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The United States money supply has reached record levels, and prominent cryptocurrency advocates are citing the surge in fiat liquidity as a potential bullish catalyst for digital assets. The latest reference point is the U.S. M2 money supply, which has reportedly hit a record $22.7 trillion.
Gemini co-founder Tyler Winklevoss commented on the milestone, saying: “Wow. Quite an advertising budget for Bitcoin.”
M2 is a broad measure of the money supply that includes cash and checking deposits. The argument presented by Winklevoss and other advocates is that expanding M2 effectively dilutes the purchasing power of existing dollars in circulation.
In this framing, the Federal Reserve’s increase in money supply is viewed as increasing the need for assets with fixed supply characteristics, particularly as inflation concerns remain in focus.
Bitcoin is described as having a hard-coded maximum supply of 21 million coins that cannot be altered. The article’s central comparison is that when the government prints trillions of new dollars, it increases the relative appeal of a fixed-supply asset.
The article also highlights a statistical relationship between global M2 and Bitcoin’s price. It states that Bitcoin’s price movements track closely with the ebb and flow of global fiat liquidity, characterizing Bitcoin as a “liquidity sponge.”
It further suggests that, in the current cycle, Bitcoin may “catch up” to gold’s performance relative to fiat expansion.
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