Global M2 Hits New Highs as Central Banks Quietly Expand Money Supply Across Six Major Economies
The post Global M2 Hits New Highs as Central Banks Quietly Expand Money Supply Across Six Major Economies appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
TLDR: Global M2 is pushing toward new highs, with China, Europe, and the US all recording monthly gains in money supply. China’s M2 has reached $49.96T, and its liquidity flows into global commodities, emerging markets, and risk assets. Germany and the UK have already hit record M2 levels, while Japan remains the only major economy yet to expand. Bitcoin historically follows global M2 with a three-to-four month lag, meaning current gains may not yet be priced in. Global M2 is climbing again across the world’s six largest economies, and the data is pointing in one direction. Central banks have continued to speak about keeping policy tight, yet money supply figures tell a different story. China, Europe, and the United States have all recorded monthly gains. Germany and the United Kingdom have reached new record levels. Japan remains the lone exception in this otherwise synchronized expansion cycle now underway. Money Supply Data Contradicts Central Bank Messaging The numbers across major economies reflect a clear and consistent shift this month. China leads with an M2 reading of $49.96 trillion, marking a 2.73% rise in one month. Europe follows closely at $19.4 trillion, up 2.71%, while the United States sits at $22.67 trillion, gaining 1%. Crypto market analyst Bull Theory brought attention to this pattern in a recent post. The account stated that central banks are expanding money supply again while still maintaining that policy remains tight. Central banks are expanding money supply again while telling you policy is still tight. Across the six largest economies, the data is moving in the same direction at the same time. – China is at $49.96T and up 2.73% this month– Europe is at $19.4T up 2.71%, – US is at… pic.twitter.com/ni0JYU7C2c — Bull Theory (@BullTheoryio) March 28, 2026 Germany and the United Kingdom have already…
Filed under: News - @ March 28, 2026 5:24 pm