U.S. M2 hit a record $22.4T in January, why Bitcoin hasn’t followed, and what could change next
U.S. broad money supply (M2) reached a record $22.442 trillion in January 2026.
That put M2 up $922.4 billion (+4.29%) from January 2025, setting a new high for a metric that often anchors “liquidity up, risk up” narratives.

Unlike during the bull market, Bitcoin has not delivered a clean “M2 = up” response since August 2025.
Either liquidity transmission is delayed, it is being diverted through new plumbing (spot ETFs and stablecoins), or it is being dominated by other forces, including real yields, the dollar, and geopolitical risk, at least for now.
Many macro-crypto frameworks implicitly assume the marginal dollar created in the banking system eventually leaks into high-beta assets.
Price action since late 2025 has been a reminder that the path from “more money” to “higher BTC” is not linear.
The latest M2 supply milestone sits alongside a shifting market structure. The historical liquidity-Bitcoin relationship has also competed with six months of flow-driven trading, and several paths could close the mismatch in 2026.
Nominal M2 supply is at a record, but “record liquidity” is not the same as record purchasing power
The nominal record is clear. The seasonally adjusted U.S. M2 series printed $22,442 billion in January 2026, up from $22,366 billion in December 2025 and $21,519 billion in January 2025.
The reference point for the prior peak also affects comparisons. On the same seasonally adjusted series, the prior nominal high occurred in April 2022 at $21,780 billion.
The distinction keeps the benchmark precise rather than relying on an imprecise version circulating online.
| Series | Point | Value | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| M2 (SA) | Jan 2026 | $22.442T | Nominal record high |
| M2 (SA) | Apr 2022 | $21.780T | True prior peak on this series |
| Real M2 | Sep 2021 | 7,668.4 | Inflation-adjusted peak (1982–84 $bn) |
| Real M2 | Jan 2026 | 6,871.7 | ~10.4% below real peak |
| M2 Velocity | Q4 2025 | 1.409 | Low “turnover” can blunt risk-asset impulse |
Inflation-adjusted real M2 supply peaked in September 2021 at 7,668 (billions of 1982–84 dollars).
January 2026 printed 6,871, still about 10.4% below that peak.
In plain terms, the nominal pile of money is bigger than ever, but its purchasing power has not returned to the high-water mark of the 2021 impulse.
M2 velocity was 1.409 in Q4 2025, a level that remains historically low relative to pre-2020 norms.
Low velocity is a simple reason the “money printing = instant pump” shortcut can fail.
Money can sit in deposits, money market funds, or other cash-like wrappers instead of chasing duration risk. Liquidity exists, but it may not circulate into the assets crypto traders watch.
One definitional detail also helps. The Federal Reserve defines M2 as M1 plus “near money” components such as small time deposits and retail money market funds, with a definition change implemented in 2020.
The composition matters because a large share of incremental M2 growth can reflect shifts in cash management behavior rather than immediate risk-taking, according to the Fed’s H.6 release.
Historically, liquidity often leads Bitcoin, but the relationship is global, lagged, and regime-dependent
Bitcoin has repeatedly traded as a high-beta expression of liquidity conditions, but the relationship is not a law of nature.
It is a tendency that strengthens in some regimes and weakens, or flips, when other variables dominate.
Two ideas show up across serious macro-crypto work. First, Bitcoin responds more reliably to global liquidity than U.S.-only aggregates.
Second, even when liquidity “works,” it often works with a lag of around 90 days.
In research published in September 2024, Lyn Alden framed Bitcoin as a barometer of global liquidity direction and reported that Bitcoin moved with global liquidity direction 83% of the time over 12-month periods in her dataset.
Coinbase Institutional has made a similar point through a more explicitly timing lens, arguing that a global M2-style liquidity index can lead Bitcoin by about 110 days in their construct.
My own analysis showed that Bitcoin’s relationship with global M2 money supply is real but conditional and time-varying rather than a simple “money printing = number go up” rule.
In level terms, Bitcoin has shown a strong positive correlation with M2 when the liquidity series is shifted by roughly 84 days (12 weeks), particularly during the 2024–2025 bull advance, but that relationship weakens or even flips negative during drawdowns.
On a day-to-day basis, correlations are near zero, with the strongest statistical links appearing only after multi-week lags (around six weeks for M2 and about one month for the dollar).
M2 acts as a slow, multi-month trend driver when the dollar is stable or weakening, while dollar strength can override or compress the liquidity effect, making the correlation regime-dependent rather than fixed.

The blue line on the chart above represents dollar strength, magenta is the M2 money supply with a 12-week lag, and orange is the Bitcoin price. You can clearly see Bitcoin diverging from M2 supply growth after a sustained period of dollar weakness.
Thus, today’s record U.S. M2 print does not need to translate into a same-month BTC move.
It could show up later, if other conditions such as the dollar, yields, and flows stop leaning the other way.
“Global liquidity” also means something broader than money supply charts.
The BIS frames global liquidity in terms of the ease of financing, often measured through credit to non-bank borrowers, cross-border bank claims, and other indicators of funding conditions.
That framing helps explain why a single-country monetary aggregate can climb while global funding conditions tighten, and why BTC can trade heavy even when U.S. money measures look supportive.
Liquidity correlation also expands and contracts.
It can look tight in a bull phase and noisy or negative in a drawdown, especially when the market is repricing real yields, a surging dollar, or an exogenous shock that changes what investors want to hold in the moment, according to research tracking correlation over time.
For 2026, M2 can be a supportive backdrop, but it still needs a transmission mechanism.
For Bitcoin, that mechanism has increasingly run through market structure, including who the marginal buyer is, which rails they use, and what prompts them to add or reduce exposure.
The last six months showed the new plumbing: ETF flows and geopolitics outweighed the M2 narrative
Over the last six months, market structure and flow channels played a larger role than broad aggregates.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs and the daily reality of allocation flows have become an outsized driver of short-run price discovery.
Bitcoin’s early-2026 weakness has repeatedly pointed to ETF demand swings as a core explanation alongside broader macro volatility.
That flow-regime shift is significant because it changes how “liquidity” manifests.
In prior cycles, crypto-native leverage and offshore exchange dynamics could dominate marginal demand.
In 2025–2026, an increasing share of marginal exposure is intermediated through regulated wrappers that respond to a different set of signals, including risk budgets, portfolio rebalancing rules, and macro hedging costs.
When those flows turn negative for weeks, they can offset, or at least delay, whatever support a rising money aggregate suggests.
Geopolitics has also acted as a stress test for Bitcoin’s “hedge” narrative.
During volatility spikes tied to geopolitical tension, gold has tended to strengthen while Bitcoin lagged, reinforcing the idea that many allocators still treat BTC as a risk asset in the short run.
That does not settle the long-run debate about Bitcoin’s monetary role, but it can shape near-term positioning and how quickly liquidity tailwinds translate into buying.
Trade policy developments have added another layer. Tariff escalation can push investors toward a stagflationary branch where inflation expectations rise while growth expectations fall.
That mix can keep real yields sticky, which tends to pressure long-duration and high-beta assets.
A separate path is one to watch for later. If growth slows enough, rate-cut expectations can rise, and financial conditions can loosen, potentially reopening the liquidity channel that Bitcoin bulls want to see.
The sequencing can make the same macro shock bearish first and supportive later.
Meanwhile, crypto has developed a parallel liquidity gauge that sits outside traditional money aggregates, stablecoins.
The circulating stablecoin market has grown into a pool of on-chain “cash” that can move into spot, perps, and DeFi without touching the banking system in the same way.
DeFiLlama puts total stablecoin market capitalization around $309 billion, a number large enough to influence marginal crypto demand even if it is small relative to U.S. M2.
Circle’s USDC supply has also been rising sharply, with a market cap of around $75 billion.
Taken together, the last six months look less like a breakdown in M2 and more like M2 competing with stronger forces.
When ETF flows de-risk, and geopolitical fear pushes investors toward gold, Bitcoin can drift or fall even while nominal money aggregates climb.
The open question for 2026 is what happens when those forces stop leaning in the same direction.
Scenarios for 2026: a lagged catch-up rally, a clogged transmission, or a risk-off reset
With M2 at record highs, the key question is whether liquidity will transmit into Bitcoin, and under what conditions.
One way to frame the setup is through scenarios tied to measurable inputs, including the dollar, real yields, ETF flows, stablecoin supply, and the pace of M2 growth and velocity.
| Scenario | What has to happen | Mechanism | What to monitor |
|---|---|---|---|
| A: Liquidity catch-up rally | M2 stays firm; USD weakens; real yields drift lower; ETF flows turn persistently positive | Lagged liquidity impulse reaches BTC via improved financial conditions and renewed allocation demand (often framed as ~10–16 weeks) | ETF flow trend; DXY/real yields; global-liquidity proxies |
| B: Liquidity up, BTC range-bound | M2 rises but velocity stays low; cash parks in MMFs/deposits; ETF flows remain mixed | Nominal money grows without a risk-taking impulse; marginal BTC buyer does not appear | M2 velocity; real M2 trend; weekly ETF demand swings |
| C: Stagflation/risk-off shock | Tariffs/energy shocks lift inflation risk; policy stays restrictive; risk premia rise; ETFs see more de-risking | BTC trades as a levered risk proxy; gold outperforms as “hedge” in the short run | Inflation expectations; real yields; gold vs BTC behavior during stress |
Scenario A is the clean “liquidity finally transmits” setup.
It is also the scenario most consistent with lag-based liquidity models that argue Bitcoin tends to respond after weeks or months, not instantly. Coinbase explicitly leans on that lag logic.
Scenario B is the one that frustrates traders, the money aggregate rises, but the market stays pinned because the liquidity is effectively idle.
In this regime, “record M2” is a talking point rather than a catalyst.
The supporting evidence would be continued low velocity and real M2 staying below its prior peak, implying that the incremental nominal dollars are not creating an incremental risk bid.
Scenario C is the reminder that macro shocks can override aggregates.
If investors price a persistent inflation problem and policymakers keep conditions restrictive, Bitcoin’s sensitivity to real yields can dominate.
In that world, liquidity is less about money supply levels and more about the cost of capital and the availability of leverage.
Trade and geopolitical developments can push markets into that regime quickly, and gold-versus-Bitcoin performance becomes a real-time diagnostic.
The watchlist is straightforward.
The first three items indicate whether the macro backdrop is easing in real terms.
The next two indicate whether the primary flow channels are delivering demand into crypto.
The last item checks whether the liquidity channel is appearing on-chain before it appears in spot ETF data.
| Indicator | Why it’s on the list | Source |
|---|---|---|
| U.S. M2 level and YoY change | Confirms nominal liquidity trend and whether growth is accelerating or fading | M2 |
| Real M2 vs 2021 peak | Checks whether purchasing power is expanding back toward prior highs | Real |
| M2 velocity | Measures whether liquidity is circulating or sitting in cash-like stores | M2V |
| Spot BTC ETF net flows | Tracks the dominant marginal flow channel in this market structure | Flows |
| Dollar and real-yield complex | Sets the discount-rate and risk-appetite conditions that can amplify or choke a liquidity impulse | Macro |
| Stablecoin market cap | On-chain “cash” proxy that can show risk-taking before it appears in ETFs | DeFiLlama |
Bitcoin does not need to track M2 closely for the current decoupling to be relevant.
A few more months of record nominal M2 alongside weak BTC would still be consistent with a lagged model if the dollar stays firm, real yields stay elevated, and ETF demand remains choppy.
It would also fit a structural shift, where macro liquidity is necessary but not sufficient, and the trigger is a turn in the primary flow channels.
That could include ETFs turning into steady net buyers, stablecoins expanding, and global funding conditions loosening in tandem.
The next data points arrive on a regular cadence. M2 updates monthly, velocity updates quarterly, and ETF and stablecoin flows update continuously.
If Bitcoin is going to catch up to record nominal liquidity, the market will likely show it first in those flow gauges, then in price.
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