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[PLUS] Weekly Observations & One Chart for the Weekend: Fed Turns Off Liquidity Spigot

January 13, 2023

From the Desk of Willie Delwiche.

Money supply is unchanged over the past year and has fallen at a never-before-seen 5% annualized rat over the past 3 months.

Why It Matters: Money supply growth peaked (on a year over year basis) at 27% in February 2021 as policymakers responded to the COVID crisis by flooding the financial system with liquidity. That growth has now dissipated and over shorter time periods money supply is actually contracting (it was down for the fourth month in a row in November). Collapsing money supply growth helps take the edge off of inflationary pressures in the economy (there is less money chasing all the goods & services). But liquidity is also the lifeblood of the financial markets. As with seedlings in the garden, when the spigot is turned off, green shoots turn brown and asset prices could struggle to flourish.    

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