Bitcoin Decouples From Money Supply Growth In a Sign The Old Macro Script Has Changed

Bitcoin Decouples From Money Supply Growth In a Sign The Old Macro Script Has Changed

For four years, one macro signal reliably preceded Bitcoin (BTC) price appreciation. When global M2 money supply expanded, capital flowed into risk assets and Bitcoin captured a disproportionate share.

That correlation has broken down, and the divergence is growing wider by the week.

The Gap Between Liquidity and Price

Global M2 has continued expanding in 2026 as central banks outside the United States maintain accommodative policy stances. Bitcoin has not followed.

The asset has underperformed the liquidity signal that traders used as a near-mechanical entry trigger during the 2020 to 2024 cycle. The explanation gaining traction among macro analysts is dollar strength.

When the U.S. dollar appreciates against other major currencies, global M2 figures measured in dollars rise mechanically without representing a genuine surge in risk appetite. Capital that would otherwise chase assets like Bitcoin instead flows back toward dollar-denominated instruments, neutralizing the liquidity signal.

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The Signal and Its Source

CryptoRank analysis published April 30 framed the divergence as a structural risk rather than a temporary noise event. The analysis noted that the old Bitcoin playbook ran on a simple logic that M2 expansion translated into cryptocurrency inflows.

That logic assumed dollar stability as a background condition. Dollar strength has removed that condition in the current cycle, and Bitcoin has stalled as a result.

Debt dynamics compound the picture. Rising sovereign debt levels in major economies are absorbing capital that might otherwise reach risk assets, creating a dual headwind from both the currency channel and the fiscal channel.

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Background

Bitcoin's correlation with global M2 became a widely cited framework after the 2020 liquidity surge sent the asset from roughly $10,000 to nearly $70,000 over fourteen months. The relationship held loosely through 2022 and 2023, with Bitcoin recovering sharply each time M2 rebounded following Federal Reserve tightening cycles.

The approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs in the United States in January 2024 added a new demand layer that briefly decoupled Bitcoin from pure macro drivers, as institutional inflows created buying pressure independent of global liquidity conditions. The current divergence suggests neither the ETF demand impulse nor the M2 signal is dominant, leaving the asset without a clear macro anchor.

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What Comes Next

Traders watching the M2 signal now face a choice between updating their framework or waiting for dollar strength to fade. If the Federal Reserve signals rate cuts later in 2026, dollar appreciation could reverse and restore the historical M2-to-Bitcoin transmission.

If dollar strength persists, the macro case for Bitcoin rests more heavily on ETF inflows, corporate treasury adoption, and supply-side dynamics from the April 2024 halving. The ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF recorded $41.2 million in inflows on April 29, suggesting institutional demand remains present even as the macro signal clouds.

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Disclaimer and Risk Warning: The information provided in this article is for educational and informational purposes only and is based on the author's opinion. It does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Cryptocurrency assets are highly volatile and subject to high risk, including the risk of losing all or a substantial amount of your investment. Trading or holding crypto assets may not be suitable for all investors. The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author(s) and do not represent the official policy or position of Yellow, its founders, or its executives. Always conduct your own thorough research (D.Y.O.R.) and consult a licensed financial professional before making any investment decision.
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