I've been staring at a chart for a long time recently—the "Excess Liquidity as a Percentage of Bank Deposits." Essentially, this thing is a thermometer measuring whether there's money in the market. The Federal Reserve recently injected another $40 billion into it, which in essence is loosening liquidity conditions. But looking at the current ratio, it has already fallen to around 15.7%, well below the historical average of 20.6%, indicating a quite tight situation.
Looking back at data over the past decade or so, each period has been quite interesting:
**2009 to 2013**: After the financial crisis, QE was aggressively implemented, and liquidity climbed from just over 12% to above 20%, gradually restoring market confidence; **2014 to 2018**: tightening began as QE stopped and balance sheet reduction started, with less money in circulation, dropping to 11% by 2019, which led to the repo market crisis; **2020 and 2021**: pandemic hit, and the Fed launched unlimited QE, pushing liquidity above 32% in 2021—asset prices soared during that time; **2022 to 2024**: another scenario, with rate hikes and balance sheet reductions, high inflation pressing down, reserve balances plunging, and excess liquidity crashing from its peak to over 19% by the end of 2024, roughly back to the historical average.
And now? As we start 2025, the money in the banking system is so tight that it's only 15.7%, significantly below the average line. Historical experience tells us that whenever liquidity begins to rise from the bottom, risk assets usually experience a recovery rally.
**In plain terms**: this round of liquidity has already fallen to a historically low level, and signs of policy easing are emerging. The key next step is to watch when it truly turns upwards—because that inflection point is often a signal that risk assets are shifting from weakness to strength.
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AirdropAutomaton
· 12-12 22:32
15.7% is so low, I feel like I can't hold it anymore.
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VCsSuckMyLiquidity
· 12-11 16:50
15.7% this number is really starting to be hard to sustain; it feels like this time it's really going to start loosening up.
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BlindBoxVictim
· 12-11 16:45
15.7% this number does look a bit tight, it feels like the previous crazy 32% has been halved, how can the market still be so cold?
The question is when will the turning point come? Waiting for this signal light to really turn on might be too late.
I vividly remember the buyback crisis in 2019, when an 11% spike suddenly exploded. Now at 15.7%, it’s not much better.
The Federal Reserve’s 40 billion is probably trying to loosen up, but it still doesn’t seem enough to quench the thirst.
With funds so tight, no wonder there’s been no market movement lately. Could we be reenacting history again?
The key is whether future policies will truly reverse course. If they keep stalling like this, it could be problematic.
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governance_lurker
· 12-11 16:38
15.7% this number is a bit scary, it feels like money is really tight
Wait, can a rebound from the historical low definitely save the market? I remember that in 2019 it didn't work very well either
So now it's a gamble on the turning point, but this bet is a bit big
That 32% in 2021 was truly outrageous, everything could rise, it all sounds magical in hindsight
The problem is that the signals of loosening are almost all exhausted, when will real money actually come in
The key still depends on whether the Federal Reserve's 40 billion can sustain the entire situation
Liquidity has fallen from heaven to hell, now it relies on that to rebound and redeem, this script is quite interesting
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FloorPriceNightmare
· 12-11 16:31
15.7% is really tight, but it seems the Federal Reserve still needs to continue easing liquidity.
I've been staring at a chart for a long time recently—the "Excess Liquidity as a Percentage of Bank Deposits." Essentially, this thing is a thermometer measuring whether there's money in the market. The Federal Reserve recently injected another $40 billion into it, which in essence is loosening liquidity conditions. But looking at the current ratio, it has already fallen to around 15.7%, well below the historical average of 20.6%, indicating a quite tight situation.
Looking back at data over the past decade or so, each period has been quite interesting:
**2009 to 2013**: After the financial crisis, QE was aggressively implemented, and liquidity climbed from just over 12% to above 20%, gradually restoring market confidence; **2014 to 2018**: tightening began as QE stopped and balance sheet reduction started, with less money in circulation, dropping to 11% by 2019, which led to the repo market crisis; **2020 and 2021**: pandemic hit, and the Fed launched unlimited QE, pushing liquidity above 32% in 2021—asset prices soared during that time; **2022 to 2024**: another scenario, with rate hikes and balance sheet reductions, high inflation pressing down, reserve balances plunging, and excess liquidity crashing from its peak to over 19% by the end of 2024, roughly back to the historical average.
And now? As we start 2025, the money in the banking system is so tight that it's only 15.7%, significantly below the average line. Historical experience tells us that whenever liquidity begins to rise from the bottom, risk assets usually experience a recovery rally.
**In plain terms**: this round of liquidity has already fallen to a historically low level, and signs of policy easing are emerging. The key next step is to watch when it truly turns upwards—because that inflection point is often a signal that risk assets are shifting from weakness to strength.