Andy Sutton / Graham Mehl

The past few weeks have been fairly ‘quiet’ regarding bank failures, but, much like a hurricane, we’re in a bit of an ‘eye of the storm’. There are several graphics that follow which will hopefully reinforce the main point – the crisis is nowhere near over. While getting direct information has become quite challenging, we maintain several data series that were previously discontinued by the publishers.

Graphic #1 – Monthly Changes in Bank Deposits – as of March 2023

In the chart above, you’ll note the timeline on the x axis. The data stream begins in 1971. March of 2023 just provided the LARGEST single month drop in bank deposits – EVER. We had nearly a trillion dollar bank run during the month of March and not a single word was uttered by any official, policymaker, or media talking head. This should not be much of a surprise – the financial industry and government have learned extremely well the lessons of Cyprus and other places in the past decade. Transparency is the mortal enemy of a fiat money system.

Let’s not split hairs here – there isn’t a single commodity-backed currency on the planet at this time so everyone else is doing the same thing we’re doing here in the US.

1930-1932 Reboot?

It certainly appears that is a distinct possibility. We’ve opined for many years now, much to the chagrin of readers, that the not-so-USFed would indeed try to rescue the dollar one last time before the cycle ended. What we’ve seen over the past few months are the possible beginnings of a contraction in the monetary aggregates (Deflation). We’ll let them graphic below speak for itself:

The above graphic is M1 in the United States. The timeline starts in 2000. The incredible spike towards the middle/end of 2019 is responsible for the massive spike in price inflation that we’ve seen in the past 18 months. There’s a delay of between 9 and 21 months from spikes in money supply to the knock-on price increases. Note that the spike in M1 started pre-pandemic.

We’ll show one more chart before we close this brief update. United States M2 – now the broadest (officially) tracked monetary aggregate. It’s painting a similar picture. The timeline is set to that of the M1 graphic above for easy comparison.

M2 tends to move more gradually than M1 because it contains more subtypes of money. We’ll post a chart at the end of the piece where you can see the various components of the aggregates. But what is noteworthy about the above M2 graphic – we’re seeing the first actual deflation in almost a century. This isn’t price deflation (falling prices), this is the actual removal of dollars from the system. If the deflation of 1930-32 was truly the accident that everyone claimed, then policymakers ought to know well enough to avoid it again.

In a fiat monetary system, only the central bank can remove money from the system. Ours did it at the beginning of the depression and it certainly looks as though they’re doing it again. We’ll deal with the fallout that will result in the next update. To give a small hint – think about debt that was taken when the money supply was at its peak.

The chart of monetary aggregates in the United States is directly below.

Stay well,

Andy / Graham

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