Most investors focus on the level of liquidity. The smarter question is whether liquidity is accelerating or decelerating.
Global liquidity continues to rise, but the rate of increase is slowing. Markets price the change in momentum, not the absolute level. That shift is already producing familiar late-cycle signals: strong commodity performance, narrowing market breadth and a bearish flattening yield curve.
The reason is simple. Money is leaving financial assets and flowing into the real economy. That supports growth, investment and corporate earnings, but it also removes some of the fuel that previously drove asset prices higher.
Historically, this has been the transition period between speculation and turbulence.
For investors, the implication is not panic but repositioning. Real assets, precious metals, energy, resource equities and other monetary inflation hedges tend to outperform when liquidity growth slows and debt monetisation becomes the preferred policy response.
The liquidity tide is still coming in.
It is simply no longer rising as fast as before.
Glossary
Bearish Flattening Yield Curve
- This is a market condition where:
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Long-term bond yields fall faster than short-term yields, or
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Short-term yields rise while long-term yields fall
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The result is a flattening of the yield curve (the gap between long and short rates narrows) combined with a bearish signal for growth assets, especially equities.
The bond market is signalling that future monetary policy will need to be easier than currently priced. Note Kevin Warsh threatens to raise the policy rate to curb inflation.
Yield curve – the line plotting government bond yields across different maturities (e.g. 2-year vs 10-year).
Flattening – a reduction in the spread between short and long-term yields.
Bearish – expectations of economic slowdown, tightening conditions, or risk asset weakness.
This needs a bit more explanation, which is offered at the end of this piece...
1. THE LIQUIDITY TIDE IS SLOWING
There is a distinction that many investors miss, and missing it can be costly.
Global liquidity continues to rise in absolute terms. Recent estimates place it at around US$193 trillion. However, markets do not primarily react to the level of liquidity. They react to the rate of change.
That rate of change is now slowing.
The implication is significant. A liquidity environment that is still expanding, but expanding more slowly, tends to favour a rotation away from financial assets and towards real assets. Within the real asset universe, the greatest beneficiaries are often those most sensitive to monetary inflation.
The direction of the tide matters more than the height of the water.
Glossary
Liquidity - The availability of money and credit within the financial system.
Rate of Change - The speed at which a variable is increasing or decreasing.
Real Assets - Physical or tangible assets such as commodities, property and natural resources.
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2. WHERE WE ARE IN THE CYCLE
The description is apt.
Artificial intelligence, semiconductors and robotics have generated extraordinary returns. Yet the broader market has not participated equally. Leadership has become increasingly concentrated. Market breadth has narrowed while valuations have expanded.
Historically, this combination has often appeared late in a cycle.
Volatility is beginning to rise. Market leadership is becoming narrower. Expectations have become elevated.
Trees do not grow to the sky.
The phase that has historically followed is what Howell describes as the turbulence stage. During this period, liquidity begins to drain more rapidly and the direction of risk assets often reverses.
That transition has not fully arrived, but the prudent time to prepare is before it becomes obvious.
Three conditions currently support the late-cycle interpretation.
First, commodity markets have begun to outperform. This is consistent with liquidity moving away from financial markets and into the real economy.
Second, yield curves are experiencing bearish flattening. Long-term yields are rising, but short-term yields are rising even faster, compressing the spread between them.
Third, market breadth continues to narrow despite resilient headline indices.
All three conditions are now visible.
Glossary
Market Breadth - The proportion of shares participating in a market move.
Bearish Flattening - A yield curve compression caused by short-term interest rates rising faster than long-term rates.
Yield Curve - A graph showing government bond yields across different maturities.
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3. WHY IS LIQUIDITY SLOWING IF CENTRAL BANKS REMAIN LOOSE?
At first glance, the slowdown appears puzzling.
Most major central banks are not aggressively tightening monetary policy. Yet financial liquidity is clearly decelerating.
The explanation is straightforward.
Money must always be somewhere.
What appears to be happening is a migration of capital away from financial assets and into the real economy.
That migration is supporting stronger-than-expected economic activity, particularly in the United States.
Nominal GDP growth of 7 to 8 per cent is entirely plausible when considering:
• Massive AI-related capital expenditure
• Persistent fiscal deficits
• Expanding energy export revenues
This shift benefits commodities and many operating businesses.
However, it is not automatically positive for financial asset valuations.
For years, Wall Street received the first wave of liquidity. Asset prices rose well ahead of underlying earnings.
Now the process is reversing.
The earnings are beginning to appear, but the liquidity that previously expanded valuation multiples is increasingly flowing elsewhere.
Main Street is receiving its turn.
That transition is rarely smooth.
The key principle is sequencing.
Liquidity leads economic activity.
Financial markets rise first because money arrives first.
The real economy improves later because investment eventually creates output, employment and profits.
When capital leaves financial markets and enters productive activity, earlier optimism becomes justified. However, the fuel for further multiple expansion begins to diminish.
Glossary
Nominal GDP - Economic growth measured without adjusting for inflation.
P/E Ratio - Price divided by earnings, a common valuation measure.
Multiple Expansion - Rising valuations caused by investors paying more for each unit of earnings.
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4. THE GLOBAL DEBT MACHINE
The backdrop to the liquidity story is unprecedented debt accumulation.
Across much of the developed world, capital markets increasingly function as debt refinancing systems rather than engines of productive investment.
Some estimates suggest that roughly four out of every five primary market transactions globally are debt rollovers rather than new financing.
Liquidity and debt form a closed loop.
Debt requires liquidity for refinancing.
Liquidity is increasingly created through collateralised lending.
According to World Bank data, approximately 75 to 80 per cent of global lending is collateral-based.
The principal collateral consists of government bonds and property.
The system therefore depends on maintaining confidence in both.
Should debt markets become unstable, liquidity can contract rapidly.
Historically, there has been only one durable solution to excessive sovereign indebtedness.
Monetisation.
Governments rarely default outright.
Instead, they reduce the real burden of debt through inflation and currency dilution.
Japan demonstrated this following its post-1990 collapse through quantitative easing and prolonged monetary expansion.
China appears to be moving along a similar path after decades of debt-fuelled property investment.
Much of the resulting liquidity has flowed into gold, traditionally viewed as a store of value.
Increasingly, price discovery in gold is being influenced by Asian demand, particularly through the Shanghai market.
The United States is not exempt.
The Treasury has increasingly favoured issuing short-dated bills rather than longer-term bonds. Roughly half of federal debt now matures within two years.
Banks willingly absorb this debt because expanding fiscal deficits simultaneously create deposits that require income-producing assets.
The result is a form of ongoing monetisation.
Milton Friedman would have recognised the implications immediately.
Glossary
Debt Monetisation - Financing government debt through money creation.
Collateralised Lending - Lending secured against assets.
Quantitative Easing - Central bank asset purchases designed to increase liquidity.
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5. THE SUPPRESSION OF VOLATILITY
One of the least discussed aspects of today's system is the active management of bond market volatility.
The key indicator is the MOVE Index, often described as the bond market's equivalent of the VIX.
A growing share of Treasury demand now comes from hedge funds operating highly leveraged basis trades.
These trades involve purchasing physical bonds while simultaneously selling futures contracts, profiting from small pricing differences.
The strategy works only when volatility remains low.
If volatility spikes, leverage must be reduced and demand disappears.
The implications extend beyond hedge funds.
Collateral values throughout the financial system depend on volatility assumptions.
Low volatility means lower collateral haircuts and a larger collateral multiplier.
This supports greater lending and greater liquidity.
High volatility has the opposite effect.
Liquidity contracts.
Treasury buyback programmes appear designed, at least in part, to support market functioning by replacing less liquid bonds with newly issued securities.
Whether this can continue indefinitely remains uncertain.
The arithmetic is becoming increasingly difficult.
If nominal GDP is growing at 7 to 8 per cent while ten-year Treasury yields remain around 5 per cent, long-duration investors are accepting negative real returns.
That imbalance may eventually require adjustment.
Glossary
MOVE Index - A measure of expected US Treasury market volatility.
Basis Trade - A leveraged strategy exploiting price differences between bonds and futures.
Collateral Multiplier - The amount of lending supported by a given quantity of collateral.
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6. WHAT THIS MEANS FOR INVESTORS
The broad implication is a gradual rotation away from financial assets and towards real assets.
Understanding the difference between monetary inflation and consumer price inflation is crucial.
Consumer inflation reflects both monetary factors and real-world production costs.
For decades, powerful deflationary forces such as globalisation, cheap energy and technological productivity offset much of the inflation generated by monetary expansion.
As a result, financial assets substantially outperformed consumer purchasing power.
Gold performed even better.
Since 2000, gold has risen approximately fifteen-fold, compared with roughly six to seven times for major US equity indices.
If US federal debt continues expanding at 7 to 8 per cent annually, as projected by the Congressional Budget Office, investors require returns above that level merely to preserve purchasing power measured against monetary dilution.
Historically, the assets most capable of achieving this have included:
• Precious metals
• Prime residential property
• Energy and resource companies
• Food / agricultural
• Select cryptocurrencies (dangerous)
Within commodities, the traditional sequence often begins with precious metals, followed by industrial metals and finally agricultural products.
There are signs that this progression is underway.
Oil also appears historically inexpensive relative to gold.
The long-term gold-to-oil ratio has averaged around 20. Current pricing implies substantial upside - $200? - for oil if that relationship reverts towards historical norms.
Energy producers and mining companies provide leveraged exposure to these themes.
A further possibility deserves consideration.
If inflationary pressures continue building, the Federal Reserve may ultimately be forced to raise interest rates despite widespread expectations of easing.
Such an outcome remains controversial, but it cannot be dismissed.
And finally, geopolitical. Middle East and Ukraine rebuilding contracts anyone? Iran, former demon, is being recognised and will be made into the new Protector Of West Asia... with all its resources, technological and engineering capabilities, plus a market of 90+m consumers, once sanctions are off and frozen assets restored. Pity Europe cannot see the same for Russia.
Glossary
Monetary Inflation - Expansion of the money supply that reduces currency purchasing power.
Gold-to-Oil Ratio - A valuation measure comparing the relative prices of gold and crude oil.
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7. CONCLUSION
The immediate challenge is not prediction.
It is context.
Markets move through identifiable liquidity cycles. Understanding the phase of the cycle matters more than forecasting the exact timing of every turn.
The evidence increasingly suggests that the speculation phase is maturing and the turbulence phase is approaching.
That does not guarantee an imminent market decline.
It does suggest that the balance of probabilities is shifting.
In such an environment, portfolio construction becomes more important than market forecasts.
A diversified core allocation tilted towards monetary inflation hedges, real assets and late-cycle sectors appears increasingly rational.
The liquidity tide has not yet gone out.
But it is no longer rising as quickly as before.
For investors, that distinction may prove to be one of the most important developments of the coming years.