The U.S. broad money supply currently consists of approximately 2.1 quadrillion cents. https://m.primal.net/HZfW.png
Poetic
For now.
I can't wait until one sat is worth one cent
SAT CENT PARITY LETS FUCKING GO 🫡
Thank goodness we have a global unit of account to maintain our sanity. https://image.nostr.build/99fc7980b1e97dd66b8c0e65da3c5061e79e827a97163b1b946f158d81b8f30a.jpg
a tale of two curves. ...... https://i.nostr.build/Xq0W.gif
Bitcoin = 2.1 quadrillion sats USD = 2.1 quadrillion cents USD is adding more daily, devaluing your purchasing power. Bitcoin will only ever have 2.1 quadrillion sats. Plan accordingly. nostr:note1vwlajm2xxsgrsndtgl73ncxty3822vsxhgp4fs6n9944t8735ykqk685c4
Lyn? This really you? If so, love your YouTube and market analysis and insight. Much kudos to you
But not for long 😂
Oh noes! How will the keynesian/MMT economists ever cut their pizza?!?
The time we've been anticipating has finally arrived, let's goo!🔥🚀 https://altcryptogems.com/ https://m.primal.net/HZwb.png
And we can still get 23 sats per penny
Is there a way to make a chart like this that shows the growth of the total global money supply (liquidity? M1, M2, eurodollar?) over time, compared to the prices of homes, S&P 500, gold, etc? That is, the causes and magnitudes of the actual decrease in purchasing power over recent decades. Like, my index fund looks like it's going way up, but it's not really, is it? I was surprised how this chart flattened out. You can rephrase all that to make it make sense.