10/01/2026
🚨 Macro Alert: China’s Liquidity Surge & Rising Global Market Risk
China has begun the largest monetary expansion in its history.
New data from the Bank of China shows M2 money supply exceeding USD 48 trillion, more than double that of the United States. This liquidity surge is accelerating rapidly.
Historically, when China prints at this scale, the money does not stay in financial assets—it flows into real assets and commodities such as gold, silver, and industrial metals.
At the same time, major Western financial institutions are reportedly holding massive short positions in silver, estimated at 4.4 billion ounces, while annual global mine supply is only ~800 million ounces.
This represents a short exposure of over 550% of yearly production—a gap that cannot be physically covered.
The macro risk is clear: • Currency debasement pushes hard assets higher
• Physical supply is limited
• Short positions are structurally trapped
If Chinese demand accelerates—driven by industrial use, energy transition, and monetary expansion—the result will not be gradual price increases, but forced repricing.
Fiat money is unlimited.
Physical assets are not.
In an environment where central banks are expanding balance sheets at record speed, owning what cannot be printed is no longer optional—it’s strategic.
Ignore the signal at your own risk.