It’s poorly explained, but given that TSLA trends downward for the past month on this site while it was in fact trending upwards in USD terms, I’m pretty sure this site isn’t using a fixed conversion.
More precisely, looking at a single point, 12/14/20 (earliest point in the 1m chart):
- Site says TSLA = 0.03324 BTC;
- TSLA in USD, according to Yahoo Finance: opening $619.00, high $642.75, low $610.20, close $639.83;
- BTC in USD, according to Google: $19272.30;
- $19272.30 * 0.3324 = $640.61, so roughly checks out.
Edit: Of course it's way more obvious if you look at other stocks... People would have been jumping off buildings left and right if the big tech stocks were taking plunges like that.
Ah yes I think you're right - easiest way to see it is to zoom out to 'all', and they all have roughly the same shape, i.e. of BTC not of the stock, since they're all relatively stable (!).
Could definitely be clearer though on landing IMO.
comparing all the stocks, seeing that only tesla is in a stable curve near the end, leads me to the following conclusion: Both Tesla and Bitcoin are heavily overpriced!
I was just looking for something like this the other day when talking with someone about how they should be thinking of their investment returns in terms of BTC and not USD (which has increased in supply > 25%) in the past year.
This website, though a bit barren, nicely illustrates the point.
> ...in terms of BTC and not USD (which has increased in supply > 25%) in the past year.
It's just shocking to me how people here don't understand inflation. There's such a disconnect between economics education in school and where people end up in reality.
Remember folks, supply is only half the picture. Velocity of money matters. They both matter. [1] Supply went up, velocity went down, net 2% inflation. The fed nailed their target. Once velocity goes up printing will slow, or reverse, to maintain the - wait for it - 2% target.
2%. Not 25%. I mean are you telling me you paid $4 for a loaf of bread last year and now it's 5 - and nobody noticed?
Compare the performance of both BTC and other speculative assets, and stocks, in USD. That's the only one that matters, because taxes.
Holy moly is this one off base. This is not how you compare currencies. China has 4X as many people as America does. There's local and regional differences in the cost of goods in the area.
You can compare currencies in a lot of reasonable ways but this sure ain't one of them. A good way is something like the way DXY (the Dollar Index) is calculated - it's based on the relative strength of the dollar compared to a basket of other foreign currencies. But this in and of itself is also not a meaningful number in the sense that the relative strength of a currency is a knob - turn it one way, and you favor exports over imports, and the other way, imports over exports.
You can also convert to a neutral currency like USD then compare the PPP factor - which shows you how far a neutral dollar goes in one country vs another, and this varies based on market conditions, regional conditions and local conditions. In some island nations, the dollar won't go as far as goods are expensive. In Canada, it goes much longer. [2]
Currencies. Do. Not. Have. Market. Caps. Equities have market caps. You measure market caps of companies in terms of currencies. Why? Because if you have a $1B market cap in equities and you start selling, you'll be left with way less than $1B in hand - selling increases supply. If you sell $1B in currency you get exactly $1B dollars.
Comparing money supplies between different countries based on number of units issued, are you serious? It's an utterly and totally meaningless number. It means nothing.
You've given me a headache. It's not often you see stuff just so plain wrong on HN.
Well said. Indeed, there are many people who don't understand how inflation manifests. Just because the FED printed a bunch of dollars _doesn't_ mean there will be rampant inflation! Yes, increasing the outside/base money supply is a prerequisite to inflation but not an immediate cause. Reality is that most money is actually bank credit and if commercial/shadow banks don't significantly increase lending as a result of the FED's open market operations, then there won't be much impact on inflation. Indeed, US inflation as currently measured is around 1-2%. At the moment the dollar is _strengthening_ vs other fiat currencies which is the last thing we need. A weaker dollar would be in everyone's interest as it will help to reverse structural trade defecits.
Sure there might be some disagreements around the nature of the inflation measure (e.g. it doesn't include house prices) but that's another discussion.
Edit: It's worth noting that money supply is believed to be mostly endogenous these days. The monetary system we currently have is a credit based system in that all money is someone's liability and the supply of this money is mostly based upon the demand for credit. The system is quite complicated. The FED uses short term interest rates to influence the demand for credit. Low rates rates make credit creation more likely (stimulates demand). Whereas high rates decrease the amount of credit creation (curtails demand). Furthermore, if people pay back loans then we experience deflation. If there is not enough credit then we experience deflation. If there is too much credit, we get inflation. Here I'm assuming that the credit is spent. I.e. velocity increases. Indeed, people don't borrow and leave the money in their accounts. Instead, they use it to make purchases! General inflation or inflation in a particular market becomes particularly acute if credit is not allocated appropriately. For example during the housing bubble which popped in 2008. The issue here was underwriting standards were not fit for purpose.
Total currency supply is the only metric that really matters in terms of true inflation. Velocity of money is a mostly useless metric in our current highly unequal society. High currency supply and low velocity means high fragility... That money is just waiting in people's pockets to be released back into the market. The more money there is sitting around in everyone's pockets, the more prices are going to fall when that money finally comes out of their pockets (and panic means it tends to be all at once)... We have a tiny number of massive pockets. The entire financial order ends up depending on the reliability of a handful of high net worth individuals to play along with the current scheme. It's no surprise then that governments ends up wanting to control and limit how these high net worth individuals spend or invest their money.
If you get an unlimited amount of something without having to work for it, of course it becomes worthless to you.
What's happening in the economy today is like what would happen if we played a game of monopoly and one player ended up with all the money and the bank started loaning people new money to keep everyone playing... So the richest player would just keep getting more money because the dynamics of the game cannot change... In the meantime, fairness is thrown out the window - Money loses all correlation with value creation. Then there is a point when one of the players grabs the board and flips it over.
Seriously this is why the money supply is actively managed. When people aren't spending, more is created. When people spend a lot, it gets removed from circulation.
> We have a tiny number of massive pockets. The entire financial order ends up depending on the reliability of a handful of high net worth individuals to play along with the current scheme.
High net worth individuals by the way? They're absolutely not sitting on dollars, they own assets. Real estate, stocks, bonds, and some nutters, crypto. That means inflation is irrelevant to them, and all that matters is the performance of their investments relative to the benchmark rates.
> It's no surprise then that governments ends up wanting to control and limit how these high net worth individuals spend or invest their money.
Not really, no. Fiscal and social policy control the distribution of wealth. Progressive taxation and redistribution reduces inequality. This applies equally no matter what we're using as currency. If we switched to BTC, to sea shells, to zombie killing ammunition, fiscal and social policy would apply just as it does now.
Monetary policy operates on a lower level, it controls only the supply.
> When people spend a lot, it gets removed from circulation.
Taking a look at M2 going back to the early 80s, I see no indication of money being removed from circulation. In fact, it appears to be ever skyrocketing higher.
This is not entirely surprising though as the policy is inflation (just enough of course, but never deflation). Inflation is seen as required and desirable, so we should expect the money supply to gradually expand with such a policy, except in cases of economic shock (as in 2020) when it expands more. The problem with such stimulus though is that it becomes very hard to withdraw and asset prices get farther and farther away from any rational valuation based on future returns.
I suspect what is happening is that a handful of high net worth people and companies are accumulating massive hoards of cash at a loss to themselves (relative to gold, real estate...); they do it for the sole purpose of 'doing their bit' to maintain the current economic order; they're avoiding big sudden short term losses by taking on smaller but more long term continuous losses via inflation.
What difference does that make? If the inflation rate is a well controlled 2% that means reducing the supply has not yet become necessary. It's not been necessary, and that's fine, that doesn't mean it won't be necessary in the future, or that the action cannot be taken. I'm explaining the theory.
There is a point when people have gotten wealthy to the point that they have bought everything that they could possibly want but the money keeps coming anyway.
Wealthy people will question whether or not they're actually 'earning' their passive income. The most objective ones will realize that passive income can never be risk-free; it it appears that way, then it means that the risk is systemic. For these people, it actually makes a lot of sense to hedge against systemic risk.
You're not supposed to hold dollars. Dollars are not an investment, they're a short term, intentionally lossy store of value designed to incentivize their movement within an economy.
> I believe what people are implying when they talk against money supply increase is redistribution of wealth using money supply increase.
How exactly does this work? To whom is money being redistributed? It's punishment for holding dollars instead of investing them.
> It would not be equivalent since with BTC you can't just take away value of your share without making you explicitly pay, it removes invisible tax.
You're not supposed to save currency, you're supposed to use currency to buy assets, even if those assets are magic beans that live in your computer. That's why we have inflation, because money only has value when it moves.
A great breakdown - thanks for the insight! I often panic when I look at the amount of money printing thats going on but I always forget about the velocity! I think this might be because it's rarely talked about.
What are your thoughts about the rapid asset inflation (stocks/housing) vs the stable consumer goods side of things? Surely they can't stay disconnected forever?
These are challenging areas and I'm not an expert on all aspects of this however housing is one I've read a lot into.
Housing on an inflation-adjusted dollars per square foot basis is exactly the same now as it was in the 1970s according to the BLS, on average, across the US. In fact, after the recent drops, it's probably more affordable per square foot. [1] There are some caveats, though!
Housing is at the mercy of local ordinances. In major metros like SF and NY the city councils refuse to allow new construction, but the economies around them have been so strong that demand outstripped supply and prices skyrocketed.
In suburban areas, setback rules, zoning rules, building codes and also tastes, have left houses twice as big on average now as they were in the 1970s [1]. This is a policy issue though, and it is truly problematic, although COVID seems to have been quite the equalizing force in a lot of ways.
[edit] One way of solving it would be national zoning rules, and permitting the construction of housing in any zone (much like Japan does [2]). The other challenge is Americans need to come to terms with the fact that housing cannot be both affordable and an investment. Investments by definition are designed to become less affordable over time.
As for the stock price explosion, I'll try and dig up an article I saw recently that attributed it to, roughly, poor folks are still poor (and so never really invested), but the wealthy and middle class have actually benefitted disproportionately from the COVID situation, PPP, stimulus, etc, and there's a lot more disposable income right now in the market. I'll mark that as a [citation needed] on myself as I try and dig it up.
Not OP, but isn't the whole point of investing in stocks to have returns which beat inflation + tax by a few % each year (on average)? In other words, investors are rewarded for the risk they took and the more time passes, the greater rewards are.
Sure, while consumer price inflation is hovering around 2%, asset price inflation is running closer to 10-20%.
I account for inflation as it relates to the basket of goods and services most important in my life. Some of those items are everyday goods inflating at 2% annually. But the biggest things that matter to me: higher education, a home/real estate, medical care ... these are all inflating at a much, much higher pace. In this way, "2% annual inflation" completely misses the mark.
"Inflating" is not the same as "going up." You're conflating two things that are unrelated under the guise of the same name and it muddies the water on this already challenging conversation.
Asset price inflation is not inflation, its ROI, and until there's a study, we won't really know why assets are going up. It may be due to increased liquidity, it might be stimulus checks, it might be all sorts of stuff. You're speculating, and if you're going to make a claim like that we're gonna need a citation.
I'm not saying these things don't matter, I'm saying [citation needed] that it's got anything to do with the Fed.
If I'm the only doctor in town and I charge $1000 one day for a surgery and $2000 the next because I feel like it, that's not inflation.
> I account for inflation as it relates to the basket of goods and services most important in my life.
Feel free but the rest of us are talking about a specific meaning of inflation which is not the same as yours, and so should be addressed in a different thread to avoid confusing people.
For the millions of young adults trying to afford a home right now, it is not ROI. For those fortunate enough to have a portfolio of real assets (including a home/real estate), sure.
2. You're not supposed to save dollars you're supposed to invest dollars. You invest them until you have enough stored value to purchase a house - or at least make the down payment. Once you buy SPY, or bonds, or magic beans that live in your computer, inflation no longer matters.
3. Housing prices are on average the same price now as they have been since the 1970s per square foot across the US (inflation adjusted). New houses are now twice as big. Higher housing prices relative to inflation is largely due to building codes, regulation, and councils restricting development in spite of massive demand. One way to solve this is national zoning ordinances like in Japan where housing can be built in every zone. One way to not solve this at all is Bitcoin, because it doesn't change any of the real issues re: zoning and supply/demand.
None of this is new, this is how it's worked forever.
> Supply went up, velocity went down, net 2% inflation.
But that just means the money is sitting in an account somewhere. If your account doesn't have 25% more money in it you're losing out and someone else is gaining an advantage without working.
At any given instant, that new money has to be somewhere controlled by someone. People would have to be a bit naive to try and hold their wealth in dollars with that sort of unfairness built in. And also even 2% inflation makes it a stupid strategy.
> But that just means the money is sitting in an account somewhere. If your account doesn't have 25% more money in it you're losing out and someone else is gaining an advantage without working.
Only partially, because the money supply is actively managed. If it starts coming out an being used, the fed will step in and reduce the money supply to match their commitment targets. They both giveth and taketh away, to meet their 2% target. You are right to an extent that the closer you are to the money supply, the more you can benefit or lose - this is the cantillion effect people are on about these days in crypto land - but this effect is very small in aggregate.
> At any given instant, that new money has to be somewhere controlled by someone. People would have to be a bit naive to try and hold their wealth in dollars with that sort of unfairness built in. And also even 2% inflation makes it a stupid strategy.
Which is why you're not supposed to hold dollars. You're supposed to spend them on investments. This, by the way, is the whole point of inflation - money only has any value at all when its moving.
The monetary base grew by 25% and velocity of money is approaching 1.0. That isn't small, someone has an insane amount of money staring them in the face and they've done nothing to justify it.
This rather undermines the argument that the 2% inflation target is really there for the benefit of the bystanders. It looks like it is mainly for the benefit of the people enjoying the Cantillion effect.
Unless I suppose all the poor and middle-class people in the US are suddenly wealthy, I suppose. I havn't been keeping up with the stats in the last 6 months.
Please cite your source as to why you think there's one person or a group who's disproportionately benefitting and has a huge stash of new money over the last year. Who are they? This is just pure speculation. Do you have a study which quantifies the Canitillon effect?
Likely many people are saving a little bit of extra money because the whole COVID situation is pretty nuts and it's leaving people scared. This has reduced velocity, and printing made up for it. More than likely it's everyone who saved a little extra for the rainy day fund, and everyone got a little extra stimulus.
JPow didn't just walk up to some guy on the street and hand him a check for 25% of the entire US M2 money supply, that's not how this works, and further, concentrated wealth positions like that decrease velocity! That's the effect the Fed is trying to counter! To increase velocity the money has to be disbursed.
There's a case to be made in [1] (Sumner) that the Cantillon effect, while it exists, is irrelevant as it doesn't really matter who gets the money first.
> The monetary base grew by 25% and velocity of money is approaching 1.0. That isn't small, someone has an insane amount of money staring them in the face and they've done nothing to justify it.
Remember that when the FED conducts open market operations to buy securities, what they are doing is swapping central bank reserves for securities. Only banks can participate in this process because only banks can hold central bank reserves. That money doesn't necessarily filter down to us and if it does, it takes a while. I guess that's where the Cantillion effect comes in, apparently. But banks don't just take that money and buy stocks... That's not how it works. The reserves sit on their balance sheet and they are used to settle transactions between banks. The reserves are also make up part of the bank's eligible capital. It is expected that banks awash in central bank reserves are better placed to lend/create credit because of the more favourable financial position and in this chart [0] you can see that M2 money supply (central bank reserves + bank deposits) has increased since the FED start conducting open market operations, which is the desired effect. The M2 money supply has increased because more people like you and me (and companies) are borrowing money to finance purchases.
edit: Amusingly, just realised that I made a logic error in the last sentence above. M2 includes M1 so presumably much of the increase in that chart is an increase in M1. This link [1] better shows what is going on. You can see the increase in M1 but there is also an increase in M2 throughout 2020. You can calculate this yourself by subtracting the number in the M1 column from the number in the M2 column and observe a modest increase - about 15% from Jan 2020 to December 2020. Presumably this is because of the sustained low short term rates and the increase in the M1 money supply via quantitative easing.
I applaud you for speaking rationally in the face of Bitcoin hysteria, but in my experience it has turned into a religion, and no amount of rational argument will sway these people.
>but in my experience it has turned into a religion
Bitcoin is very much a religion at this stage. The network is constrained to a maximum of 350k(!!) txs per day, with the layer 2 solutions failing to gather any sort of traction whatsoever. Yet the bitcoin zealots herald it as the future of finance. How in gods name is 350k txs per day going to handle global finance.
Stop listening to Bitcoin maxis, but don't dismiss the ones working on bringing new improvements to crypto. To keep the analogy with religion, Maxis are fundamentalists that end up misrepresenting the core morals and the doctrine of its Church. Brushing off crypto due to Maxis is no different than thinking all of Christianity is invalid because of Westboro Baptists.
While flawed in execution, the general idea is sound. How can we measure the true value of stocks when inflation isn't properly calculated. BTC doesn't have depth. Gold?
On the FRED website, you can easily experiment with dividing one time series by another. Just search for the first time series, then add another from the settings, then plot "a/b".
It reminds me a lot of the "New Economy" discussions my programmer colleagues were having in mid-to-late 1999 about CSCO and the rest. One guy persuaded his grandmother to sell out of bonds and buy tech stocks. That ended badly.
It could be that. Or it could be the start of something brand new and very big/exciting. Afterall, the hype of the tech stocks did come to fruition...but 5-15 years later. I don't know.
Because BTC can't be created out of thin air limitlessly, I'd say it's much more "stable" in that regard.
The chart below shows how out of control the money supply has gotten in 2020. It's inevitable before this mass printing of money translates to big inflation in the economy.
The amount of products I can buy for 1 USD was far more stable over the last year then the amount of products I get for one BTC. That's the kind of stability I am looking for in a currency as a consumer.
~This is~ using a fixed USD/BTC conversion though, not translating each data point with BTC value at the time.
So ~this is~ like viewing historical charts of US stocks in GBP with today's FX; nobody does that, because it doesn't really tell you anything.