The U.S. broad money supply currently consists of approximately 2.1 quadrillion cents.

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Poetic

1/10th of the available sats. Would love to see the day that 1sat is equal to 1/10th of a cent.

2,100,000,000,000,000

Cent/Sat purchasing power parity will be a moment to behold. Soon™️

For now.

That could cover ~~12.5 million football fields 😂😂 hard to imagine more than a few.

💸

That's one big piggy bank

Isn't the also the total number of satoshis? Or did I miss a power of 10 there

I can't wait until one sat is worth one cent

the irony

SAT CENT PARITY LETS FUCKING GO 🫡

The difference is I wouldn’t bend down to pick up a penny, but I’d always take action to stack another sat.

gm

Thank goodness we have a global unit of account to maintain our sanity.

Based

how many pizza slices is that?

That sounds like how many satoshis exist...

borken money

Sounds vaguelyyyy familiar to something else.

Go fuck yourself

its to obvious. U need to kiss his butt first.

a tale of two curves. ......

And 2.1 quadrillion sats possible, if 21 million bitcoin - trippy....

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

Sounds like rogue money!

Hello Lyn,

thank you for your honest investment reporting. Could you please tell me what sites I need to belong to so I don't miss your reports and receive them in a timely manner. Thank you again for the work you do.

Farb

But not for long 😂

$1,000,000 per bitcoin

Coincidence, that there is 2.1 quadrillion #sats in all #Bitcoin protocol. I think not.

Oh noes! How will the keynesian/MMT economists ever cut their pizza?!?

The nickel should be on notice.

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.