Hold onto your wallets—the crypto rollercoaster is climbing again.
Global M2 just punched through its ceiling, and Bitcoin’s licking its chops. Liquidity tsunami incoming? Check. Institutional FOMO? Double-check. Another ‘number go up’ cycle? Almost guaranteed.
The setup: Central banks keep printing, savers keep losing, and Bitcoin’s hard cap starts looking like the only life raft in a sea of inflationary madness. Traders are already front-running the halving’s supply shock—because nothing screams ‘bull market’ like a asset that gets scarcer while fiat gets laughably abundant.
The kicker? This time Wall Street’s ‘digital gold’ narrative has actual ETFs behind it. Cue the ironic applause as the same suits who mocked crypto now scramble for exposure.
Prediction: ATH falls before the Fed’s next ‘transitory inflation’ press conference. (Pro tip: When M2 moons, ‘store of value’ plays win. Even your boomer uncle’s financial advisor is figuring that out—slowly.)

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Global Macro Investor Raoul Pal's founder had earlier noted the correlation between global liquidity and Bitcoin's price. He said rising global liquidity drives up to 90% of Bitcoin’s price.
Notably, major bull runs in 2013, 2017, and 2021 occurred shortly after notable increases in global M2. The same pattern appears to be repeating in 2024–2025.
Current Weakness May Be Temporary
For instance, after the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, global M2 surged, and
bitcoin rallied above $60,000, reaching the then-new all-time high above $64,000. In 2022 and 2023, as central banks tightened liquidity, Bitcoin experienced a significant correction.
On July 23, 2025, M2 climbed again to a new all-time high of $95,209 trillion, and Bitcoin’s recent price action has shown signs of following that trend, although with some delay. This alignment suggests investors treat the asset as a hedge or beneficiary of loose monetary conditions.
The latest upward move began in late 2023, as global M2 rebounded following a post-pandemic slowdown. Bitcoin responded by climbing sharply throughout early 2024 and remains elevated despite occasional price fluctuations.
While Bitcoin's recent decline may reflect short-term profit-taking, the broader liquidity trend remains supportive. The analysis suggests that Bitcoin could potentially surpass previous highs, above $123,000, which was recorded last week as global M2 reaches a new all-time high.
Experts Expect Bitcoin to Trade Above $200K
Meanwhile, several industry leaders have made bold predictions about Bitcoin’s price trajectory this year. Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad, Poor Dad, forecasted that Bitcoin could trade between $180,000 and $200,000 in 2025. HC Wainwright, a New York-based investment firm, projected a year-end target of $225,000, citing Bitcoin’s historical cyclical trends.
Similarly, Tom Lee of Fundstrat predicted Bitcoin could reach $250,000, attributing the potential surge to macroeconomic changes such as expected interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. Looking ahead, Michael Saylor, executive chairman of MicroStrategy, set a long-term price target of $13 million by 2045.