According to the latest data from 【Coin World】, the Trading Margin debt in the United States saw a significant rise in November. This month alone surged by 30 billion USD, reaching a historical high of 1.21 trillion USD. What is even more noteworthy is that this marks the 7th consecutive month of continuous increase.
How exaggerated is the cumulative increase over seven months? The growth of 364 billion dollars has reached an annual growth rate of 43%. Excluding inflation, there is still a month-on-month increase of 2% and a year-on-year growth of 32%. In other words, no matter how you calculate it, the leverage in the US investment market is going crazy.
More dangerous signals come from the ratio of Margin debt to the M2 money supply. This ratio has soared to about 5.5%, a level not seen since 2007. Think about it, this ratio is even higher than during the internet bubble in 2000 — a time when many investors lost everything.
For friends who are not very familiar, let me explain simply: Trading Margin debt is the total amount of money that investors borrow from brokers to buy stocks or other securities. This mechanism allows investors to amplify their investment scale with less own capital, thereby magnifying potential returns. Sounds good, right? But this double-edged sword also amplifies risks – when the market fluctuates in the opposite direction, losses will be magnified by the same magnitude.
How outrageous is the leverage ratio in the US investment market right now? From these data, it has really reached a dangerous boundary.
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CryptoCrazyGF
· 1h ago
Starting to leverage crazily again, and this time it's really a bit scary... 1.21 trillion, is it crazier than the internet bubble?
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TokenSleuth
· 5h ago
Wow, 12.1 trillion? This leverage is crazier than the internet bubble, is it going to explode?
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Another 7 months of continuous rise... It really feels different this time
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43% year-on-year rise is ridiculous, is anyone still all in?
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5.5% ratio... Investors from 2000 might still be dreaming
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The American market is killing itself, it will have to pay off the debt sooner or later
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Can't wait to see the upcoming big dump show, it can't keep rising like this
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LostBetweenChains
· 13h ago
Oh my, 12.1 trillion is still surging up crazily? This number gives me goosebumps, it feels like another round of major reshuffling is about to happen.
Was the internet bubble ever this outrageous? Is it true?
At this rate, the US stock market is on the verge of a crash.
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MevShadowranger
· 12-21 08:50
Here we go again, leveraging up... Isn't this just a repeat of 2008? It's really going to blow up.
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TestnetNomad
· 12-21 08:50
Oh my, this leverage is even more fierce than the internet bubble; the lessons from 2000 have truly been wasted.
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MondayYoloFridayCry
· 12-21 08:46
Oh my, 12.1 trillion in leverage, this number is mind-boggling.
Still climbing for 7 consecutive months? The US stock market is playing with fire here.
It wasn't this intense back in 2000; if it blows up this time...
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ReverseTradingGuru
· 12-21 08:38
Here it comes again, leveraging up... Is it crazier than the internet bubble this time? Oh my, I just want to know who will catch a falling knife this time.
US margin debt hits an all-time high: leverage has surpassed the internet bubble period.
According to the latest data from 【Coin World】, the Trading Margin debt in the United States saw a significant rise in November. This month alone surged by 30 billion USD, reaching a historical high of 1.21 trillion USD. What is even more noteworthy is that this marks the 7th consecutive month of continuous increase.
How exaggerated is the cumulative increase over seven months? The growth of 364 billion dollars has reached an annual growth rate of 43%. Excluding inflation, there is still a month-on-month increase of 2% and a year-on-year growth of 32%. In other words, no matter how you calculate it, the leverage in the US investment market is going crazy.
More dangerous signals come from the ratio of Margin debt to the M2 money supply. This ratio has soared to about 5.5%, a level not seen since 2007. Think about it, this ratio is even higher than during the internet bubble in 2000 — a time when many investors lost everything.
For friends who are not very familiar, let me explain simply: Trading Margin debt is the total amount of money that investors borrow from brokers to buy stocks or other securities. This mechanism allows investors to amplify their investment scale with less own capital, thereby magnifying potential returns. Sounds good, right? But this double-edged sword also amplifies risks – when the market fluctuates in the opposite direction, losses will be magnified by the same magnitude.
How outrageous is the leverage ratio in the US investment market right now? From these data, it has really reached a dangerous boundary.