There is “too much money to spend,” and this will help Bitcoin (BTC) reach its next phase of huge price increases, analysts believe.

In a blog post on Aug. 25, Jeroen Blokland, portfolio manager at asset manager Robeco, noted that U.S. M2 money velocity had hit historic lows.

“Too much money to spend”

Velocity measures the speed at which money moves around the economy, and 2020 has seen a crash in the metric.

“Theoretically, the velocity of money rises when economic activity increases,” Blokland wrote. 

“While the sudden economic stop obviously resulted in much lower economic activity, the sharp decline also suggests there is just too much money to spend. A quick look at central bank balance sheets confirms this.”

The huge money printing activities by the Federal Reserve alone have characterized the period since March, when coronavirus sparked a cross-asset market crash.

U.S. money velocity chart

U.S. money velocity chart. Source: Robeco

The Fed’s vicious circle: more inflation, more money

As Cointelegraph reported, rising central bank balance sheets in G4 nations have come in tandem with rises in safe haven assets — Bitcoin, gold and silver.

For PlanB, the quant analyst behind Bitcoin’s stock-to-flow price forecasting models, the collapse in money velocity will only serve to speed the largest cryptocurrency on its way to recent predictions — an average of $288,000 by 2024.

The stock-to-flow cross-asset model (S2FX) delivers multiple “phases” of Bitcoin as an asset, and the $288,000 price point forms part of phase five.

“S2FX: $288k is the cluster center (S2F-marketvalue centroid) of next phase, like $6700 was the cluster center of last/current phase,” PlanB tweeted in March, commenting on an explanatory chart.

“We don't know exactly (yet) when phase 5 starts and ends, but looking at past clusters: roughly 6 months after 2020 halving, until 2024 halving+6m.”

Meanwhile, Blokland warned about the impact of low velocity on financial policy. This week, the Fed is widely tipped to announce plans to raise its inflation target to up to 4%.

“The low velocity of money also means that even more money is needed to create inflation. So far, however, this has only resulted in asset price inflation,” he added.