Global Liquidity Transmission Mechanism
Global liquidity flows transmit risk appetite across borders, and traders who track central bank balance sheets and dollar funding can anticipate cross-asset moves.
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Global Liquidity Transmission Mechanism
Money has to go somewhere. When central banks expand liquidity, that capital flows across borders into equities, bonds, currencies, and commodities in predictable ways. Traders who understand the transmission mechanism can see the macro tide before it shows up in individual charts.
What "global liquidity" means
Global liquidity is the pool of investable capital sloshing around the world, driven by: central bank balance sheets (Fed, ECB, BOJ, PBOC) — QE expands it, QT contracts it; bank credit creation (commercial lending expands money supply); dollar funding conditions (most global trade and debt is dollar-denominated); and the FX swap basis (the cost of borrowing dollars offshore, a key stress gauge). When liquidity expands, risk assets tend to rise together. When it contracts, the reverse happens.
The transmission channels
Liquidity doesn't spread evenly. It moves through specific channels: US Treasury yields — lower US yields mean cheaper global borrowing, sending capital into EM and risk assets; dollar strength — a weak dollar eases global financial conditions; a strong dollar tightens them, especially for EM dollar debtors; carry trades — low-yield currencies (JPY, CHF) fund high-yield assets (EM, AUD, NZD), expanding when liquidity is ample and unwinding violently when it tightens; cross-border equity flows — loose monetary policy pushes capital into EM equities and frontier markets.
The dollar as global governor
Because so much global debt is dollar-denominated, the dollar functions as a global financial conditions governor. When the dollar strengthens: EM dollar debtors face higher servicing costs, capital repatriates to the US, the cross-currency basis widens (dollar funding gets scarce), and global risk assets come under pressure. This is why a surging DXY is one of the most powerful risk-off signals in the world — more reliable than most equity indicators.
How to track global liquidity
Build a dashboard with: Fed, ECB, BOJ, PBOC balance sheet trends (weekly/monthly); DXY and the cross-currency basis (daily); US 10-year real yield (daily); global high-yield credit spreads (weekly); EM equity ETFs vs. US equity ETFs (relative strength). When global liquidity is expanding — falling real yields, weak dollar, narrowing credit spreads, EM outperformance — bias toward risk-on trades. When it's contracting, do the opposite.
The bottom line
Global liquidity is the wind behind every asset. Track central bank balance sheets, the dollar, and funding stress, and you'll know whether the wind is at your back or in your face. Most retail traders trade the surf without ever looking at the tide.
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