Updated June 2026 · Federal Reserve & Federal Reserve
M2 Money Supply (Year-over-Year Change) vs Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y)
M2 Money Supply (Year-over-Year Change) is currently 4.7% (up +0.1%), sourced monthly from Federal Reserve. Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) is currently 0.4pp (down -0.0pp), sourced daily from Federal Reserve. The two indicators sit in the money and rates categories of the U.S. macroeconomic data system.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Metric | M2 Money Supply (Year-over-Year Change) | Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) |
|---|---|---|
| Current value | 4.7% | 0.4pp |
| Previous reading | 4.6% | 0.42pp |
| Change | +0.1% | -0.0pp |
| Trend | up | down |
| Frequency | Monthly | Daily |
| Source | Federal Reserve | Federal Reserve |
| Last updated | 2026-04-01 | 2026-06-05 |
| Category | money | rates |
How These Two Indicators Relate
Interest rates and money-supply readings together describe the stance of monetary policy. Higher rates and slower money growth indicate restrictive policy; lower rates and faster money growth indicate accommodative policy. The combination sets the financial-conditions backdrop for everything from bank lending to corporate borrowing.
The two indicators are currently moving in opposite directions. M2 Money Supply has moved higher +0.1% from the prior reading, while Yield Curve has moved lower -0.0pp. Divergent moves on related indicators usually flag a regime shift in progress — one of the two is leading and the other is lagging.
What M2 Money Supply (Year-over-Year Change) Measures
M2 is a measure of the money supply that includes cash, checking deposits, savings deposits, money market funds, and small time deposits. Year-over-year changes in M2 are a leading indicator of inflation and economic activity.
M2 growth has recovered to 3.9% year-over-year after an unprecedented contraction in 2023 (the first in modern history). The normalization of money supply growth supports economic activity without being excessively inflationary. For executives, moderate M2 growth (3-5%) is consistent with a healthy economy — it means enough liquidity to support business activity without fueling the kind of excess that drove 2021-2022 inflation.
Methodology: The Federal Reserve reports M2 weekly and monthly. Components: M1 (currency in circulation + demand deposits + other checkable deposits) plus savings deposits, small time deposits under $100,000, and retail money market funds. M2 is the most commonly cited money supply measure because it captures both transaction and savings balances. Source: FRED at the St. Louis Fed (series M2SL).
What Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) Measures
The yield curve spread measures the difference between the 10-year and 2-year Treasury yields. When positive (normal), longer-term bonds pay more. When negative (inverted), it historically signals recession risk.
The yield curve has un-inverted to +0.41 percentage points after being inverted for much of 2023-2024. Historically, the yield curve un-inverting and steepening often occurs just before a recession starts — the recession signal is not the inversion itself, but the re-steepening. For executives, this is a watch-closely moment: the economy may be entering a transition period.
Methodology: Simply calculated as: 10-Year Treasury Yield minus 2-Year Treasury Yield. A positive spread is 'normal' (investors demand more for lending longer). An inverted curve (negative spread) has preceded every U.S. recession since 1955, with only one false signal. Source: FRED at the St. Louis Fed (series T10Y2Y).
How These Comparisons Are Built
Each pairwise comparison page is statically generated from the live indicator dataset — values, trends, and source links are pre-rendered into HTML at build time. When the underlying dataset refreshes (each indicator on its own publication schedule), the comparison page regenerates automatically. ExecBolt does not estimate, model, or interpolate any reading; every value comes from the publishing agency’s primary release. For the full sourcing approach, citation format, and known limitations, see the methodology page.
For plain-language guides to the concepts behind M2 Money Supply and Yield Curve, see the learn library. For tools that translate macro readings into business outputs (DCF, runway, break-even), see the calculators page. Authoritative external context comes from the Federal Reserve’s FRED database, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, and the SEC EDGAR system.
Frequently Asked Questions
M2 Money Supply (Year-over-Year Change) is currently 4.7%, up +0.1% from the previous reading. Source: Federal Reserve, updated monthly. M2 growth has recovered to 3.9% year-over-year after an unprecedented contraction in 2023 (the first in modern history). The normalization of money supply growth supports economic activity without being excessively infla
Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) is currently 0.4pp, down -0.0pp from the previous reading. Source: Federal Reserve, updated daily. The yield curve has un-inverted to +0.41 percentage points after being inverted for much of 2023-2024. Historically, the yield curve un-inverting and steepening often occurs just before a recession starts — the recession
Interest rates and money-supply readings together describe the stance of monetary policy. Higher rates and slower money growth indicate restrictive policy; lower rates and faster money growth indicate accommodative policy. The combination sets the financial-conditions backdrop for everything from bank lending to corporate borrowing.
M2 Money Supply (Year-over-Year Change) is published on a monthly cadence; Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) is published on a daily cadence. Higher-frequency indicators give earlier readings on the cycle but more noise; lower-frequency indicators give cleaner signal but with longer lags. Use the higher-frequency series to spot turning points and the lower-frequency series to confirm them.
M2 Money Supply (Year-over-Year Change) can be verified at FRED at the St. Louis Fed (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/). Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) can be verified at FRED at the St. Louis Fed (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/). Every reading on this page links back to the publishing agency’s primary source. ExecBolt does not estimate, model, or interpolate these values — they are pulled directly from the official release.
No. ExecBolt provides indicator readings and editorial context for informational purposes only. Macroeconomic indicators are inputs to investment analysis, not signals on their own — and the relationship between any two indicators changes across cycles. For investment-grade decisions, pair this data with a qualified financial advisor and primary-source verification.
Sources: M2 Money Supply (Year-over-Year Change) via FRED at the St. Louis Fed (series M2SL); Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) via FRED at the St. Louis Fed (series T10Y2Y). All underlying data is U.S. government public domain or industry-standard benchmark data. Suggested citation: “ExecBolt, ‘M2 Money Supply (Year-over-Year Change) vs Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y),’ execbolt.com, 2026.” Last refreshed 2026-06-07T16:41:52.498Z. Informational use only — not investment, financial, or tax advice.