Fed Balance Sheet Hits $6.74T as Top 20% Earners Drive 58% of US Spending

What You Need to Know
- Federal Reserve balance sheet reached $6.74 trillion in June 2025, highest since March 2025.
- Top 20% of American earners now account for 58% of personal consumption, a record high.
- Top quintile spending grew 8.3% annually since 2020, versus 4.5% for bottom 80%.
- Bottom 80% of earners now represent 42% of consumer spending, down from roughly 50%.
The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet reached $6.74 trillion in the week ending June 17, its highest point since March 2025, driven primarily by a rise in Treasury holdings to $4.49 trillion. At the same time, new spending data shows the top 20% of American earners now account for 58% of all personal consumption, the highest share on record.
These two data points are not unrelated. Since 2020, the Fed’s asset purchases and near-zero rate policies disproportionately inflated the value of financial assets, which are held overwhelmingly by higher-income households. The balance sheet expansion of the pandemic era did not distribute gains evenly, and the spending data is now making that visible in consumption patterns rather than just asset prices. The top quintile’s spending has grown at 8.3% annually since 2020, versus 4.5% for the bottom 80%. That gap compounds. For crypto markets specifically, this bifurcation matters because the institutional and high-net-worth capital that has driven spot Bitcoin ETF inflows and venture activity in this cycle is drawing from the same concentrated pool of wealth that these figures describe.
The bottom 80% of earners, who once represented roughly half of all US consumer spending, now account for just 42%. That is not a rounding error.
For anyone trying to read macro conditions into crypto market structure, the composition of consumer spending is a more honest signal than headline GDP. An economy where growth is increasingly narrow concentrates both the risk appetite and the redemption pressure in a smaller group of participants. When that group rotates out of risk assets, the moves tend to be faster and less telegraphed than broad retail-driven selloffs. The Fed’s mortgage-backed securities portfolio continuing to fall, now at its lowest level since September 2020, suggests the balance sheet growth is not a return to broad stimulus but a more specific Treasury-driven dynamic, which has different downstream effects on liquidity than the 2020-2021 expansion did.
The Fed balance sheet remains well below its pandemic peak, and the $162.8 billion increase since January is modest in historical context. Whether Treasury holdings continue rising or stabilize will shape how much of this year’s liquidity expansion translates into sustained risk appetite across asset classes, including digital assets, through the second half of the year.
0 Comments