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Global Financial Data Adds New Money Supply Files

Global Financial Data has added 50 new Money Supply files. With these additions, the GFDatabase now includes data on the Money Supply from over 100 countries. You can find these files by going to GFD’s search engine and choosing Currency in Circulation, M1, M2 or M3 under the Main Indicators. This will provide you with a list of the countries for which GFD has Money Supply data. To obtain the Money Supply for a particular country you can use the mnemonic MS + 3-letter ISO Code + M0 for Currency in Circulation, + M1 for the M1 Money Supply, + M2 for the M2 Money Supply or + M3 for the M3 Money supply. Consequently, the M1 Money Supply for the United States is MSUSAM1 and the Currency in Circulation for the United Kingdom is MSGBRM0, which begins in 1696. You can also divide the money supply values by GDP to calculate any of these four measures as a share of GDP.

Information on the money supply is an important indicator of future inflation. As Milton Friedman said, “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.” There is a very high correlation between long-term changes in the money supply and long-term changes in Consumer Prices. If you look at the hyperinflations that occurred in Germany, Hungary, Yugoslavia or Zimbabwe in the past, or in Venezuela today, you will see that increases in the money supply preceded the inflation that followed. Since the Great Recession of 2008, however, the Federal Reserve has increased the broader money supply without an increase in the prices of goods. Nevertheless, some people point to the rise in stock prices as a consequence of the large increase in the broader measures of the money supply in the United States and in Europe.

A list of the new files is provided below:

Country Ticker Type Periodicity Begins
Albania MSALBM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 2002
Albania MSALBM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2002
Albania MSALBM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 2002
Armenia MSARMM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 2003
Armenia MSARMM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2003
Azerbaijan MSAZEM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2006
Burundi MSBDIM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 2008
Burundi MSBDIM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2008
Burundi MSBDIM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 2008
Belarus MSBLRM0 Currency in Circulation Monthly 1989
Belarus MSBLRM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1989
Czech Republic MSCZEM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 1993
Czech Republic MSCZEM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1993
Dominican Republic MSDOMM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 1996
Ecuador MSECUM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 2013
Ecuador MSECUM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2013
Honduras MSHNDM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 2001
Honduras MSHNDM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2001
Haiti MSHTIM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 2006
Haiti MSHTIM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2006
Haiti MSHTIM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 2006
Iceland MSISLM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 1994
Iceland MSISLM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1994
Iceland MSISLM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 1994
Kenya MSKENM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1995
Kenya MSKENM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 1995
Cambodia MSKHMM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1993
Cambodia MSKHMM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 1993
Sri Lanka MSLKAM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 1995
Sri Lanka MSLKAM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1995
Lithuania MSLTUM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 2015
Latvia MSLVAM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2014
Morocco MSMARM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1985
Mexico MSMEXM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2000
Malaysia MSMYSM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 1998
Nicaragua MSNICM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2001
Norway MSNORM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 2008
Peru MSPERM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 1992
Peru MSPERM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1992
Papua New Guinea MSPNGM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 2002
Papua New Guinea MSPNGM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 2002
Romania MSROUM1 M1 Money Supply Monthly 2007
Romania MSROUM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2007
Romania MSROUM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 2007
China MSCHNM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2014
Pakistan MSPAKM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 2008
Pakistan MSPAKM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 2008
Saudi Arabia MSSAUM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1993
Singapore MSSGPM2 M2 Money Supply Monthly 1991
Uruguay MSURYM3 M3 Money Supply Monthly 1998

GFD Finaeon Release Notes: May 17, 2019

GFD had minor release to our live site and data set on 5/17/2019. See below for details on the changes

1. GFD did our annual review and went back to the data published on central bank websites to compare the data published on their websites with the data in the GFDatabase to make sure the values were consistent.
2. Updated historical data for indices
3. Added additional metadata for new GFD Indices

Events in Time Anniversaries: May 2019

25 years ago: May 1994
S&P 500: 456.50 (vs. 2881.40 in 05/2019)
10-year U.S. Government Bond Yield: 7.17% (vs. 2.47% in 05/2019)
Gold: $387.60 (vs. $1287.10 in 05/2019)
Oil: $18.295 (vs. $61.65 in 05/2019)
GBP/USD: 1.5105 (vs. 1.2999 in 05/2019)
US GDP: $7,115 billion (vs. $21,062 billion in 03/2019)
US Population: 260 million (vs. 328 million in 2019)
05/04/1994: The White House recruits central banks around the world to buy the flagging dollar in the biggest show of force currency markets have seen in a decade. Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO leader Yasser Arafat sign a peace accord regarding Palestinian autonomy granting self-rule in the Gaza Strip and Jericho.
05/05/1994: American teenager Michael P. Fay is convicted and caned for vandalism.
05/06/1994: Former Arkansas state worker Paula Jones files a lawsuit against United States President Bill Clinton, alleging that he had sexually harassed her in1991. Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and French President Franois Mitterrand officiate at the opening of the Channel Tunnel.
05/10/1994: Nelson Mandela is inaugurated as South Africa’s first black president.
05/17/1994: The Fed boosts short-term interest rates 1/2 percentage point.
05/24/1994: Four men convicted of bombing the World Trade Center in New York in 1993 are each sentenced to 240 years in prison.
05/26/1994: Clinton renews China’s trading status with the U.S. while conceding that Beijing hasn’t met human-rights standards he set last year.

50 years ago: May 1969
S&P 500: 103.46 (vs. 2881.40 in 05/2019)
10-year U.S. Government Bond Yield: 6.56% (vs. 2.47% in 05/2019)
Gold: $43.075 (vs. $1287.10 in 05/2019)
Oil: $3.21 (vs. $61.65 in 05/2019)
GBP/USD: 2.3885 (vs. 1.2999 in 05/2019)
US GDP: $993 billion (vs. $21,062 billion in 03/2019)
US Population: 205 million (vs. 328 million in 2019)
05/1969: Bear Markets begin in Spain, Great Britain, Switzerland, Argentina and South Africa
05/05/1969: Money/credit pinch started taking bite out of economy. Westec Corp. plunged $36.50 on ASE as trading resumed after 2 years, 8 months, 11 days.
05/08/1969: Viet Cong offered peace plan.
05/10/1969: Vietnam War: The Battle of Dong Ap Bia begins with an assault on Hill 937. It will ultimately become known as Hamburger Hill.
05/15/1969: People’s Park: California Governor Ronald Reagan has an impromptu student park owned by University of California at Berkeley fenced off from student anti-war protestors, sparking a riot called Bloody Thursday.
/05/17/1969: Venera program: Soviet Venera 6 begins its descent into the atmosphere of Venus, sending back atmospheric data before being crushed by pressure.
05/22/1969: Apollo 10’s lunar module flies within 8.4 nautical miles (16km) of the moon’s surface.

100 years ago: May 1919
S&P 500: 9.212 (vs. 2881.40 in 05/2019)
10-year U.S. Government Bond Yield: 4.67% (vs. 2.47% in 05/2019)
Gold: $20.67 (vs. $1287.10 in 05/2019)
Oil: $4.05 (vs. $61.65 in 05/2019)
GBP/USD: 4.6325 (vs. 1.2999 in 05/2019)
US GDP: $84 billion (vs. $21,062 billion in 03/2019)
US Population: 104 million (vs. 328 million in 2019)
05/01/1919: Third Anglo-Afghan War: Amanullah led a surprise attack against the British. Mt Kelud in East Java erupts with a death toll of around 5,000 people.
05/04/1919: May Fourth Movement: Student demonstrations take place in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, protesting the Treaty of Versailles, which transferred Chinese territory to Japan.
05/07/1919: German Delegation presented with the terms of the Treaty Of Versailles
05/15/1919: Greek invasion of Smyrna. During the invasion, the Greek army kills or wounds 350 Turks. Those responsible are punished by the Greek Commander Aristides Stergiades. The Winnipeg General Strike begins. By 11:00, almost the whole working population of Winnipeg, Manitoba had walked off the job.
05/16/1919: A naval Curtiss aircraft NC-4 commanded by Albert Cushing Read leaves Trepassey, Newfoundland, for Lisbon via the Azores on the first transatlantic flight.
05/29/1919: Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity is tested (later confirmed) by Arthur Eddington and Andrew Claude de la Cherois Crommelin.

200 years ago: May 1819
S&P 500: 1.549 (vs. 2881.40 in 05/2019)
10-year U.S. Government Bond Yield: 4.688% (vs. 2.47% in 05/2019)
Gold: $19.39 (vs. $1287.10 in 05/2019)
GBP/USD: 4.5455 (vs. 1.2999 in 05/2019)
US GDP: $727 million (vs. $21,062 billion in 03/2019)
US Population: 9.379 million (vs. 328 million in 2019)
05/04/1819: City Bank, Baltimore, failed, cashier resigned
05/22/1819: The SS Savannah leaves port at Savannah, Georgia, United States, on a voyage to become the first steamship to cross the Atlantic Ocean. The ship arrived at Liverpool, England, on June 20.
05/23/1819: Princess Victoria born.
05/25/1819: The Argentine Constitution of 1819 is promulgated.

© 2019 Global Financial Data. Please feel free to redistribute this Events-in-Time Chronology and credit Global Financial Data as the source.
Source for Image of Nelson Mandela

Global Financial Data Expands its Coverage of Consumer Price Indices, Producer Price Indices and Unemployment Rates

Global Financial Data has added over 30 new Consumer Price and Producer Price Indices to its database as well as 25 new Unemployment Rates.

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Our comprehensive financial databases span global markets offering data never compiled into an electronic format. We create and generate our own proprietary data series while we continue to investigate new sources and extend existing series whenever possible. GFD supports full data transparency to enable our users to verify financial data points, tracing them back to the original source documents. GFD is the original supplier of complete historical data.