Nvidia (NVDA) vs Fed Balance Sheet
Nvidia (NVDA) and the Federal Reserve balance sheet (FRED series WALCL, published every Thursday in the H.4.1 release) sit at opposite ends of the duration spectrum: NVDA is the most discount-rate-sensitive mega-cap because the AI infrastructure thesis pushes the bulk of its modeled cash flows out 5 to 15 years, while WALCL is the literal meter of central-bank liquidity. The April 23, 2026 H.4.1 print marked WALCL at $6.70 trillion, down from the March 2022 peak near $8.97 trillion and stabilizing after the Fed ended quantitative tightening in December 2025.
Also known as: Nvidia (NVDA) (STK_NVDA, Nvidia) · Fed Balance Sheet (Fed BS, balance sheet, QE, QT)
Why This Comparison Matters
Nvidia (NVDA) and the Federal Reserve balance sheet (FRED series WALCL, published every Thursday in the H.4.1 release) sit at opposite ends of the duration spectrum: NVDA is the most discount-rate-sensitive mega-cap because the AI infrastructure thesis pushes the bulk of its modeled cash flows out 5 to 15 years, while WALCL is the literal meter of central-bank liquidity. The April 23, 2026 H.4.1 print marked WALCL at $6.70 trillion, down from the March 2022 peak near $8.97 trillion and stabilizing after the Fed ended quantitative tightening in December 2025. NVDA closed April 29, 2026 at $209.25, just below the April 27 all-time high of $216.61, after a 2022 drawdown of roughly 65 percent during the prior tightening cycle. The pair is the cleanest expression of whether AI-specific earnings power can override the discount-rate path.
What the NVDA-WALCL pair actually measures
Nvidia is now the clearest single-stock proxy for the AI capex cycle: hyperscaler capex commitments from Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta and a widening set of sovereign and tier-2 cloud buyers route through Nvidia GPUs, with multi-year lead times on Blackwell and Rubin platform deliveries. WALCL captures the Federal Reserve System's total assets less eliminations from consolidation, the headline number on the H.4.1 statistical release that the Federal Reserve Board has published every Thursday since 1996.
The macro question the spread answers is whether liquidity creation by the central bank is the binding constraint on Nvidia's multiple, or whether the AI capex flywheel has decoupled NVDA from the central-bank liquidity backdrop. From January 2022 through October 2022, WALCL contracted by roughly $300 billion as the Fed began QT, and NVDA fell about 65 percent peak-to-trough. From early 2023 through late 2024, WALCL contracted by another $1.4 trillion while NVDA rose more than 800 percent. That single regime contradicts the textbook QE-equals-multiple-expansion script and is what makes the pair worth tracking explicitly.
The 2025 QT halt and why the relationship reset
On December 18, 2024 the FOMC announced that quantitative tightening would slow further in early 2025, capping monthly Treasury runoff at $5 billion from the prior $25 billion and leaving the agency MBS cap at $35 billion. The Fed ended balance-sheet runoff entirely in December 2025 and now reinvests maturing Treasuries to match trend reserve demand, with MBS holdings still grinding lower as principal returns. The result is that WALCL has stabilized in a narrow band between $6.6 and $6.8 trillion through the first four months of 2026.
Conditional Forward Response (Tail Events)
How Fed Balance Sheet has historically behaved in the 5 sessions following a top-decile or bottom-decile daily move in Nvidia (NVDA). Computed from 255 aligned daily observations ending .
Following these triggers, Fed Balance Sheet falls 0.56% on average over the next 5 sessions, versus an unconditional baseline of -0.41%. 26 qualifying events; Fed Balance Sheet closed positive in 27% of them.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where do I find current Fed balance sheet data?+
The Federal Reserve Board publishes the H.4.1 statistical release every Thursday at 4:30pm ET, with the headline total assets line showing as the FRED series WALCL. The release for the week ending April 23, 2026 showed total assets of $6.70 trillion, down from the March 2022 peak of approximately $8.97 trillion. The Fed maintains the full archive at federalreserve.gov/releases/h41 and FRED carries the time series with weekly granularity going back to December 2002.
Why did NVDA rally during 2023-2024 quantitative tightening?+
Two specific drivers overrode the QT headwind. First, the Treasury General Account and reverse repo facility drained simultaneously, releasing roughly $2.3 trillion of bank reserves into the system even as WALCL fell, so the relevant net liquidity measure was actually expansionary on the margin. Second, Nvidia's May 24, 2023 fiscal Q1 print, with $11 billion guided revenue against consensus near $7.2 billion, established the AI capex flywheel as a stand-alone earnings story independent of the central-bank backdrop. The combination is why headline WALCL became a poor explanatory variable through that window.
What is the typical NVDA correlation with WALCL?+
The 90-day rolling correlation between NVDA returns and WALCL changes has averaged roughly 0.2 to 0.4 over the past decade but has had three distinct regimes. During QE expansions (2020-2021) the correlation ran near 0.6. During QT (2022) it ran near 0.5. During the 2023-2024 AI rerate it fell below 0.1 and was negative for several windows. The wide range is what makes the pair a regime-diagnostic rather than a stable-correlation trade.
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Data sourced from FRED, CoinGecko, CBOE, and other providers. This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results.