Broker Check
Jose M Borro II
Jose M Borro II
AirMar Wealth Management Financial Planner
https://www.prudential.com/advisor/jose-borro (561) 206-5366

Jose M. Borro II, CPFA®
Founder, AirMar Wealth Management

Born and raised in Naples, Florida, Jose is the son of Cuban immigrants whose sacrifices shaped his values: freedom, family, and opportunity. That legacy is the heart of everything we do at AirMar.

After more than a decade in the financial industry, Jose founded AirMar Wealth Management to offer something often missing in finance—human advice, grounded in trust, values, and lived experience. Every strategy we create is designed around one central truth: your life comes first.

When he’s not helping clients shape their futures, Jose is enjoying his own—boating along the Atlantic with his wife Lauren, adventuring with their son Judah, and soaking in the Florida lifestyle that inspires the AirMar name.

Licenses & Credentials:

  • FINRA Series 7 & 66 held with LPL Enterprise
  • Florida 2-15 Life, Health & Variable Annuity License
  • Certified Plan Fiduciary Advisor (CPFA®)

How Big is Money?

Money

How BIG is Money?

With the advent of online payment systems and the rise of debit cards, physical currency may seem like a relic of a bygone era. But right now, there’s still a lot of it going around.

Let’s examine how the total amount of United States, Euro, Yen, and total worldwide currency actually looks. Spoiler alert: it’s big.

The Dollar

The United States dollar is the world's most traded currency, with 2.4 trillion dollars circulating in coinage and notes.1, 2

So, how big is a dollar?

Stacked together, the 55.4 billion notes currently in circulation would take up nearly 2 million cubic feet of space.3, 4

That amount of currency would fill 20 Olympic-sized swimming pools...5

...and would fill the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool in the US Capital two-and-a-half times over.5

Keep exploring! Click on another currency below to discover its true size.

The Euro

The Euro is the second most popular traded currency in the world, and the most popular in Europe.2

There are 15 billion €50 notes in circulation.

So, how big is the Euro? At 16.7 square inches each, all the €50 notes could almost completely cover Washington D.C.6,7,8

or half of Dublin...8

...or Disney World 1.5 times over.8,9

Keep exploring! Click on another currency below to discover its true size.

The Yen

The Japanese yen is the third most traded currency in the world, and the most popular in Asia.2

So, how big is the yen?

There are 18.7 billion ¥ banknotes in circulation, long enough to circle the globe about 72 times...10

could climb Mount Fuji 491 times...10

...or go to the moon and back 4 times.10

Keep exploring! Click on another currency below to discover its true size.

Total Worldwide

There’s a name for the total amount of actual currency stuffed into people’s pockets, lost in couch cushions, and stored in bank vaults. Economists call it M0.19

So, what’s the M0 for the entire planet? Something close to $8.275 trillion.11

Turns out that $5 trillion, or M0, takes up a lot of space. But we have to do a bit of abstracting to properly visualize it.

Let's assume that $8.275 trillion comes to us in $100 bills.

It would weigh 3.5 times as much as the Statue of Liberty.12,13

It would cover the Grand Canyon 11,000 times over...14

...and laid end-to-end, that M0 measure of $100 bills would circle all of planet Earth 322 times.15

Now that's a lot of dough.

Keep exploring! Click on another currency below to discover its true size.

Sources

  1. Investopedia.com, January 18, 2025
  2. FederalReserve.gov, August 27, 2025
  3. Wikipedia.org, August 27, 2025
  4. FederalReserve.gov, August 27, 2025
  5. TheMeasureofThings.com, August 27, 2025
  6. ECB.eu, August 27, 2025
  7. ECB.eu, August 27, 2025
  8. TheMeasureofThings.com, August 27, 2025
  1. Any companies mentioned are for illustrative purposes only. It should not be considered a solicitation for the purchase or sale of the securities.
  2. BOJ.jp, August 27, 2025
  3. GoBankingRates.com, May 15, 2025
  4. USCurrency.gov, August 27, 2025
  5. TheMeasureofThings.com, August 27, 2025
  6. NPS.gov, August 27, 2025
  7. Wikipedia.org, August 27, 2025

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