It's a fair question, they're more comparisons then slices of the overall pie. What's not shown are all the debt obligations. For instance the stock market valuation doesn't account for the fact that half the companies in it might actually be in debt.
Realistically you'd show the $150-$200 trillion in true global debt obligations, most of it govt to future govt obligations, in the 'all money supply' category. Actually the current USA's own unfunded welfare state/spending/debt obligations is something ridiculous like $100-150 trillion in the coming decades.
Basically there's an extra £200Tn floating around that's nothing more than IOU's scribbled on beer mats.