This is in volume 2 of Capital:

http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1885-c2/ch06.htm

We are concerned here only with the general character of the costs of
circulation, which arise out of the metamorphosis of forms alone. It
is superfluous to discuss here all their forms in detail. But how
forms which belong in the sphere of pure changes of the form of value
and hence originate from the particular social form of the process of
production, forms which in the case of the individual
commodity-producer are only transient, barely perceptible elements,
run alongside his productive functions or become intertwined with them
— how these can strike the eye as the huge costs of circulation can be
seen from just the money taken in and paid out when these operations
have become independent and concentrated on a large scale as the
exclusive function of banks, etc., or of cashiers in individual
businesses. But it must be firmly borne in mind that these costs of
circulation are not changed in character by their change in
appearance.

This is in volume 3:

http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1894-c3/ch25.htm

The other side of the credit system is connected with the development
of money-dealing, which, of course, keeps step under capitalist
production with the development of dealing in commodity. We have seen
in the preceding part (Chap. XIX) how the care of the reserve funds of
businessmen, the technical operations of receiving and disbursing
money, of international payments, and thus of the bullion trade, are
concentrated in the hands of the money-dealers. The other side of the
credit system — the management of interest-bearing capital, or
money-capital, develops alongside this money-dealing as a special
function of the money-dealers. Borrowing and lending money becomes
their particular business. They act as middlemen between the actual
lender and the borrower of money-capital. Generally speaking, this
aspect of the banking business consists of concentrating large amounts
of the loanable money-capital in the bankers' hands, so that, in place
of the individual money-lender, the bankers confront the industrial
capitalists and commercial capitalists as representatives of all
moneylenders. They become the general managers of money-capital. On
the other hand by borrowing for the entire world of commerce, they
concentrate all the borrowers vis-à-vis all the lenders. A bank
represents a centralisation of money-capital, of the lenders, on the
one hand, and on the other a centralisation of the borrowers. Its
profit is generally made by borrowing at a lower rate of interest than
it receives in loaning.

The loanable capital which the banks have at their disposal streams to
them in various ways. In the first place, being the cashiers of the
industrial capitalists, all the money-capital which every producer and
merchant must have as a reserve fund, or receives in payment, is
concentrated in their hands. These funds are thus converted into
loanable money-capital. In this way, the reserve fund of the
commercial world, because it is concentrated in a common treasury, is
reduced to its necessary minimum, and a portion of the money-capital
which would otherwise have to lie slumbering as a reserve fund, is
loaned out and serves as interest-bearing capital. In the second
place, the loanable capital of the banks is formed by the deposits of
money-capitalists who entrust them with the business of loaning them
out. Furthermore, with the development of the banking system, and
particularly as soon as banks came to pay interest on deposits, money
savings and the temporarily idle money of all classes were deposited
with them. Small amounts, each in itself incapable of acting in the
capacity of money-capital, merge together into large masses and thus
form a money power. This aggregation of small amounts must be
distinguished as a specific function of the banking system from its
go-between activities between the money-capitalists proper and the
borrowers. In the final analysis, the revenues, which are usually but
gradually consumed, are also deposited with the banks.

JH: And so on and so forth.

Note the following passage above: " In this way, the reserve fund of
the commercial world, because it is concentrated in a common treasury,
is reduced to its necessary minimum, and a portion of the
money-capital which would otherwise have to lie slumbering as a
reserve fund, is loaned out and serves as interest-bearing capital."

The mere expansion of FIRE does not mean "hypertrophy" of circulation
costs or undue lengthening of circulation time globally considered.
For capital as a whole, part of this expansion is actually a net
reduction in circulation costs and circulation time.

I hope this clarifies.
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