Probably just coincidence; there’s probably as many as fell on the first of the month or the 23rd or whatever.
If there is a lunar influence, it should happen at the moon’s nearest approach - its perigee. I took a look and the last perigee was on 1/21/23 (and will recur every 29 days or so). As it happens, it was the closest perigee on a new moon since the middle ages.
https://www.timeanddate.com/astronomy/moon/lunar-perigee-apogee.html
I believe that it has more to do with the pull of the Moon on the water covering most of the Earth. I used to live around Anchorage, Alaska and was always fascinated by the water movement in the North Pacific during the Full Moon tides (and to a lesser extent the New Moon tides). When one realizes the weight of all that water sloshing around the various basins on the surface it is staggering. Additionally, I worked most of my lengthy medical career in Emergency Medicine where all of the staff learned to anticipate how the phases of the Moon affected the craziness of the ER. We humans are, after all, mostly water. None of this is scientific but it certainly corresponds to many years of observations. Anyone who has been a first responder will know exactly what I am referring to.