Fed Drains $45 Billion From Repo Market, Back To October Level. T-Bill Purchases Continue. Assets Shrink By Most Since QT

Wolf Richter profile picture
Wolf Richter
4.21K Followers

Summary

  • The feared chaos in the repo market over the year-end period didn't materialize as the Fed had flooded the market with cash via repo operations and purchases of T-bills.
  • From September 2019 when the repo market blew out through January 1, the Fed engaged in a series of repo market interventions.
  • As of now, various Fed heads have fanned out across the land to pat each other publicly on the back about how well the repo crisis has been resolved.

The week after the year-end Repo Chaos didn't happen.

The feared chaos in the repo market over the year-end period didn't materialize as the Fed had flooded the market with cash via repo operations and purchases of T-bills (Treasury securities with maturities of one year or less). This kept repo rates glued to the bottom of the Fed's target range for the federal funds rate at just over 1.5%. But it sure took a big flood of liquidity to douse that potential chaos - $410 billion between September and January 1 - and now some of that liquidity got drained.

As of the evening of January 8, the Fed had drained $45 billion in liquidity from the repo market, according to the Fed's weekly balance sheet released this afternoon, bringing the total repo balance down from $256 billion on January 1, to $211 billion on January 8. This was by far the biggest weekly drop in total repo balances since September. It knocked repo balances down below where they'd first been at the end of October:

From September 2019 when the repo market blew out through January 1, the Fed engaged in a series of repo market interventions. Under these repurchase agreements, the Fed buys securities (mostly Treasuries) with a commitment to sell them back on a set date and at a set price. The repo takes securities off the counterparties' hands and puts cash into their hands, which adds liquidity to the market. At maturity, the repo unwinds, the transaction reverses, and that liquidity is drained from the market. Overnight repos unwind the next day. Term repos unwind, for example, in 7 days or 14 days. This repo activity is a constant in-and-out.

Over the same period from September through January 1, the Fed had also increased its holdings of

This article was written by

Wolf Richter profile picture
4.21K Followers
Wolf Richter is the publisher of wolfstreet.com, a site focused on business, finance, and money. The site is free. In addition to the many years at wolfstreet.com and its predecessor site, he has 20 years of C-level operations and finance experience.

Recommended For You

Comments (37)

To ensure this doesn’t happen in the future, please enable Javascript and cookies in your browser.
Is this happening to you frequently? Please report it on our feedback forum.
If you have an ad-blocker enabled you may be blocked from proceeding. Please disable your ad-blocker and refresh.