Analysis: U.S. banks face trillion-dollar reverse repo headache
						
		 
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		 [August 02, 2022]  By 
		Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss 
		 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - The trillions of 
		dollars in overnight cash tucked away daily at the Federal Reserve could 
		turn into a major headache for banks that could squeeze their balance 
		sheets and impair their ability to lend. 
		 
		The Fed's reverse repurchase facility (RRP) has attracted a wide array 
		of market participants, helping mop up excess liquidity in the financial 
		system. Led by money market funds, volume at the reverse repo window has 
		topped $2 trillion for 39 straight days.  
		 
		The Fed is paying a record reverse repo rate of 2.3% following its 
		75-basis-point interest rate hike last week. Barclays expects daily 
		reverse repo levels to hit between $2.8 trillion and $3.0 trillion by 
		the end of the year. 
		 
		Investors are effectively taking deposits away from banks and putting 
		them into government money market funds, which invest mainly in 
		Treasuries and repos. These money funds, in turn, funnel the cash to the 
		Fed's overnight window.  
		 
		Repo allocations from government money market funds have increased to 
		nearly 40% of their assets currently, from around 30% at the start of 
		the year, Barclays said. 
						
		
		  
						
		The Fed will shrink its balance sheet by $95 billion per month from 
		September, accelerating "quantitative tightening," which started in 
		June. The concern is that the outflow of deposits from banks into money 
		market funds could reduce bank reserves at a rapid pace that could 
		hinder lending activities to financial markets and the broader economy. 
		 
		GRAPHIC: Fed Balance Sheet and Bank Reserves (https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/ 
		
		gfx/mkt/byprjwzxbpe/Fed%20balance%20and%20bank%20reserves.PNG) 
		 
		The decline in bank reserves could also lead to a spike in the repo and 
		effective fed funds rate similar to what happened in September 2019 when 
		bank reserves dwindled due to heavy withdrawals for tax payments and 
		settlement of Treasury purchases at auctions. That forced the Fed to 
		provide additional reserves to the banking system.  
		 
		"The drift of reserves into money market funds and away from banks 
		constitute movement of money away from financial markets," said Matt 
		Smith, investment director at asset manager Ruffer in London, which has 
		$31 billion in assets under management. 
		 
		For now, bank reserves are still considered abundant at $3.3 trillion, 
		but the decline has been rapid, some market participants said. From a 
		peak of nearly $4.3 trillion in December last year, bank reserves have 
		declined about 23%. In the Fed's previous quantitative tightening (QT), 
		$1.3 trillion in liquidity was withdrawn in five years. 
		 
		To be sure, there are other factors that have contributed to the decline 
		in bank reserves, such as asset re-allocations and loan demand, analysts 
		said. 
		 
		MONEY MARKET FUND ASSETS 
		 
		Government money market fund assets have been fairly steady as of July 
		27, at $4.025 trillion, up about 0.1% from a week earlier, data from the 
		Investment Company Institute showed. The shift of deposits to money 
		funds has been a slow process. 
						
		
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			The Federal Reserve building is pictured in Washington, D.C., U.S., 
			August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie/File Photo 
            
			  
"The Fed's QT will shrink its balance sheet quickly. But bank reserves are set 
to fall much faster as cash shifts out of bank deposits to government-only money 
funds. We expect money funds to put this cash in the RRP," wrote Joseph Abate, 
managing director at Barclays, in a research note. 
 
Expectations that the U.S. Treasury will increase bill issuance for fiscal year 
2023, which starts in October, could help ease the surfeit of inflows into the 
reverse repo window, analysts said. 
 
Abate estimated that bank reserves will fall to $2.3 trillion this year, 
perilously near what he termed banks' "minimally ample level" of $2 trillion, as 
the exit of deposits starts to weigh on their balance sheets. 
 
Yet for many big banks, those deposits are unwanted anyway. 
 
As the Fed's balance sheet increased with quantitative easing during the 
pandemic, so did bank reserves deposited at the central bank. Once reserves 
reached a level at which banks were not willing to absorb the regulatory costs 
on their balance sheets, they started turning deposits away. 
 
The Fed in April 2020 temporarily excluded Treasuries and central bank deposits 
from the supplementary leverage ratio (SLR), a capital adequacy measure, as an 
excess of bank deposits and Treasury bonds raised bank capital requirements on 
what are viewed as safe assets. 
 
But the Fed let that SLR exclusion expire and big banks had to resume holding an 
extra layer of loss-absorbing capital against Treasuries and central bank 
deposits. 
 
"Banks are still not keen to increase deposits due to regulatory costs in the 
absence of SLR relief and want to free up their balance sheet," said Imran 
Siddiqui, portfolio manager at Mosaic Capital. "In a subtle way, they are 
sending a message to the Fed to provide some form of permanent SLR relief." 
  
  
 
Should the Fed tweak the SLR and give banks breathing room on regulatory costs, 
that should push these financial institutions to accept more deposits and help 
stabilize reserves. The Fed earlier this year said it would review this leverage 
ratio, but has yet to publish a proposal. 
 
(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Editing by Alden Bentley and Leslie 
Adler) 
				 
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