Fed liquidity drains moves spotlight to usage of new lending facility
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[December 27, 2023] By
Michael S. Derby
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The traditional turbulence of money markets at
year's end could pose a first test for a new and so far largely unused
central bank liquidity facility, but a shift to full scale activity
likely still lies some time off into next year.
Some market participants reckon that the Fed’s Standing Repo Facility,
which it formally adopted in 2021, may see some noticeable usage over
the turn of the year as traders and investors manage their money during
a predictably volatile period. If that happens, it would not be a sign
of distress, but of the financial plumbing system working as intended.
The Standing Repo Facility, or SRF, takes in Treasury securities from
eligible financial firms - they are mainly the mega banks that normally
support the government securities market and serve as counterparties to
Fed interventions - and converts them quickly into cash.
Scarred by Treasury bond owners’ severe liquidity problems in the spring
of 2020, the facility is designed to be a sort of automatic stabilizer
for markets. The facility is also designed to lift from the Fed at least
some of the burden of discretionary liquidity operations, of the sort it
was forced to resort to in the fall of 2019 when market liquidity ran
short.
So far, markets, still awash in Fed-created money, haven’t needed to tap
the SRF in a meaningful fashion. But what appears to be some recent
small-scale testing has reminded markets that if not soon, the day is
coming where the SRF will be in the mix.
The end of 2023 “could mark the christening of the SRF,” said Scott
Skyrm of money market trading firm Curvature Securities. He noted that a
key borrowing level for short term markets called the general collateral
repo rate has been trading above the 5.5% SRF rate which creates “a
small incentive” for eligible firms to go to the Fed as the year draws
to a close.
THE MAIN EVENT
But any SRF usage now would likely be quite small. The bigger test lies
down the road as the Fed presses forward with its ongoing effort to
shrink the size of its balance sheet. That effort is drawing liquidity
from the financial system and Fed officials expect the process, which is
allowing just shy of $100 billion per month in Fed-owned bonds to mature
and not be replaced, to run for quite some time.
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The Federal Reserve building is seen in Washington, U.S., January
26, 2022. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo/File Photo
“I don't know at what point, you know, how things will transpire
over the next year,” Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John
Williams said in a television interview on Dec. 15. The draw down is
“going according to plan” and reserves are still quite abundant, he
said, suggesting no imminent need for the Fed to slow or stop the
contraction of its balance sheet.
Markets, however, are less confident in that outlook, and they’ve
been eyeing somewhere around a second to third quarter stopping
point. Some of that projection rests on the idea that another Fed
liquidity tool, the reverse repo facility, has been falling very
rapidly over recent months. After hitting a record $2.6 trillion at
the end of last year, it’s fallen markedly and stood at about $794
billion on Tuesday.
It’s unclear if the reverse repo facility, which takes in cash
largely from money market funds and is designed to provide a floor
for short-term rates, will return to negligible usage or whether
some cash will remain.
A report from the New York Fed on Dec. 19 said conditions in the
banking sector argue for continued contraction. It noted if reverse
repos continue to fall, “such a steady decline would be consistent
with that observed in early 2018, when investment at the [reverse
repo facility] gradually disappeared as the Federal Reserve
continued to normalize the size of its balance sheet and reserves in
the banking system became less abundant.”
Joseph Wang, chief investment officer at Monetary Macro, believes
the fate of the reverse repo facility is the key barometer of when
the SRF will spring into life.
“I wouldn’t expect meaningful usage until the [reverse repo
facility] is at 0” and the Secure Overnight Financial Rate matches
the rate offered on the SRF. Reverse repo utilization “should be
around 0 first half of next year, and thereafter rates could drift
higher towards the [SRF] offering rate. So I don’t expect meaningful
usage for some time.”
(Reporting by Michael S. Derby)
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