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Fed Takes Big Step Toward Preventing More Repo-Market Blowups

Fed Establishes Domestic and Foreign Standing Repo Facilities

The Federal Reserve has toyed for years with opening something called a standing repo facility to prevent short-term rates markets from blowing up. Following a 2019 disruption and another early in the pandemic, the central bank finally took that step.

The permanent repurchase-agreement facility, one for domestic firms and another for foreign ones, will backstop money markets, which were hobbled last year as Covid gripped the global economy. The decision to create the facilities followed several years of discussion within the market about whether they are needed and what form they might take. The Fed already has temporary repo facilities.

The Fed is taking action at a time when the market is being pressured by problems that are essentially opposite to the ones it faced during the turmoil seen in recent years.Continued Fed asset purchases, the Treasury cutting its cash balance because of the debt ceiling and other issues have created a glut of cash at the front-end. That’s suppressed rates on repo, Treasury bills and related instruments.

The September 2019 tumult was marked by a huge, sudden spike in rates.

“The Fed is making hay while the sun shines and making sure 2019 is never repeated,” said Gennadiy Goldberg, senior U.S. interest rates strategist at TD Securities. “They can alter the facility details in the future if needed, but realize that it will take time to set up and expand to other counterparties, so they are setting it up long before they need it.”

Key Insights

  • Fed policy makers have been discussing a standing repo facility since the beginning of 2019, well before rates on overnight repurchase agreements spiked as high as 10% in September of that year.
  • The repo turmoil renewed calls for permanent action, though the Fed had been conducting daily overnight repo operations since September 2019, though the operations have gone unused since July 2020 as the Federal Reserve and Treasury flooded funding markets with liquidity in response to the pandemic.
  • Discussions of a standing repo facility ramped up in 2021, when the minutes from the April Federal Open Market Committee meeting showed that a substantial majority of officials “saw the potential benefits of an appropriately calibrated facility as outweighing the potential costs.”
  • And at the May 4 Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee, a presenting member said one of the most promising policy proposals to improve Treasury market functioning would be a standing repo facility.
  • Minutes from the June 15-16 FOMC showed a resumption of the discussion of a standing repo facility, with Fed Chairman Jerome Powell asking staff to work on a proposal that reflects the views expressed by participants.

Get More

  • A story on a panel of former top global economic policy makers that released a raft of recommendations to bolster the resilience of the market for Treasuries
  • Minutes from the June 15-16 FOMC meeting
  • A Bank Policy Institute blog post on the standing repo facility

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