Repos, Fed Funds, And The Federal Reserve Gone Wild

Last week the repo market, where banks borrow from each other and are supposed to pay interest on their overnight loans based on the fed funds rate set by the Federal Reserve, kind of, sort of, blew up.

Despite the fed funds rate, actually it’s now a “band”, having just been lowered by the Fed to 1.75%-2.00% some banks had to pay as much as 9% to borrow overnight in the fed funds market.

That’s what I call blowing up.

Here’s what the Fed said happened, what really happened, what it says about the Federal Reserve’s control over America and how it’s all going to affect the economy and your financial future…

Here’s the Low Down on Repos and Fed Funds

Repos, short for repurchase agreements, are loans mostly banks, but also broker-dealers and other commercial entities public and private, make to each other.

Most repos are overnight loans, though they can be “term” loans for days, a week, 14-days, or longer.

They are called repurchase agreements because a bank that wants or needs to borrow short-term money from another bank hypothecates (gives as collateral) U.S. Treasuries it holds on its balance sheet against the money it borrows. When the term of the loan is up, the bank that borrowed money repurchases its hypothecated Treasuries and pays a little extra to buy its collateral back. The amount it pays up is interest.

The interest rate on repos is usually based on the fed funds rate which the Federal Reserve determines.

Since the Fed just cut the fed funds target band to 1.75% – 2.00%, the interest on repos should be somewhere in the middle of that band, approximately 1.875%. The middle of the fed funds band is called the Effective Fed Funds Rate, or EFFR.

Repos are just overnight and term loans made within what’s called the fed funds market. The Federal Reserve determines interest rates paid in the fed funds market by targeting the actual fed funds rate.

When we hear the Fed is cutting interest rates or raising them, it’s the fed funds rate they’re cutting or raising. Since the fed funds rate is the rate banks borrow at overnight from each other, it’s the “base rate” all other interest rates on other loans are based on.

At least that’s the way it’s supposed to work.

What Banks Are Missing and Hiding from You

But it sure didn’t work that way last week and isn’t working that way now.

Contrary to popular belief the Fed doesn’t just say what the fed funds rate or band is and banks just borrow from each other at that rate, or within the band, or exactly at the EFFR.

Supply and demand for cash determines what rates banks actually pay each other.

If banks start borrowing from each other at rates higher or lower than the fed funds target rate, the Fed, through its Federal Reserve Bank of New York conducts “open market operations” to get the rate in line with their targets.

Open market operations are simply the Fed itself conducting repos and reverse-repos with banks.

If the Fed does repos with banks, it’s lending them cash and taking Treasuries as collateral. If banks have more cash to lend, including to each other, the fed funds rate usually comes down.

If the Fed does reverse-repos with banks, it’s borrowing cash from the banks and giving them Treasuries as collateral. Taking money out of banks leaves them with less money to lend, if they have less money to lend to each other they charge more interest, and that raises the fed funds rate.

At least that’s the way it used to work.

Last week, and this week, and for the near-term foreseeable future banks and other borrowers had to and may have to pay more interest on loans than the EFFR or the top end of the fed funds band.

That’s either because there’s a shortage of money at banks or some banks are charging other banks a risk premium rate because they think they’re more of a credit risk, or both.

Last week when a mild panic set over the fed funds market as interest rates rose well above the Fed’s target band, the Fed sought to calm markets by calling the spike a temporary condition due to a confluence of events that weren’t properly planned for.

According to the Fed, the need to borrow heavily on Monday September 16, 2019 resulted from an unusually large auction of Treasuries sold the Friday before, the purchase of which by banks was settling on Monday, meaning they had to pay for the tens of billions of dollars of Treasuries they’d bought, and on Monday corporations drew down balances in their banks to pay their quarterly taxes to the Treasury.

That’s all true. What’s not true, however, is that those events weren’t planned for.

Banks that bought Treasuries on Friday knew they had to settle on Monday. And banks knew companies were going to pay their quarterly taxes by writing checks against their bank balances.

How could banks not be prepared and have enough cash to meet demands?

Why would they have to pay interest way above the fed funds rate to borrow from each other?

Why would the Fed have to revert to conducting essentially emergency repos (the Fed hasn’t conducted open market repo operations since 2008) with banks to the tune of $75 billion on Monday alone?

Why would the Fed have to conduct more repos on Tuesday and the rest of last week and all this week?

Because they’ve lost control of the fed funds market and of banks because they’ve run amok and are in uncharted waters of their own stirring.

Disclosure: None.

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