Fed Increases Size Of Liquidity Bailout After Brainard’s “Simple Imbalance” Comments
- Collapse ALERT?!! After last week’s Fed Repo action, the liquidity crisis should get better not worse. It is getting much worse, repo purchase increased up from US$75B to US$100B. Term repo has doubled. These are QE by another name. Are we about to face the collapse of 1 or more major banks? Has the $1.5 Quadrillion financial derivatives market blown up?
– - Fed Increases Size Of Liquidity Bailout After Brainard’s “Simple Imbalance” Comments
by Tyler Durden, https://www.zerohedge.com/
Update (1125ET): Following the major ‘over-subscription’ for liquidity this morning, NYFed has decided to dramatically increase the scale of its bailout for both overnight and term repo:
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The 14-day term repo operation will have an aggregate limit of $60b (prior similar operation Tuesday had a $30b limit). The overnight repo operation will have an aggregate limit of $100b (most recent such operation Wednesday had a limit of $75b).
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This big increase comes just minutes after Fed Governor Lael Brainard tried to clam nerves by claiming that the recent spike in overnight lending rates, which prompted the central bank to inject billions of dollars of liquidity into the market, was the result of a “simple imbalance” of supply and demand — and not a sign of deeper distress in credit markets.
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“It may simply be that we’re close to the lowest level of reserves that are necessary for the conduct of monetary policy,” Brainard said Wednesday in testimony before the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Consumer Protection and Financial Institutions.
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“It does pose questions about whether reserves in the system do need to be allowed to grow again.”
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Lael Brainard.
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In 2008, “counter parties pulled away from each other,” Brainard added. “Today we’re in a different environment.”
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It’s different this time.
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As we detailed earlier, as month-end looms, demand for dollar liquidity is accelerating dramatically with today’s Fed operation oversubscribed – with around $92 billion of demand for The Fed’s $75 billion offering…
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read more.
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