Skip to main content

Fed Says Banks Cite Regulations Among Reasons for Repo Spike

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

A Federal Reserve survey found that many of the largest U.S. banks pointed to regulatory restrictions on their balance sheets and reduced risk appetite to explain why they stood on the sidelines during the mid-September spike in overnight funding rates instead of profiting from the excess demand for short-term lending, Bloomberg News reported. Three-fourths of primary dealers responding to the Fed’s December Senior Credit Officer Opinion Survey reported “basically no change” in secured lending from Sept. 16-18, compared with the first week in September, despite a higher lending rate. Fed officials had expected banks with excess liquidity to jump in with extra lending. After the disruption caused the Fed’s benchmark overnight interest rate to stray outside its target range, the central bank intervened by injecting funds into the repo market, eventually returning overnight rates to more normal levels. About three-fifths of those surveyed said they were “at least somewhat certain that the spike in overnight Treasury repo rates was driven by technical factors and thus would only be temporary.”