It seems that the Federal Reserve has been injecting money into the market through overnight repurchase agreements all year, but don’t misunderstand—this isn’t a move toward a large-scale quantitative easing. Essentially, it’s about paying the bill for the pandemic-related QT while ensuring that the federal funds rate stays within the set target range. What’s the real concern? It’s the fear of a repeat of the September 2019 REPO crisis.
Speaking of that crisis, what was the situation back then? Repo market liquidity suddenly tightened, and overnight repo rates skyrocketed. SOFR jumped from 2.43% to 5.25%, with intraday highs even reaching 10%. Meanwhile, the federal funds target range was only 2.00%-2.25%, which was quite a discrepancy. Even worse, spillover effects began to appear: pressure from the repo market transmitted to the federal funds market, pushing the effective federal funds rate (EFFR) up to 2.30%, directly breaking through the upper limit of the target range.
The Fed’s two main tools are controlling inflation and promoting employment. Injecting liquidity through overnight repos is fundamentally about preventing short-term liquidity crises, not about launching a new round of QE.
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Whale_Whisperer
· 1h ago
Here we go again. Every time, they say it's not QE, but the money in the market keeps increasing. This excuse is getting old.
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SybilSlayer
· 10h ago
Here we go again with this routine. The Federal Reserve says it's not QE, so it's not QE? Just a war of words... The overnight repurchase agreements have accumulated to this point, and it's no longer just about prevention.
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BankruptWorker
· 13h ago
Coming back with this again? It feels like the Federal Reserve is just patching things up. Can it really plug the holes?
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fomo_fighter
· 13h ago
Is the repo market about to crash again? I knew this year's liquidity was so strange, I thought I was seeing things haha
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Rugpull幸存者
· 13h ago
The 2019 REPO crisis was really frightening. Now, the Federal Reserve's operations are defensive, not offensive.
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BrokenDAO
· 13h ago
Basically, it's like walking a tightrope—on one hand, you have to prevent a repeat of the 2019 tragedy, and on the other hand, you have to pretend that this isn't a form of easing liquidity. Mechanism design, after all, can never escape the game of human nature—whether it's the central bank or the market, in the end, it's all a gamble over who collapses first.
It seems that the Federal Reserve has been injecting money into the market through overnight repurchase agreements all year, but don’t misunderstand—this isn’t a move toward a large-scale quantitative easing. Essentially, it’s about paying the bill for the pandemic-related QT while ensuring that the federal funds rate stays within the set target range. What’s the real concern? It’s the fear of a repeat of the September 2019 REPO crisis.
Speaking of that crisis, what was the situation back then? Repo market liquidity suddenly tightened, and overnight repo rates skyrocketed. SOFR jumped from 2.43% to 5.25%, with intraday highs even reaching 10%. Meanwhile, the federal funds target range was only 2.00%-2.25%, which was quite a discrepancy. Even worse, spillover effects began to appear: pressure from the repo market transmitted to the federal funds market, pushing the effective federal funds rate (EFFR) up to 2.30%, directly breaking through the upper limit of the target range.
The Fed’s two main tools are controlling inflation and promoting employment. Injecting liquidity through overnight repos is fundamentally about preventing short-term liquidity crises, not about launching a new round of QE.