The U.S. Federal Reserve injected $29.4 billion into the banking system on Friday, sparking optimism about cryptocurrency social media. While this is a move aimed at alleviating liquidity issues and supporting risky assets, including Bitcoin, this is not at all unusual.
The Federal Reserve has pumped billions of dollars through next-day repo operations, the largest since the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, to ease liquidity stress that is believed to have limited Bitcoin prices. It has made gains in recent weeks.
The operation, conducted through the Standing Repo Facility (SRF), temporarily increased the cash available to primary dealers and banks and was aimed at adding short-term liquidity to the system, reducing repo rates to normal levels, preventing a sudden freeze in money markets, and giving banks room to manage reserves while the Federal Reserve monitors the situation.
This all sounds too technical, so let’s break it down to understand how repo, bank reserves, and the Fed’s recent actions are related.
repo
A repo, or repurchase agreement, is a short-term loan made overnight between two parties, one with idle cash in bank deposits and the other wanting to make money, and the other wanting to borrow cash against valuable collateral such as U.S. Treasury bills and bills.
The two parties agree on an interest rate and loan cash overnight with the promise to buy the asset back the next day. The lenders involved in these transactions are typically large money managers, such as money market funds.
bank reserves
Repo transactions affect banks’ reserves. When a lender transfers cash to a borrower, the reserves of the borrower’s bank decrease while the reserves of the borrower’s bank increase. Individual banks can easily become stressed when many of their accounts lend money to borrowers at other banks.
Banks need sufficient reserves to meet regulatory requirements and conduct day-to-day operations, so they can borrow their own reserves or adjust their balance sheets as needed. And when they face funding shortages, they tap into the Fed’s other facilities, such as the repo market, the discount window, and the supplementary financing rate (SFR).
However, as system-wide reserve shortages become more severe, less loanable cash becomes available, which causes repo rates to rise and more borrowers to compete for less cash, creating less liquidity.
This is where the Federal Reserve steps in, and this is exactly what it did on October 31st. The massive liquidity injection through SRF, a tool set up to provide quick loans backed by Treasury or mortgage bonds, came as bank reserves fell to $2.8 trillion, pushing up repo rates.
The balance sheet runoff, known as quantitative tightening (QT), and the Treasury’s decision to increase the Fed’s checking accounts, known as the Treasury General Account (TGA), have reportedly led to a shortage of loanable cash. Both withdrew cash from the system.
Putting everything together
- The Fed’s QT and Treasury cash hoarding has led to a shortage of loanable cash, causing repo rates to rise.
- Bank reserves have fallen below the expected sufficient level threshold.
- The situation caused some stress.
- This prompted the Fed to pump liquidity through the SRF facility.
How will this affect BTC?
The $29 billion liquidity boost effectively counters austerity by temporarily boosting bank reserves, lowering short-term interest rates and easing borrowing pressures.
This move helps avoid a potential liquidity crisis that could damage financial markets, which ultimately supports risky assets like Bitcoin, which are seen as pure plays on fiat liquidity.
That said, what the Fed did on Friday does not amount to quantitative easing (QE) involving direct asset purchases by the Fed, nor does it suggest imminent quantitative easing (QE) or broadening the balance to increase the overall level of liquidity in the system over months or years.
The Fed’s actions on Friday represent a reversible short-term liquidity tool that may not necessarily stimulate risk assets as much as QE.
Plus, as Andy Constan, CEO and CIO of Damped Spring Advisors, says about X, everything will take care of itself.
“Only if system-wide reserves suddenly become tighter will we need more aggressive action from the Fed. What’s happening is a little bit of interbank rebalancing, a little bit of credit stress, a little bit of systemic tightening on the TGA. Everything will be fine,” Constant said of X.
“Otherwise, rates will have to continue to rise and SRFs will have to increase rapidly as well. Until then, it is mostly worth ignoring,” Constan added.
