> In accordance with the FOMC implementation note issued December 10, 2025, the Open Market Trading Desk (the Desk) at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York will make the following adjustments to standing overnight repurchase agreement (repo) operations effective December 11, 2025.
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/standing-overn...
so, watch this space
Where was the stress test for that little gamble?
The article is wordier than it needs to be, but I think it presents a solid argument. Some other interesting things I've observed is that the discount window website started advertising 'Discount Window Direct' on its homepage in June [2] (which could be a sign that there has been more inquiries about it) and that the pickup in the repo market being in the latter half of 2025 might also be correlated with the closing of the Bank Term Funding Program in March 2025 [3][4].
[1] https://www.newyorkfed.org/markets/opolicy/operating_policy_...
[2] https://www.frbdiscountwindow.org/
[3] https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/mone...
The way that this is written feels intentionally exaggerated. E.g. comparing how much banks earned in profit to how much they are pulling/could pull from thr fed makes no sense. Banks are highly levered. They earn low returns on assets (1-2%), so balance sheet items always look a lot bigger than profits. Thats just the business model of banks. Just wait to see how many years it will take them to earn enough money to pay back their deposits! Its comparing apples and oranges, and anyone who thinks about banks seriously knows that.
There's very little bandwidth and audience on monetary matters to start with. If we're talking about anything else, we're detracting from that.
skybrian•2h ago
jeffbee•56m ago
Bottom of https://www.newyorkfed.org/markets/desk-operations/repo ... click "all"
jtbayly•43m ago
jeffbee•36m ago
Despite the tone of the OP, the people who exchange securities for cash at the repo facility are paying not just the fed rate, but a higher punitive rate. It is expensive, by design, so banks seek liquidity deals privately if they can. It is not, in any sense, bags of money from helicopters.
f33d5173•39m ago
> To get the cash, banks hand over Treasury notes and bonds, mortgages, and other securities, known as a “repo.” Then they get to borrow cash at face value.
Does that meet your standards?
jeffbee•31m ago
Edit: I forgot about the haircut. The repo only lends out 98% of the staked assets value.