Yours truly

Yours truly

Friday, March 2, 2018

Fed Projections for the Fed Funds Market Implies Additional Tightening


Earlier this week (on Tuesday, February 27, 2018) researchers at the Fed published a paper, inauspiciously titled A Model of the Federal Funds Market: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. The authors develop a quantitative model of the fed funds market –honestly one of the best and by far the most comprehensive that I’ve seen – and project changes in future trading volumes and levels of the fed funds rate. The dynamics are not based on the pace of fed funds rate hikes themselves, though they do assume hikes proceed along the Fed’s baseline. Instead, the model projects the level of the effective Fed funds rate relative to the target as the Fed undertakes policy normalization and aggregate outstanding reserves – excess cash in the banking system – are drained by the Fed, declining from roughly $2 trillion to $200 billion.

This reduction – or normalization - of the level of reserves is expected to gradually reshape the interbank market, raising the trading level of the effective fed funds rate above the upper bound of the fed funds target, due to increased trading volume and an increase in the number of participating banks. The return of bank trading activity will supplant the current domination of the fed funds market by the GSEs. These projections, if realized and supported by the FOMC as prudent policy, obviously have important implications for a variety of short term interest rates and spreads, including those for repo, overnight index swaps (OIS), Libor and its descendants, the overnight bank funding rate and commercial paper.

Key Takeaways
·         The authors project that large banks will return to lending in the fed funds market when the level of reserve balances falls to $900 billion.
·         At the current pace of policy normalization, reserve balances are expected to reach $900 billion in January of 2021. Fed projections of SOMA holdings and the level of reserve balances can be found here.
·         The baseline projection is that as total reserves pass through the $850 to $800 billion range, trading volume in fed funds increases and the effective fed funds (EFF) rate begins trading above the interest on reserves (IOR) rate, which is set at the upper end of the fed funds target range. This rise in the EFF rate relative to the target should happen in February / March of 2021 timeframe.
·         By December 2021, when aggregate reserves fall by another $400 billion, the model projects that the EFF rate will be sloping upwards to the midpoint between the upper bound of the FF target range and the discount window lending rate, which is set 50 basis points above the upper bound of the target.
·         That implies the EFF rate will float from 8 bps below the FF target to 25 bps above it, tightening short term interest rates by an additional ~33 bps as the Fed proceeds with policy normalization and reserve balances decline. This additional move higher in the EFF rate would presumably occur gradually throughout 2021.  

Excerpts from the paper

Caveat: I would strongly recommend reading the entire paper, as it is a terrific analysis and includes much more detail and nuance, as well as confidence intervals around their model projections, than I can cover here. Emphasis added.

For our main policy exercise we trace the evolution of the FF market as we reduce the aggregate supply of reserves from its current levels down to $200 billion Doing so requires us to specify the complete dynamics of the distribution of excess reserves across banks along the path, for which we have little more than an educated guess. For our baseline case we find that the banks with the largest balances return to lending funds at around $900 billion in total reserves, driving a resurgence in FF volume. Quite quickly the EFFR drifts above the IOR—somewhere between $800 billion and $850 billion—as bank-to-bank trades necessarily execute at rates above the IOR. This is an important event, as it marks the end of the current implementation framework that equates the IOR to the top of the target range for the EFFR. However, it takes about $400 billion less aggregate excess reserves for the EFFR to start sloping upward to the midpoint between the IOR and the discount-window rate—what would be the hallmark of a classic corridor system.
We find that the evolution of the FF market is quite sensitive to the dynamics of the distribution of excess reserves across banks. In particular, the extent to which the largest banks hoard reserves is crucial to determine when the EFFR crosses above the IOR. By varying the rate at which the banks with higher balances reduce them relative to those banks with lower balances, the EFFR first drifts above the IOR anywhere between $500 billion and $1.1 trillion. Of particular interest is the possibility that the largest banks plan to rely on reserves as high-quality liquid assets to satisfy regulations. If so, the distribution of reserves becomes more concentrated at the top, and mechanically there is a larger fraction of banks with low balances. This combination increases the gains of trade and leads the largest banks to lend funds at a higher level of aggregate reserves, driving the EFFR above the IOR much sooner than under the baseline.

Refresher on Fed’s Monetary Policy Rates

Secured lending to the Fed
Ø  Safest counterparty (the Fed) + safest collateral (Treasuries) = Lowest return on investment

Overnight Reverse Repurchase rate (ON RRP) – Interest rate offered by the Fed for overnight loans, with borrowed funds secured by Treasury collateral from the Fed’s SOMA portfolio. These borrowings of cash in exchange for collateral are categorized as open market operations by the Fed, and they temporarily drain reserves from the financial system. Eligible counterparties include primary dealers, banks, money market funds and the GSEs. The offering rate is set at the lower bound of the FF target range, though it can fluctuate in certain circumstances based on demand (see additional notes); currently 1.25%.

Borrowing unsecured in the US based interbank market, e.g. the Fed funds market
Ø  A US bank borrowing from another US bank or GSE, to meet the level of cash reserves depository institutions are required to hold in their accounts at the Fed. Roughly speaking, these required reserves are 10% of a bank’s transaction deposits.
Ø  Prior to QE and LSAPs the level of excess cash in the system was structurally low, so the Fed funds market was very active and liquid. The Fed conducted daily open market operations as a lender of cash to keep the effective interbank borrowing rate close to their Fed funds target rate. These were overnight and short term repurchase (repo) operations.
Ø  As the Fed normalizes monetary policy they will gradually reduce their portfolio of Treasury and agency securities, and will conduct reverse repo operations, both of which will drain excess cash reserves from the banking system.

Interest on Reserves (IOR) rate – Interest rate paid by the Fed to depository institutions for reserves held in their account at the Fed. Set at the upper bound of the target FF range; currently 1.50%.
Ø  Pointing out the obvious (because I’m great at it) – since a depository institution can leave their cash in their reserve account at the Fed and earn the IOR rate, there is no incentive for that bank to lend money to anyone at a lower rate.
Ø  The reverse is also true. If a bank can borrow funds from another institution at a rate below the IOR, they can park those funds in their account at the Fed and earn the difference. A nice risk-free arbitrage.
Ø  In theory the IOR sets a lower bound for unsecured interbank lending rates. In practice it’s imperfect, due to (a) regulatory charges imposed by the FDIC; and (b) the participation of the GSEs in the interbank market. The GSEs are not required to hold reserves at the Fed, so cannot earn the IOR rate on their excess cash.
Ø  The GSEs will therefore lend cash in the interbank market at rates below IOR, and banks will execute the arbitrage. In times of abundant reserves – post QE and LSAPs – these lending operations dominate the interbank market, pushing the effective Fed funds rate below the upper bound of the target.

Target Fed funds rate (FF) – Fed’s monetary policy target range for overnight interbank lending. Difference between lower and upper bound set at 25 basis points; target adjusted in 25 basis point increments (e.g. +/- 25 bps, +/- 50 bps); current FF target range is 1.25% to 1.50%.

Effective Fed funds rate (EFF) – Calculated as the volume weighted daily median borrowing rate where reserves actually trade in the US based interbank market. This trading data is reported by depository institutions, and collected and published by the Fed.
Ø  The FF target range is currently 1.25 – 1.50%, and the effective FF rate – with the exception of days which are on month-end – typically trades 8 bps below the upper end of the target. Right now that means the EFF rate is trading steadily at 1.42% with daily trading volume in the range of $80 to $100 billion. You can find complete details here.

Financial institutions borrowing funds from the Fed, secured by a wide range of collateral

Discount window lending rate – The rate the Fed charges eligible institutions to borrow money from the Fed on a secured basis, where a very wide range of collateral is accepted. Borrowing from the Fed at the so-called discount window for large institutions is generally seen, and meant to be, a measure of last resort. There are smaller banks and financial institutions which engage in typically seasonal borrowing from the discount window, which is not an indication of stress. The discount window rate is set at the upper bound of the target Fed funds rate + 50 basis points; currently 2.00%.

Technical note: The GSEs (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Home Loan Banks, et al) are not eligible to earn IOR on their excess cash because these organizations are not depository institutions. Their participation in the Fed funds market is one-sided as they enter only as lenders of funds to depository institutions (banks), not as borrowers. Because the GSEs (a) cannot earn IOR from the Fed; and (b) do not owe depository institution insurance fees to the FDIC, they are willing to lend their excess funds at rates below IOR.