Odaily Planet Daily reports that institutional analysis indicates that anxiety in the US bond market has eased at year-end, with market expectations that the Federal Reserve’s new financing plan will alleviate seasonal liquidity pressures. Banks typically reduce lending and hoard cash at the end of the quarter and year to adjust their balance sheets, which can lead to higher short-term money market rates at cross-period points. For example, in September 2019, a sharp decline in bank reserves due to corporate tax payments and debt repayments caused repo rates to spike significantly. However, after the Federal Reserve announced last week that it would purchase short-term Treasury bills to manage cash levels and ensure control over the interest rate target range, repo market pricing during this year’s year-end period (December 31 to January 2) dropped sharply. Bob Savage, Head of Macro Market Strategy at BNY Mellon, stated, “The Federal Reserve aims to avoid sharp interest rate fluctuations on tax days or at year-end, and now has appropriate tools, so a repeat of the market volatility seen in 2019 is not expected.” Analysts pointed out that the Fed’s measures will ease year-end liquidity pressures. Meanwhile, the Fed’s bond purchases may reduce private investors’ demand for Treasury bills in 2026, thereby supporting bond prices, lowering yields, and alleviating the debt supply pressures that previously pushed up repo rates. (Jin10)
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Federal Reserve's bond purchase tool proves effective: Year-end repo rate expectations decline
Odaily Planet Daily reports that institutional analysis indicates that anxiety in the US bond market has eased at year-end, with market expectations that the Federal Reserve’s new financing plan will alleviate seasonal liquidity pressures. Banks typically reduce lending and hoard cash at the end of the quarter and year to adjust their balance sheets, which can lead to higher short-term money market rates at cross-period points. For example, in September 2019, a sharp decline in bank reserves due to corporate tax payments and debt repayments caused repo rates to spike significantly. However, after the Federal Reserve announced last week that it would purchase short-term Treasury bills to manage cash levels and ensure control over the interest rate target range, repo market pricing during this year’s year-end period (December 31 to January 2) dropped sharply. Bob Savage, Head of Macro Market Strategy at BNY Mellon, stated, “The Federal Reserve aims to avoid sharp interest rate fluctuations on tax days or at year-end, and now has appropriate tools, so a repeat of the market volatility seen in 2019 is not expected.” Analysts pointed out that the Fed’s measures will ease year-end liquidity pressures. Meanwhile, the Fed’s bond purchases may reduce private investors’ demand for Treasury bills in 2026, thereby supporting bond prices, lowering yields, and alleviating the debt supply pressures that previously pushed up repo rates. (Jin10)