SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : John Pitera's Market Laboratory

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
Recommended by:
Hawkmoon
John Pitera
To: The Ox who wrote (18264)6/13/2016 8:31:08 AM
From: The Ox2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) of 33421
 
There's a Seismic Change Coming to Money Markets But we don't quite yet know what it will be.
Tracy Alloway tracyalloway
Luke Kawa LJKawa
June 13, 2016 — 5:33 AM CDT

Bankers seeking to manipulate the London Interbank Offered Rate with a flurry of tactless messages probably had little idea that the impact of their actions would be felt all the way to the Federal Reserve target rate. But — like bubbles from a bottle of Bollinger champagne — the effects of the Libor scandal are still emanating across money markets many years later.

In 2014, the The Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) asked U.S. regulators to look into creating a replacement to Libor — one that would prove more immune to the subjective, scandalous, scurrilous whims of traders. The Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC), as the resulting body is known, last month suggested two potential replacements for the much-maligned Libor.

While the new reference rate would be important simply by dint of underpinning trillions of dollars worth of derivatives contracts, its significance could go much further. Fresh research from Credit Suisse Securities USA LLC suggests the chosen rate could also become the new target rate for the Federal Reserve, replacing the federal funds rate that has dominated money markets for decades but has been neutered by recent regulation and asset purchase programs.

"The question of alternative reference rates and alternative policy rates are intertwined: ideally, they would be the same," writes Zoltan Pozsar, director of U.S. economics at the Swiss bank. "So it is likely that the rate the ARRC will ultimately choose will also be the Fed’s new target rate. But there are problems with both alternatives."



Source: Bloomberg
A potential new target rate comes at a time when the federal funds market (FF) is said to be losing relevance thanks to new rules requiring banks to hold billions of dollars worth of high-quality assets on their balance sheets as well as with the Fed's quantitative easing (QE). While such regulation was aimed at strengthening the banking system in the aftermath of the financial crisis it also had the unanticipated impact of shunting the federal funds market onto the sidelines at the precise moment the Fed is attempting to pull interest rates up, prompting the use of a new central bank tool known as reverse repurchase agreements (RRPs).

"QE and Basel III have euthanized interbank money markets," writes Pozsar. "There isn’t much happening in interbank money markets in general in a banking system awash with massive amounts of reserves that banks are required to hoard in order to comply with new rules designed to ensure they can survive a 30-day liquidity storm."

The explosion of excess reserves as a consequence of the Fed's QE means that financial institutions have no need to tap this source of interbank funding. But regulations entail that all reserves have effectively become required reserves, Pozsar explains, as banks have a need to keep these high-quality assets in order to prevent their liquidity coverage ratios (LCR) from deteriorating.

With bank balance sheets largely consumed by these new requirements, there's little capacity left over to engage in what was once the lifeblood of money markets; arbitrage. Where once the overnight interest rate paid by the Fed on banks' excess reserves, known as IOER, tracked tightly with the target fed funds rate, they've since diverged — necessitating RRPs as a means to drag rates up through transactions with money market funds (MMFs) as opposed to increasingly-hamstrung banks.



Source: Bloomberg
Choose Your Own AcronymWhile the Fed is faced with a fed funds target rate that's fading into irrelevance, the ARRC has been eyeballing two alternative rates as it seeks to replace untrusty Libor. The two are the Fed's new overnight bank funding rate (OBFR) and the overnight U.S. Treasury general collateral repo rate. The OBFR, which mixes fed funds with overnight eurodollar deposits to come up with an average cost of funds for U.S. banks, has emerged as front-runner in recent weeks — gaining support from at least one prominent financial industry body last month.

The reasoning here is clear; the overnight eurodollar market is deep ($250 billion according versus an average $60 billion in fed funds) and features hundreds of participants versus the dozen Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLBs) still active in the fed funds market. On the flip side, the OBFR deviates significantly from the fed funds rate in that it gauges offshore interbank funding as opposed to domestic.

"Switching from the FF rate to OBFR as the Fed's policy target is not without a broad set of existential questions," writes Pozsar. "Were that switch to happen the Fed would go from targeting an onshore rate to targeting an offshore rate; from targeting an interbank rate to targeting a customer-to-bank rate..."

To avoid the complications associated with this path, the Fed could settle in on the repo rate as its new policy target.

But here Pozsar also sees potential problems: "Switching to a repo rate won't be simple either. In fact, it is impossible at present. Why? Because primary dealers do not have access to the discount window and so there is no ex-ante mechanism in place that would enable the Fed to cap repo rates in a crisis. And if you can't cap it, you can't target it."

The debate highlights a bug (feature) of the post-crisis financial system. Banks are flush with cash and high-quality assets and unlikely to need to tap the Fed for extra liquidity (at least, not for 30 days) but broker-dealers remain shut out of reserve accounts at the Fed.
It's a point perhaps, that hasn't been lost on New York Fed President Bill Dudley, who argued in a speechlast month that the Fed's discount window should be extended to primary dealers, potentially setting the scene for an official shift towards the repo rate. "Now that all major securities firms in the U.S. are part of bank holding companies and are subject to enhanced prudential standards as well as capital and liquidity stress tests, providing these firms with access to the discount window might be worth exploring," he said.

Indeed, such a change has already been undertaken by Mark Carney's Bank of England, which widened access to its so-called sterling monetary framework to include broker-dealers and central counterparties some two years ago. Still, Pozsar reckons it's not time to declare a winner and break out the bubbly just yet.

"Until we hear more about dealer of last resort, do know that the OBFR is the only game in town," Pozsar concludes.
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext