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Re: The Repo Market Time Bomb



Barkley,

I was reacting to your words:

"Thus it is accurate to say that what the Fed directly influences
is the repo rate and through it the fed funds rate, its
intermediate target."

I think that clearly reads that the Fed influences the repo rate
in order to control the Fed funds rate.  Of course that is
precisely backwards.  The banks themselves set the Fed funds rate
based on the supply-demand for reserves.  The repo market for
banks can only redistribute those reserves.  The Fed however
directly influences the availability of system reserves through
its OMO, using repos as a medium.  If the Fed decided to increase
the FFR by 100 basis points, it could quickly do so by draining
some banking system reserves.  Other short term interest rates
would follow with varying time lags depending on the term.

Short term repos rates will be affected more quickly than say the
13 week T-bill rates.  So too will the short term eurodollar
market quickly respond to a change in the Fed funds rate.  While
it's true these markets are linked, I think it is misleading to
imply that the Fed funds rate is tracking rather than leading
repo rates.

William F. Hummel

>William,
>     You are confusing things.  I fully agree that the
>"target" ("primary" if you prefer) is the fed funds
>rate.  That's what they decide on at the FOMC
>meetings.  As my friend at the Fed (who has been
>there a very long time and is pretty high up) put it,
>the fact that the Fed operates through the repo
>market is a "technicality."  But the fact that they do
>so means that what is most immediately and directly
>affected by their actions is the repo rate.  The two rates
>are linked and hence affecting means affecting the other.
>     Henry C.K. Liu's characterization of the situation
>remains accurate.
>Barkley Rosser
>-----Original Message-----
>From: William F. Hummel <wfhummel@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
>To: POST-KEYNESIAN THOUGHT <pkt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>Date: Saturday, April 10, 1999 12:59 PM
>Subject: Re: The Repo Market Time Bomb
>
>
>>Barkley Rosser wrote:
>>
>>>      A clarification of this is that the FOMC decides
>>>on an fed funds rate that it wishes to hold.  But the
>>>actual open market operations of Fed are carried
>>>out in the repo market and have been for many years,
>>>as described by Henry C.K. Liu.  Thus it is accurate
>>>to say that what the Fed directly influences is the repo
>>>rate and through it the fed funds rate, its intermediate
>>>target.   The fact that Fed open market ops actually
>>>are mostly in the repo market is not widely known and
>>>not reported in most money and banking or macro
>>>textbooks.
>>>     BTW, I first learned of this many years ago from
>>>a friend of mine at the Board of Governors.
>>>Barkley Rosser
>>
>>This is simply wrong.  It is well-known that the Fed conducts its
>>open market operations through repos to directly control the Fed
>>funds rate, not the repo rate.  The private sector repo market is
>>far too large for the Fed to have any _direct_ influence on.
>>That market merely redistributes existing reserves but does not
>>affect the total.  Only the Fed's OMO can affect the total and
>>thus the balance of supply and demand for Fed funds.  The Fed
>>funds rate is clearly the primary target, notwithstanding any
>>misconception by a friend at the Board of Governors.
>>
>>William F. Hummel
>>
>>
>>



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