Analyst Who Called The Repo Squeeze Warns On ‘Combustible Cocktail’ Into Year-End

BofA’s Mark Cabana – who repeatedly warned about a possibly imminent squeeze in short-term funding markets prior to the acute episode that grabbed headlines late last month and caught the Fed flat-footed – is worried that a “combustible cocktail” may create the conditions for another such episode at the end of the year.

The Fed has, of course, taken decisive steps to ameliorate the situation, grease the proverbial wheels and otherwise address reserve scarcity. Overnight and term repos (instituted in the wake of September’s chaos, upsized on demand and now set to run through January) and front-loaded organic balance sheet growth have brought things under control, but there’s reason to believe that no matter what the Fed does, year-end will be challenging.

Specifically, Cabana is worried about reserve shortage and dealer intermediation constraints related to GSIB. That’s the “combustible cocktail”.

Those two concerns are inextricably bound up with one another. “The way that Fed repo and GSIB issues are linked is through the Fed’s short-term temporary repo operations”, Cabana writes, in a new note. While the TOMOs increase the size of dealer balance sheets, GSIB realities prompt dealers to cut market making activity. The following table is a (highly) stylized effort to illustrate the interplay.

(BofA)

As Cabana goes on to detail, scenarios 1 & 2 “demonstrate complications with the Fed repo operations and dealer balance sheet: either the dealer expands balance sheet to ease repo funding pressures but worsens their GSIB score or the dealer adjusts the mix of their liabilities to facilitate Fed repo but does not increase the amount of financing available”.

Naturally, dealers will prefer something akin to scenario 2 into the year-end GSIB date. “This risks MMF getting pushed away from the dealers and having few options to lend into the repo market outside of Fixed Income Clearing Corporation sponsored repo”, Cabana notes.

So, what to do? How will the Fed address a situation where, even if reserve shortage is addressed by increasing the amount of reserves in the system, dealers are reluctant to intermediate them?

Before offering some suggestions, Cabana notes that the “reserve hole” is now larger than $200 billion. Over time, temporary repos will need to be soaked up via outright purchases (i.e., the Fed’s just-launched monthly bill buying program). The chart on the right below shows how that should evolve. (Remember also that over time, the need for reserves will grow, hence the necessity of perpetual “organic” balance sheet growth.)

(BofA)

Note on the right that at the current rate of bill purchases, the Fed will confront year-end with a still-large reliance on repo. That, Cabana goes on to warn, “creates GSIB-related dealer intermediation issues especially if repos are concentrated at short tenors”. Here’s a great table that shows how this all interacts:

(BofA)

As for how to reduce the risk of another funding squeeze, BofA has several suggestions which Cabana details extensively over the course of five pages.

Focusing on the three most likely “solutions”, BofA suggests Treasury might do the Fed a solid by lowering its year-end cash balance projection. That would “eliminate any additional reserve drain from the TGA”, Cabana writes, adding that it’s feasible given that “Treasury previously indicated they desire to hold a level of cash sufficient to cover one week of outflows, which is historically around $300bn in December and we estimate could be covered by a cash balance around $360bn”. In August, the forecast was $410 billion.

If you’re wondering why Treasury would be keen on helping the Fed fix its own issues, the answer is that it isn’t just the Fed’s problem. To wit, from BofA:

The US Treasury has $16+ tn in marketable debt held by the public and over $1 tn of this debt is financed in the Treasury repo market on a daily basis. UST repo issues could impact the broader liquidity of the Treasury market and the US Treasury should have a vested interest in ensuring the market functions smoothly.

A second option for ameliorating the year-end funding strain is to offer “ultra-long” term repos. So, instead of 14-days, perhaps as long as two months. In addition to providing certainty, such a move would “push MMF away from dealers and into the FICC sponsored repo platform… add[ing] an additional source of cash that could be used to assist in stabilizing the repo market on year end”, Cabana remarks.

And then there’s the possibility that the Fed could simply up bill purchases from the current rate of $60 billion/month to somewhere in the neighborhood of $100 billion. That would entail the “hole” mentioned above being plugged more quickly (Cabana calls it the Fed “buying its way out a hole”), but it raises questions about market functioning and liquidity. More to the point, people would likely start asking where the Fed plans to source that kind of supply from in terms of purchasable assets, raising the specter of a move into short coupon securities. You can probably anticipate the problem with that. (Hint: Some market participants would become even more skeptical of the notion that the Fed’s reserve management efforts are somehow “not QE”).

Cabana goes into considerably more detail in the course of outlining various “less likely” options, but you get the idea – there’s likely to be some pressure at year-end and the Fed is doubtlessly pondering how best to address the situation.

The good news, BofA reiterates, is that thanks in no small part to the September episode, the Fed is “acutely aware” of the potential problem.

Still, Cabana worries that “if funding conditions were to spike in a manner similar to mid-September but persist for weeks as opposed to the few days… there could be a broader de-leveraging across financial markets that could result a material tightening of financial conditions”.

Read more:

Steve Mnuchin Has Exactly 9 Days To Tell Elizabeth Warren What Caused Repo Market Chaos

Jamie Dimon Could Have Stopped The Repo Squeeze. Here’s Why He Didn’t…

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2 thoughts on “Analyst Who Called The Repo Squeeze Warns On ‘Combustible Cocktail’ Into Year-End

  1. Speaking of cash, I found this bit while surfing:

    Treasuring cash
    Why does the U.S. Treasury have so much cash at the Fed?

    First, late in 2008 the Treasury suspended its cash reinvestment program. It used to make short-term loans to banks that needed liquidity. Given low interest rates and the fact that banks have been holding excess reserves, this program hasn’t been necessary, and so the Treasury is holding more cash. Second, since late 2015 the Treasury has been purposefully holding more cash to be prepared for any major disruptions, such as a potential cyber event or a systemic event like the crisis in 2008.

    https://fredblog.stlouisfed.org/2017/10/treasuring-cash/?utm_source=series_page&utm_medium=related_content&utm_term=related_resources&utm_campaign=fredblog

    Then, venturing into a darker space @ FRED, looked at this:

    Collateralization of Currency: Memo Items: U.S. Treasury, Agency Debt, and Mortgage-Backed Securities Eligible to Be Pledged

    https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=plSa

  2. It all seems like a wonderful game how to keep the juggling balls up in the air until they suddenly start dropping, because there are too many cash requirement holes to fill. It clarifies a bit how the whole system can start collapsing due to the continued requirement to expand the financial needs. Thanks for the insights.

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