Key facts
- Market participants anticipate a quiet quarter-end for Federal Reserve liquidity facilities due to ample cash.
- Typical month-end money market churn and rate volatility are expected to be subdued.
- The Federal Reserve is actively managing money market conditions by adding cash.
- The Fed continues its reserve management purchases of Treasury bills at a pace of $10 billion per month.
- A debate is ongoing about the optimal size of the Federal Reserve's balance sheet.
Market participants are forecasting a quiet quarter-end for Federal Reserve liquidity facilities, attributing the expected calm to ample cash injected by the central bank. This situation is anticipated to suppress the volatility that often characterizes such calendar dates. Heading into the close of the quarter, there is no indication of significant market pressure that would lead to interest rate volatility or a surge in the use of central bank liquidity tools.
Lou Crandall, chief economist at Wrightson ICAP, expects "normal turn-of-the-quarter pressures but nothing disruptive." On Monday, there were no borrowings through the Fed's standing repo operations, and reverse repo inflows were marginal, suggesting a calm trading session for Tuesday. Typically, month-ends can bring short-lived money market churn as some participants withdraw funds, potentially pushing rates up and prompting others to use the Fed's reverse repo facility or borrow from it via repo operations. These pressures are often most pronounced at quarter-end as firms manage their balance sheets, though such churn usually dissipates quickly.
However, this quarter-end, similar to year-end and the close of March, the Fed is injecting cash into the market as part of a technical effort to manage money market conditions. This aims to maintain firm control over its interest rate target range and allow for normal market volatility.
Looking ahead, BMO Capital Markets strategists noted in a Monday report that they anticipate the Fed will continue its $10 billion per month Treasury bill buying through late summer. Current money market rates suggest "relatively modest quarter-end pressures in the funding market." However, they also cautioned that "if the softer tone persists as [the third quarter] gets under way, there is a risk that the Fed reduces or temporarily halts reserve management purchases."
The Treasury bill buying, referred to by the central bank as reserve management purchases, is occurring amidst a broader discussion about the overall size of the Fed's balance sheet. Newly appointed Chairman Kevin Warsh has expressed skepticism about the Fed's still-large balance sheet and advocates for its reduction. He indicated at a recent Federal Open Market Committee meeting that a task force would be established to study this issue. Many economists and some central bankers agree that the Fed's balance sheet could be reduced by altering regulations to permit banks to hold less highly liquid cash, though this might increase financial stability risks. Such a move could potentially decrease Fed holdings by as much as $1 trillion from the current $6.7 trillion level. Analysts, however, do not foresee immediate action, emphasizing that any adjustments to bank liquidity requirements must be handled with extreme care to preserve the Fed's primary focus on interest rate control.