Cash-strapped banks have borrowed $300bn from the
Fed this past week
The central bank has lent about half as much as it
provided during the 2008 crisis as banks rush to shore up their financials
Associated
Press
Fri 17 Mar
2023 00.56 GMT
Cash-short
banks have borrowed about $300bn from the Federal Reserve in the past week, the
central bank announced on Thursday.
Nearly half
the money – $143bn – went to holding companies for two major banks that failed
over the past week, Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, triggering
widespread alarm in financial markets. The Fed did not identify the banks that
received the other half of the funding or say how many of them did so.
The holding
companies for the two failed banks were set up by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC), which has taken over both banks. The money they borrowed
was used to pay their uninsured depositors, with bonds owned by both banks
posted as collateral. The FDIC has guaranteed the repayment of the loans, the
Fed said.
The figures
provide a first glimpse of the scale of the Fed’s assistance to the financial
sector after the two banks collapsed this past weekend.
The rest of
the money was borrowed by banks seeking to raise cash – likely, at least in
part, to pay off depositors who tried to withdraw their money. Many mega banks,
such as Bank of America, have reported receiving inflows of funds from smaller
banks since the bank failures last weekend.
An
additional $153bn in borrowing from the Fed over the past week came through a
longstanding program called the “discount window”; it amounted to a record
level for that program. Banks can borrow from the discount window for up to 90
days. Typically in a given week, only about $4bn to $5bn is borrowed through
this program.
The Fed has
lent an additional $11.9bn from a new lending facility it announced on Sunday.
The new program enables banks to raise cash and pay any depositors who withdraw
money.
Michael
Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan Chase, said in a research note that the Fed’s
assistance is, so far, about half what it was during the financial crisis 15
years ago.
“But it is
still a big number,” he said. “The glass half-empty view is that banks need a
lot of money. The glass half-full take is that the system is working as
intended.”
The past
week’s emergency lending from the Fed seeks to address a leading cause of the
collapse of the two banks: Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank owned
billions of dollars of seemingly safe treasury and other bonds that paid low
interest rates.
Over the
past year, as the Fed steadily raised its benchmark interest rate, yields on
longer-term treasury and other bonds rose. That, in turn, reduced the value of
the lower-yielding treasury bonds that the banks held.
As a
result, the banks couldn’t raise enough cash from the sale of their treasury
bonds to pay the many depositors who were trying to withdraw their money from
the banks. It amounted to a classic bank run.
The Fed’s
lending programs, particularly the new facility it unveiled on Sunday, enable
financial institutions to post bonds as collateral and borrow against them,
rather than having to sell them.
For its new
lending facility, the Fed said it has received $15.9bn in collateral, more than
the $11.9bn it has lent. Banks sometimes provide the Fed collateral before
borrowing. That suggests that additional lending is under way.
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