đ¤ The Fed last night injected an additional $13.5 billion into the banking system through a Repo contract.
This is the second largest liquidity injection since Covid-19, and it even surpassed the peak level during the Dot-Com bubble.
Why does the Fed have to inject so much⌠while trying to maintain a "tightening" tone?
1) The market is in distress
Repo is a short-term money injection method to ensure the interbank system does not experience "liquidity blockage".
When the Fed has to inject Repo on such a large scale, it only indicates one thing:
đ There is real stress pressure beneath the surface.
The U.S. bond market has seen the most volatility this month since 2020. The yields on 1-3 months shot up and then fell very quickly, proving there is a temporary "USD thirst" in the system.
2) An early signal for a loosening cycle?
Repo is often a stepping stone before the Fed has to soften its tone.
Itâs not that they want to â but the system forces them to do so.
Looking back at history:
⢠2019: Fed injected Repo â a few months later had to return to QE.
⢠2020: Huge Repo â the beginning of the largest stimulus package in history.
⢠2023â2024: RRP â keeping the market from "dying prematurely" when QT is too strong.
Now history seems⌠to be repeating itself.
Although the Fed still says "not sure about cutting interest rates in December", the flow of money tells a different story:
đ Liquidity has started to loosen