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LIBOR, the interest rates banks charge each other for short term lending has
been rising lately. Curve Watchers Anonymous notes that 1-month LIBOR was 2.61%
a month ago while today it is 2.90%.
LIBOR is normally close to the Fed Fund Rates which is sitting at 2.25%. Typically
the spread would be something like 15 basis points not the 64 that you see.
And with expectations of rate cuts coming, it should be dropping or steady,
not rising.
Interest Rate Derivatives Suggest LIBOR To Rise Further
Eurodollar futures signal LIBOR
to Rise Further and banks remain wary of lending.
Interest-rate derivatives are signaling that the rate banks charge for loans
in dollars in London may rise further as financial institutions remain reluctant
to lend.
The persistence of banks' need for cash and increase in Libor rates has
triggered speculation that the Federal Reserve will increase, for the third
time, the amount it loans through its Term Auction Facility, which is known
as TAF. The Fed has auctioned a total of $360 billion in temporary funds
through TAF since its debut in December. This month, both TAF auctions were
for $50 billion each in 28-day loans.
The rate at this week's TAF was 2.87 percent, or 82 basis points above the
minimum bid set by the Fed, the highest spread to date. An increase in the
spread signals a rise in demand for funds in the banking system.
Fed Announces Another Auction
Speculation the Fed would act again was right on the money. Hoping to ease
credit woes, Fed
to auction another $75 billion in Treasuries.
The Federal Reserve announced Wednesday it will auction an additional $75
billion in super-safe Treasury securities to big investment firms, part of
an ongoing effort to help strained credit markets. The auction -- the fifth
of its kind -- will be held Thursday.
In exchange for the 28-day loan of Treasury securities, bidding firms can
put up more risky investments, including certain shunned mortgage-backed
securities, as collateral. In the four auctions held so far, the Fed has
provided close to $158.95 billion worth of the Treasury securities to investment
firms.
The goal is to make investment houses more inclined to lend to each other.
It also is aimed at providing relief to the distressed market for mortgage-linked
securities. Questions about their value and dumping of these securities had
driven up mortgage rates, aggravating the housing slump.
Goal Fails Miserably
Interestingly enough, analysis posted on the Fed's own website shows why the
program is doomed to fail. The conclusion of a Fed sponsored study was that
banks and broker dealers will not make short term unsecured loans to each other
when instead they can swap increasingly lousy paper with the Fed.
The above logic was presented in Failures
of the Term Auction Facility and Fed's
Swap-O-Rama Gets Crazier.
Regardless of what the Fed is thinking, a rational person would conclude that
banks and broker dealers will pawn off as much garbage on the Fed as the Fed
is willing to take. And so the Fed's own balance sheet is ballooning with garbage.
The latest H.4.1 Report, Factors
Affecting Reserve Balances shows that of the $867 billion in reserve
bank credit that is normally treasury bills and notes, approximately $319
billion has been swapped out.
Today, another $75 billion will be added to the swap-o-rama total. That will
make the Fed's balance sheet look something like this: $394 Billion Garbage
to $473 Billion Treasuries. One additional swap will make the Fed's balance
sheet more than 50% garbage.
Is this supposed to restore confidence in the Fed? In the banking system?
In the US dollar? Is this supposed to make institutions want to lend? Is the
fact that the Fed is holding garbage instead of the banks supposed to make
the securities more valuable?
Whatever the Fed thinks its pawn shop is supposed to accomplish, it clearly
isn't doing it. After all, the Fed
Is Not King Midas.
Besides, this pawn shop arrangement with non-banks is not even legal. Nonetheless,
the Fed seems willing to pursue swap-o-rama till its balance sheet fills up.
At the current rate that will be 3-4 more months. Swap till you flop? Is ZIRP
next? Printing? Whatever it is, it won't matter. Banks and brokers are becoming increasingly
zombified with each passing day.
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