A lot of us were scratching our heads yesterday at 1:16 pm CST as to why the
Fed did not reduce the spread between its discount rate and its federal funds
rate target so as to alleviate pressures in the term Libor market that have
developed since August (see Chart 1 below). Little did we know that the Fed
had a little holiday stocking stuffer to give us today - Term Auction Facility
(http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/monetary/20071212a.htm).
Chart 1

TAF is akin to the regular discount window facility except that it will provide
Federal Reserve credit to depository institutions (mainly banks) at interest
rates lower than what they could obtain from the regular discount window. The
regular discount rate is 50 basis points over the FOMC's federal funds rate
target. To borrow funds from TAF, banks will participate in an auction, submitting
interest rate bids for funds. The minimum bid rate for the auctions will be
established at the overnight indexed swap (OIS) rate corresponding to the maturity
of the credit being auctioned. The OIS rate is a measure of market participants'
expected average federal funds rate over the relevant term. In other words,
if the federal funds rate were expected to remain constant over the next 30
days, the OIS would be approximately at the current level of the federal funds
rate. Each TAF auction will be for a set amount of funds, the first two for
$20 billion each. As this is being written, we do not know upon what basis
the winning bids will be allocated. The same collateral from bank borrowers
will be accepted by the Fed under the TAF program as it does under the regular
discount window facility. The Fed accepts a wide variety of collateral for
discount window borrowing (http://www.frbdiscountwindow.org/discountmargins.pdf).
Today the interest rate on one-month Libor borrowings was 5.10%. If the first
TAF auction were held today, presumably banks that could borrow one-month funds
at 5.10% in the Libor market would bid less than this in the TAF auction. Moreover,
today the discount rate is 4.75%. Again, if a TAF auction were held today,
banks presumably would bid less than 4.75% for funds.
In recent months, banks have increasingly been tapping Federal Home Loan Banks
(FHLBs) as a source of term lending as other funding sources have pulled back
due to credit concerns. To simplify the analysis a bit, lenders now purchase
the liabilities of the FHLBs rather than the liabilities of the banks, and
the FHLBs then lend to the banks. The credit risk is being shifted to the FHLBs.
To the degree that funds can be borrowed from the TAF program at a lower rate
than from the FHLBs, we would expect to see FHLB lending slow.
As mentioned above, the Fed will accept a wide range of collateral at the
regular discount window and under the TAF program. A question arises as to
whether the Fed will be taking a large enough "haircut" on some of the collateral
being presented to it by successful TAF bidders. If the markets cannot price
some of these securities, how does the Fed know what they are worth? If a TAF
borrower were to become insolvent, the Fed might not be able to recover the
full amount it had loaned the bank. In effect, the TAF program, as well as
the regular discount window facility, transfers credit risk to the Fed, which
means ultimately, to the taxpayer. Depending on how the Fed prices the collateral
presented to it, the TAF program could be construed as a taxpayer subsidy to
banks presenting "questionable" collateral. Remember, there is no such thing
as a free bailout.
Total reserves in the banking system as of December 5 were $44.4 billion,
of which $34.9 billion were vault cash eligible to satisfy reserve requirements.
So, a $20 billion injection of reserves via the TAF program would represent
almost a 50% increase in total bank reserves. A 50% increase in reserves would
drive down the federal funds rate below its 4.25% target level. As a result,
the Fed will need to drain reserves from the banking system via open market
operations as reserves flood in via the TAF program.
Although the TAF program is likely to alleviate some of the credit stringencies
in the money markets, it is unlikely to meaningfully correct the lending errors
made in this cycle. There was initial euphoria in the U.S. stock market today
when the TAF program was announced. Although the major stock market averages
did finish in the black, albeit well off their session highs, indexes of bank
and home builder stocks finished in the red, suggesting that, upon reflection,
TAF may provide only marginal relief to a major economic headache.