The table at the bottom puts this in context: reserve requirements, which have never been reduced by more than $2 billion across the economy in any year prior, are suddenly reduced by $200 billion - the entire regulatory program seems to have been unwound.
Presumably this will give late banks desperately needed liquidity and ability to lend, but it also increases systemic risk. Desperate times these are indeed, but this is an unprecedented measure.
I'd rather see highly leveraged companies go under quickly, rather than postponing it. A small bang now is less bad than a massive explosion later.
The 2008 crunch was almost purely financial. Let's get past this pandemic and then see where the businesses shake out financially.
They put themselves in this position by being fiscally irresponsible in order to pump and dump their stock. They should be held responsible by experiencing the joys of bankruptcy.
It's pretty clear we're well past #1 and could be at #2.
The problem that policy-makers are facing here is the real economic impact of this crisis as unknowable but is very likely to be very large. So it's hard to incentivise lending.
For example if you're a bank in this environment it's pretty tough to have the courage to go out and lend to small businesses knowing the next few months are going to be brutal for their cashflow. The fed is going to have some difficulty convincing them to lend even in the presence of a zero reserve requirement ratio given that those banks will look at very serious potential writedowns on their loans in any downside scenario.
No we aren't. The discount window, central banks' original and most-powerful tool, was only just accessed by big banks [1].
[1] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-03-17/u-s-banki...
Of course it could be as they say, and there are a bunch of overlevered businesses that need cheap capital or they'll go bust and cutting interest rates and injecting liquidity is the only way to save them.
The first layer is central bank money (reserves) and payments are ultimately settled in reserves. Reserves can either be cash (notes) or account balances that banks have with the Fed. This first layer money never leaves the banking system and only banks with access to the Fed can have it.
The second layer is money that banks can create themselves out of thin air. When they grant you a loan they create a claim against you on the left side of their balance sheed and they create your deposits on the right side of their balance sheet.
When you wire transfer your deposits to another bank you instruct them to transfer reserves to the other bank, since that is what payments are settled with. Therefore banks can create as many loans as they want and are only limited by their ability to generate reserves.
This is where central banks come in. In order to get reserves, banks participate in Repo auctions and can get reserves against collateral. It used to be that collateral needed to be really good, but the quality has decreased a lot lately so that the Fed even accepts CDOs or regular bank loans that they just created.
Since shadow banks (which is really just a fancy word for Asset Managers, Dealers/Brokers and SPVs or foreign banks) do not have access to the Fed, they rely on other banks that DO have access to the Fed to lend them reserves. This used to be the case in the unsecured LIBOR market overnight, and if there was any doubt that a player was not solvent, simply nobody would lend to them overnight. In order to stabilize this, the Fed was running QE in order to channel reserves into the shadow banking system by buying assets (CDOs, bonds, etc.). Nowdays, the secured Repo market has replaced the unsecured interbank market by a larger extent since the need for trust is lower.
In a crisis just like today even the interbank repo market is drying out a bit since the value of collateral in foreign markets is questioned and US banks are protecting their reserves. Therefore the Fed is jumping in to establish trust in market liquidity again by pumping reserves into the market and show their lender of last resort function (today also dealer of last resort)."
https://miltonfriedman.hoover.org/objects/58159/the-eurodoll...
https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/fezfqi/the_...
The average person has zero idea that this happens, but it's not going to somehow be impossible (or even hard) to undo it.
This isn’t a wholesale elimination of reserve requirements.
This does not sound great. Can somebody clarify as to how this is a sensible move at all / what the intention is?
This is a 9/11 like event, except the impacts are nationwide, not just in the NY Metro area. Companies and people are just going to stop paying bills. I'd guess you're looking at 2-4 million people out of work in the next week. The only saving grace is that this season is a low business period for retail and other sectors anyway, but they'll start dying in the summer.
It's sensible because it's low risk. The intention is to alleviate pressure on the short-term lending markets, e.g. the repo and Fed Funds markets. This is about preventing a credit crisis moreso than juicing the taps.
Is there a reason I shouldn't rely on the FDIC (or NCUA for credit unions) insurance?
Is the expectation that if banks systematically fail, FDIC won't be able to cover all of the losses?
FDIC and NCUA are not bottomless pits of money, and I expect that, with a key safeguard removed, banks and credit unions now have the power to discover their bottoms more quickly than anyone should care to contemplate.
I should disclaim: I am not a banker, I am just a completely random person on the Internet, possibly a troll, and certainly someone who occasionally posts with a trollish twinkle in their eye. Don't take this as financial advice. Anyone who assumes I know what I'm talking about will get what they deserve for their efforts.
Or is this going to turn into Greece where all banks will close or limit the amount that can be withdrawn.
What a shit-show this has become
EDIT: another thing to consider is where to store all this cash if you withdraw. For those that have 6 figs in cash sitting in their banks, exposing that large sum of money in physical form poses an enormous risk (e.g. natural disasters or accidents being a big one)
One would hope that the Fed wouldn't actually allow that to happen. But how does one re-impose reserve requirements without causing even more problems?
It's like in that one song: "And I don't know why she swallowed the fly. Perhaps she'll die."
On the upside, I suppose we'll now get to have an empirical test to settle that age old debate over whether the number of people allowed to print money should be one or many. Pity Bitcoin's in such a shambles, so we can't with clean conscience make it a test among zero, one and many.
Strange times.
Money supply.
If you're a company who invested in a great workforce, and is getting nuked due to demand destruction, borrowing to keep paying them is a savvy long-term bet.
If you can't borrow, you'll have to let them go. That not only creates human misery. It also destroys the human capital you carefully built.
“ Many economists and bankers now realize that the amount of money in circulation is limited only by the demand for loans, not by reserve requirements.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_creation#Credit_theory_o...
I'd think a reserve at the banks is a good protection of solvency, and should be increased instead of decreased. Is my layman interpretation completely wrong? It feels like they ran out of bullets and have thrown the gun.
Fractional reserve banking has produced a tremendous amount of wealth for the world over recent centuries. It encourages assets to be used in a productive manner rather than hoarded, which is essentially wasteful.
Typically, the loans get paid off to the bank over time, and the bank originates new loans to continue to make a profit. Currently, there are two systemic risks:
1. If borrowers begin to default, the bank still must cover its expenses. Under stressful circumstances, they would normally not be allowed to draw down their reserve to meet their expenses. This change allows this. Once the economy recovers, the reserve requirements will be reimposed.
2. It encourages banks to continue issuing new credit to borrowers. This keeps economic activity flowing and prevents a situation where borrowers have nowhere to turn to find money to keep their business afloat until profitable times return.
>Once the economy recovers, the reserve requirements will be reimposed.
I bet they aren't, until something awful happens, again.
No, it doesn't. Broader capital requirements are still in place. This move just removes reserve requirements for certain categories of transaction accounts.
I assume that someone will explain why I am an idiot and have no reason to worry.
Before this change, reserve requirements in the US were at 10% which means the bank could lend out $90. Now in general this is problematic because if everyone were to try to withdraw their money at once, the bank could not produce it. Thus we have the FDIC, which is a government program that insures bank account deposits up to $250k so people don't lose all their money if a bank run happens. A cynical way of looking at this is that taxpayers are on the hook for the bank's bad behavior if they go bust, and the lower the reserve ratio the more likely the bank is to overdo it.
Things also get really weird when other banks are in the picture. If you deposit $100 at bank A which has 10% reserve ratio, it will lend out $90 - so total money in the system is now $190. That $90 might end up deposited at bank B, which also has a 10% reserve ratio, so it lends out $81 making the total amount of money in the system $190 + $81 = $271. This process continues until it approaches the value of principal * (1 / reserve ratio), so in our case $100 * (1 / 0.1) = $1000 [0]. At 0% this means technically infinite money can be lent/created, although banks will presumably keep some percentage as reserves due to internal risk requirements (interesting assumption, I know).
Reserve requirement ratios are viewed as one of the levers the government can use to help steer the economy. Reducing the reserve requirement ratio has the effect of increasing the overall money supply, which has some nonlinear effect on the economy that the government wants to happen. This move to 0%, in addition to various other recent moves by the federal reserve, are all geared toward flooding the economy with cheap easy money to prop it up. They will all fail.
[0] https://www.economicshelp.org/blog/67/money/money-multiplier...
A short-sighted economist, maybe. What needs to circulate is goods and services, not money. If you have $100 in the bank (or stuffed in your mattress), that means you produced stuff worth $100 more in total than what you consumed. Those extra goods are already being put to productive use. If your savings stay safely locked away and out of circulation that just means prices will be a bit lower due to the decrease in the money supply, which benefits everyone else. And when you take that saved money and spend it later your prices will be a bit lower, too, which is your reward (interest) for basically letting everyone else borrow the value of your money for the time you had it out of circulation.
If you can take your savings and invest them in some venture likely to provide a real return—after factoring in inflation and overhead—that would obviously be better than just stuffing the money in your mattress. However, taking money out of circulation is still better for the economy as a whole than "investing" it in something that can be expected to lose value, because that would divert goods and services away from better investments. If the money supply were held constant than you could treat price inflation or deflation as indications that we need more or less targeted investment, respectively. Unfortunately that isn't the case, so we're missing a key economic signal.
> Fractional-reserve banking is the most common form of banking practised by commercial banks worldwide. It involves banks accepting deposits from customers and making loans to borrowers, while holding in reserve an amount equal to only a fraction of the bank's deposit liabilities. Bank reserves are held as cash in the bank or as balances in the bank's account at the central bank. The minimum amount that banks are required to hold in liquid assets is determined by the country's central bank, and is called the reserve requirement or reserve ratio. Banks usually hold more than this minimum amount, keeping excess reserves.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractional-reserve_banking
It's a mighty pillar of our global economic systems or the biggest scam ever or both depending on who you ask.
Anyway, if I understand correctly (and I don't, IANAEconomist), now the fraction is zero. But I don't know what that means and I suspect few do. It sounds like it means that banks can just write loans all day long and "poof" money into existence, but I've been told that that is somehow not the case. Higher economics is indistinguishable from numerology (in terms of semantic analysis) to me, so I shouldn't comment further. Hopefully someone more knowledgeable will show up and read the tea leaves for us.
What could go wrong.
End central banking and you've single-handedly fixed systemic wealth inequality in the United States.
I mean, almost every social construct is bizarre and borderline fraudulent when you get into it in granular detail. Why does someone paid by taxes working in a government created 200+ years ago get involved in my choice on who I marry or live with? Why does an arbitrary marker on a map indicating someone 'owns' a piece of the earth mean I can't walk across the actual physical ground?
They're social constructs. They're not natural. They're supposed to be bizarre. That's the point.
End central banking and San Francisco will still be full of homeless people and rich people
Bank regulation is open to be criticized. But it's far from "nil".
> First to central bankers, and now to private bankers
Money was originally printed by private parties, then by banks, and most-recently by central banks.
Bank regulation is political and is regularly criticised, I'll give you that. However, the Federal Reserve and central banking is borderline immune to any form of criticism from the electorate partly due to a lack of understanding but also due to the widespread perception that central banking is somehow a necessity in a well-functioning economy and that its operation and development should remain firmly in the domain of "experts" like economists and others. I blame out-of-control scientism in economics for this one.
>Money was originally printed by private parties, then by banks, and most-recently by central banks.
Apologies, I phrased my sentence badly. It was more of a figure of speech rather than a historical account.
Is it your claim that the past 200 years of economic develop were stunted by the banking system?
Without fiat money, you have to disable value-generating productive resources as placeholders.