Banks Tap Fed's Repo Facility: $74B Loan Fuels 'COVID Cover-Up' Theory
Banks accessed the Federal Reserve's Standing Repo Facility, borrowing a record $74.6 billion on December 31. This activity has reignited speculation about a potential "COVID cover-up" related to earlier market interventions. The overnight funding rates experienced a notable increase, with the benchmark SOFR briefly reaching 3.77% and the general collateral repo rate touching 3.9%. The year-end activity tested the central bank's "ample" reserve theory, creating a binary scenario for risk assets in January. The repo market, which involves short-term borrowing secured with collateral, experienced a notable spike in mid-September 2019, prompting the Fed to intervene. This event, coupled with the timeline of the COVID-19 pandemic, has fueled theories about hidden leverage and market manipulation.
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