US overnight funding rate hits highest since January

us overnight funding rate hits highest since january

FILE PHOTO: The Treasury Department is pictured in Washington, U.S., April 25, 2021. REUTERS/Al Drago/File Photo

By Davide Barbuscia

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A measure of the borrowing costs on loans between banks and other participants in the U.S. repurchase agreement (repo) market hit its highest level since January on Monday, New York Federal Reserve data released on Tuesday showed.

The Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), a measure of the cost of borrowing cash overnight collateralized by Treasury securities, hit 5.4%, the highest since Jan. 2, in a sign of dwindling liquidity.

The jump from 5.33% at the end of last week follows heavy Treasury coupon debt supply, with the settlement of Treasury auctions straining banks' balance sheets, analysts said.

"SOFR should normalize in the coming days, as the supply gets digested," said Teresa Ho, head of U.S. short duration strategy at JPMorgan.

"However, it might take a little bit longer to normalize, not only because primary dealer inventories are already high, but also because it’s a holiday shortened week, providing less liquidity to the markets," she said.

A spike in the price for repurchase agreements, or repos, can be a sign that cash is getting scarce in a key funding market for Wall Street. Short-term funding costs spiked in September 2019, forcing the Federal Reserve to intervene by injecting liquidity into repo markets.

"Everyone's keeping a close eye on it because it is reminiscent of what happened in 2019," said Gennadiy Goldberg, head of U.S. rates strategy at TD Securities USA.

The jump in funding rates roughly coincided with an increase in usage of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's reverse repo facility, through which money market funds lend to the Fed.

The facility last week saw $664.6 billion in inflows, the highest level since $680 billion on Jan. 10.

Such increases tend to happen around the end of the quarter as dealers offer less intermediation for regulatory reasons, prompting market participants to park their cash at the Fed.

"Around quarter end is when you typically have a pullback in balance sheet availability because a lot of the banks are looking to de-risk heading into quarter end," said Goldberg.

"You're starting to see more of an impact now that liquidity is not as ample as it used to be," he said.

(Reporting by Davide Barbuscia; Editing by Chris Reese)

OTHER NEWS

5 hrs ago

Norris backtracks on Verstappen apology demand

5 hrs ago

Arsenal confirms deal for Okonkwo, six other players [Full list]

5 hrs ago

Dollar on defensive after soft data, battered yen under watch

5 hrs ago

Senate confirms appointment of Abdullahi Usman Bello as Chairman of CCB

5 hrs ago

‘You’re enemy of the South’ – MASSOB knocks Yerima Shettima over comment on Nnamdi Kanu

5 hrs ago

Putin Embarrasses Zelensky Again: Tankman Who Hijacked Ukrainian Tank Gets Russian Citizenship

5 hrs ago

What If Russia Broke Up?

5 hrs ago

Super Eagles to face Benin, Libya, Rwanda in AFCON 2025 qualifiers

5 hrs ago

McLaren use repaired old floors to fix Norris’s F1 car “destroyed” in Verstappen crash

6 hrs ago

Homemade Wooden Ferrari Makes Waves In Venice

6 hrs ago

Trump presidency would cause spike in US bond yields, says Edmond de Rothschild investment boss

6 hrs ago

Rachel Cruze: 8 Popular Products Not Worth the Cost

6 hrs ago

Ghanaian youth angered after only 10 people show up for anti-government protests: "Disappointing"

6 hrs ago

Transfer: Rangers demand £4.5m for Dessers

6 hrs ago

Cobra saved after swallowing cough medicine bottle

6 hrs ago

Better Artificial Intelligence Stock: Nvidia vs. SoundHound

6 hrs ago

Lufthansa to consider raising stake in ITA to 90%, CEO says

6 hrs ago

Cineworld to exit some UK sites in radical restructuring plan, Sky News reports

6 hrs ago

Nvidia Continues to See Strong Demand for Its Artificial Intelligence (AI) Chips

6 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Erdogan to attend Turkey game amid diplomatic row

6 hrs ago

Taylor Swift becomes most followed artiste on Spotify

6 hrs ago

Tinubu: PDP should expel Wike, trying to destroy party – Adeyanju

6 hrs ago

Alphabet Stock Soars to New Peak. Here's Why I'm Doubling Down.

6 hrs ago

2 Top Growth Stocks to Buy With $1,000

6 hrs ago

Tesla cars for first time on Chinese government purchase list

6 hrs ago

German industrial orders decline amid weak foreign demand

6 hrs ago

London stocks, pound climb as Britons vote

6 hrs ago

William Ruto announces 3-hour x space interactive session with Gen Zs: "Let's engage"

6 hrs ago

Aaron Cheruiyot admits he considered quitting politics during protests: “I reflected deeply"

7 hrs ago

Meet Kericho's 10-Year-Old Goal-Scoring Machine Who's Left Peers Stunned

8 hrs ago

Should we be concerned about a summer COVID surge?

8 hrs ago

'Something small but real': Orban meets Zelensky in Kyiv as first trip under EU Presidency

8 hrs ago

Benue commission of inquiry probes lease, sale of companies

8 hrs ago

New Cuban radar site near US military base could aid China spying, think tank says

8 hrs ago

I have been vindicated – Edo Deputy Gov, Shaibu on invalidation of PDP guber primary

8 hrs ago

Should You Buy the Second-Highest Yielding Stock in the Dow Jones Industrial Average?

8 hrs ago

BREAKING: Tinubu inaugurates Presidential Economic Coordinating Committee

8 hrs ago

Wall Street May Be Underestimating This Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock: 2 Reasons Why You Should Consider Buying While It Remains Beaten-Down

8 hrs ago

Enyimba to appoint Yemi Olanrewaju as permanent head Coach

8 hrs ago

Can Chipotle Get Back to $1,000 After Its Stock Split?