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Fed Quietly Injects $125 Billion in Repo Market

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2019 REPO CRISIS Mother of

The Federal Reserve quietly pumped $125 billion into the repo market during the last week of October. Red flags have been raised that the banks are in desperate need of liquidity, but there is a deeper issue at play—the entire system is under stress.

In a special report for institutional clients, I detailed the progression of the Liquidity Crisis we had forecast would erupt at our Rome World Economic Conference, come September 2019. The early warning signs were right there in our face if you just looked. The next stage emerged into the Repo Crisis, and the third stage will unfold as the Mother of all Financial Crises.

The central bank stepped into the repo market in 2019 and has not injected an amount this large since the 2020 pandemic. This move comes as bank reserves drop to a four-year low of $2.8 trillion and liquidity is certainly a valid concern. More importantly, the Fed wants banks to trade US debt for cash and force the private sector to absorb the debt. The Fed does not want to publicly provide a bail out so they inject money into the standing repo facility and lend against Treasuries.

The public must have confidence in the banks, and the banks must have confidence that the Federal Reserve will always catch them before they fall. We’ve seen several smaller banks go under in 2025, yet they were small enough not to raise concerns. The Fed fears panic more than it fears inflation. Powell knows that the central bank lost the ability to control inflation, but for now, it can control panic.

The cycle cannot be prevented. The systemic issues are too far gone for repair. As we move closer to 2032, the banks will impose heavy regulations and capital restrictions. Eventually, the banks will lose trust in the Fed, and the people will lose confidence in the banks.