https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/06/the-fed-posts-historic-operating-losses-as-it-pays-out-5-40-percent-interest-to-banks/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: June 26, 2024 ~

According to Federal Reserve data, for the first time in its history, the
Fed has been losing money on a consistent monthly basis since September 28,
2022. As of the last reporting date of June 19, 2024, those losses add up
to a cumulative $176 billion. As the chart above using Fed data shows, the
losses thus far in 2024 have ranged from a monthly high of $11.076 billion
in February to a low of $5.674 billion in May.

These losses are separate and distinct from the unrealized losses the Fed
is experiencing on the debt securities it holds on its balance sheet. It
does not mark those losses to market since it intends to hold the
securities to maturity and their principal is guaranteed at maturity by the
U.S. government.

The losses shown in the above chart are actual cash operating losses that
result from the fact that the Fed is earning significantly less interest on
its debt securities than the high rates of interest the Fed is paying out
to depository banks on their reserves held at the Fed; to mutual funds on
its reverse repo operations; and in dividend payments to the banks that are
shareowners of the 12 regional Fed banks.

Interest on Reserve Balances (IORB): 5.40 Percent

Since July 27 of last year, or one month shy of a year, the Fed has been
paying 5.40 percent interest on reserve balances held by banks at the Fed.
A significant part of that generous payout has been going to megabanks like
JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America. The graphic below, taken from
BankRate.com this morning, shows that these megabanks aren’t passing along
that generosity to their customers’ savings accounts, since those savings
accounts continue to pay the preposterously low rate of 0.01 percent
interest, despite 11 rate hikes by the Fed since 2022.


Interest Rate Paid on Savings Accounts, as Shown at BankRate.com on June
26, 2024

A detail that goes missing in mainstream media reports on this generous
payout by the Fed is that the Fed and banking system were able to survive
for 95 years without the Fed paying any interest on bank reserves. The Fed
began paying interest on reserves at a time when the megabanks on Wall
Street were in the process of imploding during their self-inflicted
financial crisis of 2008 and needed every handout they could conjure up
from the Fed. The Fed explains the origination of this policy as follows on
one of its website pages from 2008:

“The Financial Services Regulatory Relief Act of 2006 originally authorized
the Federal Reserve to begin paying interest on balances held by or on
behalf of depository institutions beginning October 1, 2011. The recently
enacted Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 accelerated the
effective date to October 1, 2008.”

At the time Congress was pressured into passing this legislation by Wall
Street sycophants, it was unaware that the Fed would be conducting three
years of secret backroom bailout programs (2007-2010) that would eventually
tally up to a cumulative $29 trillion, according to a detailed analysis by
the Levy Economics Institute using data the Fed was eventually forced to
release.

Reverse Repurchase (Repo) Agreement Operations (RRPs): 5.30 Percent

In addition to paying out 5.40 percent interest on bank reserve balances,
the Fed has been paying the hefty rate of 5.30 percent on its reverse repo
operations since July 28, 2023. (To track the interest rate the Fed has
paid on its reverse repos, put your cursor on any point on the graph linked
here.)

Dividend Rate to Bank Shareholders of Federal Reserve Regional Banks: 6
Percent

The highest interest rate of all paid by the Fed is the 6 percent dividend
that the Fed pays to the member shareholder banks that own the 12 regional
Fed banks. If those banks have assets of $10 billion or less, they receive
the 6 percent dividend. Shareholder banks with assets larger than $10
billion receive a dividend which is the lesser of 6 percent or the yield on
the 10-year Treasury note at the most recent auction prior to the dividend
payment. How long has the 6 percent dividend rate been in effect? Since the
creation of the Fed in 1913. In other words, during busts and bailouts,
when the Fed has also been shoveling trillions of dollars in secret loans
to its member banks, that 6 percent dividend has been protected.

Think Tank Fallout

In January, two researchers, Paul Kupiec and Alex Pollock, put the cash
operating losses at the Fed into broader perspective with a detailed report
published at the think tank, American Enterprise Institute (AEI). The
researchers wrote:

“Notwithstanding the claims made by current and former Federal Reserve
officials, the Fed’s cash operating losses and unrealized interest rate
losses have already changed the way the Fed conducts monetary policy. In
the past, when the Fed wanted to raise rates or shrink member bank reserve
balances, it would sell SOMA [System Open Market Account] securities. But
today, with the market value of its SOMA securities approximately $1
trillion less than their book value, selling these securities would
immediately turn huge unrealized mark-to-market losses into actual cash
losses. To avoid reporting such embarrassing losses, the Fed has committed
to hold these securities until they mature to ‘avoid’ a loss, thus
constraining its monetary policy options.

“The Fed’s official plan is to shrink the size of its balance sheet by
letting its SOMA securities mature over time. But if interest rates stay
elevated, the Fed’s unrealized market value losses will systematically turn
into cash operating losses because the Fed will keep paying more to finance
its securities than the yield it earns on SOMA securities. FRBs’ [Federal
Reserve Banks’] operating losses could continue for a long time.”

Kupiec and Pollock further suggest that the Fed is engaged in a dangerous
confidence game:

“As long as the public and financial market participants retain confidence
in the FRB’s unsecured deposits, FRBs [Federal Reserve Banks] can continue
to pay banks billions in interest and dividend payments while operating at
a loss, deeply technically insolvent, and with asset shortfalls. Aided by
an implicit guarantee, taxpayers will bear the burden of accumulating
Federal Reserve losses that are hidden by Federal Reserve accounting
policies and not included in reported government deficit statistics.”

For how the U.S. taxpayer is on the hook for the Fed’s losses, see our May
2020 report: Taxpayers Are on the Hook for 98 Percent of the Fed’s $6.98
Trillion Balance Sheet. (As of June 19 of this year, the Fed’s balance
sheet was $7.3 trillion.)

Reply via email to