https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/07/the-new-york-fed-has-contracted-out-key-functions-to-jpmorgan-chase-we-filed-a-foia-and-got-these-strange-invoices/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: July 29, 2024 ~

The New York Fed, which has bank examiners engaged in supervising JPMorgan
Chase, has also repeatedly provided bailout funds to JPMorgan Chase; was
supervising JPMorgan Chase when it lost $6.2 billion of deposits from its
federally-insured bank by gambling in derivatives on its London trading
desk; allowed JPMorgan Chase’s Chairman and CEO, Jamie Dimon, to previously
sit on the New York Fed’s Board of Directors, even as he faced the $6.2
billion derivatives trading scandal; and the New York Fed has exclusively
used JPMorgan Chase to hold, as custodian, more than $2.3 trillion of the
Federal Reserve’s Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) for the past 15-1/2
years – despite JPMorgan Chase admitting to five felony counts brought by
the criminal division of the U.S. Department of Justice during that time.

If there was an admitted felon in your neighborhood, would that be your
first choice for a house sitter?

During the financial crisis of 2008, in an effort to restore liquidity to
seized up markets, the Fed announced it planned to buy $500 billion of MBS
that was backed by government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae. That was the first of what would become
Quantitative Easing (QE) to infinity at the Fed. The Fed’s MBS holdings
have grown from the planned $500 billion to $2.3 trillion as of last
Wednesday.

In a typical move, the Federal Reserve outsourced its MBS buying program to
the New York Fed, which, in turn, farmed out one critical leg of the
program (custodianship of the MBS) to the very Wall Street megabank that
had corrupted a significant part of the MBS market: JPMorgan Chase.

A little more than a month after the Fed’s 2008 MBS announcement, on
December 31, 2008, the New York Fed signed a contract with JPMorgan Chase
to be the sole custodian of the securities it bought under the MBS program.
That contract with JPMorgan Chase was amended on April 1, 2010; April 26,
2011; April 17, 2014 and again on January 30, 2017. (As of today, the
original contract and its amendments are available at the New York Fed’s
website. Should those documents vanish, we have archived the same documents
on our website here.)

This spring, Wall Street On Parade became curious as to just how much
JPMorgan Chase was reaping in revenues from serving as a vendor to the New
York Fed. On April 18, via email, we filed a Freedom of Information Act
request with the New York Fed, asking for the following:

“Please provide copies of invoices that the New York Fed received from
JPMorgan Chase (or any of its subsidiaries such as Chase Bank or JPMorgan
Securities) during the 2023 calendar year.

“We are particularly interested in invoices for custodial and cash
management services related to MBS securities held in custody by JPMorgan
Chase for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.”

While the Federal Reserve Board of Governors is a federal agency and
subject to FOIA, the 12 regional Fed banks are considered private
corporations, not legally subject to FOIA. The New York Fed, however,
regularly states that it “complies with the spirit of the Freedom of
Information Act” in providing documents to the public.

Under FOIA, Wall Street On Parade was entitled to a response in 20 business
days. Since these invoices should have been easily obtainable in the
Accounts Payable department of the New York Fed, and we were asking only
for those from last year, 20 business days seemed to us like an adequate
response time.

Instead, on May 16 we received an email from the New York Fed telling us
they needed more time and were planning to provide us the documents on July
1. When July 1 came around, the New York Fed told us the new projected date
was July 12. When July 12 arrived, we were told to expect the invoices on
or before July 26. On that date, we received a cover letter and 158
documents – with the amounts that JPMorgan Chase had billed to the New York
Fed redacted behind blocks of black ink.

Stalling on FOIA requests and providing journalists with useless
information has become a favorite sport at both the Federal Reserve and the
New York Fed. (See also: Reporters Who Ask Tough Questions at Fed Press
Conferences Have a Habit of Being Disappeared from the Room.)

Despite blacking out the very information we had requested – how much
JPMorgan Chase had billed to the New York Fed in one year – after making us
wait almost three months, we were able, nonetheless, to make some
interesting findings from the sanitized documents.

Per the invoice graphic above from the documents, covering the billing
period of January 1, 2023 through January 31, 2023, JPMorgan Chase appears
to be billing for a lot more than just providing custodianship of the MBS
assets. There are menu tabs for the following services billed: “Custody
Fee,” “Transaction Fee,” “Cash Management Fee,” “Security Lending Fees,”
“Benefit Payment Fees,” “Other Fees,” and “Other Expenses.”

Equally of note, there does not appear to be any significant documentation
provided to the New York Fed to support how these fees were calculated.

Another curiosity is that the New York Fed allows invoices from JPMorgan
Chase to go unpaid for more than two months in multiple cases. (See the
invoice below as one sample.)

JPMorgan Chase Overdue Invoice to Fed

And raising our eyebrows were invoices that we did not know existed. These
are the invoices toward the end of the document that are marked as
“Tri-Party Collateral Management Fees.” We’ll be reporting on that aspect
of these invoices later this week.

We will also be filing a formal complaint with the Federal Reserve
Inspector General over how this FOIA request was handled, involving the
largest federally-insured bank in the United States and its perpetually
blind-folded supervisor, the New York Fed.

Related Articles:

The New York Fed Has Quietly Staffed Up a Second Trading Floor Near the S&P
500 Futures Market in Chicago

These Are the Banks that Own the New York Fed and Its Money Button

Is the New York Fed Too Deeply Conflicted to Regulate Wall Street?

Former New York Fed Pres Bill Dudley Calls This the First Banking Crisis
Since 2008; Charts Show It’s the Third

New York Fed Stuns with New Report: At Year End Its Trading Desk Owned 38
Percent of All 10-30 Year U.S. Treasuries

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