Federal Reserve accepts $1.85B in reverse repurchase operation, a fraction of its pandemic-era peaks
The Federal Reserve's latest reverse repurchase operation accepted $1.85 billion from seven counterparties, marking a significant decline from its pandemic-era peaks. This facility, which was once absorbing over $2 trillion daily, now handles a fraction of that amount. The decrease reflects a broader shift in liquidity as banks and financial institutions seek more attractive investment opportunities.
- ▪The Federal Reserve accepted $1.853 billion in its latest overnight reverse repurchase operation.
- ▪During the pandemic, the facility was absorbing over $2 trillion daily.
- ▪Participation in the reverse repo facility is limited to large banks and money market funds.
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Federal Reserve accepts $1.85B in reverse repurchase operation, a fraction of its pandemic-era peaks The Fed's overnight reverse repo facility continues its quiet decline, with just seven counterparties parking cash in the latest operation. Share Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 27, 2026 window.sevioads = window.sevioads || []; var sevioads_preferences = []; sevioads_preferences[0] = {}; sevioads_preferences[0].zone = "01f21ccf-2092-46b1-9ac7-8c44cc782e0f"; sevioads_preferences[0].adType = "native"; sevioads_preferences[0].inventoryId = "c5700508-581b-472c-8fdd-a931cdbfc8e1"; sevioads_preferences[0].accountId = "1e47efc1-ec2d-4fca-a8b9-354e249e5095"; sevioads.push(sevioads_preferences); The Federal Reserve accepted $1.853 billion from seven counterparties in its latest overnight…
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