The concept of reverse repo is so crazy... this is just money printing with extra steps.
To my knowledge, this is the first time RRO have sustained such a high level - I think a lot of economists are stumped on this.
Basic thought is that there is so much excess liquidity in the market that the banks cannot stuff money anywhere else in the economy that they feel comfortable with - highlighting just how over valued every asset in the market is.
As credit dries up, all the zombie companies will be exposed and employees will find themselves quickly unemployed :/
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Basic thought is that there is so much excess liquidity in the market that the banks cannot stuff money anywhere else in the economy that they feel comfortable with - highlighting just how over valued every asset in the market is.
In my opinion this means that assets are undervalued because the money and the liquidity is there its just refusing to invest currently. The money will enter the assets when it realizes that they are undervalued relative to the amount of dollars in circulation. So the way the market is currently valuating things is by assuming the amount of dollars is constant, but in reality trillions have been printed and because of this assets are still undervalued even if they are near historic highs. This is something the market does not yet accept which explains the current activity in the repo market.
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I would argue the opposite.
The current RRO market rate is 0.4% which means that banks are willing to lend out their money to the Fed at 0.4% - a lower interest rate than other assets (e.g mortgages, business/personal loans, etc.). If there were valuable assets to invest in, the Banks would be making loans out for the purchase of these assets (and not to the Fed)
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So im sorry for editing my post, but i only did it to clarify my point. But i see what you mean, the question is why are banks taking the 0.4% interest with so much money and why is the trend increasing? Imo its because they THINK other assets are overvalued simply because they are near historic highs? But when you look at the amount of money chasing that 0.4% then its kinda obvious that other assets are undervalued. Not sure if that makes sense
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i'm new to the topic, how do reverse repos increase the money supply?
is there any material you suggest reading?
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Also, if you're interested in learning more about Finance/Economics (in a straight-forward way), I would highly recommend Investopedia.com. Google anything related to finance, (e.g Reverse Repos - https://www.investopedia.com/terms/r/reverserepurchaseagreement.asp) and they will provide very good content
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I'm also new to this and have no idea what I'm talking about, but I heard Greg Foss explaining it in some podcast with Preston Pysh and that explanation made sense (the concept itself doesn't make much sense, but the explanation did). I can't find which one that was unfortunately :(
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Ah I see, are you sure it was a conversation about reverse repos and not repos?
At first glance through this Fed article, it seems like reverse repos actually reduce reserve balances, though I'm unclear on how that affects money supply.
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RROs are the banks giving back money to the Fed because the banks have no other places in th economy to deploy/loan the funds out to.
The bank will give money back to the Fed, effectively reducing the money supply (temporarily)
Here is a basic summary of a RRO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_wwzyAGPZw
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