Search Results

SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Keywords:Treasury market 

Speech
Preparing for the Unknown

Remarks at the 2021 U.S. Treasury Market Conference (delivered via videoconference).
Speech

Speech
Opening Remarks

Remarks at 2023 U.S. Treasury Market Conference, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New York City.
Speech

Working Paper
The Relationship between Market Depth and Liquidity Fragility in the Treasury Market

Analysis of market liquidity often focuses on measures of the current cost of trading. However, investors and policy-makers also care about what would happen to liquidity in the event of an adverse shock. If liquidity were to deteriorate rapidly at times when investors were seeking to rebalance portfolios, this could amplify the effects of shocks to the financial system even if liquidity is high most of the time. We examine the potential for such fragility of liquidity in the Treasury market. We show that a reduction in the availability of resting orders to trade ("market depth") increases ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2025-014

Discussion Paper
Has Treasury Market Liquidity Improved in 2024?

Standard metrics point to an improvement in Treasury market liquidity in 2024 to levels last seen before the start of the current monetary policy tightening cycle. Volatility has also trended down, consistent with the improved liquidity. While at least one market functioning metric has worsened in recent months, that measure is an indirect gauge of market liquidity and suggests a level of current functioning that is far better than at the peak seen during the global financial crisis (GFC).
Liberty Street Economics , Paper 20240923

Report
All-to-All Trading in the U.S. Treasury Market

Although the U.S. Treasury market remains the deepest and most liquid securities market in the world, several episodes of market dysfunction over recent years have brought the market’s resilience into focus. The adoption of all-to-all trading in the Treasury market could be one avenue to strengthening market resilience. Conceptually, all-to-all trading would allow any market participant to trade directly with any other market participant. This could be helpful in times of stress when the capacity of traditional intermediaries may be tested. In this article, we discuss what all-to-all ...
Staff Reports , Paper 1036

Speech
Collaboration Toward Increased Resilience of the Treasury Market

Remarks at ISDA/SIFMA AMG Derivatives Trading Forum New York: The Path to Resilient Treasury Markets, New York City.
Speech

Speech
Transcript of Lorie Logan on the Macro Musings Podcast

A closer look at monetary policy operations, the Fed’s new Standing Repo Facility, and the future of the Fed’s balance sheet.
Speech

Working Paper
Risk-averse Dealers in a Risk-free Market - The Role of Trading Desk Risk Limits

Self-imposed risk limits effectively limit dealers' appetite for risks and their capacity to intermediate in Treasury markets in times of market stress. Using granular and high frequency regulatory data on US dealers' Treasury securities trading desk positions and desk-level Value-at-Risk limits, we show that dealers are more inclined to reduce their positions as they get closer to their internal risk limit, consistent with such limit being meaningful and costly for traders to breach. Dealers actively manage their inventories away from their limits by selling longer-term securities and ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2025-034

Working Paper
The Effect of Primary Dealer Constraints on Intermediation in the Treasury Market

Using confidential microdata, we show that shocks to primary dealers’ risk-bearing constraints have significant effects on the US Treasury securities market. In response to tighter constraints, dealers reduce their Treasury positions, triggering a reduction in aggregate turnover and an increase in bid–ask spreads. These effects are more pronounced in securities that contribute more to the utilization of risk constraints. The impaired intermediation also affects Treasury yields, amplifying the yield response to net demand shifts. Moreover, tighter dealer constraints weaken Treasury auction ...
Working Papers , Paper 24-7

Discussion Paper
Bank Supervisory Goals versus Monetary Policy Implementation

The global financial crisis of 2007–09 revealed substantial weaknesses in large banks' capital adequacy and liquidity. Bank regulators responded with a variety of prudential measures intended to strengthen both. However, these prudential measures resulted in conflicts with the implementation of monetary policy that helped alter the way the Federal Reserve conducts monetary policy. I review three such conflicts: regulation inhibiting interest on excess reserves arbitrage starting in 2008, regulation inhibiting banks' operations in the repo market in 2019, and regulation inhibiting their ...
Policy Hub , Paper 2021-03

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Series

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Author

FILTER BY Jel Classification

G12 14 items

E52 8 items

G1 8 items

G10 7 items

E58 6 items

G01 6 items

show more (15)

FILTER BY Keywords

liquidity 7 items

monetary policy 6 items

repo market 5 items

Liquidity 4 items

bank liquidity regulation 4 items

show more (119)

PREVIOUS / NEXT