Federal Reserve Overnight Repo Operation Receives No Bids

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Federal Reserve
05-16 01:49
1 sources

Summary

On May 16, 2026, the Federal Reserve’s overnight repo operation received zero bids, indicating no market demand for central bank liquidity at the offered rate [Zhitong]. This occurs as the Reverse Repo (RRP) facility has plummeted to just $2.034 billion, a fraction of its historical levels, signaling a transition from excess to ‘reasonable’ liquidity levels [][].

Impact Analysis

So, the Fed basically offered to lend cash and nobody showed up. This ‘zero bid’ on the repo side tells me the private market is still self-sufficient for now, but don’t let that fool you. The real story is the backdrop: the Reverse Repo (RRP) facility—the market’s massive cash cushion—has effectively drained to nearly nothing, sitting at just $2 billion compared to the trillions we saw previously [][].

We’re at a critical inflection point where the liquidity ‘buffer’ is gone. With PPI recently coming in hot and reigniting inflation fears [], the Fed is likely to keep the pressure on. This shift from ‘excess’ to ‘just enough’ liquidity means we should expect higher volatility in the front end of the curve. I don’t buy the ‘soft landing’ narrative here; the margin for error in the repo market is now razor-thin. Bottom line: stay defensive. I’d be trimming those crowded AI positions [] and looking for opportunities in low-valuation financials that can weather a tighter funding environment. The safety net is officially pulled back.

Event Track

Federal Reserve