Banks take advantage of Fed crisis lending programs
Source: CNBC
Financial institutions took billions in short-term loans this week from the Federal Reserve as the industry copes with a serious crisis of confidence and liquidity, the central bank reported Thursday.
Utilizing tools the Fed rolled out Sunday, banks looking for cash infusions borrowed $11.9 billion from the Bank Term Funding Program. Under that facility, banks can take one-year loans under favorable terms in exchange for high-quality collateral.
Most banks took the more traditional route, using the Feds discount window under terms slightly less favorable, with borrowing rising by $148.2 billion for the week. The discount window provides loans of up to just 90 days, while the BTFP term is for one year. However, the Fed eased conditions at the discount window to make it more attractive for borrowers in need of operating funds.
There also was a large uptick in bridge loans, also done over short terms, totaling $142.8 billion, made primarily to now-shuttered institutions so they could meet obligations regarding depositors and other expenses. The data comes just days after regulators shut Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, two institutions favored by the high-tech community.
Read more: https://www.cnbc.com/2023/03/16/banks-take-advantage-of-fed-crisis-lending-programs-.html
Casady1
(2,133 posts)You didn't quite think out all those interest rates going up very well.
Mawspam2
(1,106 posts)SOOEY! HERE PIG, HERE PIG.