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#美联储回购协议计划 The Fed's "Double Insurance": From Liquidity Fears to a Liquidity Defense Line
Trump's tariff policies triggered fluctuations in U.S. Treasuries, and the New York Fed has been on high alert—closely monitoring the overnight repurchase agreement (repo) rate, fearing a replay of the 2019 "cash crunch." This time, unlike before, the Federal Reserve shifted from a passive response to an active approach, using the "ample reserve framework" to regulate interest rate fluctuations and liquidity supply.
What exactly is a repurchase agreement? Simply put, banks use government bonds as collateral to borrow short-term cash from the Fed, with the difference in interest being the profit. No new money is printed; it's purely precise liquidity management.
This year's approach has changed. Repos are no longer "emergency measures" but have become a routine "insurance product." The Fed directly canceled the $500 billion daily limit, opening a "safety valve" for a high-interest-rate environment. At the same time, it employs a three-pronged strategy: the reserve balance rate, overnight reverse repurchase agreements (ON RRP), and standing repurchase agreements, tightly locking the federal funds rate within its target range.
The 2025 policy mix is formidable: slowing down balance sheet reduction, upgrading repo mechanisms, and restarting Treasury purchases. These operations lower short-term interest rates and influence traditional asset trends; the crypto market is more sensitive—when liquidity is injected, funding tightness eases, and risk appetite immediately rebounds.
Currently, reserve balances are approaching the critical level seen in 2019, and upward pressure on interest rates is increasing. However, the Fed is well-prepared, and the "cash crunch" risk appears manageable at present.
Looking ahead, proactive regulation is expected to become the new normal. Investors need to learn to distinguish between "liquidity stabilization" and "genuine monetary easing"; crypto players can use the spread between SOFR and ON RRP rates as a barometer of liquidity tightness.
Before the end of the year, the NY Fed's $6.8 billion Treasury purchase will be gradually implemented, further tightening the link between traditional markets and crypto markets. The Fed's liquidity tools are no longer passive responses but are part of a sophisticated system actively shaping the market ecosystem.