


The Federal Reserve and other financial regulators are drafting a proposal to mandate banks to borrow from the central bank at least once a year to diminish the stigma of using the discount window.
Alongside the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Fed aims to ensure financial institutions are better prepared for a hurried exodus of deposits. The latest regulatory efforts come nearly a year after the banking crisis that saw regional banks endure a tidal wave of client deposit outflows, resulting in the failures of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, and First Republic Bank.
Since the Fed was established in 1913, which came in response to the Banking Panic of 1907, the discount window has been available to troubled entities. For the past century, the Fed has been viewed as the lender of last resort, and monetary authorities have discouraged lending facility usage unless borrowers are on the cusp of collapse.
Banks have usually hesitated to take advantage of the discount window because Wall Street might view it as a sign of financial trouble brewing at these companies.
However, mandating banks to tap the discount window can reduce this stigma typically associated with borrowing from the central bank, says Michael Hsu, the acting comptroller of the currency.
“It’s almost like doing a fire drill. If it’s required, when a real liquidity fire comes, then the banks can do it in real life,” Mr. Hsu told Bloomberg TV. “Operationally, banks would have to go borrow $1, $100 million, whatever it might be, just to ensure that the procedures, the systems, the people, everything is there and in place to access the discount window.”
It is unclear if regulators would lower the discount rate to enable usage. It currently stands at 5.5 percent.
This is not an idea that has come out of nowhere.
Financial regulators have been engaging with the industry and are reviewing comments and responses to the trio’s proposals to bolster capital.
In December, speaking at a European Central Bank (ECB) event, Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael S. Barr recommended banks utilize “the discount window in good times and bad.”
“The ability to access funding at a predictable rate through the discount window should figure importantly into banks’ liquidity risk management plans under a range of scenarios,” Mr. Barr said in prepared remarks, adding that there should be a broad array of avenues to access liquidity, and the “discount window borrowing should be an important part of this mix.”
In a message directed to banks, analysts, rating agencies, market observers, and the public, Mr. Barr noted that “using the discount window is not an action to be viewed negatively.”
Early Response
The response has been limited, but early comments have signaled a thumbs-up for the proposal.Earlier this month, the Group of Thirty (G30), an international organization of academics, bankers, and economists, conveyed its support for “strengthened lender-of-last-resort (LoLR) mechanisms.”
“We would require banks to pre-position enough collateral at the discount window to cover, after the normal haircutting for credit risks, all runnable liabilities—that is, all liabilities excluding capital, long-term debt, swap liabilities, and insured deposits. This more robust LoLR system would enable banks to obtain immediate liquidity in times of stress and avoid fire-selling assets,” said former New York Fed President Wlliam C. Dudley, who authored the G30’s study titled “Bank Failures and Contagion: Lender of Last Resort, Liquidity, and Risk Management.”
“By requiring pre-positioning, we will reduce the risk that uninsured depositors and other short-term claimholders run for the exits during periods of panic,” Mr. Dudley said.
Stijn Claessens, the project director of the G30 Working Group on the 2023 Banking Crisis and the former head of Financial Stability Policy at the Bank for International Settlements, argued that reforming the LoLR mechanisms is the “most important, most feasible, and lowest-cost reform.”
According to Darrell Duffie, the project adviser to the G30 Working Group on the 2023 Banking Crisis and Adams Distinguished Professor of Management at Stanford University, this is the fastest and most effective way to safeguard the financial system without the need for new legislation.
Writing in a Jan. 19 note to clients, JPMorgan Chase strategists ostensibly favor the new rule because it “has the potential to enhance overall financial stability by improving the liquidity position of bank.”
Bank Term Funding Program
In March, roughly half of the loans that originated from the Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP), an emergency lending facility established shortly after the banking meltdown a year ago, will be due. While the Fed had suggested at the beginning that it could be extended, recent comments from central bankers indicate it would close on March 11, as scheduled.Many economists and market analysts have observed the BTFP’s significant growth in recent months. Despite repeated assertions from the current administration that the banking system is sound, strong, resilient, and highly liquid, the BTFP has kept climbing.
For the week ending Jan. 17, the facility reached a record high of nearly $162 billion. Since November, the program has experienced a meteoric increase, rising roughly 42 percent.
Some observers had purported that this could signal a banking system in trouble. However, others realized that the substantial boost to the BTFP was a case of companies taking advantage of the situation by using an arbitrage opportunity.
Banks borrowed from the BTFP to park the funds in their accounts at the Fed, earning a 5.4 percent on reserve balances. By comparison, the lending program’s interest rate stands at around 5.1 percent.
This, says Heritage Foundation economist E.J. Antoni, is manufacturing an event similar to the end of the 1920s.
“The Fed has managed to turn its own assets into liabilities; BTFP is charging a lower interest rate than IOR [interest on reserve balances], creating an arbitrage reminiscent of the bankers’ acceptances debacle the Fed created at the end of the 1920s, which helped cause the ‘29 crash,” Mr. Antoni wrote on X.
Meanwhile, until March, analysts will be combing through the financial markets to determine if there are signs of stress as the Fed puts an end to the lending facility.