AMPLE LIQUIDITY FOR A SAFE AND EFFICIENT BANKING SYSTEM
The following information was released by the
Dallas Fed
Good morning. Thank you all for joining us again today. Yesterdays discussions were so enriching, and Im excited to build on them this morning.
As you know, the
Monetary policy
I would have preferred to hold interest rates steady at this weeks
While the government shutdown has reduced the availability of national statistics, a wide range of alternative data sources continue to provide visibility into the state of the economy. Those sources include private-sector indicators, continuing administrative data such as unemployment claims, regional surveys run by many of the
The labor market remains roughly balanced. At 4.3 percent, the latest reading on the unemployment rate was up only slightly over the past year on net.
Payroll job gains fell markedly in 2025. But slow job gains dont necessarily mean theres more slack in the labor market. Labor supply has fallen at the same time as demand, particularly due to changes in immigration policy and labor force participation. In consequence, despite the drop in job growth, were not seeing a rapidly widening gap between the number of jobs available and the number of people who want work.
My staff estimates that break-even payroll growth, the number of net new jobs needed to hold unemployment steady, has fallen to around 30,000 jobs per month.
Resilient consumer and business spending continues to support employment. Consumer spending growth has slowed from last year, but only to a pace that equals or slightly exceeds the longer-run trend. Stock market gains are fueling wealthier households demand. Large companies are investing enthusiastically in artificial intelligence and data centers. The picture for lower-income families and smaller businesses is softer than the aggregate, but it remains stable.
The Dallas Fed Weekly Economic Index combines 10 daily and weekly data series to deliver a rapid signal of the state of the economy. It is averaging 2.4 percent. Thats consistent with strong gross domestic product growth in the third quarter.
The risks to the labor market do lie mainly to the downside. In this low-hiring environment, the job market could have difficulty absorbing any significant pickup in layoffs from the current low level. Buoyant asset valuations can sometimes snap back without much warning, which might take the wind out of consumer spending. And the federal government shutdown will pose greater risks to economic activity the longer it continues. But these are all risks the
Turning to the price stability side of the mandate, inflation is still too high and too slow to return to target. The
While inflation has come down significantly from the postpandemic peak, its still not convincingly headed all the way back to 2 percent. The Blue Chip Economic Indicators surveys dozens of private-sector forecasters about their economic outlooks. The Blue Chip consensus outlook is for 2.6 percent PCE inflation in 2026 and around 2.4 percent in 2027, followed by fluctuations between 2.1 and 2.2 percent all the way out to at least 2031never all the way back to target.
The FOMCs 2 percent inflation target is a serious commitment. Weve reaffirmed it repeatedly, most recently in the Statement on Longer-run Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy we issued this August. Our obligation to the public is to deliver on this commitment.
To be sure, inflation persistently running several tenths above the target is not the emergency that inflation persistently several percentage points above the target would be. And we have an equally serious obligation to pursue maximum employment. The FOMCs long-run strategy calls for a balanced approach to our two objectives. I carefully weigh the potential labor market costs of measures to reduce inflation. But labor demand and supply remain in balance. The
Balance sheet normalization
The
More than just a return to normal, the reduction in the balance sheet forms part of how the Fed promotes safe and efficient liquidity for our nations banks. Of course, the primary responsibility for banks funding and liquidity risk management rests with bankers. Still, the Feds balance sheet underpins some aspects of bankers decisions, and thats what Id like to talk with you about today.
Efficient reserve supply
The Feds single largest liability, nearly half the balance sheet in total, is bank reserves.
If youre holding a loan to one of your customers, a corporate bond, or even a
As authorized by
When the interest rate on reserve balances (IORB) is close to interest rates on other money market instruments, it doesnt cost banks anything to hold reserves to meet their liquidity needs. If reserves paid less than market rates, on the other hand, or no interest at all, each dollar of reserve holdings would cost a bank the difference between market rates and IORB. Banks would have a strong incentive to avoid holding reserves.
Considering that it doesnt cost the Fed to provide reserves, all those gymnastics represented wasted effort for the economy. And thats the best case. If costly liquidity held banks back from providing services their customers would have valued, the old system of scarce reserves put a brake on economic growthfor no good reason. Moreover, if banks were taking unnecessary liquidity risk because they avoided holding the safest, most liquid asset in existence, the financial system was more vulnerable to shocksagain, for no good reason.
Since 2008, the Fed has met banks demand for reserves with interest on reserves close to market rates. In 2019, the
If reserves are so great, why did the
Its clear reserve supply exceeded banks demand because market interest rates fell significantly below interest on reserves. In 2022, rates on overnight repurchase agreements, or repos, collateralized by
Supplying too many reserves is just as inefficient as supplying too few reserves. When aggregate reserve supply is too high, the banking system holds reserves instead of more productive assets. And liquidity is too expensive for financial institutions other than banks. To best serve the economy in normal times, the Fed needs to strike a balance and supply an efficient quantity of reservesneither too many nor too few.
The transition to ample reserves
There are many indicators of reserve ampleness, but the most significant one to me is the position of money market rates relative to IORB. In an efficient system, market rates should be close to, but perhaps slightly below, interest on reserves on average over time.
On average is key there. Market rates can fluctuate from day to day. Bringing the average level close to IORB also requires some tolerance for modest, temporary moves above IORB.
Those fluctuations should help, in fact, in returning the Feds balance sheet to an efficient size. Many banks have adapted their business models to an environment with more-than-ample reserves and market rates consistently below interest on reserves. These adaptations likely increased the aggregate demand for reserves compared with the prepandemic level. Theres a ratchet effect: To meet banks reserve demand in the short run, the Fed now must supply more reserves than it would have previously.
Since late summer, market rates have risen significantly relative to IORB. The rise in market rates relative to IORB will likely make many banks want to cut back on reserve holdings. There is only so much a bank can do, though, to reduce its reserve needs from one day or week to the next. It takes time to shed unwanted deposits or to adjust the composition of assets and liabilities so the bank needs less immediate liquidity. By sustaining a period of money market rates averaging close to IORB, including some modest, temporary swings higher, the
However, it is important not to take those incentives too far. Rates averaging above IORB in a sustained way would be inefficient.
The
First, we reduced reserve supply gradually. After beginning asset runoff in 2022, we twice slowed the pace of runoff to produce a gentler glide path for aggregate reserves. The gradual decline in reserves gave banks more time to change their business models and their own balance sheets during the transition from abundant to ample reserves.
Second, the Fed has established strong tools to put a ceiling on money market rates and to provide additional liquidity if needed.
The Feds ceiling tools
The discount window is available every business day to healthy banks, with primary credit offered against a wide range of collateral at an interest rate equal to the top of the fed funds target range. The
The Feds Standing Repo Facility (SRF) also offers funding to eligible counterparties at the top of the target range against
But the way the Fed implements SRF operations can also affect counterparties willingness to use it. This year, the Open Market Trading Desk at the
Moreover, central clearing of Fed operations would align with the private-sector repo markets ongoing shift toward central clearing. Broader central clearing of
Effective ceiling tools will allow the
The outlook for money market conditions and reserves
In recent months, money market rates have moved up toward and sometimes above IORB. After averaging 8 to 9 basis points below IORB in the first eight months of 2025, the tri-party general collateral rate (TGCR) averaged slightly above interest on reserves in September and October. TGCR is a rate on overnight repos collateralized by
It is not certain where money market spreads will go from here and how the supply of reserves will need to evolve. Temporary factors including tax payments,
The size and timing of these reserve management purchases should not be mechanical, in my view. While purchases will need to offset relatively predictable trend growth in currency, reserve demand will likely also change over time in response to economic growth, changes in the banking and payments businesses, and adjustments in regulations. Reserve supply will need to roughly track those developments to remain efficient. I currently view the average spread of TGCR to IORB as the central, though certainly not only, indicator of how reserve supply needs to evolve.
The FOMCs operating target
You may have noticed that I focused on a repo rate, TGCR, and not the fed funds rate, even though the
One change is the move to supplying ample, interest-bearing reserves. Because reserves now earn a competitive interest rate, banks are less motivated to lend out extra reserves at the end of the day to peers whose reserves have fallen short.
Some say the Fed should reduce reserves to the point of scarcity to revive interbank trading. But ample reserves dont cost anything, and they make the banking system safer and more efficient, as I discussed earlier. Creating artificial scarcity just to force banks to manage it would be wasteful. Although it would be competition of sorts, it wouldnt be the kind of competition that matters for a vibrant economy. Banks should compete to best serve their customers, not to scrounge for liquidity that the Fed can easily provide.
In addition, while banks should be prepared to source contingent liquidity when needed, they dont need to trade every day in the fed funds market to maintain that readiness. Ive compared this before to building codes and fire drills. Modern building codes prevent many fires. People these days get much less practice escaping burning buildings. But no one suggests returning to old-fashioned, dangerous construction methods so buildings would burn down more often, and firefighters could get more experience. Fire drills work fine! In the same way, ample reserves reduce liquidity risk, and banks can employ drills and other readiness exercises to ensure theyre prepared to address the risk that remains.
The Global Financial Crisis (GFC) demonstrated the risks to firms on both sides of an unsecured, short-term interbank loan. The lender is at risk because if the borrower defaults, theres no collateral to fall back on. The borrower is at risk because if lenders become worried, funding can dry up suddenly. The other key change since the 1990s is that post-GFC capital and liquidity regulations recognize these risks and create disincentives for unsecured, short-term interbank lending.
Put it together, and fed funds is no longer a vibrant interbank market that measures the marginal cost of money for a wide range of institutions. Today, the fed funds market is dominated by an arbitrage trade. FHLBs, which dont receive interest on reserves, lend to foreign banks, which receive interest on reserves but dont pay for deposit insurance. This concentrated base of lenders and borrowers makes the fed funds market idiosyncratic and fragile. From
If the connection between fed funds and broader money markets ever broke, the
Let me emphasize that modernizing the target rate would not change the FOMCs monetary policy strategy. The operating target specifies how the
Targeting TGCR would not require a larger Fed balance sheet or larger, more frequent or more complex operations than targeting the fed funds rate. For many years, the
There are important trade-offs between potential replacements for the fed funds rate. Besides TGCR, market participants often mention the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) as a candidate. SOFR is a widely adopted reference rate with well-developed derivatives markets, and it includes centrally cleared trades that seem likely to grow in volume in light of the
To reiterate, these are only my views. But I believe the
Thank you.


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