The following chart shows that on a monthly closing basis, bank reserves
held at the Fed peaked in August of 2014 at $2.79T and by August-2016 had
shrunk to $2.35T. This amounts to a $440B decline in bank reserves over the
space of two years. Furthermore, $320B of this $440B decline happened since
last October. Does this mean that while the financial world vigorously
debates whether the Fed will/should take a ‘baby step’ along the rate-hiking
path next week, behind the scenes the Fed has been tightening the monetary
screws for 2 years and especially over the past 10 months?
In a word, no. Up until now the Fed has done nothing to tighten monetary
conditions.
I am, of course, aware that there was a tiny increase in the Fed’s
targeted interest rate last December, but this rate hike was not implemented
via a money-supply or reserve reduction and therefore did not constitute
genuinely-tighter monetary policy. What, then, is the explanation for the
significant reduction in bank reserves held at the Fed?
Before getting to the explanation I’ll reiterate that there are only three
ways for US commercial bank reserves to decline. They can be converted to
physical currency in circulation in response to increasing demand on the part
of the public for notes and coins, they can be shifted to other accounts at
the Fed, or they can be removed by the Fed. Only the last of these
constitutes monetary tightening by the Fed.
Part of the explanation for the decline in bank reserves is the increasing
demand on the part of the public for notes and coins. Due to “inflation”,
this demand increases almost every year and is satisfied by the conversion of
reserves into physical currency. This naturally has the effect of reducing
bank reserves, but the process does not change the money supply because the
physical currency replaces electronic currency. For example, when you
withdraw $100 at an ATM, $100 is converted from electronic form to paper form
while the total money supply is obviously unaffected. This $100 of ‘paper’
comes from the bank’s reserves.
The following chart shows the steady increase in “Currency in Circulation”
over the past 5 years. As noted above, this increase involves the siphoning
of reserves (in physical form) out of the banking system to replace
electronic money. An implication is that if the Fed does nothing and the
public’s demand for physical notes/coins is rising, bank reserves will
dissipate over time.
Since last October, when the rate of decline in bank reserves accelerated,
“Currency in Circulation” has risen from $1392B to $1464B, or by $72B. In
other words, increasing demand for physical notes/coins only explains $72B of
the $320B reduction in reserves since last October. If the remaining $248B
reduction wasn’t due to the actions of the Fed, what caused it?
Before I answer the above question I’ll provide evidence that the reserve
reduction wasn’t engineered by the Fed. The evidence is the following chart
showing total Federal Reserve Credit. Notice that Total Fed Credit has
flat-lined since the end of QE in October-2014. This indicates that since
October-2014 the Fed has not made any sustained additions to or deletions
from the quantity of money or the quantity of bank reserves.
Getting back to the question asked above, the answer is the US Treasury.
More specifically, about 90% of the remaining $248B reduction in bank
reserves has been caused by the US Treasury hoarding a lot more cash than
usual at the Fed.
As I mentioned earlier in this piece, bank reserves can’t leave the Fed
unless they are removed by the Fed or get converted to physical currency in
response to increasing public demand for notes/coins, but they can get
shifted to other (non-reserve) accounts at the Fed. One of these accounts is
called the US Treasury General Account, which, as the name suggests, is the
US government’s account at the Fed.
As illustrated by the following chart, the Treasury General Account was
about $50B at the end of October last year and was about $275B at the end of
August this year. This means that over the 10-month period beginning in
November of last year the US Treasury removed about $225B from the
economy-wide money supply and removed the equivalent amount from bank
reserves.
Just to be clear, the government removes trillions of dollars per year
from the economy, but it normally recycles the money very quickly. Usually,
money comes in one door via taxation or borrowing and immediately goes out
another door. The difference this year is that the Federal Government has
been maintaining a much higher ‘cash float’ than usual.
I don’t know why the US Federal government has suddenly started keeping a
lot more cash in reserve. Perhaps the leadership wants to make sure that,
come what may, there will always be plenty of ready cash to pay the
salaries/benefits of politicians and senior bureaucrats.