The Fed said it could supply the economy with $2.3 trillion. It hasn’t come close so far

  • The Fed in March unveiled lending programs it said could provide $2.3 trillion to the economy. So far, that has totaled just $143 billion, or 6.2% of the total firepower.
  • There are several likely explanations for why what was supposed to be an infusion of cash into the economy instead has been a comparative trickle.
  • The programs, particularly the Main Street lending initiative, are complicated. There also may be less of a need as the economy improves.
  • “There are also early signs that demand for the new facilities has been relatively muted, perhaps because the terms on offer have proved relatively unattractive,” said economist Andrew Hunter of Capital Economics.

ECB ready to cooperate to resolve German legal dispute, VP says

The European Central Bank is ready to cooperate with German “institutions” to resolve a legal dispute that jeopardises the participation of the euro zone’s biggest economy in the ECB’s hallmark stimulus programme, the bank’s vice president said.

The ECB is ready to provide the German central bank the necessary information to resolve the issue and the ECB it is willing to engage German institutions if this did not threaten its independence, Germany’s Der Spiegel quoted Luis de Guindos as saying on Monday. Source Reuters

European Central Bank hands out 1.3 trillion euros in loans for minus 1% interest

The European Central Bank has handed out 1.31 trillion euros ($1.46 trillion) in long-term, ultra-cheap credit to hundreds of banks as part of its emergency support aimed at cushioning the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on businesses and worker. The ECB said Thursday that 742 banks across the 19 countries that use the euro currency took up the credit offer, which can carry a negative interest rate of as low as minus 1.0% so long as banks keep up their lending to businesses. That means banks are getting paid by the ECB to borrow the money, an offer that many found hard to refuse. Source Lethbridgenews

Fed will begin purchasing corporate bonds on Tuesday

The Federal Reserve said it will start purchasing corporate bonds on Tuesday through the secondary market corporate credit facility (SMCCF), one of several emergency facilities recently launched by the U.S. central bank to improve market functioning in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Fed will use an indexing approach when making purchases, aiming to create a portfolio that is based on a broad, diversified market index of U.S. corporate bonds. Source Reuters