The Fed's SRF is proving ineffective at capping repo rates. Despite rates trading well above the facility's level, usage was minimal. This indicates a market stigma or hesitation, questioning its ability to function as a reliable backstop for temporary liquidity shortages and control rates.
The early end to the Fed's Quantitative Tightening (QT) is largely irrelevant for year-end funding pressures. The monthly $20 billion runoff is insignificant compared to daily swings in Treasury balances or money market funds. The primary drivers remain bank balance sheet constraints and regulatory hurdles.
The inflation market's reaction to tariff news has fundamentally shifted. Unlike in the past, recent tariff threats failed to raise front-end inflation expectations. This indicates investors are now more concerned about the negative impact on economic growth and labor markets than the direct pass-through to consumer prices.
Despite market speculation about potential cuts to long-end Treasury auction sizes, the primary dealer agenda for the next refunding shows no such intention. The Treasury's focus on other topics suggests it will likely maintain or even increase coupon auction sizes next year, pointing to continued supply pressure.
