Banks’ demand for emergency loans could signal more rate hikes

April 28, 2023

By George Prior 

US banks continuing to increase emergency loans from the Federal Reserve will hinder attempts to cool inflation, giving the central bank more reason to continue interest rate hikes.

This is the stark warning from Nigel Green, the CEO of deVere Group, one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory, asset management and fintech organizations, as new data shows that banks’ demand for loans from the Fed increased for the second consecutive week.

The US central bank now has provided more than $155.2 billion in loans to financial institutions through two backstop lending programs since the string of bank collapses in March.

The deVere chief executive says: “The $25 billion Bank Term Funding Program, which offers banks loans of up to one year, is surely going to turn out to be inflationary.

“It’s increasing the balance sheet of the Federal Reserve at a time when it’s supposedly intent on trying to reduce it.


Free Reports:

Sign Up for Our Stock Market Newsletter – Get updated on News, Charts & Rankings of Public Companies when you join our Stocks Newsletter





Get our Weekly Commitment of Traders Reports - See where the biggest traders (Hedge Funds and Commercial Hedgers) are positioned in the futures markets on a weekly basis.





“The emergency borrowing program is, essentially, another form of quantitative easing, which, as we know, adds to inflationary pressures.”

He continues: “The increase in demand for loans from financial institutions demonstrates ongoing stress in the US financial system, and this together with the inflationary consequences of the emergency program, are likely to give the Fed more reason to continue with its tightening campaign, despite weaker-than-expected GDP data, which has some investors betting that the central bank could soon wrap up its current agenda.”

Earlier this week, Nigel Green said in a statement that he expects the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates once again at its upcoming May meeting and that this is likely to cause jitters in the market as some investors, concerned about short-term profits, will move into panic-selling mode.

“Furthermore, they will have legitimate concerns that further rate hikes now – when monetary policy time lags are notoriously long – could steer economies into a recession.”

The time lag in monetary policies is very high. Economists estimate interest rate changes take up to 18 months to have the full effect. This means monetary policymakers need to try and predict the state of the economy for up to 18 months ahead.

Nigel Green concludes: “The latest data showing banks increasing their emergency borrowings will give the Fed more excuse to continue with their tightening next week.”

About:

deVere Group is one of the world’s largest independent advisors of specialist global financial solutions to international, local mass affluent, and high-net-worth clients.  It has a network of more than 70 offices across the world, over 80,000 clients and $12bn under advisement.

InvestMacro

Share
Published by
InvestMacro

Recent Posts

Optimism surrounding the US-China summit in Beijing supported the markets

By JustMarkets  On Thursday, the US stock market closed higher. By the end of the…

1 day ago

Gold Falls on US Inflation Concerns as Week Ends in Losses

By Analytical Department RoboForex Gold continued its decline on Friday, falling to 4,619 USD per…

1 day ago

Button‑pushing explorers: How to grasp that AI agents can do amazing things while knowing nothing

By Ji Y. Son, California State University, Los Angeles and Alice Xu, University of California,…

2 days ago

The oil market may remain in a state of severe supply shortage until autumn

By JustMarkets  On Wednesday, the US stock indices mostly rose, with the S&P 500 and…

2 days ago

GBP/USD Under Policy Pressure: What Lies Ahead for the Prime Minister?

By Analytical Department RoboForex GBP/USD held at 1.3528 on Thursday following an overnight decline. The…

2 days ago

The missing link in America’s critical minerals push isn’t mining – it’s processing expertise

By Hélène Nguemgaing, University of Maryland and Alan Collins, West Virginia UniversityThe United States is…

3 days ago

This website uses cookies.