Federal Reserve accepts $1.85B in reverse repurchase operation, a fraction of its pandemic-era peaks
The Fed's overnight reverse repo facility continues its quiet decline, with just seven counterparties parking cash in the latest operation.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 27, 2026The Federal Reserve accepted $1.853 billion from seven counterparties in its latest overnight reverse repurchase operation, a number so small by recent historical standards that it barely registers as a rounding error.
For context, this same facility was absorbing north of $2 trillion on a daily basis during 2021-2023.
What the ON RRP facility actually does
Think of the Federal Reserve’s overnight reverse repurchase facility, or ON RRP, as a parking lot for cash. When banks and money market funds have more money than they know what to do with, they can lend it to the Fed overnight in exchange for Treasury securities as collateral. The next morning, the trade reverses.
The facility exists for a very specific reason. It provides a floor on overnight interest rates by offering a risk-free place to park money. If banks can always earn a guaranteed return at the Fed, they won’t lend to other institutions for less than that rate. This helps the Fed keep the federal funds rate within its target range.
AdvertisementEligible counterparties aren’t exactly mom-and-pop operations. Participation is limited to banks with assets of at least $30 billion, banks with reserves of at least $10 billion, money market funds, and government-sponsored enterprises like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
No digital asset firms, crypto exchanges, or DeFi protocols are anywhere near this facility. It remains a strictly traditional finance affair.
From $2 trillion to pocket change
The decline has been dramatic. According to Federal Reserve Bank of New York data, daily ON RRP utilization in May 2026 ranged from as low as $0.965 billion to a high of around $24.867 billion. Even on its busiest recent days, the facility is handling roughly 1% of what it managed at peak usage.
During the pandemic era, the Fed’s aggressive quantitative easing flooded banks with reserves. Those institutions, swimming in cash with limited attractive places to deploy it, stuffed trillions into the reverse repo facility. As the Fed tightened monetary policy and reduced its balance sheet through quantitative tightening, excess reserves in the banking system declined. Institutions that were once content to park cash at the Fed started deploying it into Treasury bills, lending markets, and other instruments offering competitive yields.
What this means for investors
When this facility held $2 trillion, it represented a massive pool of potential liquidity waiting to be released into the financial system. That pool has now largely drained.
For crypto investors, the dynamic is worth watching for a different reason. Risk assets, including Bitcoin and the broader digital asset market, have historically been sensitive to liquidity conditions. The absence of any crypto-native participants in ON RRP operations also underscores a structural reality. Despite years of talk about institutional adoption, digital asset firms remain outside the Fed’s core monetary plumbing. Banks, money market funds, and GSEs are the only players in this arena.
The seven counterparties who showed up to this latest operation represent a tiny fraction of the eligible participant pool.
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