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Federal Reserve’s reverse repo facility drops to $761M as liquidity drains toward risk assets

By Editorial Team · Published June 7, 2026 · 2 min read · Source: Crypto Briefing
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Federal Reserve’s reverse repo facility drops to $761M as liquidity drains toward risk assets

Federal Reserve’s reverse repo facility drops to $761M as liquidity drains toward risk assets

Only five counterparties parked cash with the Fed on June 5, continuing a dramatic collapse from the facility's $2 trillion peak.

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Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 6, 2026

The Federal Reserve’s Overnight Reverse Repurchase Agreement facility, once the preferred parking lot for trillions in excess cash, processed just $761 million on June 5. Five counterparties showed up. That’s it.

To put that number in context, this same facility absorbed over $2 trillion in late 2021. The decline from $2 trillion to under $1 billion isn’t a gentle slope. It’s a cliff.

What the reverse repo facility actually does

Think of the ON RRP as a giant overnight savings account at the Fed. Non-bank financial institutions, primarily money market funds, can park their cash there overnight and receive Treasury securities as collateral. In return, they earn a risk-free rate.

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The facility exists to help the Fed manage short-term interest rates and mop up excess liquidity sloshing around the financial system. When there’s too much cash chasing too few safe assets, the ON RRP absorbs the overflow. When cash finds better places to go, the facility empties out.

Eligible participants include money market funds with at least $2 billion in assets, banks, government-sponsored enterprises, and primary dealers. The New York Fed maintains the full list of qualified counterparties, though it doesn’t disclose which specific institutions showed up on any given day.

The $761 million figure marked a decline from $1.122 billion the previous day.

The great drain: from $2 trillion to pocket change

The Fed is still running small-value test operations to keep the plumbing functional. A May 13 exercise, for instance, was limited to $1 million per counterparty.

The trend has been remarkably consistent over recent months. Utilization has stayed persistently below $1 billion, a level that would have seemed almost unimaginable when the facility was absorbing a quarter of the Fed’s balance sheet.

Why crypto investors should pay attention

When trillions of dollars were locked up at the Fed earning a risk-free rate, that capital was effectively removed from circulation. As that cash has drained from the facility over the past several years, it has re-entered the financial system as deployable liquidity. Liquidity analysis from crypto-related sources suggests that recent RRP drawdowns could be affecting market liquidity conditions, subsequently influencing risk assets, including those within the crypto market.

With the ON RRP essentially drained, future liquidity dynamics will depend more heavily on the Fed’s balance sheet decisions, Treasury issuance patterns, and bank reserve levels.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
This article was originally published on Crypto Briefing and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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