Economic Policy Review Executive Summary
Key Mechanics of the U.S. Tri-Party Repo Market
Recapping an article from the November 2012 issue of
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the Economic Policy Review, Volume 18, Number 3 View full article PDF

12 pages / 206 kb

Authors: Adam Copeland, Darrell Duffie, Antoine Martin,
and Susan McLaughlin

Disclaimer
Index of executive summaries
  • The 2007-09 financial crisis exposed weaknesses in the design of the U.S. tri-party repo market that could rapidly elevate and propagate systemic risk.

  • A study of the market identifies the collateral allocation and unwind processes as two key mechanics contributing to the market’s fragility and delaying reform efforts.

  • One problem stems from the considerable amount of intervention by dealers to allocate collateral, which can slow processing and has been a significant obstacle to market reform.

  • A second problem is associated with reliance by dealers on intraday financing to “unwind,” or settle, expiring repos; the financing required creates potentially perverse dynamics that increase market fragility and financial system risk.

  • The authors conclude that by streamlining the collateral allocation process and eliminating the time gap associated with the unwinding of repos, market fragility and financial system risk could be reduced.

  • The study serves as a useful primer on the issues and mechanics that have contributed to the tri-party repo market’s fragility and impeded industry reform efforts.


About the Authors

Adam Copeland is a senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Darrell Duffie is the Dean Witter Distinguished Professor of Finance at Stanford University; Antoine Martin is an assistant vice president and Susan McLaughlin a senior vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Disclaimer

The views expressed in this summary are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or the Federal Reserve System.

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