The Fed’s Collateral Requirements: It’ll Take Anything

The Fed won’t just lend out $40 billion in an attempt to inject some liquidity

into the banking system, oh no. It requires collateral. But, as jck says in

the comments

to my earlier blog entry, it seems as though "any junk will do" in

terms of the collateral the Fed will accept.

The details can be found on the Fed’s website,

where the margin

tables can be downloaded in Excel or PDF form. But to give you an idea of

what the Fed will lend, consider a AAA-rated subprime-backed CDO – the

kind of thing which is causing billions of dollars in losses all over the financial

system. If the CDO has a market price, the Fed will lend up to 98% of that price

if it’s a short-term CDO, up to 96% if it’s medium-term, and up to 93% if it’s

long-term.

But what if the CDO is completely illiquid, and you can’t find a price for

it at all? No worries, the Fed will still accept it as collateral, and lend

up to 85% of par value. (There’s an interesting thought experiment here: what

happens if a long-term CDO has a market value of, say, 90 cents on the dollar?

In that case, an illiquid version of that CDO would actually be worth more to

the Fed than the liquid version.)

Do keep on looking down that list, though: it turns out that banks can even

put up as collateral subprime credit-card receivables – they don’t even

need a AAA rating.

Now it’s worth noting that the Fed is going to be repaid on its loans

no matter what happens to the collateral. We’re not talking non-recourse loans

here: there’s really no chance that one of the Fed’s borrowing banks is going

to suddenly go bankrupt and leave the Fed holding some paper of dubious value.

But it certainly seems that any bank sitting on a bunch of nuclear waste and

suffering from liquidity problems has now found its savior in the Federal Reserve.

As Steve

Waldman says, never mind the mortgage plan – this is a bailout.

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