On December 21, the Federal Reserve accepted a total of 45 counterparties in the fixed rate reverse repurchase operation of 98.356 billion dollars, the first time since April 2021 below 100 billion dollars. At the end of September 2022, the scale was as high as 2.426 trillion dollars.
The use of overnight reverse repurchase agreements (RRPs) by the Federal Reserve on Friday was $155.476 billion, the lowest since 2021, and was reported at $2012.78 billion in the last trading day. Only 41 counterparties participated, significantly less than the usual level in the past.
The Federal Reserve accepted $451.783 billion from 67 counterparties in fixed-rate reverse repo operations, the lowest level since June 24, compared with $664.60 billion the previous day. The decline in $212.80 billion was the largest since January 2. The number of counterparties also fell to the lowest level since June 17.
The Federal Reserve accepted a total of 93 counterparties of $664.57 billion in fixed-rate reverse repo operations.
The Federal Reserve accepted a total of $531.692 billion from 75 counterparties in fixed-rate reverse repo operations.