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Credit Markets & Spreads
5 min readUpdated Apr 12, 2026

Repo Rate

ByConvex Research Desk·Edited byBen Bleier·
repurchase rateovernight reposecured overnight financing rateSOFRrepo agreementreverse repo

The interest rate on repurchase agreements, short-term borrowing where one party sells securities and agrees to repurchase them at a slightly higher price. The repo market is the plumbing of the financial system, providing overnight liquidity to banks and institutions.

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Analysis from May 14, 2026

What Is a Repo?

A repurchase agreement (repo) is a short-term collateralized loan, the most fundamental financing mechanism in the global financial system. In a repo transaction, one party sells securities (typically US Treasuries) to another party and simultaneously agrees to repurchase them at a slightly higher price on a specified future date (usually the next day). The price difference is the repo rate, effectively the interest cost of the overnight loan.

From the other side, this is a reverse repo: the cash lender is receiving securities as collateral for an overnight loan. The Fed uses reverse repos as a monetary policy tool to drain excess liquidity from the banking system.

Daily US repo volume exceeds $4-5 trillion, making it one of the largest financial markets in the world and the critical infrastructure that allows banks, broker-dealers, money market funds, and hedge funds to function.

The Repo Market's Role in Finance

User How They Use Repo Daily Volume
Primary dealers Finance Treasury inventory; market-making ~$2T
Hedge funds Leverage fixed-income positions (basis trades) ~$1T
Money market funds Invest excess cash overnight against collateral ~$1.5T
Banks Manage reserve balances and liquidity requirements ~$1T
Fed (RRP/repo) Implement monetary policy; set rate floor/ceiling $0.3-2.6T

Types of Repo

Type Term Collateral Rate Use Case
Overnight repo 1 day Treasuries, agencies SOFR (or near fed funds) Daily financing; most volume
Term repo 2 days - 1 year Treasuries, agencies Slightly above overnight Planned financing needs
GCF repo (General Collateral) Overnight Any Treasury SOFR-adjacent Interdealer; most standardized
Special repo Varies Specific CUSIP Below GC rate (can go negative) When specific bond is in high demand

SOFR: The Benchmark Born from Repo

SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate) is calculated from actual overnight repo transactions collateralized by US Treasuries, approximately $1 trillion+ in daily volume. It replaced LIBOR as the dominant US interest rate benchmark.

Feature SOFR LIBOR (deprecated)
Basis Actual transactions Survey of banks' estimates
Volume $1T+/day $200-500M/day at best
Secured Yes (Treasury collateral) No (unsecured)
Manipulable Extremely difficult Proven to be manipulated ($9B+ in fines)
Administrator NY Federal Reserve ICE Benchmark Administration
Credit risk Nearly zero Included bank credit premium

The LIBOR-to-SOFR transition affected $200+ trillion in global financial contracts.

The Fed's Repo Toolkit

Standing Repo Facility (SRF)

Established July 2021. Allows primary dealers and depository institutions to borrow cash from the Fed against Treasury collateral at the top of the fed funds target range. Acts as a ceiling on repo rates, preventing spikes like September 2019.

Overnight Reverse Repo Facility (ON RRP)

Allows money market funds and other eligible counterparties to lend cash to the Fed overnight, earning the ON RRP rate (bottom of the fed funds target range). Acts as a floor on money market rates.

The RRP peaked at $2.6 trillion in December 2022, absorbing an extraordinary amount of excess liquidity created by QE. Its decline to approximately $300-500 billion by 2024 signals that excess liquidity is being absorbed, bringing the financial system closer to the "minimum reserve" level that could trigger repo stress (as in September 2019).

The September 2019 Repo Crisis

Date Overnight Repo Rate Normal Rate Event
Sep 16, 2019 2.1% ~2.0% Normal
Sep 17, 2019 10% ~2.0% Crisis spike, 5x normal
Sep 18, 2019 3.5% ~2.0% Fed emergency repo injection begins
Sep 19, 2019+ ~2.1% ~2.0% Stabilized with ongoing Fed operations

What happened: Quarterly tax payments ($100B) + Treasury settlement ($78B) simultaneously drained reserves from a system where QT had already reduced reserves to ~$1.4 trillion, the threshold where banks no longer had "excess" reserves to lend freely.

Lasting impact: The Fed learned that it had tightened too far. It established the SRF as a permanent backstop and resumed balance sheet expansion in October 2019.

The Basis Trade: Repo's Biggest Risk

The Treasury basis trade, buying Treasury bonds and shorting Treasury futures, financed through repo, has grown to an estimated $800 billion to $1 trillion in positions as of 2024. This trade relies on cheap, stable repo financing. If repo rates spike or repo availability declines, these highly leveraged positions must be unwound rapidly, potentially causing a Treasury market dislocation.

The Fed and SEC have flagged the basis trade as a systemic vulnerability because: (1) the trade is concentrated among a relatively small number of hedge funds, (2) leverage ratios of 50:1 or higher are common, and (3) rapid unwinding could cause Treasury price dislocations that cascade into all financial markets.

What to Watch

  1. SOFR rate vs fed funds target, a spread widening above 10bps signals tightening funding conditions
  2. Fed RRP balance, declining toward zero = system approaching minimum reserves; repo stress risk rising
  3. Treasury fails, rising fail volumes signal market dysfunction; $5T+/week in fails = crisis conditions
  4. GCF-SOFR spread, widening = collateral scarcity; narrowing = normal conditions
  5. Term repo rates, rising term repo rates relative to overnight = market pricing sustained funding pressure

Frequently Asked Questions

What happened in the September 2019 repo crisis?
On September 17, 2019, overnight repo rates spiked from ~2% to as high as 10% intraday — a 5x increase in the cost of overnight borrowing. This was the most dramatic repo market disruption since the 2008 financial crisis and caught the financial world off guard. The causes were a confluence of factors: (1) quarterly corporate tax payments drained approximately $100 billion from bank reserves as companies transferred cash to the Treasury, (2) settlement of $78 billion in new Treasury issuance required dealers to finance new inventory, (3) bank reserves had been declining since the Fed began quantitative tightening in 2017, reducing the buffer of excess reserves in the banking system. The key insight: bank reserves had fallen to a level (~$1.4 trillion) where the system no longer had sufficient liquidity to absorb routine cash flow events. Banks with excess reserves were unwilling to lend them in the repo market at normal rates, possibly due to regulatory constraints (LCR requirements, G-SIB surcharges). The Fed responded by injecting $75-100 billion per day in emergency repo operations — the first since the 2008 crisis — and eventually launched a standing repo facility (SRF) and resumed balance sheet expansion ("not QE" as Powell called it). The episode demonstrated that the Fed had shrunk reserves too far and that repo market functioning requires a minimum level of bank reserves — a discovery with lasting implications for monetary policy.
What is SOFR and why did it replace LIBOR?
The Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) replaced the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) as the primary US interest rate benchmark, effective June 30, 2023 for most contracts. SOFR is based on actual overnight repo transactions collateralized by US Treasuries — approximately $1 trillion in daily volume, making it one of the deepest and most liquid money markets in the world. LIBOR, by contrast, was based on a daily survey asking banks what rate they WOULD charge each other for unsecured loans — a hypothetical rate that could be (and was) manipulated. The LIBOR manipulation scandal (2012) revealed that traders at major banks (Barclays, UBS, Deutsche Bank, and others) had been rigging LIBOR submissions for years to benefit their derivatives positions, resulting in over $9 billion in total fines. Key differences: SOFR is transaction-based (real trades, not surveys), secured (backed by Treasuries, so nearly risk-free), overnight (no term risk), and administered by the NY Fed (not a private industry group). SOFR is typically 10-20bps lower than LIBOR was because it is a secured rate (LIBOR included a bank credit risk premium). The transition affected over $200 trillion in financial contracts globally — loans, mortgages, derivatives, and bonds that referenced LIBOR needed to be converted to SOFR plus a spread adjustment.
What is the Fed's Reverse Repo Facility (RRP) and why did it grow so large?
The Fed's Overnight Reverse Repo Facility (ON RRP) allows eligible counterparties (primarily money market funds) to lend cash to the Fed overnight in exchange for Treasury securities, earning the ON RRP rate (set at the bottom of the fed funds target range). The RRP peaked at approximately $2.6 trillion in December 2022 — an astonishing amount of cash that the private sector was parking at the Fed rather than deploying in markets. Why it grew so large: (1) QE had flooded the financial system with approximately $5 trillion in new reserves/deposits during 2020-2022. (2) Money market funds received enormous inflows as investors fled riskier assets. (3) These funds had limited alternative investment options — T-bill supply was constrained and bank deposits were already overflowing. (4) The ON RRP offered a clean, risk-free overnight return at the Fed. The RRP essentially acted as a sponge for excess liquidity — absorbing cash that had nowhere else to go. Its decline from $2.6T to approximately $300-500B by 2024 was a key indicator of declining excess liquidity in the financial system. When the RRP approaches zero, excess reserves in the banking system are fully absorbed and further QT could cause repo market stress (similar to September 2019). This is why traders watch the RRP balance as a gauge of how much more liquidity the Fed can drain before something breaks.
How do hedge funds use repo for leverage?
Repo is the primary mechanism through which hedge funds and institutional investors leverage their fixed-income positions. The strategy works as follows: (1) A hedge fund buys $100 million in Treasury bonds. (2) The fund immediately repos out (pledges) those bonds as collateral, borrowing ~$98 million in cash (the 2% difference is the "haircut"). (3) With the $98M in cash, the fund buys more Treasury bonds. (4) Those bonds are also repoed out for ~$96M. (5) This process can be repeated to build substantial leverage. A fund with $10M in equity capital can build a $200-500M Treasury position through this rehypothecation chain. The "basis trade" — buying Treasury bonds and shorting Treasury futures to capture the spread — is one of the most popular repo-financed strategies, with an estimated $800 billion to $1 trillion in positions as of 2024. The risks: (1) If repo rates spike (as in September 2019), financing costs can exceed the trade's returns, forcing rapid unwinding. (2) If Treasury prices fall sharply, the fund faces margin calls on both the repo haircut (which increases as collateral value falls) and the futures margin. (3) The concentrated nature of basis trade positions — many hedge funds running the same trade — creates systemic risk if they unwind simultaneously. The Fed and SEC have flagged the basis trade as a potential systemic vulnerability.
How do repo rates signal financial stress?
Repo market conditions are one of the earliest and most reliable signals of financial system stress, because repo is the "plumbing" through which institutions finance their daily operations. Normal conditions: the overnight repo rate trades within a few basis points of the fed funds rate. The spread between repo rates and the fed funds rate is typically 0-10bps. Stress signals: (1) Repo rate spike — when overnight repo rates jump 25bps+ above the fed funds rate, it signals that cash is scarce relative to collateral demand. Banks are hoarding reserves rather than lending them. September 2019 spike: repo rates jumped to 10% (500bps+ above fed funds). (2) Repo rate inversion — when the repo rate falls significantly below the fed funds rate, it signals that high-quality collateral (Treasuries) is in short supply, often because of extreme short-selling or fails. (3) Haircut increases — when repo lenders demand larger haircuts (more collateral per dollar lent), it signals declining confidence in counterparties or collateral quality. Haircuts on Treasuries rose from 2% to 5%+ during 2008. (4) Failed repo transactions — when repos fail to settle (one party doesn't deliver securities), it signals extreme market dysfunction. Treasury fails exceeded $5 trillion/week during the March 2020 crisis. For traders: repo market dysfunction precedes equity and credit market stress by hours to days. Monitoring SOFR, fed funds-SOFR spread, and Treasury fail volumes provides an early warning system for broader market dislocations.

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