by Pam Martens and Russ Martens at Wall Street on Parade
From September 17, 2019 through July 2, 2020, the trading units of the Wall Street megabanks (both domestic and foreign) took a cumulative total of $11.23 trillion in emergency repo loans from the Federal Reserve. The loans were conducted by one of the 12 regional Fed banks, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York – which is literally owned by megabanks, including JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and others.
The New York Fed is also responsible for sending its bank examiners into these same banks to make sure they aren’t plotting some evil scheme that will bring down the U.S. economy, as they did with their derivatives and subprime debt bombs in 2008. Unfortunately, if a New York Fed bank examiner doesn’t listen to the “relationship managers” at the New York Fed, and insists on giving a negative review of a megabank, she can find herself fired, as New York Fed bank examiner and attorney Carmen Segarra found when she went up against Goldman Sachs. Segarra provides a fascinating look inside the New York Fed in her book, Noncompliant: A Lone Whistleblower Exposes the Giants of Wall Street. (For mind-numbing other conflicts at the New York Fed, see our report here.)
As we’ve been reporting this past week, there’s been a complete mainstream media news blackout on the names of the banks that were feeding at the Fed’s repo loan trough. The New York Fed released the names of the banks and the amounts they borrowed for the last quarter of 2019 a week ago Thursday, and yet all those Fed watchers at Bloomberg News, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, Financial Times, CNBC, MarketWatch, and Reuters just can’t seem to bring themselves to publish even 100 words on the subject.
Banks were borrowing huge sums over short spans of time from the Fed’s emergency repo facility. As we previously reported, from November 12 through November 25, 2019 – a span of just 14 days – J.P. Morgan Securities, the trading unit of the megabank JPMorgan Chase, pancaked term repo loans ranging from 14-days to 42-days, together with one overnight loan, to amass a total of $30 billion outstanding at one time. (You can download the data from the New York Fed at this link, as well as the data it previously released for the last 14 days of September 2019 in its Q3 2019 release.)
And J.P. Morgan Securities’ loan of $30 billion may be just the tip of the iceberg. The Fed has yet to release the details for any of the quarters in 2020. Under the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation of 2010, the Fed has two years before it is legally required to release the names of the banks and their borrowing amounts.
Yesterday, we decided to ask four of the banks that own the New York Fed if they reported this emergency borrowing binge from the Fed on their SEC filings. Tens of billions of dollars in loans from an emergency Fed facility set up for the first time since the financial crisis of 2008 would seem to be a material disclosure required under securities laws.
We emailed the media relations folks at JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and Morgan Stanley. The response from Goldman Sachs sought clarity on what data we were talking about. After we clarified that we heard nothing further from them. JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley did not respond at all. But Citigroup’s response was very enlightening. It went like this: “I am going to decline to comment on this open market operations data.”
This strongly suggests that one or more banks are going to claim…
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