Subscribe

N.Y. Fed to finance money market fund buys

The New York Federal Reserve Bank on Nov. 24 will begin funding five special-purpose vehicles to finance the purchase of certain assets from money market mutual funds through its Money Market Investor Funding Facility program.

The New York Federal Reserve Bank on Nov. 24 will begin funding five special-purpose vehicles to finance the purchase of certain assets from money market mutual funds through its Money Market Investor Funding Facility program.

The goal is to improve liquidity in short-term funding markets, the bank said in a statement.

The program, authorized Oct. 21, provides loans for the purchase of U.S.-denominated certificates of deposit, bank notes and commercial paper issued by highly rated financial institutions.

The investments must have remaining maturities of no fewer than seven days and no more than 90 days.

The loans will be offered through the financing vehicles managed by JPMorgan Securities, a division of JPMorgan Chase & Co. of New York.

The program authorizes a maximum purchase amount of $600 billion in eligible assets of 50 institutions.

As the New York Federal Reserve will provide 90% of the financing, the bank’s lending may total $540 billion.

The Federal Reserve will charge the primary credit discount rate.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Stocks rise following hot March inflation

The S&P 500 is poised to extend gains on tech earnings while short-term Treasury yields fell following brisk rise in Fed’s preferred inflation gauge.

Fed will cut once before presidential election, says Howard Lutnick

Cantor Fitzgerald’s chief executive predicts the central bank will “show off a little bit” just before voters head to the polls.

Tech stocks tumble after Meta misses on earnings

The Nasdaq 100 shed $400B, the Facebook parent slumped by as much as 16%, and AI believers are left on tenterhooks.

Concord ups the ante on Hipgnosis takeover battle

The music rights investor increased its bid to own the London-listed company’s enviable library of songs from iconic acts.

Trump Media doubles down on illegal short-selling claims

Parent company of Truth Social has flagged concerns that so-called "naked" short sales are happening.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print