Looking at this chart, a thought flashes through my mind.
This is not just a market decline, nor just some bad news. It’s a signal that the entire operational mechanism is starting to stall.
What does the chart reflect? The trend in overnight repurchase agreement (repo) scale. Simply put: to prevent the banking system from collapsing overnight, how much emergency liquidity the Federal Reserve needs to inject.
A few details can illustrate the issue.
**In the long run**, this line has approached zero before. The system can operate on its own. Funds circulate normally in the market, financial institutions trust each other, and refinancing can be resolved through market forces. There’s no need for the central bank to intervene.
**But what about later?** The chart shows several alarming vertical lines. It’s not a slow climb, not a trend. It’s a sudden spike—$20 billion, $30 billion, even over $70 billion in a single night.
This isn’t "liquidity injection." It’s firefighting.
What does this situation usually indicate?
First, some large institutions’ assets and liabilities are starting to become unbalanced.
Second, some market participants cannot complete financing through normal channels.
Third, risk appetite in the market is declining.
Fourth, the creditworthiness among participants is weakening.
At this point, the Federal Reserve has to step in as the "ultimate counterparty" to pull the system back from the edge.
**To clarify**: overnight repos are not the same as QE. The latter is a long-term asset purchase plan by the central bank; the former is just an emergency measure to prevent system collapse at a specific moment.
But if such emergency needs become more frequent and the scale continues to grow? That itself is already a symptom.
Looking back at history, these phenomena often occur in several situations:
— End of tightening cycles — Periods of credit market stress — The eve of policy shifts or market volatility
This raises a core question. Rather than being about this chart alone, it’s about the entire macro landscape.
If the economic fundamentals are "strong enough," interest rates stay high, and inflation is under control, then the question is:
**Why does the system still need to rely on nightly emergency injections now and then to survive?**
In my view, this is not a sign of strength, but an accumulation of internal pressure.
On the surface, everything seems calm; but secretly, leaks are already forming. The market usually pretends not to see these signals and continues operating as usual. Until one day, it suddenly turns around and revalues everything.
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DegenRecoveryGroup
· 01-07 10:33
The system is draining blood, I really can't keep up anymore.
View OriginalReply0
MEVVictimAlliance
· 01-06 11:28
The fire brigade keeps rescuing fires every now and then; they should have seen it clearly by now.
View OriginalReply0
Ser_APY_2000
· 01-06 09:51
Everyone is talking about strength, but the overnight repurchase is a chaotic $70 billion splash—this is just funny.
View OriginalReply0
GasBankrupter
· 01-05 22:04
$70 billion wiped out in one night, and you still call that "strong"? That's hilarious.
View OriginalReply0
GasWaster
· 01-05 09:01
$70 billion poured in overnight, this isn't investment, it's obvious the system is leaking.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-00be86fc
· 01-05 09:01
$70 billion in one night—this really isn’t firefighting... The system really can’t hold up anymore.
View OriginalReply0
BTCBeliefStation
· 01-05 08:54
700 billion overnight, this is really outrageous, the system is really about to collapse
Some people truly believe the strong economic fundamentals, but I can't see it
Leakage behind the scenes, it will explode sooner or later, all the signs of a major event seem to be in place
Firefighters are rescuing fires every day, what does that mean? It means the houses were already leaking like sieves
This chart makes my scalp tingle, when will our assets be revalued?
Losing blood every now and then, it doesn't sound like "everything is normal," wake up everyone
Looking at these numbers, I feel the sense that a storm is approaching more and more
View OriginalReply0
BlindBoxVictim
· 01-05 08:50
700 billion in one night, this is really not "injecting liquidity," it's just emergency rescue.
View OriginalReply0
MetaNeighbor
· 01-05 08:43
Fires are becoming more frequent; this time, it's truly different
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Lying flat, the system's self-healing ability is long gone
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Pouring $70 billion overnight, and still claiming the economy is strong? Haha
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The problem isn't with the chart; it's that this has become the norm
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Credit is evaporating, and the liquidity patches are getting bigger and bigger
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Internal leaks, no one knows their own situation? The next wave of revaluation is coming
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This is the calm before the storm; the bulls are pretending to sleep
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Overnight repurchase agreements jumped from zero to $700 billion; this leap is a bit terrifying
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Institutional imbalance + declining participant credit, no wonder they are being cut
---
Surface calmness hides all the hidden mines behind, typical
View OriginalReply0
SerumSurfer
· 01-05 08:32
700 billion dollars poured in overnight, and this guy still says the system has no issues? LOL
Looking at this chart, a thought flashes through my mind.
This is not just a market decline, nor just some bad news. It’s a signal that the entire operational mechanism is starting to stall.
What does the chart reflect? The trend in overnight repurchase agreement (repo) scale. Simply put: to prevent the banking system from collapsing overnight, how much emergency liquidity the Federal Reserve needs to inject.
A few details can illustrate the issue.
**In the long run**, this line has approached zero before. The system can operate on its own. Funds circulate normally in the market, financial institutions trust each other, and refinancing can be resolved through market forces. There’s no need for the central bank to intervene.
**But what about later?** The chart shows several alarming vertical lines. It’s not a slow climb, not a trend. It’s a sudden spike—$20 billion, $30 billion, even over $70 billion in a single night.
This isn’t "liquidity injection." It’s firefighting.
What does this situation usually indicate?
First, some large institutions’ assets and liabilities are starting to become unbalanced.
Second, some market participants cannot complete financing through normal channels.
Third, risk appetite in the market is declining.
Fourth, the creditworthiness among participants is weakening.
At this point, the Federal Reserve has to step in as the "ultimate counterparty" to pull the system back from the edge.
**To clarify**: overnight repos are not the same as QE. The latter is a long-term asset purchase plan by the central bank; the former is just an emergency measure to prevent system collapse at a specific moment.
But if such emergency needs become more frequent and the scale continues to grow? That itself is already a symptom.
Looking back at history, these phenomena often occur in several situations:
— End of tightening cycles
— Periods of credit market stress
— The eve of policy shifts or market volatility
This raises a core question. Rather than being about this chart alone, it’s about the entire macro landscape.
If the economic fundamentals are "strong enough," interest rates stay high, and inflation is under control, then the question is:
**Why does the system still need to rely on nightly emergency injections now and then to survive?**
In my view, this is not a sign of strength, but an accumulation of internal pressure.
On the surface, everything seems calm; but secretly, leaks are already forming. The market usually pretends not to see these signals and continues operating as usual. Until one day, it suddenly turns around and revalues everything.