The Federal Reserve's repurchase agreements may seem like a simple short-term operational tool, but don't be fooled by the surface — they often reflect the true stress in the financial system.
You'll find that when these phenomena start to occur frequently, the repurchase tool is being used on a large scale:
• Banks begin to distrust each other, and the enthusiasm for interbank lending significantly decreases • The supply of government bonds is too large, and the market's capacity to absorb them cannot keep up • USD liquidity begins to experience structural tension, which cannot be replenished in the short term
History teaches us a harsh truth: behind every large-scale expansion of repurchase agreements, the market is desperately testing the "edge of imbalance."
Therefore, repurchase is not an easing policy, but it often serves as a prelude to easing. From another perspective: when the repurchase tool is activated, it is usually not the start of a market rescue, but a signal saying "Hey, there's a problem here." When this warning light turns on, smart investors should be alert.
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MysteryBoxBuster
· 3h ago
You're trying to deceive me again by saying there's no problem? As soon as the buyback starts, I knew it was going to run away.
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MetaverseHobo
· 10h ago
Wait, the buyback is coming again? Isn't this just the calm before the storm?
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OnchainUndercover
· 10h ago
It's obvious that trouble will arise as soon as the buyback starts; history really does repeat itself.
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AltcoinMarathoner
· 10h ago
just like mile 20 in a marathon when shit gets real... fed repos aren't the救市,they're the warning bell before the real pain starts. accumulation phase incoming fr fr
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BrokenDAO
· 10h ago
Trust costs soar and then start passing the buck, old tricks again.
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Using buybacks as a signal light is a pretty good analogy, but the problem is most people simply don't understand or pretend not to understand.
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It's another edge of game imbalance being tested; the inertia of the financial system's governance has long determined the outcome.
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Banking distrust of each other hits a nerve; systemic flaws cannot be self-repaired.
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Every time it's said "Smart people should be cautious," yet the market still lies flat, how distorted are the incentives?
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Very true, but there's a problem—The Federal Reserve itself is the biggest beneficiary of the centralization trap. Will it genuinely want to solve it?
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The prelude to buybacks is quite accurate, but retail investors still get cut.
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With such obvious mechanism flaws, why hasn't anyone truly fixed them? The checks and balances have become a facade.
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DAOTruant
· 10h ago
Once the buyback starts, it indicates that there are cracks in the underlying layer.
The Federal Reserve's repurchase agreements may seem like a simple short-term operational tool, but don't be fooled by the surface — they often reflect the true stress in the financial system.
You'll find that when these phenomena start to occur frequently, the repurchase tool is being used on a large scale:
• Banks begin to distrust each other, and the enthusiasm for interbank lending significantly decreases
• The supply of government bonds is too large, and the market's capacity to absorb them cannot keep up
• USD liquidity begins to experience structural tension, which cannot be replenished in the short term
History teaches us a harsh truth: behind every large-scale expansion of repurchase agreements, the market is desperately testing the "edge of imbalance."
Therefore, repurchase is not an easing policy, but it often serves as a prelude to easing. From another perspective: when the repurchase tool is activated, it is usually not the start of a market rescue, but a signal saying "Hey, there's a problem here." When this warning light turns on, smart investors should be alert.