Jim Bianco Profile picture
Nov 2, 2025 13 tweets 7 min read Read on X
1/13

🧵on the stresses in the funding markets, why they are happening, and what it means. Be sure to see the last two posts (12 and 13).

Funding rates are rising relative to the Federal Reserve's administered rates (bottom panel arrow).

This signals stress in funding markets. Image
2/13

Another signal of stress is that the Fed's Standing Repo Facility (SRF) is getting used regularly, a new record on Friday.

If money is too expensive, banks can borrow from the Fed at 4.00%.

Note that only 40 banks are counterparties, no broker/dealers, no hedge funds. LimitedImage
3/13

The Fed sees the stress and is ending Quantitative Tightening (QT) on Dec 1.

This will end Fed balance sheet shrinkage and slow the decline in bank reserves, now at a 5-year low.

Lower bank reserves mean banks have less ability to supply funding to the markets. Image
4/13

Why should we care?

Funding markets supply more than $3T/day in cash/liquidity (orange). By contrast, the fed funds market is less than $100B/day.

Rising repo rates are undoing the Fed's rate cuts by raising short-term rates, with no signs (yet) of a reversal. Image
5/13

To recap, funding stress is driven by rising demand (SOFR volume has more than doubled in the last 2 years), while supply is falling (bank reserves declined to a 5-year low).

This has finally reached the point that funding is getting scarce, so its cost (repo) is rising.
6/13

What to do about it?

Dallas Fed Pres Logan, who previously ran the NY Fed open market desk, on Friday

IF RECENT RISE IN REPO RATES TURNS OUT NOT TO BE TEMPORARY, FED WOULD NEED TO BEGIN BUYING ASSETS

Quantitative Easing (QE), "money printing."
7/13

What is the risk of restarting QE?

It distorts the markets and the economy.

First, after the Fed started QE in 2009, it was rocket fuel for markets.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke crowed about it at the time. Image
8/13

And overlaying the stock market (orange) and the Fed's balance sheet (blue) supported this idea. Image
9/13

And during the post-financial crisis period, 2010 to 2020, there were no signs of core inflation (orange) reacting to the Fed's balance sheet expansion (blue).

But that changed following COVID in 2020. Inflation and the Fed's balance sheet are now moving in tandem. Image
10/13

What changed?

Federal spending as a % of GDP is 23%, one of the highest levels in the last half-century and higher than during most recessions.

Only the financial crisis and COVID saw higher spending levels.

Five years after COVID, spending is still at crisis levels. Image
11/13

Massive government spending means massive deficits.

And these deficits need to be financed. And trillions of that financing comes from the repo market, which again, doubled in size over the last year.

"Nothing stops this train" -- @LynAldenContact Image
12/13

When Does The Bond Market Care?

A credible argument is NOW given the stress in the repo markets that has emerged in the last few weeks. This stress stems from the ever-increasing demand to finance $38 trillion in debt —100% of GDP —on its way to $40 trillion, which is outstripping the supply of liquidity, thanks to QT, to do so.

If stopping QT on December 1st is not enough, the Fed will have to supply more liquidity through QE (see Lorie Logan) or possibly a massive expansion of the SRF.

Either way, the Fed is supporting the continuation of massive government spending — spending as if we are in a crisis — and fueling sticky inflation well above the Fed's 2% target five years after the COVID shutdowns ended.

If the Fed denies additional liquidity through QE/SRF, a funding crisis worsens, leading to broader financial problems.

Fix Without QE?

One way is for Washington to cut spending. Currently, the opposite of this is happening. The Government is presently spending record amounts for a non-crisis period (% of GDP), yet it is shut down over demands to increase spending even further.

The other way is for financial markets to force a spending reduction upon Washington via higher rates. Stress in the funding market is an early sign that the markets are starting to raise rates. The problem with this method is that it is messy and chaotic.Image
13/13

Last week, we posted a version of this chart to illustrate the "K-Shaped" economy.

Those in the upper incomes are doing well, as illustrated by the stock market (red).

The broad masses are down on the economy, as indicated by flagging consumer confidence (blue).

(More thoughts/comments on the K are in the retweet below).

Our concern is that the current K-Shape, shown as the lighter gray arrows, is placing significant strain on the culture/economy.

QE, or the expansion of the SRF to keep repo rates from rising, is the Federal Reserve allowing financing for even more government spending at manageable levels. This "cheap money" will drive higher stock prices and encourage even more government spending, fueling more inflation, widening the inequality gap, and further straining the culture/economy.

The dark gray arrows illustrate this, signifying a widening of the inequality gap.

If the current K-Shape inequality is helping to vote socialists into office now, widening the K-Shape risks turning it into a full-blown movement that sweeps the country.

Widening The Pipes

Too many are treating this stress in funding markets as a plumbing problem. They are correct, but this is a too-narrow view.

When the reservoir is running low, asking the plumber in the basement to install larger pipes might work for a short time, but it won't "fix" the problem.

Too many commentators on the stress in funding markets are taking this approach, throwing out technical solutions and legislative changes to fix it.

Examples:

* Encouraging greater use of the SRF (note that it is currently constrained by a stigma against its use, as it is perceived that only troubled banks use it, and only 40 banks are counterparties, no broker/dealers or hedge funds)

*The Fed should buy low-duration Treasury Bills via open-market operations (aka "not" QE) rather than longer-duration notes and bonds (aka QE).

* Make changes to the banking supplemental leverage ratio

* Switch the Fed's target interest rate from fed funds to the tri-party repo rate.

All of these are good technical suggestions, but they are akin to installing larger pipes to get water from a low reservoir.

More concerning is the assumption behind technical fixes: that the stresses in the funding markets are consequence-free. It only needs a technical fix, and the problem goes away without affecting anything else.

The problem is that the Government continues crisis-level spending without a crisis. This is pumping up financial markets and keeping inflation high, worsening inequality, and stressing the culture/economy. This will encourage an even bigger backlash.

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More from @biancoresearch

Feb 7
1/4

I fear this is spot on.

@CryptoNobler's thread unpacks $BTC's "synthetic supply" problem. ETFs, structured notes (@CryptoHayes), futures, options, swaps, lending—all flood the system with "paper" BTC.

When it swamps real demand, price crashes.

x.com/CryptoNobler/s… x.com/coinbureau/sta…
2/4

@CryptoHayes: structured notes on $IBIT flooded $BTC with synthetic supply → forced liquidations turbocharged the dump.

Next rally? TradFi piles into ETFs → Wall Street "prints" more synthetics.

Price discovery decoupled from on-chain.

Volatility on steroids
3/4

Wall Street's entry turned BTC into a pseudo-fractional reserve system.

21M cap? On-chain only—price discovery swims in synthetic street "printing."

Fractional is inherently unstable. That's why banks need heavy regs (Fed/Treasury/OCC/FDIC).

On-chain BTC only needs code.
Read 4 tweets
Feb 1
1/6

10% of the outstanding $BTC is held by $MSTR and the 11 Spot BTC ETFs.

These are the ways normies hold $BTC in regulated brokerage accounts.

Collectively, the avg purchase price is $85.36K, meaning the average is now ~$8k underwater, with an unrealized loss of ~$7B.
🧵 Image
2/6

The 11 biggest spot $BTC ETFs now hold 1.29M $BTC – worth over $115B (Friday PM).

These ETFs hold roughly 6.5% of all $BTC in circulation.

The 3 largest – iShares’ $IBIT (blue), Fidelity’s $FBTC (red), and Grayscale’s $GBTC (orange) – hold 5.65%. Image
3/6

The 11 Spot $BTC ETFs average purchase price is ~$90.2K (blue), about $13K (16%) above the current price (bottom panel).

Note these ETFs are collectively on a record 10 consecutive outflow days. $BTC is down ~8% since Friday's NYSE close. Image
Read 6 tweets
Jan 19
1/11

What is Housing?

Affordable shelter or path to retirement?

It cannot be both.

We tried to make it both in the early 2000s and almost wrecked the financial system.

🧵 Image
2/11

The average home price is $417K (above), an all-time high.

This means around 43% of a median household income (~$84K) goes to housing.

For the last three years, this has been comparable to the (unsustainable) housing peak in 2006. Image
3/11

For 50 years, from the end of World War II through 1997 (red box), housing was affordable. Prices rose by the inflation rate.

In other words, it held its value but remained within reach of most renters/first-time homebuyers. Image
Read 11 tweets
Jan 4
1/5

Thoughts on market reaction to the Venezuela news.

tl:dr

The spigot in Venezuela waiting to be opened to flood the world with crude oil and lower its price has been broken for a while.

It will take several years to fix it.
2/5

Venezuela is a founding member of OPEC their official statistics show its production (blue) is down 71% from its 1998 peak.

Its sustainable capacity (max output in within 90 days and held for a year) is 1M barrels/day (orange).

Venezuela is at its maximum now. Image
3/5

Why the big production decline?

Socialist Hugo Chávez was elected in December 1998. He turned out to be a brutal dictator. Only to be replaced by an even more brutal dictator, Nicolás Maduro, when Chávez died in March 2013.
Read 5 tweets
Nov 27, 2025
1/7

This analysis concludes by saying "something is seriously wrong with the housing market."

Not based on this chart.

tl:dr - New home sizes are falling to account for this spread falling below zero. Adjust for that, and there is nothing to see here.

Short 🧵
2/7

Same chart with prices in the top panel.

It is correct that the new home premium (green) above existing home prices (blue) has collapsed from 38% in 2013 to below zero today (the lowest in 54 years).

Why?

See new home prices (orange), they stalled. Image
3/7

Here is the average home price (orange) and the home's size (blue). The reason prices are falling is that builders are constructing smaller homes.

But as the bottom panel shows (green), the price per square foot is as high as ever.

No bear market, just smaller homes. Image
Read 8 tweets
Nov 25, 2025
1/8

Following @deanbaker and @ezraklein ...

Homeowners will not tolerate a "fix" that will lower prices. So, nothing will get done about affordability.
=
What is housing?

* Affordable shelter?
* Piggy bank that funds retirement?

Both cannot be true at the same time.
2/8

For the 50 years following WWII (box), home price gains kept pace with inflation ("real" prices), making housing affordable.

Starting in the late 90s, housing went into wild boom-bust cycles.

This is when housing started to be viewed as a piggy bank to fund retirement. Image
3/8

400 years of real (inflation-adjusted) home prices in Amsterdam show that housing has remained affordable for centuries.

This view began to break down in the late 1990s, as housing became the piggy bank for retirement. Image
Read 8 tweets

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