Chapter 11 The Money Markets
267
To accomplish this adjustment, the Fed will buy or sell Treasury securities in the repo
market. The maturities of Federal Reserve repos never exceed 15 days.
Interest Rate on Repos
Because repos are collateralized with Treasury securities,
they are usually low-risk investments and therefore have low interest rates. Though
rare, losses have occurred in these markets. For example, in 1985, ESM Government
Securities and Bevill, Bresler & Schulman declared bankruptcy. These firms had used
the same securities as collateral for more than one loan. The resulting losses to munic-
ipalities that had purchased the repos exceeded $500 million. Such losses also caused
the failure of the state-insured thrift insurance system in Ohio.
Negotiable Certificates of Deposit
A negotiable certificate of deposit is a bank-issued security that documents a deposit
and specifies the interest rate and the maturity date. Because a maturity date is spec-
ified, a CD is a term security as opposed to a demand deposit: Term securities
have a specified maturity date; demand deposits can be withdrawn at any time. A
negotiable CD is also called a bearer instrument. This means that whoever holds
the instrument at maturity receives the principal and interest. The CD can be bought
and sold until maturity.
Terms of Negotiable Certificates of Deposit
The denominations of negotiable cer-
tificates of deposit range from $100,000 to $10 million. Few negotiable CDs are denom-
inated less than $1 million. The reason that these instruments are so large is that
dealers have established the round lot size to be $1 million. A round lot is the mini-
mum quantity that can be traded without incurring higher than normal brokerage fees.
Negotiable CDs typically have a maturity of one to four months. Some have six-
month maturities, but there is little demand for ones with longer maturities.
History of the CD
Citibank issued the first large certificates of deposit in 1961.
The bank offered the CD to counter the long-term trend of declining demand deposits
at large banks. Corporate treasurers were minimizing their cash balances and invest-
ing their excess funds in safe, income-generating money market instruments such
as T-bills. The attraction of the CD was that it paid a market interest rate. There
was a problem, however. The rate of interest that banks could pay on CDs was
restricted by Regulation Q. As long as interest rates on most securities were low,
this regulation did not affect demand. But when interest rates rose above the level
permitted by Regulation Q, the market for these certificates of deposit evaporated.
In response, banks began offering the certificates overseas, where they were exempt
from Regulation Q limits. In 1970, Congress amended Regulation Q to exempt cer-
tificates of deposit over $100,000. By 1972, the CD represented approximately 40%
of all bank deposits. The certificate of deposit is now the second most popular money
market instrument, behind only the T-bill.
Interest Rate on CDs
Figure 11.4 plots the interest rate on negotiable CDs along
with that on T-bills. The rates paid on negotiable CDs are negotiated between the
bank and the customer. They are similar to the rate paid on other money market
instruments because the level of risk is relatively low. Large money center banks
can offer rates a little lower than other banks because many investors in the mar-
ket believe that the government would never allow one of the nation’s largest banks
to fail. This belief makes these banks’ obligations less risky.
Access
www.federalreserve
.gov/releases/CP/
. Find
detailed information on
commercial paper,
including criteria used for
calculating commercial
paper interest rates and
historical discount rates.
268
Part 5 Financial Markets
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