Repos and Reverses
Dealers in government securities use
repurchase agreements, also called “repos” or
“RPs,” as a form of short-term, usually overnight, borrowing. The dealer sells govern-
ment securities to an investor on an overnight basis, with an agreement to buy back those
securities the next day at a slightly higher price. The increase in the price is the overnight
interest. The dealer thus takes out a 1-day loan from the investor, and the securities serve
as collateral.
A term repo is essentially an identical transaction, except that the term of the implicit
loan can be 30 days or more. Repos are considered very safe in terms of credit risk because
the loans are backed by the government securities. A reverse repo is the mirror image of
a repo. Here, the dealer finds an investor holding government securities and buys them,
agreeing to sell them back at a specified higher price on a future date.
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32 P A R T
I
Introduction
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