Glossary/Monetary Policy & Central Banking/Excess Reserves
Monetary Policy & Central Banking
4 min readUpdated Apr 2, 2026

Excess Reserves

bank excess reservesIOERIORBinterest on excess reserves

Excess reserves are the funds commercial banks hold at the central bank beyond regulatory minimums, a metric that has become central to understanding modern monetary transmission, since the Fed began paying interest on these balances in 2008, fundamentally altering how rate policy propagates through the banking system.

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Analysis from Apr 3, 2026

What Is Excess Reserves?

Excess reserves are the deposits that commercial banks voluntarily hold at the Federal Reserve (or their respective central bank) above the legally mandated required reserve ratio. Prior to 2008, US banks held minimal excess reserves — typically under $2 billion — because idle balances at the Fed earned zero return. The landscape changed permanently in October 2008 when the Fed, under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act, began paying Interest on Excess Reserves (IOER), now rebranded as Interest on Reserve Balances (IORB). This single policy change transformed excess reserves from a residual accounting entry into an active monetary policy instrument and profoundly altered how banks allocate liquidity.

Post-QE, excess reserves ballooned as the Fed's asset purchases injected reserves into the banking system mechanically — when the Fed buys a Treasury bond from a primary dealer, reserves are credited to the dealer's bank account at the Fed. By 2014, excess reserves exceeded $2.7 trillion. As of 2023, total reserve balances remain well above $3 trillion, reflecting the sustained impact of multiple rounds of quantitative easing.

Why It Matters for Traders

The level of excess reserves signals whether the banking system is in a scarce reserves regime (pre-2008) or an ample reserves regime (post-2008). In the ample reserves framework, the IORB rate functions as the effective floor for the fed funds rate, since no rational bank will lend reserves in the overnight market at a rate below what the Fed pays for doing nothing. This means the traditional money multiplier model — where reserve levels directly control credit creation — no longer applies. For macro traders, changes in IORB relative to market rates like SOFR or the overnight reverse repo rate signal whether reserves are being incentivized to sit at the Fed versus flow into money markets, with direct implications for short-term funding costs and bank net interest margins.

How to Read and Interpret It

Monitor the spread between IORB and the effective fed funds rate (EFFR). When EFFR trades at or above IORB, it suggests reserves are becoming scarcer at the margin — a potential early warning of funding stress. The Fed watches this spread closely as a signal for when to potentially resume reserve injections. The Fed balance sheet liabilities breakdown (reserves vs. TGA vs. reverse repo) tells traders whether QT is draining reserves directly or mainly reducing the overnight reverse repo facility first. A sharp decline in the ON RRP balance with stable reserves is considered benign; a rapid decline in actual bank reserves toward $2.5–3 trillion begins to signal proximity to the lowest comfortable level of reserves (LCLoR), a threshold the Fed itself monitors.

Historical Context

The most instructive episode occurred in September 2019, when repo rates spiked to nearly 10% intraday — far above the then-IOER rate of 2.10% — as excess reserves fell to approximately $1.4 trillion following two years of quantitative tightening. The spike revealed that reserve distribution mattered as much as the aggregate level: major banks were flush with reserves but were unwilling to lend into repo markets due to regulatory constraints (LCR, leverage ratio), while smaller dealers faced acute shortages. The Fed was forced to conduct emergency repo operations and subsequently restart balance sheet expansion. This episode directly informed the design of the Standing Repo Facility (SRF) introduced in 2021.

Limitations and Caveats

Excess reserve levels are a lagging indicator of system stress — by the time the September 2019 repo spike became visible, funding markets were already seizing. Additionally, the aggregate level masks critical distributional issues: reserves are not evenly held across the banking system, and regulatory constraints can prevent their redeployment even when aggregate levels appear comfortable. International comparisons are also complicated by different regulatory frameworks; ECB TLTRO programs and the Bank of Japan's tiered reserve system function quite differently from the Fed's flat IORB structure.

What to Watch

  • Weekly H.4.1 Fed balance sheet release — track reserve balances, TGA, and ON RRP levels
  • EFFR vs. IORB spread daily — narrowing or inversion signals tightening reserve conditions
  • Standing Repo Facility (SRF) usage — upticks signal banks seeking emergency reserve substitution
  • Overnight Reverse Repo (ON RRP) facility balance as it drains, indicating reserves as the next absorber of QT
  • Bank regulatory filings for LCR ratios, which constrain willingness to deploy reserves into money markets

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did excess reserves explode after 2008 if banks weren't required to hold them?
Excess reserves surged because the Fed began paying interest on them (IOER/IORB) simultaneously with launching QE. Each asset purchase by the Fed mechanically creates reserves in the banking system, and those reserves earn a risk-free return simply by sitting at the Fed — making them an attractive alternative to lending in uncertain credit markets. Banks had no incentive to deploy them aggressively into loans during the post-financial-crisis deleveraging environment.
What is the difference between excess reserves and the overnight reverse repo facility?
Excess reserves are balances held by commercial banks at the Fed, while the overnight reverse repo (ON RRP) facility is used by money market funds and GSEs that cannot hold reserves directly. Both are short-term, near-risk-free parking facilities, but they serve different counterparty types — the distinction matters for tracing how QT drains system liquidity and which institutions feel the effects first.
How does IORB influence the federal funds rate in practice?
IORB acts as the effective floor because banks will not lend in the fed funds market at rates below what they earn by leaving reserves at the Fed. The Fed sets IORB at the top of its target range to keep the effective fed funds rate anchored; if EFFR were to trade persistently above IORB, it would signal reserve scarcity and potential loss of rate control, prompting the Fed to inject liquidity.

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