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Scenario × Asset Analysis

What Happens to 20Y+ Treasury (TLT) When the Fed Reverse Repo Facility Drains to Zero?

What happens when the Fed RRP facility drains? Liquidity implications, money market dynamics, and impact on bank reserves.

20Y+ Treasury (TLT)
$87.21
as of Apr 14, 2026
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Trigger: Overnight Reverse Repo
$0B
Condition: declines below $100B
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How 20Y+ Treasury (TLT) Responds

Mixed. Near-term liquidity support positive, but Fed being forced to end QT could be positive longer-term.

Scenario Background

The Fed's overnight reverse repo (RRP) facility allows money market funds and other eligible counterparties to deposit cash with the Fed at the administered rate, earning a risk-free return. RRP balances peaked at $2.5T in late 2022 as excess liquidity accumulated in money markets post-COVID stimulus. As these balances drain, funds flow back into T-bills, repo, and bank deposits, with important implications for liquidity.

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Historical Context

RRP balances ranged from $0-$400B before 2021, spiked to $2.5T in late 2022, and began draining in 2023 as T-bill supply expanded and rates rose. By early 2024, balances had declined to roughly $400B, freeing liquidity for Treasury absorption. Similar dynamics in 2018-2019 saw reserves drain aggressively, culminating in the September 2019 repo spike that forced the Fed to restart balance sheet expansion.

What to Watch For

  • RRP balance below $200B
  • Bank reserves declining below $3T
  • SOFR-IORB spread widening
  • Treasury bill supply continuing to expand
  • Fed statements signaling possible QT adjustment

Other Assets When the Fed Reverse Repo Facility Drains to Zero

Other Scenarios Affecting 20Y+ Treasury (TLT)

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