Primary Dealer Credit Facility: Frequently Asked Questions

Effective June 25, 2009

What is the Federal Reserve’s Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF)? Why are we introducing the PDCF and what are some of its terms?
The Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF) is an overnight loan facility that will provide funding to primary dealers in exchange for any tri-party-eligible collateral and is intended to foster the functioning of financial markets more generally.

Who can participate?
Eligible participants include the primary dealers. They will participate through their clearing banks.

What are the terms of the loan?
Loans will settle on the same business day and will mature the following business day. The rate paid on the loan will be the same as the primary credit rate at the New York Fed. In addition, primary dealers will be subject to a frequency-based fee after they exceed 45 days of use. The frequency-based fee will be based on an escalating scale and communicated to the primary dealers in advance.

What is the rate of the loan?
The rate of the loan is the primary credit rate at the New York Fed. Click here for current rates.

What is the frequency-based fee and how is it determined?
The frequency-based fee is a fee schedule that will specify additional fees to be charged to dealers who access the facility on more than 45 business days. Access to the facility on the 46th and subsequent days will result in additional fees to be paid by the dealer. The exact frequency-based fee schedule was determined in consultation with the primary dealers and was announced shortly after the program was put in place.
 
What collateral is eligible for pledging?
Eligible collateral will include all collateral eligible in tri-party repurchase arrangements with the major clearing banks as of September 12, 2008.

How will collateral be valued?
The collateral will be valued by the clearing banks based on a range of pricing services.

How do primary dealers initiate the loans?
Primary dealers should contact their clearing bank to request PDCF funds no later than 5:00 p.m. ET on business days.

How much can primary dealers borrow?
A primary dealer will be allowed to borrow up to the margin-adjusted collateral they can deliver to the Federal Reserve’s account at the clearing banks.

How and when are the loans and collateral settled?
The loans will be made available to a primary dealer’s clearing bank following the acknowledgment by the clearing bank that sufficient collateral has been placed in the New York Fed’s tri-party account at the clearing bank. This will take place around 5:00 p.m. each day.

What is the duration of the loans made under the PDCF?
All loans are made for a duration of one day. New loans can be taken out each day.

How do the primary dealers know that their requested borrowing has been fulfilled?
Each primary dealer should contact their clearing bank directly.

Is this lending with recourse?
Yes, loans to primary dealers made under the PDCF are made with recourse beyond the collateral to the primary dealer entity itself.

What are the differences between this and other recent initiatives?
The Term Auction Facility program offers term funding to depository institutions via a bi-weekly auction, for fixed amounts of credit. The Term Securities Lending Facility will be an auction for a fixed amount of lending of Treasury general collateral in exchange for OMO-eligible and investment grade corporate securities, municipal securities, mortgage-backed securities, and asset-backed securities.

Will the PDCF operations have a reserve impact?
Yes, the credit advanced to the primary dealers under the PDCF will increase the amount of bank reserves.

How will we offset the reserve impact of PDCF loans?
PDCF loans made to primary dealers increase the total supply of reserves in the banking system, in much the same way that Discount Window loans do. To offset this increase, the Desk will utilize a number of tools, including, but not necessarily limited to, outright sales of Treasury securities, reverse repurchase agreements, redemptions of Treasury securities and changes in the sizes of conventional RP transactions.

How is this different from discount window lending to depository institutions?
This differs from discount window lending to depository institutions in a number of ways. Currently, the primary credit facility offers overnight as well as term funding for up to 90 calendar days at the primary credit rate secured by discount window collateral to eligible depository institutions. The PDCF, by contrast, is an overnight facility that will be available to primary dealers (rather than depository institutions).

What information regarding PDCF loans will be released to the public and how frequently?
Similar to loans made to depository institutions via the Discount Window, information on PDCF borrowing will be made available each Thursday, generally at 4:30 p.m., on Federal Reserve Statistical Release H.4.1 - Factors Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions and Condition Statement of Federal Reserve Banks. The H.4.1 release will contain the total amount of PDCF credit outstanding as of the close of business on the prior business day and the average daily amounts for each week.

Under what legal authority are PDCF loans made?
PDCF loans are made under Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act.

How long will the PDCF be in operation?
The PDCF will remain available to primary dealers until February 1, 2010, or longer if conditions warrant.

FAQs: February 3, 2009 ››

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