Global Savings Glut: The U.S. Banking System Is Drowning In Liquidity

 | Jun 17, 2021 12:36AM ET

Many longtime readers know that I’ve talked often about there being a global savings glut issue. Or, said another way, there’s been far too much liquidity in the global financial system with a lack of attractive investments.

Thus, I believe it’s safe at this point to say that credit is not the problem. Rather, the issue is banks and other lenders finding places to put it all.

This is the main reason why global central bankers have been stuck pushing on string with their aggressive easing policies.

Meaning: they can print and ease as much as they want (which they have). But if it isn’t getting into the main-economy (which it hasn’t)—then all it’s doing is fueling a savings glut, excess speculation, and further inequality.

And now we are seeing another key symptom of this savings glut issue in the Federal Reserve’s overnight-reverse-repo facility (aka the RRP facility). . .

(To give some context: the RRP facility is known as the ‘last resort’ for banks and money-markets. It’s a place to park excess cash for a short-duration—usually overnight—for 0% interest. This indicates that these institutions would rather shelve that money for zero-return instead of paying interest to keep that cash in-house).

Over the last few weeks, major banks and financial firms have shoveled a record amount of excess cash—nearly $600 billion —into the RRP facility.