Swap Lines Monitor
Outstanding — full history
SWPT — Central Bank Liquidity Swaps Outstanding, Wednesday level, weekly H.4.1 release. Symlog y-axis so dormant periods (~$0) and crisis peaks (~$583B) both render legibly. Three canonical activation episodes annotated: GFC, 2012 European debt crisis, COVID. Dashed horizontal rules mark the regime thresholds — green ($1B = DORMANT/ELEVATED border), gold ($10B = ELEVATED/STRESS border), red ($100B = STRESS/CRISIS border) — so the regime tier is readable at a glance.
Maturity bucket split (current)
| Maturity bucket | Outstanding ($M) | Share of total |
|---|
SWP15, SWP1690.
Standing C5 partners
| Central bank | Code | Standing arrangement since |
|---|
FIMA Repo Facility
Operational terms
| Parameter | Setting |
|---|---|
| Tenor | |
| Rate (current, post-March 2020) | |
| Rate (legacy, pre-March 2020) | |
| Fed FX risk | |
| Counterparty | Foreign central bank only (foreign commercial banks cannot draw directly) |
Methodology
Why these facilities exist. The eurodollar system — offshore dollar deposits, currently around $14 trillion per FT — creates structural dollar funding stress that the Fed cannot resolve through domestic tools alone. When the FX swap market stresses (cross-currency basis blowouts), foreign banks holding dollar-denominated assets face forced-selling pressure. Swap lines short-circuit the cascade by lending dollars directly to foreign central banks at OIS + 25 bps; the foreign CB then on-auctions to its banks.
Why the Fed bears no FX risk. A swap is opened at the prevailing spot rate and unwound at the same locked rate. The Fed lends dollars and gets foreign currency as collateral; at maturity, the trade reverses at the original rate. The Fed is not directionally taking euro / yen / sterling reserves — it is just providing temporary dollar liquidity through a foreign CB's plumbing.
The stigma hierarchy (operational practice, lowest to highest): FIMA Repo (standing, low-profile) → standing C5 swap drawing (visible on H.4.1 release) → bilateral discretionary swap with non-C5 CB (becomes news; e.g., 2008 expansion to Korea, Mexico, Brazil, Singapore). Smaller central banks under stress will tap FIMA before triggering bilateral negotiations.
Regime thresholds (operator-set, based on historical record):
| Regime | Outstanding | Historical example |
|---|---|---|
| DORMANT | < $1B | 2024-2026 baseline |
| ELEVATED | $1B – $10B | 2022 European energy crisis |
| STRESS | $10B – $100B | Pre-peak phases of major activations |
| CRISIS | > $100B | 2008 GFC ($583B peak), 2020 COVID ($449B peak), 2012 European debt ($109B peak) |
These are descriptive labels for the headline outstanding number. Cross-currency basis spreads are the leading indicator that activation is coming; the swap-line drawings are the confirming indicator that funding stress is acute.
Canonical references. Bahaj & Reis 2022 (Review of Economic Studies) on swap-line effectiveness; Goldberg & Ravazzolo 2022 (NY Fed Staff Report) on basis-suppression effects; Mehrling The New Lombard Street (2011) on the international-dealer-of-last-resort framing; Snider's eurodollar university work for the offshore-dollar-system context.
Cross-references
- Multi-Polar Monitor — IMF COFER currency composition, BIS credit gaps; the broader dollar-system context that swap lines sit inside.
- Credit-Cycle Melt-Up Monitor — credit-cycle complement; swap-line activations historically correlate with credit-cycle stress moments.
- Dollar Pillar — the dollar regime composite; swap-line outstanding is one of the structural-stress channels feeding the broader Dollar System read.
- Swap Lines Deep Dive — comprehensive operator briefing in the repo. Mechanics, history, C5/FIMA architecture, fiscal-dominance / weaponization debate, full reading list.