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by sorbits 1867 days ago
I believe the U.S. minimum requirement is currently at 10%, but you do remember how bad it all came crashing down 13 years ago, right?

So yes, it does matter if we let financial institutions disregard risk in the pursuit of profit, when they are gambling with other people’s money.

In the case of Tether though, it’s not a traditional bank that issues interest yielding loans based on the lender’s credit profile.

Rather, the suspicion has been that they are simply issuing USDT coins to buy up crypto, which causes the latter to increase in value, but the money to buy these assets were never there in the first place, and that is why today, they can only show a fraction of the cash they claim to have received.

2 comments

https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/reservereq.htm

"As announced on March 15, 2020, the Board reduced reserve requirement ratios to zero percent effective March 26, 2020. This action eliminated reserve requirements for all depository institutions."

I experienced time very differently the past year. I thought it was two years already. But I'm sure there was another announcement similar to that earlier.

The OP just told you it's 0%, and he's right. Reserve requirements have been abolished for the past 2 years, and even before that, banks could easily conjure reserves when they needed. That was the whole point of the QE programs run by the Fed.

Edit: another poster linked the actual Fed announcement and it is actually 1 year since the reserve requirement has been lifted.

I like how QE is becoming a catch all for "expansionary monetary policy I don't like."

Changing reserve requirements is part of conventional monetary policy, it is not QE.