Reserve Maintenance Period

Reserve Maintenance Period

The reserve maintenance period is the length of time during which the Federal Reserve requires banks and other depository institutions to maintain a specified level of funds. In fact, according to the Federal Reserve, banks have built up their reserves beyond the requirements, The Federal Reserve has stated that it has no plans to reinstate reserve requirements. The agency announced it was eliminating the reserve requirement The Federal Reserve set the minimum reserve balance requirement for each bank, basing the reserve number on the amount of business that the bank normally undertakes. The Federal Reserve set the reserve requirement to zero in March 2020 as one of several measures intended to free up liquidity and encourage new lending to consumers and businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic. Eligible correspondent banks include National Credit Union Administration Central Liquidity Facilities, Federal Home Loan Banks, depository institutions, or banking Edge Act and Agreement corporations with a master account at a Federal Reserve Bank.

What Is the Reserve Maintenance Period?

The reserve maintenance period is the length of time during which the Federal Reserve requires banks and other depository institutions to maintain a specified level of funds. The standard reserve period is two weeks in length, beginning on a Thursday and ending on a Wednesday.

The Federal Reserve set the reserve requirement to zero in March 2020 as one of several measures intended to free up liquidity and encourage new lending to consumers and businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic. The move essentially eliminated the reserve requirement.

Understanding the Reserve Maintenance Period

The Federal Reserve has stated that it has no plans to reinstate reserve requirements.

The agency announced it was eliminating the reserve requirement In a statement released on March 15, 2020, just as the COVID-19 pandemic was taking hold in the U.S. The Fed explained that the nation's banking institutions had "built up substantial levels of capital and liquidity" in excess of the government's reserve numbers ever since the 2007-2008 financial crisis.

The action was one of several taken by the Fed to encourage lenders to keep the money flowing to consumers and businesses through the COVID-19 crisis.

The agency also noted that it had already decided to begin implementing an "ample reserves regime" in order to free up liquidity in the banking system.

How the Reserve Maintenance Period Worked

The Federal Reserve set the minimum reserve balance requirement for each bank, basing the reserve number on the amount of business that the bank normally undertakes.

The amount of the required reserve fund changed regularly. Most banks keep some of their reserve cash on-site in their vaults for day-to-day use and the rest in a regional Federal Reserve vault or at another depository institution.

To calculate whether a bank was meeting its reserve requirement, the Fed used the average of all the end-of-day balances of that institution's master account throughout the reserve maintenance period. That gave the bank the leeway to fall below the required reserve on a given day without incurring a penalty.

Banks keep much of their cash reserves offsite in accounts at regional Federal Reserve facilities or in another bank with which it has an arrangement. Eligible correspondent banks include National Credit Union Administration Central Liquidity Facilities, Federal Home Loan Banks, depository institutions, or banking Edge Act and Agreement corporations with a master account at a Federal Reserve Bank.

Monitoring the Reserve Requirements

The Federal Reserve maintained a penalty-free band that allowed banks some flexibility in handling their cash.

Banks that maintained their reserve balances directly at Federal Reserve banks were required to maintain an average balance that is at least equal to the bottom threshold of the band. That minimum is $50,000 or 10 percent of the institution’s reserve balance requirement, whichever amount is greater.

Related terms:

Bank Reserves

Bank reserves are the cash minimums financial institutions must retain to meet central bank requirements. Read how bank reserves impact the economy. read more

Checking Account

A checking account is a deposit account held at a financial institution that allows deposits and withdrawals. Checking accounts are very liquid and can be accessed using checks, automated teller machines, and electronic debits, among other methods. read more

Contemporaneous Reserves

Contemporaneous reserves are a form of bank reserve accounting that requires a bank to maintain enough reserves to cover all deposits made during a week. read more

Depository

A depository is a facility such as a building, office, or warehouse in which something is deposited for storage or safeguarding. read more

Edge Act Corporation

An Edge Act corporation is a subsidiary of a U.S. or foreign bank that engages in foreign banking operations; these subsidiaries are named after the 1919 Edge Act, which authorized them. read more

Federal Funds

Federal funds are excess reserves that commercial banks deposit at regional Federal Reserve banks which can then be lent to other commercial banks. read more

Federal Funds Rate

The federal funds rate is the target interest rate set by the Fed at which commercial banks borrow and lend their excess reserves to each other overnight. read more

Federal Reserve System (FRS)

The Federal Reserve System is the central bank of the United States and provides the nation with a safe, flexible, and stable financial system. read more

Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) System

The Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) System is a consortium of regional banks created to keep cash flowing to the nation's lending institutions. read more

Key Rate

The key rate is a benchmark interest rate that determines bank lending rates and the cost of credit for borrowers. read more