Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Set the limit on the U.S. Treasury Department's (TGA) account? Will Powell "shrink the balance sheet" like this?
Federal Reserve Chair Nominee Waller advocates for a “balance sheet reduction” plan, a long-overlooked mechanism discussion heating up again—limiting the size of the Treasury General Account (TGA). While theoretically feasible, the Treasury may not permit it.
According to Chase Trade Desk, U.S. Bank Securities Rate Strategist Katie Craig breaks down this logic chain: Setting a cap on TGA, with excess cash flowing into the banking system as reserves, and once reserves are ample enough, the Fed could restart quantitative tightening (QT), selling assets and reclaiming reserves, ultimately shrinking the balance sheet.
The logic on the books is sound, but her judgment is clear—this plan is “highly unlikely” to be implemented. The Fed and Treasury have not engaged in any official communication regarding this approach, and the Treasury fundamentally does not want a smaller TGA. Since the beginning of this year, the Treasury’s rolling five-day cash outflows average about $825 billion, and tend to be higher during large debt payments or tax refund seasons.
It’s worth noting that TT&L (Treasury Tax & Loan) is not a new concept—before the financial crisis, the Fed managed this mechanism on behalf of the Treasury. After the crisis, as reserves shifted from scarcity to abundance, TT&L gradually phased out. Canada and the UK still have similar arrangements, but replicating this in the U.S. faces significant obstacles.
TGA—A Major Variable on the Fed’s Liability Side
The Fed’s main liabilities consist of three parts: (1) currency in circulation; (2) the Treasury General Account (TGA); (3) bank reserve balances.
Bank of America points out that TGA appears as a liability on the Fed’s balance sheet: when the Treasury deposits money, the liability increases; when it spends, the liability decreases. TGA is one of the largest liabilities on the Fed’s balance sheet and is largely outside the Fed’s control. The Treasury’s minimum cash target is the sum of expected expenditures over the next five days, averaging about $825 billion year-to-date, and it tends to spike during large debt repayments or tax refund seasons.
There is a precedent for the Fed controlling TGA: before the 2008 global financial crisis, the Fed managed the Treasury’s Tax & Loan (TT&L) operations on behalf of the Treasury. Instead of immediately depositing tax revenues into TGA, commercial banks were allowed to hold onto the funds temporarily, smoothing inflows and reducing the passive outflow of reserves that could impact the money market.
At that time, two “incentive” features were in place: the Treasury earned interest on TT&L deposits, whereas TGA deposits paid zero interest; additionally, funds could be used more flexibly—invested in term deposits or repurchased government securities.
As the Fed entered an era of abundant reserves, TT&L operations gradually diminished, and the Fed deemed their necessity greatly reduced.
Modern Proposal: Limit TGA Cap or Restart TT&L
If today’s approach involves “setting a cap on TGA/restarting TT&L,” the Bank of America Merrill Lynch research team explores a two-stage transmission mechanism:
Through these two steps, the Fed’s balance sheet can be substantially reduced, while total bank reserves remain unchanged. The net interest impact on the Treasury roughly offsets—interest paid on debt is approximately equal to interest earned on deposits.
Three Major Obstacles
Despite the logical consistency of the mechanism, Bank of America Merrill Lynch is highly skeptical about its practical implementation, citing three core obstacles:
These combined obstacles largely dissuade the Treasury from actively pursuing this plan. The Fed and Treasury have never officially discussed plans to limit TGA or restart TT&L.
Canada and the UK’s Approaches, Not Easily Replicated in the U.S.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch compares the U.S. discussion with two overseas cases:
Canada (Bank of Canada’s RG auction mechanism):
UK (Debt Management Office’s proactive cash management):
Even if implemented, the effects would be temporary
If TGA caps are set or TT&L is restarted, initial effects would be a loosening of dollar funding conditions: cash flows from TGA into bank reserves, then into the money market, putting downward pressure on short-term rates. But this easing window would not last—once the Fed restarts QT or accelerates balance sheet reduction, excess reserves would be drained, and funding conditions would revert.
Bank of America’s view is that: from an interest income perspective, the Treasury’s earnings on TT&L deposits roughly offset the debt service costs, making it nearly neutral; but operationally, especially during debt ceiling negotiations, the volatility of TT&L balances could become a new source of instability.
Therefore, Bank of America believes that limiting TGA or restarting TT&L could, in theory, marginally shrink the Fed’s balance sheet, but this pathway is unlikely to be realized.