Fed Balance Sheet Shrinks as Reserves Drop $52.7B in One Week

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Federal Reserve balance sheet declined last week, with reserve balances dropping $52.7 billion to $3.014 trillion as of June 3, 2026. Securities held outright fell $1.3 billion to $6.436 trillion, led by a $9.2 billion drop in mortgage-backed securities. The Fed ended its quantitative tightening in December 2025 and now manages reserves to maintain ample levels. With rising regulatory clarity under MiCA, BTC as hedge against inflation could see renewed interest as capital shifts toward riskier assets.

The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet got a little lighter last week. Reserve Bank credit fell by $2.5B to roughly $6.665 trillion for the week ended June 3, 2026, according to the central bank’s H.4.1 statistical release published on June 4.

Reserve balances held at the Fed dropped by $52.7B in a single week, landing at $3.014 trillion.

What the numbers actually say

Securities held outright, the Fed’s largest balance sheet asset, declined by $1.3B to $6.436 trillion. Mortgage-backed securities fell by $9.2B, while US Treasury holdings rose modestly to partially offset the decline.

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Year-over-year, Reserve Bank credit is actually up $38.4B compared to the week ended June 4, 2025. So while the weekly direction is contractionary, the annual trajectory shows the Fed’s balance sheet hasn’t exactly been on a crash diet.

Life after quantitative tightening

The Fed formally ended its quantitative tightening program on December 1, 2025. QT was the process of letting bonds mature without reinvesting the proceeds, effectively draining money from the financial system. The Fed initiated QT in June 2022, which reduced total assets by over $2 trillion by December 2025.

With QT officially in the rearview mirror, the Fed has shifted to what it calls “reserve management purchases,” aimed at maintaining “ample reserves” in the banking system while the economy continues to grow.

The timing of this particular release is worth a brief note. The H.4.1 data came out one day later than its usual Thursday schedule, consistent with the Fed’s standard timing adjustment procedures.

What this means for crypto and risk assets

The reduction in mortgage-backed securities holdings is quietly relevant. As MBS roll off the Fed’s books, they get absorbed by private buyers who might otherwise be allocating capital to riskier corners of the market.

The year-over-year increase of $38.4B in Reserve Bank credit offers a modest counterpoint. On a longer time horizon, the Fed isn’t aggressively tightening. With reserve balances at $3.014 trillion and the Fed demonstrating it won’t hesitate to let that number fluctuate, digital asset markets are competing for attention in an environment where “ample” reserves doesn’t mean “unlimited” reserves.

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