The Outage at the Federal Reserve

Guest Post by Martin Armstrong

The outage of the National Settlement Service and the Fedwire Securities Service, which provides issuance, settlement, and transfer services for Treasuries and other government securities, was down and this has caused some concern and then conspiracy theories mixed in. The Fed made progress reversing the shutdown within a couple of hours, however, this has illustrated that a long-term outage of the Fed’s online services could cause intense chaos across the world financial system, preventing banks and businesses from finalizing transactions and impeding basic banking functions.

The Federal Reserve said an outage of its key financial services on Wednesday was caused by a maintenance mistake and it is taking steps to prevent a recurrence. The official statement read:

“The incident was caused by an operational error involving an automated data center maintenance process that was inadvertently triggered during business hours,” a Fed spokeswoman said. Such tasks are normally performed after-hours, she said, adding, “This was human error.”

“Our technical teams have determined that the cause is a Federal Reserve operational error,” the Fed said on Wednesday on its website. “The Federal Reserve Banks have taken steps to help ensure the resilience of the Fedwire and NSS applications, including recovery to the point of failure.”

There was no power-outage so it does appear that the Federal Reserve was honestly calling it a disruption due to an ‘operational error’. This raises the issue of concern surrounding digital currency. Indeed, solar flares and other solarmass ejections that travel through space can overwhelm Earth’s atmosphere and generate powerful electric and magnetic fields. These magnetic storms can occasionally be intense enough to disrupt the operation of high-voltage electricity lines. A digital currency system could be brought to its knees with an EM attack.

(see report)

We do have an EMP Task Force on National and Homeland Security which issued a report on China’s ability to conduct an Electromagnetic Pulse attack on the United States. China now has super-EMP weapons and could engage in a first-strike attack that could blackout the entire country. China could actually launch a surprise “Pearl Harbor” type attack that could produce a deadly blackout of the entire country. Indeed, China has built a network of satellites, high-speed missiles, and super-electromagnetic pulse weapons that could meltdown the electric power grid, fry critical communications, and even takeout the ability of our aircraft carrier groups to respond. All of this is possible today using EMP weapons rather than nuclear.

The outage at the Federal Reserve was not an attack, loss of power, or anything nefarious. It was indeed a human error. Nonetheless, this outage even for a few hours brought the economy to a halt. This is the system used by U.S. banks to execute some $3 trillion in transactions daily and the outage began around 11.15 am Eastern time on Wednesday, and remained down for more than three hours. Most of the key systems, including the backbone settlement services Fedwire and FedACH, were back online by 3 pm. Fedwire is the system for large transfers between banks which last year handled 184 million transactions totaling more than $840 trillion, or more than $3.3 trillion daily, according to Fed data.

Other affected systems included FedACH, the clearinghouse which generally handles smaller transactions such as paychecks, tax refunds, and utility bill payments. The National Settlement Service (NSS), used by depository institutions with Federal Reserve Bank master accounts, was also shutdown offline. Every other transaction service maintained by the Fed was also affected by the disruptions.

Fedwire Funds is the premier electronic funds-transfer service that banks, businesses, and government agencies rely on for mission-critical, same-day transactions. On a monthly basis, Fedwire handles more than 835,000 transactions a day on average, with a daily average dollar volume of $3.4 trillion.

CHIPS, a private-sector alternative to Fedwire run by The Clearing House, continued to operate normally. ET. CHIPS handles about $1.5 trillion a day, according to its website.

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14 Comments
lamont cranston
lamont cranston
March 1, 2021 7:53 pm

CHIPS??? Who’s running it? Eric Estrada?

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 1, 2021 8:12 pm

Trust the Plan. Q and his Merry Band of EMP Proof Tards got your backs.

Ed
Ed
March 1, 2021 8:29 pm

And I was worrying my ass off over here. /s

TS
TS
March 1, 2021 9:37 pm

Testing, testing, 1, 2, 3…

Ghost
Ghost
  TS
March 2, 2021 7:40 am

What are you testing?

Patricia Sabina Haubrich
Patricia Sabina Haubrich
  Ghost
March 2, 2021 12:04 pm

The Quantum System

frdavidrn
frdavidrn
March 1, 2021 9:57 pm

So three major clearing operations, FedACH, Fedwire Funds, and National Settlement Service were all brought down at once by “…an operational error involving an automated data center maintenance process…”. I note the singular article used to describe one “operational error” on one “maintenance process” as the reason. As I understand, these systems actually operate 24/7. Something doesn’t smell right. But then again, what’s new.

Ed
Ed
  frdavidrn
March 2, 2021 5:57 am

With all the rotten activity at the Fed, I can’t really tell one bad smell from another.

Freddy Uranus
Freddy Uranus
  frdavidrn
March 2, 2021 7:16 am

My sister-in-law’s second cousin’s kid is an environmental engineer (janitor) at the Fed. He said he was mopping the floor and inadvertently knocked a power cord from the wall. By the time he got the plug back in the outlet the Dow had dropped 700 points! Good thing he’s in a union.

Ghost
Ghost
  Freddy Uranus
March 2, 2021 7:40 am

Good one.

Fact_Rechecker
Fact_Rechecker
March 1, 2021 10:49 pm

So, frankly, pretty sure you read a WHOLE LOT more into that than was reality. Quite likely, this was a patching fail or maintenance mishap or maybe even a series of servers getting out of sync (after some patch). Anyone in IT knows, It happens once in a while in any big complex organization. And the Fed is likely one of the most complex out there. Even with testing, or doing everything right — when it comes to “maintenance”— shit happens, expect it. So, offline for 3 hours? Really? So what? What long term effects resulted? NONE. Anyone expecting 100% uptime needs to put that Hunter BYEden ‘special edition’ crack pipe down. So here’s likely what happened, banks were super pissed and they had to pause their gazillion dollar transactions or queue them up for a few hours, while they took a ‘cocktail party’ lunch. And sure, they yelled and screamed about how much $$ they were losing, by the second, likely more than you make in a year…. what banks likely lost three hours of interest, most “common folk” don’t EARN in 5 years. Yeah, tell me again, why you’re so sad. Here’s a reality check, for as OVER-connected and reliant we are on technology, service providers, and the Interwebz (Cloud, amazon) and general connectivity (provided by the BIG 3, mind you) — the Sheeple should really start getting comfortable and prepared for this to happen MORE OFTEN, not less. One issue ANYWHERE, will soon affect every system EVERYWHERE. You think Google, or amazon or Facebook or your ISP has protection against an EMP attack? Cool story, Bro. Naa. Even the most rudimentary attack, but remedial high school Iranian attackers could likely bring us to our knees. Personally, I think THIS (above) story, circumstances of events — and DAYS of parroted coverage was WAY OVERBLOWN. But more sad still? I see “smart” ppl taking the hook, and doing ignorant hand wringing. We’re only feeding the PANIC AND CHAOS nonsense pushed by CNN, who is always looking for more hysteria to push (once they know we REACT). If this event happened once a week — honestly, it really wouldn’t affect much IMHO; However, have these networks and services down for a week? Oh hell yeah, now you’d have ARMAGEDDON. That however, has NEVER happened.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Fact_Rechecker
March 2, 2021 12:48 am

One thing about tech….it is AWESOME until it fails.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Glock-N-Load
March 2, 2021 3:58 am

people should never depend on it. even us talking here, were more dependent on it than we ought to be. probably most of us are still working towards more independence and that takes time and money and labor.. lot of us probably looking forward to the day we can turn off the computer and say good effing riddance.

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 2, 2021 3:56 am

hard to tell if its part of some ‘cyber octagon’ (or some name very similar to that) ‘scenario’ the wef was pushing a while back, about outages on power grids and banking systems, or if its just a run of the mill fubar.. because anybody who has any idea how software is written and managed these days, is regularly amazed that anything still works from one day to the next.