(Bloomberg) When Brookline Bancorp Inc. needs to borrow short-term cash quickly — part of the regular course of business for the Boston-based lender — it has a range of options. One source of cheap money it’s loath to turn to, however, is the Federal Reserve for fear of setting off alarm bells. Most Read from BloombergPutin Sends US Signal on Ukraine Talks, Seeing War AdvantageOne of World’s Richest Doctors Sees Fortune Surge to $12 BillionJPMorgan Shuffles Top Managers as Jamie Dimon Prepare
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Banks with between $50 billion and $250 billion of assets leaned particularly heavily on the Federal Reserve and the Federal Home Loan banks amid deposit outflows in March and April, according to new research that quantifies the scramble for funding.
The Federal Reserve System is facing increasing demands from the Senate to revamp the process for granting master accounts, disclose more information to the public and pick more diverse leaders. That pressure makes executive searches at the Kansas City and Chicago Fed banks more complicated.