The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet expanded by $7.96 billion for the week ending June 24, 2026, according to the central bank’s H.4.1 statistical release published on June 25. Total factors supplying reserve funds now sit at $6.788 trillion.

The growth was driven primarily by an $8.14 billion increase in reserve bank credit, which reached approximately $6.6896 trillion. Securities held outright also climbed by $5.09 billion to $6.4536 trillion.

Inside the numbers

Breaking down the securities portfolio, US Treasuries accounted for $4.4879 trillion of the total, while mortgage-backed securities made up $1.9634 trillion. That ratio, roughly 69% Treasuries to 31% MBS, reflects the composition that has gradually shifted as the Fed allowed certain holdings to mature without replacement during its quantitative tightening phase.

Total assets stood at approximately $6.736 trillion as of June 17, 2026, meaning the week-over-week move brought the figure closer to $6.79 trillion. A $7.96 billion increase on a nearly $6.8 trillion base works out to roughly 0.12%.