The NCUA determined that pulling the Central Liquidity Facility funds from U.S. Central would be the only way to continue helping it and the credit union system at large.
After the CLF capital infusion to U.S. Central and subsequent conservatorship earlier this year, the NCUA looked at the generally accepted accounting principles and decided that the entities' funds were so intertwined that the CLF and U.S. Central would have to provide consolidated financials under the current structure.
Historically credit unions have voluntarily subscribed to the CLF. The CLF in turn sold the stock to U.S. Central and then left the funds in the wholesale corporate on deposit.
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