KEY POINTS
  • The Federal Reserve is continuing to buy corporate bonds, following up on a pledge it made in March.
  • Corporate America titans such as Microsoft, Apple and Home Depot have been among the beneficiaries.
  • Questions have been raised over "moral hazard" as the Fed buys debt from companies that don't seem to need the central bank's help.
A woman walks past the U.S. Federal Reserve building in Washington D.C., May 21, 2020.

As the Federal Reserve moves deeper into its purchases of corporate debt, it faces more questions about the consequences of its unprecedented market interventions.

Disclosures filed this week surrounding its credit facilities show the Fed is not only buying the bonds of struggling companies hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic but also some of the stalwarts of American industry — Microsoft, Visa and Home Depot just to name three companies whose debt the Fed holds directly.