UK watchdog says Libor ‘end game’ may be uncertain

FAN Editor
The Canary Wharf financial district is seen in east London
FILE PHOTO – The Canary Wharf financial district is seen in east London November 12, 2014. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett

January 28, 2019

LONDON (Reuters) – The “end-game” for the Libor interest rate benchmark will be uncertain and regulators will seek to give markets notice when they no longer believe the rate is reliable, a senior UK markets watchdog official said on Monday.

Used as a price reference in financial contracts and derivatives, Libor reflects borrowing costs among banks and is based on quotes submitted by lenders.

Banks have been fined millions of dollars for trying to rig the benchmark, which is being replaced in Britain by the Bank of England’s Sonia overnight rate.

“There is now wide recognition that Libor will come to an end,” said Edwin Schooling-Latter, director of markets and wholesale policy at the Financial Conduct Authority.

Regulators say the market for interbank lending is too patchy to base a widely-used benchmark on and want it replaced by Sonia by the end of 2021.

New contracts referencing Libor are still being written, however.

Industry is seeking a “fallback” rate that could still be used in “legacy” contracts, but Schooling-Latter urged the market to push ahead with migration to Sonia.

“We think that the best and smoothest transition from Libor will be one in which contracts that reference Libor are replaced or amended before fallback provisions are triggered,” Schooling-Latter told an ISDA derivatives industry conference.

Banks have told the FCA they would continue submitting quotes for Libor until the end of 2021, but Schooling-Latter said the regulator would intervene earlier if it felt a Libor rate had become unsafe to use in contracts.

“The FCA would be very clear in any future announcement about the precise date at which a particular Libor rate would no longer be capable of being representative,” Schooling-Latter said.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Toby Chopra)

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

JP Morgan's co-president says more market meltdowns like December's rout are coming

The market meltdown that wiped out stocks’ gains late last year will be a recurring feature of the trading environment, according to Daniel Pinto, co-president of J.P. Morgan Chase and head of its massive corporate and investment bank. “Over time, you will probably see several more market events like we […]

You May Like