LONDON INTERBANK OFFERED RATE (LIBOR) - ECONOMY

News: Explained | Why are financial regulators transitioning from LIBOR?

 

What's in the news?

       On May 12, the RBI stated that some banks and financial institutions were yet to facilitate an absolute transition away from the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) benchmark.

 

Key takeaways:

       They had not inserted fallback clauses into all their financial contracts that reference U.S.$ LIBOR or the corresponding domestic Mumbai Interbank Forward Outright Rate (MIFOR).

       Both LIBOR and MIFOR would cease to be a representative benchmark from June 30 this year. The regulator urged the entities to incorporate the clauses to avert any “last-minute rush to insert fallbacks''.

       The RBI had stated in its November 2020 bulletin that, in India, exposures to LIBOR are from loan contracts linked to it, Foreign Currency Non-Resident Accounts (FCNRA-B) deposits with floating rates of interest and derivatives.

 

LIBOR:

       LIBOR is a global benchmark interest rate that combines individual rates at which banks opine they may borrow from each other (for a particular period of time) at the London interbank market.

       It is used as a benchmark to settle trades in futures, options, swaps and other derivative financial instruments in over-the-counter markets (participants engaging directly without using an exchange) and on exchanges globally.

       Further, consumer lending products including mortgages, credit cards and student loans, among others, to use it as a benchmark rate.

 

How was LIBOR calculated?

       Before December 31, 2021, LIBOR was calculated for five currencies (U.S. dollar, Euro, Pound, Swiss Franc and Japanese Yen) for seven tenors (overnight, one-week, one-month, two months, three months, six months and 12 months). Thus, totaling to 35 individual rates on each business day.

       Only U.S.-dollar LIBOR, excluding one-week and two-month tenor, were allowed to be published after the U.K. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) announced its phased rollback in March 2021.


Issues:

       The central flaw in the mechanism was that it relied heavily on banks to be honest with their reporting disregarding their commercial interests.

 

Alternatives:

       Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) - USA. Accordingly, in India, new transactions were to be undertaken using the SOFR and the Modified Mumbai Interbank Forward Outright Rate (MMIFOR), replacing MIFOR.