Corporate Finance & Accounting Corporate Finance
London Inter-Bank Offered Rate (LIBOR)
What Is London Inter-Bank Offered Rate (LIBOR)?
The London Inter-bank Offered Rate (LIBOR) is a benchmark interest rate at which major global banks lend to one another in the international interbank market for short-term loans.
LIBOR, which stands for London Interbank Offered Rate, serves as a
globally accepted key benchmark interest rate that indicates borrowing
costs between banks. The rate is calculated and published each day by
the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE).
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London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR)
Understanding LIBOR
LIBOR is the average interest rate at which major global banks borrow
from one another. It is based on five currencies including the US
dollar, the euro, the
British pound, the Japanese yen, and the Swiss franc, and serves seven
different maturities—overnight/spot next, one week, and one, two, three,
six, and 12 months.
The combination of five currencies and seven maturities leads to a
total of 35 different LIBOR rates calculated and reported each business
day. The most commonly quoted rate is the three-month U.S. dollar rate,
usually referred to as the current LIBOR rate.
Each day, ICE asks major global banks how much they would charge
other banks for short-term loans. The association takes out the highest
and lowest figures, then calculates the average from the remaining
numbers. This is known as the trimmed average. This rate is posted each
morning as the daily rate, so it's not a static figure. Once the rates
for each maturity and currency are calculated and finalized, they are
announced/published once a day at around 11:55 am London time by IBA.
LIBOR is also the basis for consumer loans in countries around the
world, so it impacts consumers just as much as it does financial
institutions. The interest rates on various credit products such as
credit cards, car loans, and adjustable rate mortgages fluctuate based
on the interbank rate. This change in rate helps determine the ease of
borrowing between banks and consumers.
But there is a downside to using the LIBOR rate. Even though lower
borrowing costs may be attractive to consumers, it does also affect the
returns on certain securities. Some mutual funds may be attached to
LIBOR, so their yields may drop as LIBOR fluctuates.
Key Takeaways
- LIBOR is the benchmark interest rate at which major global lend to one another.
- LIBOR is administered by the Intercontinental Exchange which asks major global banks how much they would charge other banks for short-term loans.
- The rate is calculated using the Waterfall Methodology, a standardized, transaction-based, data-driven, layered method.
How Is LIBOR Calculated?
The ICE Benchmark Administration (IBA) has constituted a designated
panel of global banks for each currency and tenor pair. For example, 16
major banks, including Bank of America, Barclays, Citibank, Deutsche
Bank, JPMorgan Chase, and UBS constitute the panel for US dollar LIBOR.
Only those banks that have a significant role in the London market are
considered eligible for membership on the ICE LIBOR panel, and the
selection process is held annually.
As of April 2018, the IBA submitted a new proposal to strengthen the
LIBOR calculation methodology. It suggested using a standardized,
transaction-based, data-driven, layered method called the Waterfall
Methodology for determining LIBOR.
- The first transaction-based level involves taking a volume-weighted average price (VWAP) of all eligible transactions a panel bank may have assigned a higher weighting for transactions booked closer to 11:00 a.m. London time.
- The second transaction-derived level involved taking submissions based on transaction-derived data from a panel bank if it does not have a sufficient number of eligible transactions to make a Level 1 submission.
- The third level—expert judgment—comes into play when a panel bank fails to make a Level 1 or a Level 2 submission. It submits the rate at which it could finance itself at 11:00 a.m. London time with reference to the unsecured, wholesale funding market.
The Waterfall Methodology retains the trimmed average calculation.
The IBA calculates the LIBOR rate using a trimmed mean
approach applied to all the responses received. Trimmed mean is a
method of averaging which eliminates a small specified percentage of the
largest and smallest values before calculating the mean. For LIBOR,
figures in the highest and lowest quartile are thrown out and averaging
is performed on the remaining numbers.
Uses of LIBOR
LIBOR is used worldwide in a wide variety of financial products. They include the following:
- Standard interbank products like the forward rate agreements (FRA), interest rate swaps, interest rate futures/options, and swaptions
- Commercial products like floating rate certificate of deposits and notes, syndicated loans, and variable rate mortgages
- Hybrid products like collateralized debt obligations (CDO), collateralized mortgage obligations (CMO), and a wide variety of accrual notes, callable notes, and perpetual notes
- Consumer loan-related products like individual mortgages and student loans
LIBOR is also used as a standard gauge of market expectation for
interest rates finalized by central banks. It accounts for the liquidity
premiums for various instruments traded in the money markets, as well
as an indicator of the health of the overall banking system. A lot of
derivative products are created, launched and traded in reference to
LIBOR. LIBOR is also used as a reference rate for other standard
processes like clearing, price discovery, and product valuation.
A Brief History of LIBOR
The need for a uniform measure of interest rates across financial
institutions became necessary as the market for interest rate-based
products began evolving during the 1980s. The British Bankers’
Association (BBA)—which represented the banking and financial services
industry—set up BBA interest-settlement rates in 1984. Further
streamlining led to the evolution of BBA LIBOR in 1986, which became the
default standard interest rate for transacting in the interest rate-
and currency-based financial dealings between financial institutions at
the local and international levels.
Since then, LIBOR has undergone many changes. The major one is when BBA LIBOR changed to ICE LIBOR in February 2014 after the Intercontinental Exchange took over the administration.
Currencies involved in calculating LIBOR have also changed. While new
currency rates have been added, many have been removed or integrated
following the introduction of the euro rates. The 2008 financial crisis
saw a significant decline in the number of tenors for which LIBOR was
calculated.
LIBOR Equivalents
Though LIBOR is accepted globally, there are other similar regional interest rates that are popularly followed across the globe.
For instance, Europe has the European Interbank Offered
Rate (EURIBOR), Japan has the Tokyo Interbank Offered Rate (TIBOR),
China has Shanghai Interbank Offered Rate (SHIBOR), and India has the
Mumbai Interbank Offered Rate (MIBOR).
LIBOR Scandal of Rate Rigging
While LIBOR has been a long-established global benchmark standard for
interest rate, it has had its fair share of controversies including a
major scandal of rate rigging.
Major banks allegedly colluded to manipulate the LIBOR rates. They took
traders' requests into account and submitted artificially low LIBOR
rates to keep them at their preferred levels. The intention behind the
alleged malpractice was to bump up traders’ profits who were holding
positions in LIBOR-based financial securities.
Following reporting by the Wall Street Journal in 2008, major global
banks which were on the panels and contributed to the LIBOR
determination process faced regulatory scrutiny. It involved
investigations by the U.S. Department of Justice. Similar investigations
were launched in other parts of the globe including in the U.K. and
Europe. Major banks and financial institutes including Barclays, ICAP,
Rabobank, Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS, and Deutsche Bank faced heavy
fines. Punitive actions were also taken on their employees who were
found to be involved in the malpractice.
The scandal was also one of the primary reasons why LIBOR shifted from BBA administration to ICE.
Examples of LIBOR-Based Products and Transactions
The simplest example of a LIBOR-based transaction is a floating rate
bond which pays an annual interest based on LIBOR, says at LIBOR + 0.5%.
As the value of LIBOR changes, the interest payment will change.
LIBOR also applies to interest rate swaps—contractual agreements
between two parties to exchange interest payments at a specified time.
Assume Paul owns a $1 million investment that pays him a variable
LIBOR-based interest rate equal to LIBOR + 1% each quarter. Since his
earnings are subject to LIBOR values and are variable in nature, he
wants to switch to fixed-rate interest payments. Then there is Peter,
who has a similar $1 million investment which pays him a fixed interest
of 1.5% per quarter. He wishes to get a variable earning, as it may
occasionally give him higher payments.
Both Paul and Peter can enter into a swap agreement, exchanging their
respective interest receipts. Paul will receive the fixed 1.5% interest
over his $1 million investment from Peter which equals $15,000, while
Peter receives LIBOR + 1% variable interest from Paul.
If LIBOR is 1%, then Peter will receive 2% or $20,000 from Paul.
Since this figure is higher than what he owes to Paul, in net terms
Peter will get $5,000 ($20,000 - $15,000) from Paul. By next quarter, if
LIBOR comes down to 0.25%, Peter will be eligible to receive 1.25% or
$12,500 from Paul. In net terms, Paul will get $2,500 ($15,000 -
$12,500) from Peter.
Such swaps essentially fulfill the requirement of both the
transacting parties who wanted to change the type of interest receipts
(fixed and floating).
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