Libor transition and implementation – Special report 2019
A critical halfway stage has been reached on the Libor transition journey – at least in terms of timing. It’s just over two years since the UK’s top financial regulator called notice on the discredited benchmark. It’s also just over two years until the rate could cease to exist. When it comes to action, however, it’s not clear whether this halfway point is even in sight given a to-do list that never seems to stop growing.
Much has happened since mid-2017, when the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) chair, Andrew Bailey, made life without Libor a reality by freeing panel banks from the shackles of Libor quote submission after 2021. Most crucially, perception has gradually shifted. Denial has been replaced by widespread acceptance that Libor’s days are numbered, accelerating efforts to embed regulator-preferred successor rates throughout the system.
There’s no magic fix, but some turbo-charged remedies look promising. For example, machine learning and natural language processing have already proved their worth in sifting through financial contracts and picking out those that may require the most immediate attention.
It might take more than advances in artificial intelligence to smooth the transition from Libor. The derivatives and cash markets have work ahead before they can confidently dispose of the ubiquitous Libor benchmark.
Download the full 2019 Libor transition and implementation special report in PDF format
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (point 2.4), printing is limited to a single copy.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@risk.net
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
You may share this content using our article tools. As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (clause 2.4), an Authorised User may only make one copy of the materials for their own personal use. You must also comply with the restrictions in clause 2.5.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@risk.net
Looking forward to backward‑looking rates
Interbank offered rates are critical in the world of contracts and derivatives, acting as reference rates in millions of financial contracts and with a total market exposure in the hundreds of trillions of dollars. Bloomberg explores why offering…
Libor leaders: how seven firms are tackling the transition
BMO, Prudential, Associated British Ports, LCH and others reveal their plans to move off troubled benchmark
Libor leaders: ABP crafts blueprint for corporate Libor switch
UK port operator converts swaps and bonds to Sonia, but loans proving more tricky
ECB’s Holthausen on Euribor, fallbacks and Eonia’s end
QE wind-down could boost Euribor, but panel bank expansion is unlikely
Libor leaders: BMO sets the pace in RFR transition
Early mover switches £10 billion of pension liability swap hedges to Sonia
Libor transition and implementation – Covering all bases
Sponsored Q&A
Libor takes a back seat as insurers await regulatory clarity
Eiopa silence on discount curves holds back transition plans
Patchy grasp of Libor reform worries Asia lenders
Widespread lack of understanding could hinder renegotiation of loan terms
Harnessing AI to achieve Libor transition
Chris Dias, principal at KPMG, explains how the vast increase in accuracy that artificial intelligence (AI) offers when dealing with large volumes of complex agreements is crucial to exploring the market opportunities and mitigating the risks of the…
Dealers dip toe into Sonia swaptions market
NatWest and HSBC print trades, Barclays offers prices
IBA mulls RFQ data and Sonia spinoff to bolster swap rate
Benchmark administrator consults on plan to reduce non-publication and prepare for transition to RFRs
Realising opportunities while managing conduct risk
As efforts to transition from Libor to risk-free rates ramp up, Maria Blanco and Nassim Daneshzadeh, partners in PwC’s US and UK financial services practices, discuss two critical and interconnected strategies that are front and centre for PwC clients
Splits emerge over ‘pre-cessation’ fallback triggers
CCPs say cleared swaps will move to new rates if Libor is no longer representative of markets
NLP sniffs out contracts harbouring Eonia as fallback
Test finds wide range of 4,000 Libor euro contracts examined could end up in the flagging Eonia rate