As an extra related series, check out Sybil Star's links.
Here's an older article of Marshall Auerback's everyone should read; Link It is certainly still pertinent.
This article by Karol Gellert should also be read by everyone. It may be old, but very pertinent.
And finally for the real truth: Auerback, Gross and Dialynas
Libor Set for Overhaul as Credibility Is Doubted (Update1)
By Ben Livesey and Gavin Finch
May 13 (Bloomberg) -- The benchmark interest rate for at least $347 trillion of derivatives and 6 million U.S. mortgages is set for its biggest shakeup in a decade on concern that banks misquoted their true borrowing costs.
``We have not run away or hidden from the need for reform or the need for review'' of ``serious issues'' in the U.K. financial-services industry, British Bankers' Association Chief Executive Officer Angela Knight said at a hearing of a parliamentary committee in London today. The BBA is set to announce the results of its most far-reaching review of the way it sets the London interbank offered rate in a decade on May 30.
The association, an unregulated London-based trade group, is under pressure to show that Libor is reliable following complaints by investors that financial institutions weren't telling the truth about their funding costs after rising mortgage defaults contaminated credit markets and drove up borrowing costs.
While the association set the one-month dollar Libor rate at 2.72 percent on April 7, the Federal Reserve said banks paid 2.82 percent for secured loans later that day. Secured loans typically yield less than unsecured debt.
``The Libor numbers that banks reported to the BBA were a lie,'' said Tim Bond, head of global asset allocation at Barclays Capital in London. ``They had been all along. The BBA has been trying to investigate them and that's why banks have started to report the right numbers.''
April Warning
Libor rates jumped after the association said April 16 that any member banks found to be misquoting rates will be banned. The cost of borrowing in dollars for three months rose 18 basis points to 2.91 percent in the following two days, the biggest increase since the start of the credit squeeze last August. The one-month rate climbed 14 basis points, the most since November.
The cost of borrowing in dollars for three months should be as much as 30 basis points, or 0.30 percentage point, higher than the current rate, Citigroup Inc. said in a report last month.
Banks are understating borrowing costs on concern they will be perceived as ``weakened'' by the credit turmoil that forced financial companies to record $323 billion of losses and credit- markets writedowns, said Peter Hahn, a fellow at the London- based Cass Business School.
``Since the credit crunch, it's something that appears to have been manipulated,'' said Hahn, a former managing director at Citigroup. ``We are in an extraordinarily delicate confidence time where a small event can shatter things quite easily.''
Review Brought Forward
The BBA accelerated its annual review of Libor to assess if there's a fault with how the rate is computed, if it reflects ``difficult markets'' or is ``giving the right answer, just one that people don't want to hear,'' Knight said yesterday.
``Libor has stood the test of two decades,'' she said at today's parliamentary committee hearing. While the association has contacted all the member banks to investigate Libor ``volatility,'' the swings in the rate are ``hardly surprising'' amid the credit turmoil, Knight said.
The association has submitted a report based on discussions with member banks to its independent Foreign Exchange and Money Market Committee, which is carrying out the review of Libor, said Brian Mairs, a spokesman for the BBA in London.
The banking group, which represents Citigroup, HSBC Holdings Plc and 14 other lenders, asks members each morning to say how much it would cost them to borrow from each other for 15 different periods ranging from a day to a year in dollars, British pounds, euros and eight other currencies.
BIS Report
The Bank for International Settlements said in a March report some lenders were manipulating the rates to prevent their borrowing costs from escalating. The system still worked as it was meant to do as the credit crunch began in the middle of last year, the Basel, Switzerland-based BIS said.
Libor is used to guide banks in setting rates on most adjustable-rate mortgages. It's also the benchmark for the $1.2 trillion of interest-rate swap contracts traded every day worldwide, according to the BIS.
``Libor is a proxy for the effective rates of the economy,'' said Rav Singh, an interest-rate strategist at Morgan Stanley in London. ``Libor eventually feeds into the economy. There's so much on the back of the Libor problem. There are structured products, all the swaps and then there are the hedging positions.''
Fed Cuts
To ease the credit crunch, the Fed cut rates seven times, created three lending facilities to help both banks and securities firms obtain funds and backed the takeover of Bear Stearns Cos., which was on the verge of collapse. In all, the central bank made more than $600 billion available to lenders and allowed Wall Street firms to borrow money overnight at the same so-called discount rate charged to commercial banks. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke provided $29 billion of financing to back JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s bailout of Bear Stearns in March.
Bank representatives declined to say what recommendations they are making to change Libor.
HSBC and HBOS Plc spokesmen declined to comment, as did Bank of America Corp. spokesman Scott Silvestri. Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, Lloyds TSB Group Plc also declined to comment. Deutsche Bank AG spokesman Ronald Weichert wasn't immediately able to comment.
``I can confirm that along with the other 15 members of the BBA, as happens every year, we have been in consultations,'' said Richard Bassett, a London-based spokesman for WestLB AG. Rabobank Groep NV spokesman Anthony Arthur wasn't immediately available for comment.
Spokesmen for Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. and Norinchukin Bank Ltd. weren't immediately available. A Royal Bank of Canada spokeswoman said it had discussions with the BBA as part of consultations with all Libor panel members and awaits the association's recommendations.
To contact the reporters on this story: Ben Livesey in London blivesey@bloomberg.net; Gavin Finch in London at gfinch@bloomberg.net
No comments:
Post a Comment