INTEREST RATE BENCHMARK REFORM – LONDON INTERBANK OFFERED RATE (LIBOR)

Worldwide transition away from LIBOR

LIBOR, formerly one of the world’s most common benchmark interest rates, has been used for decades in financial products like business loans and adjustable-rate mortgages. However, a worldwide transition has been completed to replace it with rate alternatives. This transition may impact some existing contracts that use LIBOR as a benchmark rate, and for new contracts, regulators have made it clear that LIBOR shouldn’t be used.

We planned extensively and were well-positioned to make this a smooth transition for customers who might be impacted by the change. We offer a variety of newer interest rate alternatives, including the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), Bloomberg Short-Term Bank Yield Index (BSBY).

Recommended alternative reference rates for LIBOR

Country

United States

United Kingdom

Europe

Switzerland

Japan

LIBOR Rate

USD LIBOR

GBP LIBOR

EURIBOR AND EUR LIBOR

CHF LIBOR

JPY LIBOR,

JPY TIBOR, EUROYEN TIBOR

Alternative Replacement Rate

Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR)

Sterling Overnight Interbank Average Rate (SONIA)

European Short-Term Euro Rate (€STR)

Swiss Average Rate Overnight (SARON)

Tokyo Overnight Average Rate (TONAR)

Description

Multiple overnight repo market segments

Overnight wholesale deposit transactions

Overnight wholesale deposit transactions

Interest paid on interbank overnight repo average

Overnight call rate market

Secured

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

Administrator

Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Bank of England

European Central Bank

SIX Swiss Exchange

Bank of Japan

Country

LIBOR Rate

United States

USD LIBOR

United Kingdom

GBP LIBOR

Europe

EURIBOR AND EUR LIBOR

Switzerland

CHF LIBOR

Japan

JPY LIBOR,

JPY TIBOR, EUROYEN TIBOR

Country

Alternative Replacement Rate

United States

Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR)

United Kingdom

Sterling Overnight Interbank Average Rate (SONIA)

Europe

European Short-Term Euro Rate (€STR)

Switzerland

Swiss Average Rate Overnight (SARON)

Japan

Tokyo Overnight Average Rate (TONAR)

Country

Description

United States

Multiple overnight repo market segments

United Kingdom

Overnight wholesale deposit transactions

Europe

Overnight wholesale deposit transactions

Switzerland

Interest paid on interbank overnight repo average

Japan

Overnight call rate market

Country

Secured

United States

Yes

United Kingdom

No

Europe

No

Switzerland

Yes

Japan

No

Country

Administrator

United States

Federal Reserve Bank of New York

United Kingdom

Bank of England

Europe

European Central Bank

Switzerland

SIX Swiss Exchange

Japan

Bank of Japan

The difference between SOFR and LIBOR

In 2017, the Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC), a committee convened by the Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in 2014, identified SOFR as the recommended alternative to USD LIBOR. SOFR is a secured-overnight rate, while LIBOR is a term, unsecured rate. SOFR is calculated based on a larger amount of underlying transactions, averaging more than $900 billion in daily transactions in 2021. In contrast, LIBOR reflects the funding costs of panel banks.

Metric

LIBOR

SOFR

Term SOFR

Tenor Coverage

Overnight, one, three, six months

Overnight

One, three, six and twelve months

Underlying Data Source

Submission by panel banks based on estimations of underlying market and expert judgment

Transaction based on overnight repo transactions

Transactions based on one-month and three-month SOFR Futures contracts

View

Forward-looking

Overnight backward looking

Forward-looking

Determination of Costs

Weighted average of submitted rates after eliminating some higher and lower rates

Volume-weighted median of actual transactions (for combined repo datasets)

Volume-weighted one-month and three-month SOFR futures contracts

Credit Risk

Embedded credit risk component due to bank risk

Near to risk-free, as repo transactions are collateralized by U.S. Treasury securities

Near to risk-free, as repo transactions are collateralized by U.S. Treasury securities

Interest Calculation

Payments known at the beginning of the accrual period

Daily rate, with interest accrued and paid in arrears. Interest due known at the end of the accrual period

Payments known at the beginning of the accrual period

Metric

Tenor Coverage

LIBOR

Overnight, one, three, six months

SOFR

Overnight

Term SOFR

One, three, six and twelve months

Metric

Underlying Data Source

LIBOR

Submission by panel banks based on estimations of underlying market and expert judgment

SOFR

Transaction based on overnight repo transactions

Term SOFR

Transactions based on one-month and three-month SOFR Futures contracts

Metric

View

LIBOR

Forward-looking

SOFR

Overnight backward looking

Term SOFR

Forward-looking

Metric

Determination of Costs

LIBOR

Weighted average of submitted rates after eliminating some higher and lower rates

SOFR

Volume-weighted median of actual transactions (for combined repo datasets)

Term SOFR

Volume-weighted one-month and three-month SOFR futures contracts

Metric

Credit Risk

LIBOR

Embedded credit risk component due to bank risk

SOFR

Near to risk-free, as repo transactions are collateralized by U.S. Treasury securities

Term SOFR

Near to risk-free, as repo transactions are collateralized by U.S. Treasury securities

Metric

Interest Calculation

LIBOR

Payments known at the beginning of the accrual period

SOFR

Daily rate, with interest accrued and paid in arrears. Interest due known at the end of the accrual period

Term SOFR

Payments known at the beginning of the accrual period

The ARRC has formally recommended the forward-looking Term SOFR rates developed by CME Group (“CME Term SOFR”), a leading derivatives market operator.

Our top priority is keeping you informed on industry developments and our transition efforts as we work collaboratively with customers to update LIBOR contracts. If you’d like more information, make an appointment to meet with us virtually, on the phone or in person. We also encourage you to seek independent professional advice on any questions or concerns you may have.

Key industry developments

Frequently asked questions

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Disclosures

This discussion is intended to be informational only and is not exhaustive or conclusive. It is not intended to serve as a recommendation or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any particular product or service. It does not constitute advice and is issued without regard to any particular objective or the financial situation of any particular individual. Some of the information provided has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but is not guaranteed as to accuracy or completeness. Other information represents the opinion of U.S. Bank and is not intended to be a forecast of future events or a guarantee of future results. U.S. Bank and its representatives do not provide tax, accounting or legal advice. Each individual's financial situation is unique. You should consult your tax, accounting and/or legal advisor for advice and information concerning your particular situation.

Investment and insurance products and services including annuities are:
Not a deposit ● Not FDIC insured ● May lose value ● Not bank guaranteed ● Not insured by any federal government agency.

For U.S. Bank:

Deposit products are offered by U.S. Bank National Association. Member FDIC.

U.S. Bank is not responsible for and does not guarantee the products, services or performance of U.S. Bancorp Investments, Inc.

For U.S. Bancorp Investments, Inc.:

Investment products and services are available through U.S. Bancorp Investments, the marketing name for U.S. Bancorp Investments, Inc., member FINRA and SIPC, an investment adviser and a brokerage subsidiary of U.S. Bancorp and affiliate of U.S. Bank National Association.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. All performance data, while obtained from sources deemed to be reliable, are not guaranteed for accuracy.

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