libor
LIBOR has been the market standard for adjustable-rate mortgages for as long as most of us can remember. Consequently, transitioning to the new SOFR index in the United States, and to SONIA in the UK and Europe, is forcing many CRE players to exercise muscles that haven’t been used lately, and is dragging many more into completely uncharted waters. While providers of capital prepare for the eventual shift away from LIBOR, many are feeling relief in light of the recently announced extension of several US LIBOR tenors. Others, by contrast, would have rather seen things move forward as scheduled....
ValueWalk
A Q&A with Richard Sandor focused on the impact on consumer finance as LIBOR is going way at the end of 2021.Q3 2020 hedge fund letters, conferences and moreThe Most Important Number in Finance (LIBOR) is Going Way: Here’s why consumers should be paying attentionBy Richard L. SandorNext year the interest rate benchmark known as LIBOR (the London Interbank Offering Rate) will be retired. Trillions of dollars on financial instruments are pegged to this number and the ramifications are significant not just to Wall Street but to Main Street. Here’s why: if you have variable rate loans on your cred...
ValueWalk
As the 2021 deadline for replacing LIBOR approaches, the conversation among policy makers and market participants has shifted from which single benchmark will replace the scandal-ridden LIBOR to the value of multiple alternative benchmarks tailored to specific requirements. Regulators and capital markets participants are recognizing that borrowers and lenders need and will benefit from interest rate benchmark choice. Let’s take a step back and look at how we got here and who will benefit.Q2 2020 hedge fund letters, conferences and moreThe Market SpeaksIn the early days of preparing for the tra...
ValueWalk
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