LIBOR: Alternatives taking shape - BBH

Research Team at BBH, suggests that since the LIBOR scandal erupted, US officials have been working toward an alternative benchmark.

Key Quotes

“In 2014, the Fed set up a working committee that includes more than a dozen large banks and regulators. Before the weekend the committee (Alternative Reference Rates Committee) proposed two possible replacements for LIBOR.

There reportedly was some consideration of using the Fed funds as an alternative. However, Fed funds were rejected because it would have been made it more difficult to change the monetary policy framework in the future.

The other possible alternative that the committee proposed was the General Collateral Repo Rate (GCRR). GCRR requires additional work as presently there is no single rate associated with it. However, the minutes of the December 2015 FOMC meeting suggests the Fed is considering producing a rate.

The next step is for public comments on the proposal (to be submitted to the committee before July 15. The committee will hold a roundtable at the NY Fed on June 21 to facilitate discussion.

It is not immediately clear the extent to which the US committee is coordinating efforts globally. However, it appears that Eurosystem officials think that reforming the Euribor market is possible and a replacement unnecessary, for example.

In other areas, the fragmentation of US regulatory authority poses challenges of its own. Indeed, officials are currently scrambling to minimize the potential disruption of one such challenge. It related to the use of clearing houses such as Options Clearing Corp and the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. They are regulated by the SEC and CFTC. European banks that use either clearer can do so without discrimination provided that the EU recognizes the regulatory environment is as robust as Europe's.

This was the case. However, in 2014, the SEC proposed stiffer standards but has failed to implement them. This leaves the EU in a quandary. It cannot judge the equivalency. The EU has repeatedly delayed it is a decision, allowing European banks to use the US-based clearers.

Another deadline is approaching (June 15) and talks continue. If no solution is found and the EU then judges US rules are less than EU rules, European banks would be required to tie up billions of dollars in extra margin. Another delay looks more likely than allowing an additional squeeze on European banks.”

USD/JPY: Yen back on the bids on BOJ’s Kuroda, below 110

The upbeat momentum in the USD/JPY pair once again lost steam near 110.20 region, and the major reverted towards 110 handle, as the US dollar embarked upon the
Baca selengkapnya Previous

US: Home sales surging - Rabobank

Michael Every, Head of Financial Markets Research at Rabobank, notes that the US house sales surged, with the April report showing purchases
Baca selengkapnya Next