Tag Archives: contagion

LIBOR Becomes a Bit More Accurate, So Financial Crisis Becomes a Bit Worse

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Interbank borrowing rates updated to include mid-April restoration of LIBOR accuracy
[Source: Institute of International Finance, Washington, DC]

Continuing on the theme of the unusual spread that banks currently have to pay to borrow from each other since August (due to credit risk and liquidity concerns): a Wall Street Journal article on April 16, the day after my last post, explained that LIBOR had recently lost some of its reliability. The true spreads were even higher than what the panels of banks were reporting to the institution that calculates LIBOR, the British Bankers Association (BBA). Banks can have an incentive to act strategically in the interest rates that they report to the BBA. Even though the highest and lowest respondents are dropped from the computation, that was not enough of a correction. But the Wall Street Journal reported the next day that the banks had immediately reacted to this news by increasing the honesty of their interest rate numbers. The updated version of the LIBOR graph exhibits an upturn in the US interbank rate at the very end. read more

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Graph of Interbank Spreads Suggests Financial Crisis Continues Unabated

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While some aspects of the subprime mortgage crisis were predictable, the freezing up the most liquid risk-free markets in the world was not. The illiquidity has been especially striking in the interbank market. The following chart was kindly made available by the Institute of International Finance, an association of international banks and other financial institutions, in Washington, D.C. Their Capital Markets Monitor reports in April: “Credit and equity markets have recovered somewhat, after a series of central banks’ moves to provide liquidity and safeguard systemic stability. However, tension in term interbank markets remains.” read more

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