Clarus Financial Technology

Bollinger, Greenspan and The Millennium Bug: LIBOR Is Now Dead

USD LIBOR is no more:

I will likely never type US0003M into my Bloomberg ever again. I doubt many will shed a tear at the ultimate demise of LIBOR because:

  1. Most markets transitioned to RFRs well before Friday June 30th 2023.
  2. Managing daily fixings versus LIBOR was quite a different job to trading Eurodollar futures. For most swaps traders, it would be considered a “chore” – albeit a relatively technical one.
  3. Traders will continue to have some noise associated with LIBOR fallbacks. Fallenback trades are not exactly fungible versus vanilla RFR trades, which is likely to cause some frictions when considering terminations/novations/amendments on the ever-decreasing stock of “fallenback” LIBOR trades.

LIBOR – The Numbers

This is as good a time as any to therefore pause and consider some of the things we saw in USD LIBOR – historic data up to about 2020 can be found here: 3 Month LIBOR Rate – 30 Year Historical Chart

What Made LIBOR Famous

Viewed entirely through the lens of record highs and lows and unusually volatile daily changes, readers may be surprised to note that we haven’t mentioned anything about fixings scandals, rate rigging or quoted a single line of IB chat yet (“Done…for you big boy” and of course “Dude, I owe you big time! Come over one day after work and I’m opening a bottle of Bollinger“).

I still find the underlying story of the LIBOR scandal and how it unfolded quite incredible. It is always worth reviewing the Reuters LIBOR timeline to understand the simple facts:

No one mentions the difference in magnitude between the two different reasons for “misrepresentative” LIBOR fixings because at the end of the day, wrong is wrong and regulations are regulations. As far as I know, no-one ever said “it is okay to submit LIBOR 0.25bp either way, but don’t get it wrong by 200 basis points please“. Perhaps if they did we would still have some term fixings out there 😛

It is the period from 2007-2009 that really changed the impact of LIBOR on the day-to-day lives of all finance professionals. Long before the actual “scandal” and the prosecutions, everyone in Fixed Income trading would come into the office and ask where 3 month USD LIBOR was expected to fix that day (even before saying “hello” to anyone!).

The below chart is helpful in understanding why that was:

It is the areas on the left hand side and right hand side that give the context here:

That period of time served to revolutionise risk management in swaps markets. Many more risks in swap markets are now understood (from OIS discounting, to funding adjustments and cross gammas) by more people in the market. It resulted in our much vaunted transparency and each crisis since (namely the Eurozone debt crisis and the COVID Pandemic) have resulted in financial markets reacting in a recognisable way.

And it can all be seen through a LIBOR lens. Maybe I will miss daily LIBOR fixings afterall!

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