Asia

Asian Financial Institutions May Retain Libor Until Next Year

 

Most financial institutions operating in Asia will take until next year to remove references to the Libor benchmark in loan agreements, an industry survey found, though most iterations of the benchmark were discontinued at the end of 2021.

The Asia Pacific Loan Market Association (APLMA) found that 54% of its members expected to take until 2023 to remove references to Libor from their existing loans, according to a survey published on Wednesday, attributing the delay partly to lack of consensus around the way in which Libor alternatives should be calculated.

Once dubbed the world’s most important number, the London Interbank Offered Rate or Libor is being ditched after banks were fined in 2012 for trying to manipulate the rate for pricing mortgages, loans and derivatives worth trillions of dollars globally across five currencies.

Most Libor settings were discontinued at the end of last year, with financial institutions shifting contracts to “risk-free” overnight rates compiled by central banks, such as Sofr from the US Federal Reserve, the official replacement to US dollar libor.

However, the survey found that banks in Asia were split with some using a method of calculating Sofr that is widely used in the United States, and others preferring a method more commonly used in other markets such as the UK.

“It is now almost four months since LIBOR was officially discontinued and it is clear that the transition remains a major issue for both new and legacy loans in Asia Pacific,” said Andrew Ferguson, CEO of the APLMA said in a statement.

“With so many uncertainties about calculation methodologies and market conventions, both borrowers and lenders feel it is far better to wait and see what happens than to hardwire the wrong conventions into their legal documentation.”

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean OMeara

 

 

 

ALSO READ:

 

 

Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.

Recent Posts

Huawei Revs Up Intelligent Driving Push With Software Launch

The Chinese tech firm has also launched seven EV models in partnership with domestic automakers…

14 hours ago

Country Garden Wins Onshore Bonds Payments Delay Approval

China’s largest private developer has already defaulted on $11 billion of offshore bonds amid a…

15 hours ago

TikTok Plans Legal Battle as US Senate Passes Divest-or-Ban Bill

Experts say that if a sale of TikTok does go through, it would be one…

17 hours ago

Tesla Profit Plunges, But Stock Jumps on Vow of ‘Affordable’ Cars

Shares jump 12% on news Tesla will make 'more affordable' EVs on its manufacturing lines,…

17 hours ago

ByteDance, TikTok’s $7m Lobbying Bid to Derail US Ban – CNBC

The popular video-sharing app’s owner will be told to sell its stake in nine months…

18 hours ago

Nikkei, Hang Seng, China Stocks Rally on Tech Earnings Boost

Investors were in optimistic mood on Wednesday as technology shares led the charge amid easing…

19 hours ago