The Spread: Libor and Fed Funds Rate

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A presentation from early fall about changes in the Libor and the Fed Funds Rate. We discuss the relationship between the two rates. * Leave a comment if you download, please! *

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Armando, Arseny, Cory, Joe, Neekunj

SPREAD

1

Question

Source: Historical data2

BACKGROUND

LiborFEDHistoryWhy Libor Matters

3

London Interbank Offered Rate

Average rate at which banks loan to

one another

LiborFED

HistoryWhy Libor

Matters

4

Libor Calculation

16 Banks

10 Currencies

LiborFED

HistoryWhy Libor

Matters

5

Federal Funds Rate

The interest rate at which a member institution lends immediately available funds to another depository institution overnight.

“2%”

FED (FOMC)

Target Rate

Open Market OperationsFunds Rate

LiborFED

HistoryWhy Libor

Matters

6

1.Control Inflation1. Control

Inflation2. Promote

economic growth

FED & Central Banks

Federal Reserve Other Central Banks

LiborFED

HistoryWhy Libor

Matters

7

Commercial Banks

Federal Reserve

(Central Banks)

Market Conditi

ons

Market Conditi

ons

PR

EM

IUM

LiborFED

HistoryWhy Libor

Matters

8

The Credit Crunch

Washington Mutual Barclays Capital

Citigroup Lehman Brothers

Merrill Lynch UBS

Market Conditi

ons

Market Conditi

ons

LiborFED

HistoryWhy Libor

Matters

9

Crisis Cycle ?LiborFED

HistoryWhy Libor

Matters

10

Not US - ExclusiveLiborFED

HistoryWhy Libor

MattersLEGEND:CURRENT Sept 2007

Dec 2007

LEGEND:CURRENT Sept 2007

Dec 2007

11

Why the Libor Matters

• Borrowing– Short-term interest rates– Forward rate agreements– Syndicated loans– Variable rate mortgages

• Financial Instruments– Derivatives - futures, forwards, options, and

swaps.– Floating rate notes

• Currencies

Source: WSJ, Apr 2008

LiborFED

HistoryWhy Libor

Matters

12

IMPACT OF SPREAD

Borrowing CostsMortgage RatesBank ProfitsCounter Fed

13

Borrowing Costs

• Borrowers v. Lenders• Businesses v. Consumers

Borrowing CostsMortgage Rates

Bank ProfitsCounter Fed

14

Mortgage Rates

FED: 47 % Decrease

Mortgage Rates: 10% Increase

Borrowing CostsMortgage Rates

Bank ProfitsCounter Fed

15

Bank Profits

% banks keep

Borrowing CostsMortgage Rates

Bank ProfitsCounter Fed

16

Countering Fed

• FED was designed to protect / stabilize the economy– Government is not affective at setting

lending rates

Borrowing CostsMortgage Rates

Bank ProfitsCounter Fed

17

REASONS FOR SPREADSeven Reasons

18

1. Banks Hoarding Cash

• Banks holding onto cash/cash equivalents– Massive de-leveraging – Flight to quality assets like Treasuries as

opposed to inter-bank loans

19

2. Fear of Counterparty Risks

• Ability of other banks to pay back loans has been called into question– Sub prime/credit crunch, capital

structure unknown – Lehman affirmed balance sheet

$27/share– Bear affirmed balance sheet

$60-80/share

20

3. Role of Bank Write Downs

• Many banks/I-banks highly leveraged and have risky positions– Insufficient capital / collateral to finance

loans

21

“Worst of the Credit Crisis may be over.” - Henry Paulson, May 7, 2008

4. Symptomatic of Financial Crisis

• Where there is fear of uncertainty, premiums must be paid.– Risk premium rising, credit crunch still

continues

22

5. Liquidity Issue

• Trillions of US dollar positions tied to LIBOR, not enough $ to go around

• Fed as of Sunday expanded creditfacilities to allow use of risky collateral

• Banks less likely to borrow from Fed, Fed is lender of last resort

• Banks don’t want perception that they are in trouble

23

6. Predatory Lending

• Banks are interested in limiting exposure to a concentrated amount of banks– Bear’s trades not cleared by Goldman then

other trading partners– Survival of the Fittest (biggest)

GoldmanBear Stearns

24

7. Clean balance sheets

Banks are interested in keeping strong cash positions on balance sheets– Banks want to show the market they have

adequate cash and liquidity in case of a market fall out

– Bear Stearns Liquidity issue not a capital issue

25

SOLUTIONS

Inject Liquidity

Creation of NYBor

Expand US Libor

Tighter Scrutiny of Banks

Time?

26

1. Inject Liquidity

Who would really be paying the price?27

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBor

Expand US LiborTighter Scrutiny of Banks

Time?

To the Rescue!

28

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBor

Expand US LiborTighter Scrutiny of Banks

Time?

Moral Hazard

29

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBor

Expand US LiborTighter Scrutiny of Banks

Time?

2. Creation of a NYBOR

• Would only track borrowing costs of US banks only.

30

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBor

Expand US LiborTighter Scrutiny of Banks

Time?

3. Expand US LIBOR

31

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBorExpand US Libor

Tighter Scrutiny of BanksTime?

Expand the LIBOR

• Expand the panels of banks which report their borrowing costs to LIBOR– More complete, reflective average

• Increase the accuracy of the benchmark by better capturing the US market.

32

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBorExpand US Libor

Tighter Scrutiny of BanksTime?

4. Tighter Scrutiny on Banks

“…tighter governance of the rate-setting process. This means broadening the Foreign Exchange and Money Markets committee that oversees Libor and creating a new group that would scrutinize the data submitted by banks.”

33

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBor

Expand US LiborTighter Scrutiny of Banks

Time?

5. Time?

• We can use the history to examine the present and predict the future.

• Easy and comforting to call it “cyclical” and say we’re between crests.

34

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBor

Expand US LiborTighter Scrutiny of Banks

Time?

• What happens when the present has never been seen before?

• We are in unknown territory, and no one knows how deep this will go…

35

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBor

Expand US LiborTighter Scrutiny of Banks

Time?

This could be

you.

36

Inject LiquidityCreation of NYBor

Expand US LiborTighter Scrutiny of Banks

Time?

Thank you

37

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