Libor 'not fit for purpose'

Libor benchmark interest rates are no longer "fit for purpose" and must be changed or replaced, Britain's regulator said today…

Libor benchmark interest rates are no longer "fit for purpose" and must be changed or replaced, Britain's regulator said today as he set out proposals to restore their credibility.

The initial review by the Financial Services Authority is the first concrete step to reforming Libor after a rigging scandal that has dragged in global banks and hurt the reputation of regulators on both sides of the Atlantic.

"The existing structure and governance of Libor is no longer fit for purpose and reform is needed," the FSA's managing director, Martin Wheatley, said in a speech in London.

The future of other benchmarks - for everything from oil and gold to stock prices - was also under scrutiny, he said.

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The London Interbank Offered Rate, known as Libor, sets prices for everything from credit card payments to complex derivatives, but its credibility has been damaged since it emerged that it had been manipulated by the big banks that set it.

Mr Wheatley's review was ordered after UK bank Barclays was fined more than $450 million for rigging Libor. Lenders such as Royal Bank of Scotland also face fines.

In his proposals, Mr Wheatley makes clear alternative benchmarks to Libor should be used in some cases while the calculation of the rates themselves needs to be done differently.

Benchmarks would be based less on judgment and more on actual trades, he suggests. Banks could also be obliged to contribute to setting Libor to widen participation.

Until now, membership of the Libor rate setting panel has been the preserve of a small group of banks, which volunteer daily estimates for the rates at which they would borrow different currencies for different periods.

It was impossible to replace Libor straight away because so many contracts were linked to it and it might not be possible to replace completely because alternatives are not perfect, Mr Wheatley said.

Basing benchmarks on actual trades would raise the problem of what to do when there were no trades for a specific rate, but Mr Wheatley suggested that could be addressed through "interpolation" from more frequently traded rates.

The industry will have until September 7th to respond to Mr Wheatley's review with final recommendations to be made by the end of next month. Some of those are expected to be enshrined in a new law next year.

Bank of England governor Mervyn King told fellow central bankers in July that radical reforms of the Libor system were needed and called a meeting in September to discuss it.

The tougher regulation for benchmark interest rates could be extended to stock market indexes and benchmarks for commodity prices such as oil and gold, Mr Wheatley said. Although stock indexes are based on trades, the others are often set by panels and less transparent.

Supervision of Libor could be handled by a "college of supervisors" from across the world with Britain in the chair, Mr Wheatley said.

This may not satisfy other regulators, however. There have been calls in the United States for a locally supervised alternative to Libor. The European Union has floated the idea of the European Central Bank regulating Euribor, the euro-denominated rate.

Thomson Reuters, parent company of Reuters, calculates and distributes Libor rates on behalf of the British Bankers' Association trade body.

Reuters