LIBOR–OIS spread: Difference between revisions
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The '''Libor-OIS''' is the difference between the [[London Interbank Offered Rate|LIBOR rate]] and the [[Overnight indexed swap|overnight indexed swap]] rate. The spread between the two rates is considered to be a measure of health of the banking system.<ref name="Thorton" >[http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/es/09/ES0924.pdf Thorton, Daniel L. (2009) What the Libor-OIS Spread Says. Economic Synopses, Number 24, 2009. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis]</ref> |
The '''Libor-OIS''' is the difference between the [[London Interbank Offered Rate|LIBOR rate]] and the [[Overnight indexed swap|overnight indexed swap]] rate. The spread between the two rates is considered to be a measure of health of the banking system.<ref name="Thorton" >[http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/es/09/ES0924.pdf Thorton, Daniel L. (2009) What the Libor-OIS Spread Says. Economic Synopses, Number 24, 2009. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis]</ref> |
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Revision as of 08:20, 9 December 2009
It has been suggested that this article be merged into Overnight indexed swap. (Discuss) Proposed since December 2009. |
The Libor-OIS is the difference between the LIBOR rate and the overnight indexed swap rate. The spread between the two rates is considered to be a measure of health of the banking system.[1]
Risk Barometer
The 3-month LIBOR rate is generally floating rate of financing, which fluctuates depending on how risky a lending bank feels about a borrowing bank. The OIS is a swap derived from the overnight rate, which is generally fixed by the local central bank. The OIS allows LIBOR banks to borrow at a fixed rate of interest over the same period. In the United States the spread is based on the LIBOR Eurodollar rate and the Federal Reserve's Fed Funds rate.[2]
The LIBOR rate is risky in the sense that the lending bank loans cash to the borrowing bank, and the OIS is considered stable as both [Counterparty|counterparties]] only swap the floating rate of interest for the fixed rate of interest. The spread between the two is therefore a measure of how likely borrowing banks will default. This reflects risk premiums in contrast to liquidity premiums.[1]
Historical levels
In the United States, the LIBOR-OIS spread generally maintains around 10bps. This changed abruptly, as the spread jumped to a rate of around 50bps in early August as the financial markets began to price in a higher risk environment. Within months, the Bank of England was forced to rescue Northern Rock from failure. The spread continued to maintain historically high levels as the crisis continued to unfold. [2]
As markets improved, the spread fell and as of October 2009, remain around 10bps once again.