Anonymous ID: cb3556 Feb. 10, 2019, 6:23 p.m. No.5115208   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5276

What's Behind Last Week's Libor* Plunge: Blame The Inverted Yield Curve

 

On Thursday morning, traders were stumped by a violent drop in 3m USD Libor, which after weeks of barely budging, saw its fixing plunge by more than 4bps, its biggest one day move since the financial crisis, prompting questions what was behind the sudden drop.

 

The move followed a declining trend in commercial paper yields, which banks use as one of the primary inputs in their Libor submissions.

 

According to Deutsche Bank's Steven Zeng, a significant factor for the decline of commercial paper yields is the recent inflows into prime money market funds. Since December, prime money market funds have grown their assets by about 11%, with this week’s ICI data showing that total prime fund assets rose above $600bn for the first time since 2016. And as prime fund assets grow, cash is being deployed in the unsecured borrowing markets, pushing their rates lower.

 

So was Libor just catching up to CP?

 

According to Zeng there's more to the sudden jerk lower in the world's most important fixed income benchmark; in a Friday note, the Deutsche Banker writes that while the Fed hikes have attracted more cash into the short end, the yield-curve inversion has likely also played an important contributing role. At the moment, the Treasury curve is inverted between the 1yr and 5yr points. Furthermore, yields out to the 10yr point are at levels below the 3m Libor.

 

And while curve inversions are rare, inversions while the economy looks healthy and the Fed maintains that it could still possibly hike rates are even rarer. In other words, with the 3m Libor currently 21bp above the 2yr Treasury yield and 23bp above the 5yr yield, some investors are finding money market investments a much more appealing option than front-end and intermediate Treasuries.

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-02-10/whats-behind-last-weks-libor-plunge-blame-inverted-yield-curve

 

  • What is LIBOR

 

LIBOR is a benchmark rate that represents the interest rate at which banks offer to lend funds to one another in the international interbank market for short-term loans. LIBOR is an average value of the interest-rate which is calculated from ESTIMATES* submitted by the leading global banks on a daily basis. It stands for London Interbank Offered Rate and serves as the first step to calculating interest rates on various loans throughout the world.

 

*It is nothing moar than a survey and is done this way so the banks can game the rate they charge themselves to lend each other money

Anonymous ID: cb3556 Feb. 10, 2019, 6:35 p.m. No.5115442   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5510

>>5115363

digits confirm that will be difficult as they are already in roll off mode and people keep cheering the 'shiney' numbers on the index's. no one talks about darkpools, the low-volumes and fake 10-Q'setc. They have a tall order to clean out all that plus the credit creation of the last 35 years.

Gonna be dirty as there is no other way. Wish I knew how they were going to do it.

Anonymous ID: cb3556 Feb. 10, 2019, 6:42 p.m. No.5115567   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5115510

agree but the people who worked hard and saved diligently should not be screwed because other's treated the system as a personal ATM.

And they put David Malpass in charge of the world bank.

I just went WTF! Mr Bear Stearns chief economist when it was carved up and given to JPM.