LIBOR
- London InterBank Offered Rate
LIBOR
is the rate on dollar-denominated deposits, also know
as Eurodollars, traded between banks in London. The
index is quoted for one month, three months, six months
as well as one-year periods.
LIBOR
is the base interest rate paid on deposits between
banks in the Eurodollar market. A Eurodollar is a
dollar deposited in a bank in a country where the
currency is not the dollar. The Eurodollar market
has been around for over 40 years and is a major component
of the International financial market. London is the
center of the Euromarket in terms of volume.
The
LIBOR rate quoted in the Wall Street Journal is an
average of rate quotes from five major banks. Bank
of America, Barclays, Bank of Tokyo, Deutsche Bank
and Swiss Bank.
The
most common quote for mortgages is the 6-month quote.
LIBOR's cost of money is a widely monitored international
interest rate indicator. LIBOR is currently being
used by both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as an index
on the loans they purchase.
LIBOR
is quoted daily in the Wall Street Journal's Money
Rates and compares most closely to the 1-Year Treasury
Security index.
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