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Description:
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With the London Interbank Offered Rate — which underpins more than $350 trillion in mortgages, commercial loans, bonds and derivatives worldwide, including $200 trillion in U.S. dollar-denominated financial instruments — not guaranteed to be sustained after 2021, what should banks be doing now to prepare for a transition away from the widely used benchmark? On the latest episode of the ABA Banking Journal Podcast, Federal Reserve official David Bowman and ABA staff expert Hu Benton discuss: - Need-to-know background on why Libor has become unsustainable as a benchmark rate
- Why the Alternative Reference Rates Committee selected the Secured Overnight Funding Rate, or SOFR, as its preferred alternative
- What bankers need to know about how SOFR behaves differently from Libor and why they will need time to get used to it
- The urgency of reviewing bank portfolios to ensure contracts contain fallback language should Libor cease permanently
- Supervisory expectations regarding SOFR use and planning for the Libor transition
- How bankers can get involved in the ARRC’s public consultation process on the transition and learn more
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