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It has been well documented that the Financial Conduct Authority will be phasing LIBOR out by 2021. Yet despite this being first announced in 2017, the market continues to be in flux on the preferred approach for LIBOR successor rate provisions.
In the U.S., the Loan Syndications and Trading Association (LSTA) is still consulting on the relevant replacement language. To date, it has not landed on a single preferred convention for establishing rules for pricing loans at successor rates. We note, however, that the U.S. syndicated loan market is more reliant on agreed precedents and bank forms rather than the equivalent of the form documentation published by the Loan Market Association.
The Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC) Business Loans Working Group, co-chaired by the LSTA and the American Bar Association, is currently engaging with its members as it develops a LIBOR successor recommendation for U.S. dollar syndicated loans. Two approaches have been suggested. The first is an "amendment" approach (providing an efficient amendment mechanism for negotiating a replacement benchmark) and the second is a "hardwired" approach in that it does not rely on amendments, but provides more clarity upfront by setting out a specified waterfall of replacement benchmark rates starting with a forward looking term Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) plus a spread adjustment.
SOFR, as a recommended alternative to LIBOR, measures the cost of overnight cash borrowing, using U.S. Treasury Securities as collateral. There are a few features to SOFR which are challenging for the existing loan pricing framework, outlined as follows:
LIBOR and SOFR may behave very differently but there is an expectation in the market that SOFR will be further developed to address these challenges, with market participants cognizant of the price differentials that the use of SOFR may lead to.
Prior to the announcement of the phasing out of LIBOR, credit agreements in the U.S. syndicated loan market had an established fall-back pricing at an alternative base rate to manage the risk of LIBOR becoming temporarily unavailable. However, the alternative base rate is more expensive than LIBOR and is only intended to address a temporary situation. This means borrowers will find it unappealing as a permanent solution and it is unlikely that any borrower would agree to permanently default to this solution without seeking amendments.
With this in mind, a number of alternative approaches on the selection of LIBOR replacement rates have been seen in loan documentation:
It is evident that LIBOR will not continue post 2021. In the immediate term banks are increasingly reluctant to submit LIBOR rates as they are unwilling to reveal their cost of funds. SOFR is a combination of 3 overnight U.S. Treasury rates, with a large volume of trading – so, it is more liquid, robust and difficult to manipulate (unlike LIBOR).
Whilst the market remains unsettled, the definitions and amendment sections of syndicated credit agreements warrant careful review by the lenders and investors, as well as the borrowers who need to be wary of these provisions when negotiating them. The market is constantly evolving so lenders and borrowers should be vigilant, keeping abreast of the developments to be able to choose the most appropriate successor rate provisions as the time draws near. It may be even be more efficient and wiser to start hardwiring some alternatives in new credit agreements as developments become more concrete rather than go through a burdensome amendment process post 2021 when LIBOR ceases to exist.
For further information on the ever-evolving LIBOR landscape and the effect this will have on New York law-governed financings please contact Gabrielle Wong or Ahu Yalgin.
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
© Herbert Smith Freehills 2024
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