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The FCA today made its much anticipated announcement that all LIBOR settings will either cease to be provided by any administrator or will no longer be representative:

  • immediately after 31 December 2021, in the case of all sterling, euro, Swiss franc and Japanese yen settings, and the 1-week and 2-month US dollar settings; and
  • immediately after 30 June 2023, in the case of the remaining US dollar settings.

The FCA has said that, based on undertakings received from the panel banks, it does not expect that any LIBOR settings will become unrepresentative before the relevant dates set out above. Representative LIBOR rates will not, however, be available beyond the dates set out above.

The FCA expressly state that they “make this statement in awareness that it will engage certain contractual triggers for the calculation and future application of fallbacks that are activated by pre-cessation or cessation announcements made by the FCA (howsoever described) in contracts…” as they had said that they would.

Publication of most of the LIBOR settings will cease immediately after the dates above, though the FCA will consult on requiring the IBA to continue to publish certain tenors of Sterling, Yen and potentially USD on a synthetic basis, using changed methodology, under its new proposed powers in the Financial Services Bill 2020 which we have previously analysed here.  Today the FCA also published their statements of policy in relation to these proposed new powers.

Market impact

ISDA has announced that this is an Index Cessation Event under the Supplement and the Protocol and will fix the spread adjustment published by Bloomberg (which will then be capable of being used by the loans market).

There may also be contractual consequences in loan agreements which include a non-representativeness trigger for screen rate replacement, and in bond programme documents which include the new style fallback language catering for a pre-cessation or cessation trigger.

Jenny Stainsby photo

Jenny Stainsby

Global Head – Financial Services Regulatory, London

Jenny Stainsby
Rupert Lewis photo

Rupert Lewis

Partner, Head of Banking Litigation, London

Rupert Lewis
Harry Edwards photo

Harry Edwards

Partner, Melbourne

Harry Edwards
Nick May photo

Nick May

Partner, London

Nick May
Ceri Morgan photo

Ceri Morgan

Professional Support Consultant, London

Ceri Morgan
Emily Barry photo

Emily Barry

Professional Support Consultant, London

Emily Barry

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Key contacts

Jenny Stainsby photo

Jenny Stainsby

Global Head – Financial Services Regulatory, London

Jenny Stainsby
Rupert Lewis photo

Rupert Lewis

Partner, Head of Banking Litigation, London

Rupert Lewis
Harry Edwards photo

Harry Edwards

Partner, Melbourne

Harry Edwards
Nick May photo

Nick May

Partner, London

Nick May
Ceri Morgan photo

Ceri Morgan

Professional Support Consultant, London

Ceri Morgan
Emily Barry photo

Emily Barry

Professional Support Consultant, London

Emily Barry
Jenny Stainsby Rupert Lewis Harry Edwards Nick May Ceri Morgan Emily Barry