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Clifford Chance Discusses US Considerations For Transition Away From Libor

Although a bedrock of the financial markets for over 30 years, LIBOR has been under pressure ever since the Wheatley Review, and a speech given by Andrew Bailey, Chief Executive of the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) on July 27th heralds its potential demise.[1] Market participants need to prepare for the possible transition away from LIBOR by the end of 2021. This briefing explains why and assesses the practical and documentary implications for the US market.

Key Points

The following are four key takeaways from Mr. Bailey’s July 27th speech:

“I cannot entirely discount the risk of earlier panel degradation, or having to fall back to use of our powers to compel, with all the costs and risks of a messier and more costly transition that this might crystallise.”

Andrew Bailey
Chief Executive, FCA, July 27, 2017

What does this mean for LIBOR?

Mr. Bailey stressed that the FCA is not mandating the end of LIBOR and that LIBOR’s administrator, ICE Benchmark Administration (IBA),[2] would be free to continue to produce LIBOR after 2021 if it can do so. However, the practical reality is that, in the current environment, the production of LIBOR is unlikely to be sustainable in the absence of the FCA encouraging or compelling panel banks to provide quotations.

What will replace LIBOR?

That is the $300 trillion question. There is no ready-made replacement rate in place, and the FCA has made clear that, although it is ready to support and coordinate them, it is market participants themselves that must take primary responsibility for the development of, and transition to, alternative reference rates.

There has been progress in the development of alternative reference rates (often dubbed “risk free rates”) in the context of derivatives, and Mr. Bailey suggested that these could be adapted for other purposes:

The BTRF rate and the SONIA rate are both at an early stage of gestation and market consideration. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced that it plans to begin publishing BTRF quotes during the first half of 2018.[5] The Bank of England anticipates SONIA will move to a new basis by April 2018. Both are verifiable overnight benchmark rates and are “backward looking” or “observed” rates in that they report what the rate was for past transactions. By contrast LIBOR is a term benchmark rate which is “forward looking” or “estimated” in that it reports what the rate is today for a forward-starting term and which relies on the judgment of submitters.  Observed rates are generally considered to be less susceptible to manipulation than estimated rates, especially with respect to short-term maturities for which a highly liquid market exists.  The extent to which overnight rates of this type could be used as a basis for the construction of a new forward looking benchmark for a variety of terms, who might produce and publish such a benchmark and the extent to which such a rate would be commercially acceptable to LIBOR users in all contexts, are matters that market participants need to address.

“There is a very important question here to which we need a robust answer, namely whether the better approach to transition would be to amend contracts to reference an alternative rate, or amend the definition of LIBOR through the fallback protocol to replace the current methodology with alternative reference rates.”

Andrew Bailey
Chief Executive, FCA, July 27, 2017

Any new forward looking benchmark for the debt markets will have to be closely linked to the development of benchmarks for the derivatives markets given the interrelationships involved.

What does this mean for current transactions and documentation?

In the recent past, the financial markets have needed to address the discontinuance of interbank rates for specific currencies and maturities (for example, through the amendment of market standard forms to provide for interpolation). However, in the context of a future complete discontinuance of a rate like LIBOR, it is difficult for current transactions sensibly to specify the use of a future alternative reference rate which does not yet exist and which does not yet have market acceptance. In the near term, it is likely that transactions will continue to be based on LIBOR as documentation can be adapted only when market thinking is more developed on the alternative(s) to LIBOR in the context of the markets in question.

Build-in flexibility to amend

To the extent commercially acceptable, a step to consider in the context of multi-creditor transactions (such as syndicated lending or debt securities), is to provide for flexibility to make amendments to interest rate determination provisions that may be required as a result of the discontinuation of LIBOR. Transaction parties will want to consider whether to permit unilateral amendment or incorporate a lower standard for approval of an amendment to specify a replacement reference rate than might otherwise apply to an amendment affecting interest rate determination provisions. For example:

While it is important to note that future amendment is no panacea (in transactions involving a number of interrelated products, it may be important to continue to reference the same reference rate in all relevant documents at all times), the flexibility to make such changes may prove useful.

Identify and disclose risks

In the context of bonds and other debt securities, issuers and underwriters will need to consider how to disclose the risks associated with possible discontinuation of LIBOR as a rate. Many floating rate note prospectuses recently filed with the SEC have included a risk factor concerning LIBOR related reforms. These could be expanded to refer to the FCA’s announcement and the possible discontinuation of LIBOR entirely.  In doing so, it will be important to disclose the uncertainty as to the nature of any replacement reference rate and whether it will gain widespread market acceptance may present additional risks.  Issuers and underwriters will want to consider which additional risks to disclose, which could include any of the following:

What does this mean for legacy transactions and documentation?

The key question is how these transactions deal with LIBOR not being available. This is considered below in the context of corporate lending, bonds and other floating rate securities and interest rate swap documentation.

There could be challenges in construing references to LIBOR in existing New York law governed documentation (whether by reference solely to a rate displayed on a specified screen or in more descriptive terms) as including any future alternative reference rate, since it will likely be very different in nature to LIBOR.

Corporate lending

Bonds and other floating rate securities

Interest rate swaps

Conclusion

The Financial Stability Board recommended that benchmark rates be anchored in transactions and objective market data as far as practicable.  The potential discontinuation of LIBOR may be the most high profile consequence of this recommendation to date.  Market participants need to prepare for the possible transition away from LIBOR by the end of 2021.

For legacy transactions, parties will want to evaluate the fallback provisions in agreements that refer to LIBOR as the reference rate and how to efficiently and effectively amend those agreements to specify a replacement reference rate when necessary. Parties should be aware that fallback provisions in existing market standard documentation have practical limitations in the absence of agreed alternatives to LIBOR. For now, the most prudent change to multilateral documentation is likely to be to provide for easier amendment in the future.

In the context of current transactions, parties face practical difficulties in specifying the use of a future alternative reference rate which does not yet exist and which does not yet have market acceptance. In the near term, it is likely that transactions involving floating rates will continue to be based on LIBOR. In the longer term, documentation can be adapted once an appropriate replacement benchmark rate is regularly published and has gained market acceptance.

ENDNOTES

[1] https://www.fca.org.uk/news/speeches/the-future-of-libor

[2] Since February 2014, the IBA has been administering the production of ICE LIBOR (formerly known as BBA LIBOR) as a benchmark rate quoted for five currencies and seven maturities, resulting in the production of 35 rates each business day.

[3] The US Federal Reserve tasked the ARRC with identifying a set of alternative reference interest rates that are more firmly based on transactions from a robust underlying market.  The ARRC’s June 22, 2017 announcement of its selection of a preferred alternative reference rate is available at https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/microsites/arrc/files/2017/ARRC-press-release-Jun-22-2017.pdf. As next steps, the ARRC is refining its proposed transition plans and developing implementation options, and it plans to publish a final report before the end of 2017.

[4] Information about SONIA reform is available at http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/markets/Pages/benchmarks/soniareform.aspx

[5] The Federal Reserve has announced that it will seek public comment on rate composition and calculation methodology before it adopts a final publication plan for overnight treasury repo rates.  See Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Statement Regarding the Publication of Overnight Treasury Repo Rates, May 24, 2017, available at https://www.newyorkfed.org/markets/opolicy/operating_policy_170524a.

[6] Since 2014, LMA loan documentation has, for example, as an option, facilitated subsequent replacement of an unavailable benchmark by providing for suitable amendments to be made with the consent of the borrower group and the majority lenders only.

[7] See, e.g., American Bar Association, Committee on Trust Indentures and Indenture Trustees, Annotated Trust Indenture Act, 67 The Business Lawyer 977, 1002 (2012).

This post comes to us from Clifford Chance LLP.  It is based on the firm’s memorandum, “US Considerations For Transition Away From LIBOR,” dated August 2, 2017 and available here.

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