Private debt funds are rapidly expanding into a segment of the market traditionally dominated by banks -
Bank lenders have traditionally been the primary providers of debt to finance infrastructure project development, but...more
The order marks the end of the Kirschner case, which had threatened to expand US securities regulation to syndicated loans.
The US Supreme Court has denied a petition for certiorari review in the Kirschner case, in which...more
The hard deadline for stopping new use of USD LIBOR following 31 December 2021 is rapidly approaching. Latest market practice as at end November 2021 suggests that some loan market participants are (at last) now contracting...more
Recent statements by LIBOR authorities in the UK have implications for benchmark fallbacks in US documents.
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority ("FCA") and ICE Benchmark Administration ("IBA") released statements1 on...more
The disruption to capital markets caused by the COVID-19 pandemic has not shifted the overall timeline of regulators and industry bodies for the replacement of US dollar LIBOR with SOFR by the end of 2021.
With the expected...more
8/4/2020
/ Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC) ,
Banks ,
Bonds ,
Capital Markets ,
CARES Act ,
Coronavirus/COVID-19 ,
Derivatives ,
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) ,
Financial Institutions ,
Financial Regulatory Agencies ,
ISDA Master Agreement ,
Libor ,
Loan Syndication and Trading Association (LSTA) ,
Loans ,
Main Street Lending Programs ,
Popular ,
Secured Overnight Funding Rate (SOFR) ,
Transitional Arrangements ,
UK
LIBOR, the reference rate for more than US$300 trillion of contracts globally and nearly US$200 trillion of US dollar contracts, is expected to cease after the end of 2021. In highlighting the limitations of the LIBOR reforms...more
9/17/2019
/ Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC) ,
Banks ,
Derivatives ,
Federal Reserve ,
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) ,
Financial Institutions ,
Interest Rates ,
IOSCO ,
Lenders ,
Libor ,
Secured Overnight Funding Rate (SOFR) ,
Transitional Arrangements ,
UK