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Showing 21 to 30 of 364 search results for LIBOR Summit.
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LIBOR transition and contractual fallbacks
Speech by Edwin Schooling Latter, Director of Markets and Wholesale Policy at the FCA, delivered at the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) Annual Legal Forum. -
Changes to LIBOR as of end-2021
Publication of 24 LIBOR settings has ended, and the 6 most widely used sterling and Japanese yen settings will be published using a changed methodology. -
US dollar LIBOR panel – 1 month to go
FCA issues final messages before the important end-June 2023 deadline. -
The US dollar LIBOR panel has now ceased
This marks another critical milestone in the transition away from LIBOR. Overnight and 12-month US dollar LIBOR settings have now permanently ceased. 1-, 3- and 6-month US dollar LIBOR settings will continue to be published using a synthetic -
3-month synthetic sterling LIBOR – 1 month to go
FCA issues final message before the end-March 2024 deadline and a reminder of the expected cessation of US dollar synthetic LIBOR at end-September 2024. -
FCA announces decision on synthetic US dollar LIBOR
In November 2022, we consulted on proposals to require the continued publication of 1-, 3- and 6-month synthetic US dollar LIBOR after 30 June 2023 when the US dollar LIBOR panel is due to cease. -
UK EMIR news
Read our archive of news relating to EMIR dating back to August 2013. -
Further consultation and announcements on the wind-down of LIBOR
We are proposing to require LIBOR’s administrator, IBA, to continue to publish the 1-, 3- and 6-month US dollar LIBOR settings under an unrepresentative ‘synthetic’ methodology until end-September 2024. After this, publication would cease -
Administrator and Submitter of specified benchmarks (LIBOR)
The Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) (Amendment) Order 2013 has introduced a regulated activity for firms administering a specified benchmark. -
The USD LIBOR panel ceases at end-June 2023: Are you ready?
It is now less than 90 days until the USD LIBOR panel ceases on 30 June 2023, marking another critical milestone in the necessary transition to robust Risk-Free Reference Rates (RFRs).