Transition away from LIBOR continues to spark confusion among firms, Accenture study finds

Maria Nikolova

The study finds that most respondents have transition plans in place but less than half of them believe they would be able to meet the 2021 deadline in order to complete this transition.

A new report from Accenture reveals that although many financial services firms have prepared their plans to shift away from the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), many remain uncertain as to whether they would be able to finalize the transition on time.

Accenture’s 2019 LIBOR Survey covered 177 firms from across financial services and corporate industries about their LIBOR preparedness. While 84% of the respondents have plans to transition away from LIBOR — which regulators are set to phase out at the end of 2021 — less than half (47%) are confident they would be able to complete the transition by then.

Only 18% of survey respondents say their LIBOR transition plan is “mature”, whereas two in five respondents say regulatory uncertainty and lack of clarity hamper execution of their remediation efforts.

LIBOR currently underpins approximately $400 trillion in financial contracts for derivatives, bonds, mortgages, commercial and retail loans, representing an enormous challenge, the authors of the study note.

UK regulators have been carefully examining the situation around LIBOR and the switch to alternative rates. In June 2018, the Financial Policy Committee (FPC) of the Bank of England underlined the financial stability risks around Libor and warned that market participants continue to accumulate Libor-linked sterling derivatives for periods well after 2021.

In July 2018, Andrew Bailey, Chief Executive of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) stressed the need for market participants to be prepared for transitioning away from LIBOR. He made it clear that firms that the FCA supervises will need to be able to demonstrate to FCA supervisors and their PRA counterparts that they have plans in place to mitigate the risks, and to reduce dependencies on LIBOR. In particular, some firms will also have obligations to disclose and consider risks to investors when they sell LIBOR-related instruments, he explained back then.

In January 2019, Edwin Schooling Latter, Director of Markets and Wholesale Policy at the FCA noted that, despite the progress made in transitioning away from LIBOR, uncertainty remains on how this transition will happen exactly.

The Accenture study found evidence of confusion among financial providers regarding aspects of the transition away from Libor like timing. For instance, 40% of the respondents reported significant regulatory uncertainty and lack of clarity. Some firms do not think the 2021 deadline represents the end point for the LIBOR transition, with more than 40% of respondents expecting transition and remediation costs to continue into 2022, and over 30% expecting these to continue into 2023.

Further, the bulk of respondents do not yet have transition funding in place or are underfunded. When they do have funding, respondents seem uncertain as to where they can make the largest impact.

Read this next

blockdag

Transforming a Bankrupt Investor into a Cryptocurrency Giant; Can BlockDAG Replicate Ethereum’s Meteoric Rise With 30,000x Predictions?

The realm of cryptocurrency investing presents a thrilling blend of challenges and opportunities. The legendary gains by early Ethereum investors serve as a powerful lure for those seeking the next major breakthrough.

Market News, Tech and Fundamental, Technical Analysis

Solana Technical Analysis Report 25 April, 2024

Solana cryptocurrency can be expected to fall further toward the next support level 130.00, target price for the completion of the active impulse wave (i).

Digital Assets

Morgan Stanley to sell bitcoin ETFs to clients

Morgan Stanley may soon allow its 15,000 brokers to recommend bitcoin ETFs to their clients, as reported by AdvisorHub.

Digital Assets

Masa Announces Comprehensive AI Developer Ecosystem with 13 Dynamic Partners Focused on Leveraging Decentralized Data and Large Language Models

In a groundbreaking development, Masa, the global leader in decentralized AI and Large Language Models (LLMs), proudly announces the launch of its AI Developer Ecosystem, partnering with 13 visionary projects.

Financewire

Kinesis Mint becomes the official partner for the House of Mandela

Kinesis Mint, the certified independent precious metals mint and refinery of Kinesis, the monetary system backed by 1:1 allocated gold and silver, has been appointed the exclusive coin producer for the House of Mandela.

Chainwire

Kadena Announces Annelise Osborne as Chief Business Officer

Kadena, the only scalable Layer-1 Proof-of-Work blockchain, expands its leadership team by onboarding Annelise Osborne as Kadena’s new Chief Business Officer (CBO).

Fintech

TNS brings full-stack market data management to EMEA

“We are also delighted to have Ben Myers join our London-based TNS Financial Markets team as Head of Strategic Sales for EMEA, to bolster our presence in the region.”

Chainwire

Velocity Labs and Ramp Network facilitate fiat to crypto onramp on Polkadot via Asset Hub support

Velocity Labs is proud to announce a fiat to crypto onramp using Ramp Network through the integration of Asset Hub. Through it, Ramp will be able to service any parachain in the Polkadot ecosystem.

Executive Moves

INFINOX hires Mayne Ayliffe as Global Head of HR

“I look forward to working with our teams around the world to develop a strategic HR agenda that supports high performance and is centred on human motivation.”

<