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Showing 11 to 20 of 139 search results for all sterling LIBOR settings.
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So long LIBOR – 3 weeks to go
Speech by Edwin Schooling Latter, FCA Director of Markets and Wholesale Policy and Wholesale Supervision, delivered at delivered at Risk.net’s LIBOR telethon. -
LIBOR – 6 months to go
Speech by Edwin Schooling Latter, FCA Director of Markets and Wholesale Policy, delivered at UK Finance's Commercial Finance Week -
FCA issues final messages on LIBOR before end-2021
Final LIBOR publications before end-2021 deadline and remaining actions firms need to take. -
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 -
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. -
FS21/11: Article 23D BMR decision for 6 sterling and yen LIBOR versions
Our feedback on responses to our proposal to use our Article 23D(2) powers introduced through amendments to the Benchmarks Regulation (BMR) -
FCA announces decision on cessation of 1- and 6-month synthetic sterling LIBOR at end-March 2023
Publication of 1- and 6-month synthetic sterling LIBOR will be required until end-March 2023, after which these settings will permanently cease. -
Further arrangements for the orderly wind-down of LIBOR at end-2021
The sterling, Japanese yen, Swiss franc and euro LIBOR panels are ceasing on 31 December 2021 -
LIBOR – are you ready for life without LIBOR from end-2021?
Speech delivered by Edwin Schooling Latter, Director Markets and Wholesale Policy at the FCA, at City & Financial's Managing LIBOR transition event -
CP22/11: Winding down ‘synthetic’ sterling LIBOR and US dollar LIBOR
We seek views on winding down the 1, 3 and 6-month synthetic sterling LIBOR settings, and information on market participants’ exposure to US dollar LIBOR.