Euro_Interbank_Offered_Rate

Euribor

Euribor

Euro interbank offered (interest) rate


The Euro Interbank Offered Rate (Euribor) is a daily reference rate, published by the European Money Markets Institute,[1] based on the averaged interest rates at which Eurozone banks borrow unsecured funds from counterparties in the euro wholesale money market (or interbank market). Prior to 2015, the rate was published by the European Banking Federation.[2]

Overview from 2008 until 2020 of the Euribor-12m (red), 3m (blue), 1w (green) value
Euro Monetary policy
  Euro Zone inflation year/year
  M3 money supply increases
  Marginal Lending Facility
  Main Refinancing Operations
  Deposit Facility Rate
  Euribor

Scope

Euribors are used as a reference rate for euro-denominated forward rate agreements, short-term interest rate futures contracts and interest rate swaps, in very much the same way as LIBORs are commonly used for Sterling and US dollar-denominated instruments. They thus provide the basis for some of the world's most liquid and active interest rate markets.

Domestic reference rates, like Paris' PIBOR, Frankfurt's FIBOR, and Helsinki's Helibor merged into Euribor on EMU day on 1 January 1999.

Euribor should be distinguished from the less commonly used "Euro LIBOR" rates set in London by 16 major banks.[3]

Technical features

Official reference: EURIBOR Technical features

A representative panel of banks provide daily quotes of the rate, rounded to two decimal places, that each Panel Bank believes one prime bank is quoting to another prime bank for interbank term deposits within the Euro zone, for maturity ranging from one week to one year. Every Panel Bank is required to directly input its data no later than 11:00 a.m. (CET) on each day that the Trans-European Automated Real-Time Gross-Settlement Express Transfer system (TARGET) is open. At 11:02 a.m. (CET), GRSS (Global Rate Set Systems) will instantaneously publish the reference rate on Refinitiv (ex. Reuters), Bloomberg and a number of other information providers which will then be made available to all their subscribers. The published rate is a rounded, truncated mean of the quoted rates: the highest and lowest 15% of quotes are eliminated, the remainder are averaged and the result is rounded to 3 decimal places. Euribor rates are spot rates, i.e. for a start two working days after measurement day. Like US money-market rates, they are Actual/360, i.e. calculated with an exact daycount over a 360-day year. Euribor was first published on 30 December 1998 for value 4 January 1999.

Panel banks

Current banks

More information Country, Banks ...

Former banks

More information Country, Banks ...

Euribor-based derivatives

Euribor futures

EUR Euribor futures are traded on Intercontinental Exchange (ICE)[5] and on Eurex[6]

They were previously also traded on CurveGlobal, part of the London Stock Exchange Group,[7] which has closed down operations in January 2022.

Interest rate swaps

Interest rate swaps based on short Euribors currently trade on the interbank market for maturities up to 50 years. A "five-year Euribor" will be in fact referring to the 5-year swap rate vs 6-month Euribor. "Euribor + x basis points", when talking about a bond, will mean that the bond's cash flows have to be discounted on the swaps' zero-coupon yield curve shifted by x basis points in order to equal the bond's actual market price.

€STR

The other widely used reference rate in the euro-zone is €STR, published by the European Central Bank.

See also


References

  1. "Home | The European Money Markets Institute (EMMI)".
  2. ""Euribor-EBF becomes EMMI", Retrieved 4 Feb 2017". Archived from the original on 5 February 2017. Retrieved 5 February 2017.
  3. "Three Month Euribor Futures". Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  4. "Three-Month EURIBOR Futures (FEU3)". Archived from the original on 22 December 2019. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  5. "Our product offering". Archived from the original on 22 December 2019. Retrieved 22 December 2019.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Euro_Interbank_Offered_Rate, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.