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'''Australia and BBSW'''
''Interest rates - reference rates - Australia.''
 
'''Authors: [https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-leather-treasury/ James Leather FCT CGMA]''', Corium Treasury Limited & '''[https://www.linkedin.com/in/pieterbierkens/ Pieter Bierkens]''', Ex Head of Interest Benchmark Reform, Commonwealth Bank of Australia.
 
 
'''BBSW : Definition, calculation and publication'''


Bank Bill Swap Reference Rate (from: B(ank) B(ill) SW(ap)).
Bank Bill Swap Reference Rate (from: B(ank) B(ill) SW(ap)).


BBSW is the interbank reference interest rate for Australia.
BBSW is a key interest rate benchmark for Australia.  The other being AONIA (also known as the “cash rate”).
 
BBSW is a mid-rate.  It is calculated for the tenors of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6 months from the live traded prices of the Eligible Securities of Prime Banks between 8.30am and 10am on a Sydney business day and is published daily at 10.30am Australian Eastern Time zone. 
 
See [[BBSW calculation methodology]] for mechanics and evolution (1).
 
As such, BBSW is an interest rate which includes a credit premium representing the market assessment of the premium payable by the Prime Banks relative to a comparable risk-free interest rate (RFR).  BBSW is used in many financial contracts (mainly lending and interest rate derivative products), for which it will act as the base interest rate, typically before a margin is applied (2).


It is Australia's equivalent of LIBOR or SIBOR, in that it is a reference rate that is referred to in many loan and derivative contracts, for which it will act as the base interest rate, before a margin is applied.
The BBSW ‘bid’ and ‘ask’ rates are known as ‘BBSY’ and are +/- 5 basis points to BBSW.  BBSY is published on Refinitiv page ‘BBSY’ and on Bloomberg (1).


Given its wide usage, BBSW has been identified by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) as a financial benchmark of systemic importance to Australian financial markets and it is therefore important to anyone with an exposure to Australia, that there is ongoing confidence in it.


'''BBSW and Interest Rate Benchmark Reform'''


'''1-month BBSW'''
In response to the weaknesses identified in the setting of financial benchmarks such as the [former] London Interbank Offered Rate  (LIBOR), the global regulatory community has, since 2013, been involved in a programme  to strengthen financial benchmarks.  For Australia, the key interest rate benchmarks were identified as BBSW and AONIA (also known as the “cash rate”) for which reforms were undertaken to enhance their robustness (3).  Unlike [the former] LIBOR, the local market generates enough transactions to statistically support the BBSW benchmark.  This, along with the recent reforms, has meant that BBSW has remained sufficiently robust for Australian regulators to retain BBSW and to promote a “multiple-rate” approach, whereby market participants are expected to choose robust reference rates (e.g., BBSW or AONIA) that best suit each of their products and situations (4).


As at 19 March 2019, confidence still exists in the various BBSW tenor rates, apart from 1 month BBSW, which is abnormally volatile due to a lack of underlying transactions.  The RBA recommends that market participants find alternatives for this rate ‘in a timely manner’ (see Notes below), suggesting that 3 month BBSW or the cash rate are used and that participants do not wait for the development of a term risk-free rate.


'''BBSW Outlook'''


'''BBSW calculation'''
With the exception of 1-month  BBSW, as at September  2022, the view of the RBA (Reserve Bank of Australia) remains that BBSW is a robust benchmark (4) and expected to have a secure future, since the assets of managed funds, which are among the main investors of bank bills, continue to grow, supported by superannuation (pension) contributions (5). 


BBSW is a mid rate.
However, the RBA has commented that BBSW’s status as a robust benchmark should not be taken for granted (5). It has  pointed out that, although growing, the bank bill market from which BBSW rates are derived (see BBSW calculation methodology), is declining both as a share of managed funds’ assets and major banks’ liabilities. This is partly due to the liquidity standards introduced over recent years (e.g. Basel 3), which reduced the value that banks place on short-term wholesale funding (5). This has especially been evident in the 1-month BBSW tenor, with potential users of the rate being advised to give careful consideration to using alternative benchmarks, such as 3-month  BBSW or AONIA (the Australian cash rate) (5).  
It is calculated and published daily (at 10.30am Australian Eastern Time zone) and is available for the tenors of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6 months.
BBSY (Bank Bill Swap bid rate) is calculated from the BBSW rate, which derives the BID and ASK rates ( +/- 5 basis points).
Since 1 January 2017, the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) has administrated and published the rates.
Both rates are also available on Reuters under these acronyms.
Being the inter-bank rate, BBSW does contain bank credit risk - see BBSW calculation methodology for mechanics and evolution.


In addition, regardless of the robustness of BBSW, there is expected to be a natural migration away from using BBSW in some products, where it might have been used historically, towards AONIA.  This applies in particular, to financial products that contain reference to a risk-free rate in another currency.  Such products may include: cross-currency swaps (where certain IBORs have been replaced by the respective RFRs); and multi-currency lending facilities and other financial contracts (to align RFR usage across currencies) (6).


'''BBSW Outlook, fallback provisions, risk free rates and term risk-free rates'''


As at March 2019, the future existence of BBSW is not assured for several reasons.
'''Fallback Provisions'''


Firstly, the bank bill swap market, from which BBSW rates are derived (see BBSW calculation methodology), is in general decline as regulatory liquidity standards drive bank funding away from short term sources such as bank bills so the existence of a bank bill market of sufficient size to support BBSW shouldn’t be taken for grantedThus the RBA have been working with ISDA to design fallback provisions for BBSW, as well as LIBOR.  For BBSW, this involves using the cash rate (administered by the RBA and calculated directly from transactions in the interbank overnight cash market and considered as the risk free rate for the AUD) - as the fall-back, with an adjustment for the historical spread between BBSW and the cash rate.
A key element of Australia’s multiple-rate approach are fallbacks, which provide valuable insurance when using any benchmark (3).  With respect to BBSW, the RBA have adopted a ‘principles-based’ approach, requesting that market participants include a ‘robust, reasonable and fair’ fallback to another interest rate in their financial contracts (7).


Secondly, there is expected to be a migration away from BBSW towards the cash rate, driven by the transition from LIBOR to risk free rates internationally, especially for financial products.
The RBA have said that the BBSW derivative fallbacks (primarily AONIA compounded in arrears plus an adjustment for the historical spread to BBSW) set out in ISDA’s IBOR Fallbacks Supplement and Protocol are just one example of a fallback that meets their ‘robust, reasonable and fair’ criteria.  However, they see it as practical and more efficient for market participants to work together to develop market conventions that specify the specific fallback rates and language to be used in prospectuses and other legal documents.  The Australian Financial Markets Association (AFMA) and the Australian Securitisation Forum (ASF) are cited as examples of industry groups who are developing their own template fallback language for use in BBSW-linked securities (AFMA 2021; ASF 2021) (7).


Thirdly, there is also demand from investors for term risk-free rates with similar tenors to BBSW (and LIBOR), with some users valuing having more certainty about their cash flows, since such a rate would be known at the start of the relevant interest period, rather than being calculated at the end of the period by compounding the cash rate. It could be possible to generate this term rate using the overnight indexed swap market or the repo market, which the private sector is trying to achieve.  However, whilst supporting these activities, the RBA warn that there will need to be significant effort to develop the appropriate market infrastructure and practices before such term rates could be considered robust benchmarks. They therefore encourage market participants to consider using the cash rate for this purpose, rather than waiting for the development of a term risk-free rate.
To promote appropriate use of fallbacks, the RBA will only accept securities referencing BBSW issued after 1 December 2022 as collateral in its domestic market operations if those securities include a fallback that meets its criteria (7).


(see Notes below for source)
 
''(LIBOR ended in September 2024.)''




==See also==
==See also==
* [[AFMA]]
* [[AONIA]]
* [[ANZ]]
* [[ANZ]]
* [[Ask]]
* [[ASX]]
* [[ASX]]
* [[Australia]]
* [[Australia]]
* [[Australian Financial Markets Association]]
* [[Australian Financial Regulation]]
* [[Australian Financial Regulation]]
* [[Australian Securitisation Forum]]  (ASF)
* [[Basel III]]
* [[Basis point]]
* [[Benchmark]]
* [[Bid]]
* [[Bill]]
* [[BBSW calculation methodology]]
* [[BBSW calculation methodology]]
* [[Collateral]]
* [[Eligible security]]
* [[Fallback]]
* [[IBOR]]
* [[IBOR Transformation Australian Working Group]]
* [[Insurance]]
* [[Interest rate]]
* [[International Organization of Securities Commissions]]
* [[International Organization of Securities Commissions]]
* [[LIBOR]]
* [[International Swaps and Derivatives Association]]  (ISDA)
* [[Liquid]]
* [[Mid rate]]
* [[Migration]]
* [[Premium]]
* [[Prime bank]]
* [[Prime bank]]
* [[Reference rate]]
* [[Reference rate]]
* [[SIBOR]]
* [[Reserve Bank of Australia]]  (RBA)
* [[Risk-free rates]]  (RFR)
* [[Swap]]
* [[Tenor]]
 
 
==References==
 
(1) [https://www2.asx.com.au/content/asx/search.html?q=bbsy ASX Bank BBSW Conventions and BBSW Methodology -  Effective 10th February 2020]
 
 
(2) [https://www2.asx.com.au/connectivity-and-data/information-services/benchmarks/benchmark-data/bbsw ASX Benchmark Rates]
 
 
(3)  [https://www.rba.gov.au/mkt-operations/resources/interest-rate-benchmark-reform.html Interest Rate Benchmark Reform in Australia - RBA]
 
 
(4)  [https://www.bis.org/review/r210318b.pdf “The End of Libor and the Australian Market”, ISDA Benchmark Strategies Forum Asia Pacific, Online, March 2021 - speech by Christopher Kent, Assistant Governor (Financial Markets) RBA]
 
 
(5)  [https://www.rba.gov.au/speeches/2019/sp-ag-2019-03-19.html Debt Capital Markets Summit, Sydney, 19 March 2019 - speech by Christopher Kent, Assistant Governor (Financial Markets) RBA]
 
 
(6)  [https://afma.com.au/getattachment/Policy/topics/Benchmarks-Ibor-Transition/Sections/Content/20220404-ITAWG-Market-Statement-Publication.pdf?lang=en-AU Use of interest rate benchmarks in Australia - IBOR Transformation Australian Working Group - 4 April 2022]




==Notes==
(7)  [https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2022/jun/fallbacks-for-bbsw-securities.html Fallbacks for BBSW - RBA - 16 June 2022]


'''Debt Capital Markets Summit, Sydney, 19 March 2019 - speech by Christopher Kent, Assistant Governor (Financial Markets) Reserve Bank of Australia'''


[https://www.rba.gov.au/speeches/2019/sp-ag-2019-03-19.html]
(8)  [https://www.coriumtreasury.com/ Corium Treasury]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]

Latest revision as of 07:52, 5 October 2024

Interest rates - reference rates - Australia.

Authors: James Leather FCT CGMA, Corium Treasury Limited & Pieter Bierkens, Ex Head of Interest Benchmark Reform, Commonwealth Bank of Australia.


BBSW : Definition, calculation and publication

Bank Bill Swap Reference Rate (from: B(ank) B(ill) SW(ap)).

BBSW is a key interest rate benchmark for Australia. The other being AONIA (also known as the “cash rate”).

BBSW is a mid-rate. It is calculated for the tenors of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6 months from the live traded prices of the Eligible Securities of Prime Banks between 8.30am and 10am on a Sydney business day and is published daily at 10.30am Australian Eastern Time zone.

See BBSW calculation methodology for mechanics and evolution (1).

As such, BBSW is an interest rate which includes a credit premium representing the market assessment of the premium payable by the Prime Banks relative to a comparable risk-free interest rate (RFR). BBSW is used in many financial contracts (mainly lending and interest rate derivative products), for which it will act as the base interest rate, typically before a margin is applied (2).

The BBSW ‘bid’ and ‘ask’ rates are known as ‘BBSY’ and are +/- 5 basis points to BBSW. BBSY is published on Refinitiv page ‘BBSY’ and on Bloomberg (1).


BBSW and Interest Rate Benchmark Reform

In response to the weaknesses identified in the setting of financial benchmarks such as the [former] London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), the global regulatory community has, since 2013, been involved in a programme to strengthen financial benchmarks. For Australia, the key interest rate benchmarks were identified as BBSW and AONIA (also known as the “cash rate”) for which reforms were undertaken to enhance their robustness (3). Unlike [the former] LIBOR, the local market generates enough transactions to statistically support the BBSW benchmark. This, along with the recent reforms, has meant that BBSW has remained sufficiently robust for Australian regulators to retain BBSW and to promote a “multiple-rate” approach, whereby market participants are expected to choose robust reference rates (e.g., BBSW or AONIA) that best suit each of their products and situations (4).


BBSW Outlook

With the exception of 1-month BBSW, as at September 2022, the view of the RBA (Reserve Bank of Australia) remains that BBSW is a robust benchmark (4) and expected to have a secure future, since the assets of managed funds, which are among the main investors of bank bills, continue to grow, supported by superannuation (pension) contributions (5).

However, the RBA has commented that BBSW’s status as a robust benchmark should not be taken for granted (5). It has pointed out that, although growing, the bank bill market from which BBSW rates are derived (see BBSW calculation methodology), is declining both as a share of managed funds’ assets and major banks’ liabilities. This is partly due to the liquidity standards introduced over recent years (e.g. Basel 3), which reduced the value that banks place on short-term wholesale funding (5). This has especially been evident in the 1-month BBSW tenor, with potential users of the rate being advised to give careful consideration to using alternative benchmarks, such as 3-month BBSW or AONIA (the Australian cash rate) (5).

In addition, regardless of the robustness of BBSW, there is expected to be a natural migration away from using BBSW in some products, where it might have been used historically, towards AONIA. This applies in particular, to financial products that contain reference to a risk-free rate in another currency. Such products may include: cross-currency swaps (where certain IBORs have been replaced by the respective RFRs); and multi-currency lending facilities and other financial contracts (to align RFR usage across currencies) (6).


Fallback Provisions

A key element of Australia’s multiple-rate approach are fallbacks, which provide valuable insurance when using any benchmark (3). With respect to BBSW, the RBA have adopted a ‘principles-based’ approach, requesting that market participants include a ‘robust, reasonable and fair’ fallback to another interest rate in their financial contracts (7).

The RBA have said that the BBSW derivative fallbacks (primarily AONIA compounded in arrears plus an adjustment for the historical spread to BBSW) set out in ISDA’s IBOR Fallbacks Supplement and Protocol are just one example of a fallback that meets their ‘robust, reasonable and fair’ criteria. However, they see it as practical and more efficient for market participants to work together to develop market conventions that specify the specific fallback rates and language to be used in prospectuses and other legal documents. The Australian Financial Markets Association (AFMA) and the Australian Securitisation Forum (ASF) are cited as examples of industry groups who are developing their own template fallback language for use in BBSW-linked securities (AFMA 2021; ASF 2021) (7).

To promote appropriate use of fallbacks, the RBA will only accept securities referencing BBSW issued after 1 December 2022 as collateral in its domestic market operations if those securities include a fallback that meets its criteria (7).


(LIBOR ended in September 2024.)


See also


References

(1) ASX Bank BBSW Conventions and BBSW Methodology - Effective 10th February 2020


(2) ASX Benchmark Rates


(3) Interest Rate Benchmark Reform in Australia - RBA


(4) “The End of Libor and the Australian Market”, ISDA Benchmark Strategies Forum Asia Pacific, Online, March 2021 - speech by Christopher Kent, Assistant Governor (Financial Markets) RBA


(5) Debt Capital Markets Summit, Sydney, 19 March 2019 - speech by Christopher Kent, Assistant Governor (Financial Markets) RBA


(6) Use of interest rate benchmarks in Australia - IBOR Transformation Australian Working Group - 4 April 2022


(7) Fallbacks for BBSW - RBA - 16 June 2022


(8) Corium Treasury