Interest cap and SOFR: Difference between pages

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''Tax - anti-avoidance''.
''US interest rate benchmarks''.


Limits on corporate tax relief for interest and amounts economically equivalent to interest.
SOFR is the Secured Overnight Financing Rate.  


This is a broad treasuries repo financing rate, recommended as a benchmark by the Alternative Reverence Rates Committee (ARRC) of the Federal Reserve.


Do not confuse with an interest ''rate'' cap, which is a hedging instrument to manage interest rate risk.
It is published by the New York Fed at approximately 8am local time.
 
 
3 April 2018 was the first time SOFR was published. It is calculated based on actual transactions and is a volume-weighted median.
 
In the first three months of the publication of SOFR the underlying overnight lending transaction volume was on average approximately USD 800 billion.
 
 
LIBOR, which is currently used as the main benchmark rate, is expected to discontinue by 2021 in light of multiple irregularities and lack of sustainability in the absence of an active underlying market.
 
SOFR is the new benchmark USD rate (alternatively known as risk-free rate) and ARRC is working with the industry to transition to SOFR from LIBOR.  




==See also==
==See also==
* [[Corporate Interest Restriction]]
*[[Alternative Reference Rates Committee]]
* [[Debt cap]]
*[[Federal Reserve]]
* [[Fixed ratio method]]
*[[IBOR]]
* [[Interest rate cap]]
*[[LIBOR]]
* [[Tax avoidance]]
*[[Reference rate]]
* [[Tax relief]]
*[[Risk-free rates]]
* [[Worldwide interest cap]]
*[[Repo]]
*[[SOFR term rate]]
*[[SONIA]]
*[[Treasury]]
 
 
===Other links===
 
[[Media:Slaughter and May interest rate benchmarks.pdf| 2021: A Benchmark Odyssey, Practical Guidance for Treasurers on interest rate benchmarks, Slaughter and May]]
 
[[Category:Corporate_financial_management]]

Revision as of 08:04, 12 September 2021

US interest rate benchmarks.

SOFR is the Secured Overnight Financing Rate.

This is a broad treasuries repo financing rate, recommended as a benchmark by the Alternative Reverence Rates Committee (ARRC) of the Federal Reserve.

It is published by the New York Fed at approximately 8am local time.


3 April 2018 was the first time SOFR was published. It is calculated based on actual transactions and is a volume-weighted median.

In the first three months of the publication of SOFR the underlying overnight lending transaction volume was on average approximately USD 800 billion.


LIBOR, which is currently used as the main benchmark rate, is expected to discontinue by 2021 in light of multiple irregularities and lack of sustainability in the absence of an active underlying market.

SOFR is the new benchmark USD rate (alternatively known as risk-free rate) and ARRC is working with the industry to transition to SOFR from LIBOR.


See also


Other links

2021: A Benchmark Odyssey, Practical Guidance for Treasurers on interest rate benchmarks, Slaughter and May