Updated March 02 2010
LIBOR
Rates
This
Week Month
Ago Year
Ago
0.84
0.86
2.09
What it means:
LIBOR stands for London Inter Bank Offer Rate. It's the rate of interest at
which banks offer to lend money to one another in the wholesale money markets
in London. It is a standard financial index used in U.S. capital markets and
can be found in the Wall Street Journal. In general, its changes have been
smaller than changes in the prime rate.
How it's used:
It's an index that is used to set the cost of various variable-rate loans.
Lenders use such an index, which varies, to adjust interest rates as economic
conditions change. They then add a certain number of percentage points called
a margin, which doesn't vary, to the index to establish the interest rate you
must pay. When this index goes up, interest rates on any loans tied to it
also go up. Although it is increasingly used for consumer loans, it has
traditionally been a reference figure for corporate financial transactions.