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REPEAT: RBA Debelle:Mkt Should Enhance BBSW As Libor May Fade

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 03:00 GMT Sep 8/23:00 EST Sep 7
--Urges Mkt to Look At Risk-Free Benchmark Like Cash Rate For Certain Contracts
By Sophia Rodrigues
     SYDNEY (MNI) - More work needs to be done to enhance the bank bill swap
rate (BBSW) benchmark as the longevity of Libor cannot be assumed, Reserve Bank
of Australia Deputy Governor Guy Debelle said Friday, even as he urged market
participants to look at the appropriateness of risk-free benchmarks like the
cash rate for certain contracts.
     In his prepared remarks at a FINSIA event in Sydney on Friday, Debelle said
"the longevity of Libor cannot be assumed, and you [market participants] should
start considering today what that might mean for any contracts you have that
reference Libor."
     He said the Council of Financial Regulators -- of which the RBA is one of
the regulators -- is working closely with the industry to ensure that BBSW,
Libor's equivalent interest rate benchmark for the Australian dollar, remains a
robust financial benchmark.
     "For the new BBSW methodology to be implemented successfully, the
institutions that participate in the bank bill market will need to start trading
bills at outright yields rather than the current practice of agreeing to the
transaction at the yet-to-be determined BBSW rate," Debelle said.
     This change of behavior needs to occur at the banks that issue the bank
bills, as well as those that buy them, including the investment funds and state
treasury corporations, he said.
     The RBA is also playing its part by agreeing to move its open-market
operations to an earlier time to support liquidity in the bank bill market
during the trading window, Debelle added.
     Debelle said that Australia is well advanced in changes to enhance the
longevity of BBSW. "While these changes entail some costs, the cost of not doing
so would be considerably larger."
     He went on to say that while BBSW remains a robust benchmark, it is also
important for market participants to ask if a risk-free rate instead of a
credit-based reference rate is a better benchmark for certain contracts.
     For instance, floating rate notes (FRNs) issued by governments,
non-financial corporations and securitization trusts, which are currently priced
at a spread to BBSW, could instead tie their coupon payments to the cash rate,
he suggested.
     For other products such as corporate loans, it makes sense to continue
referencing a credit-based benchmark that measures banks' short-term wholesale
funding costs, he added.
     He noted that the RBA's cash rate is the risk-free interest rate benchmark
for the Australian dollar even though the cash rate is not a perfect substitute
for BBSW, as it is an overnight rate rather than a term rate, and doesn't
incorporate a significant bank credit risk premium.
--MNI Sydney Bureau; tel: +61 2-9716-5467; email: sophia.rodrigues@marketnews.com

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