by Calculated Risk on 11/14/2008 01:03:00 PM
Friday, November 14, 2008
Credit Crisis Indicators: LIBOR Rises Again
Once again, as economic activity dives off a cliff, here is another daily look at a few credit indicators ...
The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, for three-month dollar loans edged above 2.23% from just below 2.15% Thursday, the British Bankers Association reported.The three-month LIBOR was 2.15% yesterday and the rate peaked at 4.81875% on Oct. 10. (slightly worse)
With the effective Fed Funds rate at 0.35% (as of yesterday), this is probably somewhat in the right range. At some point, I'd like to see the effective Fed funds rate close to the target rate (currently 1.0%) and the 3 month yield within 25 bps of the target rate.
The TED spread is back above 2.0 again, and still too high. The peak was 4.63 on Oct 10th. I'd like to see the spread move back down to 1.0 or lower. A normal spread is around 0.5. From reader Kai using data back to 1986: "The average TED spread is 58bps, but the median TED spread is 42bps and the non-crisis (i.e. less than 100bps spread) median is 37.8bps."
Here is a list of SFP sales. It has been a few days without an announcement from the Treasury... (no progress).
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
The Federal Reserve assets increased $139 billion this week to $2.214 trillion.
Note: the graph shows Total Factors Supplying Federal Reserve Funds and is an available series that is close to assets.
This is the spread between high and low quality 30 day nonfinancial commercial paper.
The Fed is buying higher quality commercial paper (CP) and this is pushing down the yield on this paper (0.65% yesterday!) - and increasing the spread between AA and A2/P2 CP. So this indicator has been a little misleading. Also the recession is creating concern for lower rated paper. Still, if the credit crisis eases, I'd expect a significant decline in this spread.
If anything these indicators suggest a small step backwards ...