Alternatives to Libor in Consumer Mortgages
Author(s) -
Mark E. Schweitzer,
Guhan Venkatu
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
economic commentary (federal reserve bank of cleveland)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2163-3738
pISSN - 0428-1276
DOI - 10.26509/frbc-ec-201214
Subject(s) - libor , treasury , reset (finance) , payment , interest rate , economics , financial crisis , monetary economics , financial system , business , actuarial science , financial economics , finance , keynesian economics , archaeology , history
Many adjustable rate mortgages in the United States are indexed to Libor. While the accuracy of this rate has recently been called into question, another issue affecting U.S. borrowers has become evident since the onset of the financial crisis. Specifically, many U.S. consumers with Libor-based loans may have been hit with substantially higher payments when their loans reset during the financial crisis than if those loans had been tied to a Treasury rate. We investigate several alternative reference rates for consumer loans and estimate their payment effects on a large sample of Libor-linked U.S. mortgages. We find that these alternatives would have delivered average monthly savings over Libor of about $25 to $45 and substantially more for mortgages that reset in October 2008.
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