U.S. Dollar (Eurodollar) LIBOR Rates

The London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR)
from the interest-rate specialists at www.FedPrimeRate.comSM

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

The 1-Month Eurodollar LIBOR Rate Rose Today

The 1-month Eurodollar LIBOR rate rose today, while the 6-month rate eased. The 3- and 12-month rates held steady. The 3-month TED spread was unchanged.

image courtesy: The Wall Street Journal
Image courtesy: Wall Street Journal Online

Right now, the yield on the 3-month U.S. Treasury Bill is 0.13%. Therefore, the 3-month TED spread is currently 0.17281 percentage point; it was 0.17281 yesterday, 0.18281 last Friday and 4.60875 on October 10, 2008 at the peak of the global banking crisis.

For the 3-month TED spread, a figure between zero and 0.50 percentage point (0.50 percentage point = 50 basis points) is a strong indication that large, international banks are lending money to each other with confidence.

A Eurodollar is a U.S. dollar deposited in any bank outside the United States.

Click here for historical LIBOR values.

Click here for a chart comparing LIBOR to the Prime Rate and the target fed funds rate.

Click here to read about how U.S. Dollar LIBOR fixing works.

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