Tuesday, January 13, 2009

signaling the freeze in credit markets that began 18 months ago is starting to thaw

More good news on the possible diminution of the fear and aversion to risk. As I've said, the TED and VIX are both down, and what a lovely couple they are. From Bloomberg:

"By Gavin Finch and Matthew Brown

Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The premium that banks pay to borrow money compared with the U.S. Treasury narrowed to the least in five months, signaling the freeze in credit markets that began 18 months ago is starting to thaw.( YES )

The difference between the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, that banks say they charge each other for three-month loans in dollars and the yield on the three-month Treasury bill, fell 12 basis points to 98 basis points today. The so-called TED spread last closed below 100 basis points Aug. 15. Dollar Libor dropped to 1.09 percent today, the lowest level since June 2003.

“It’s slowly but surely improving,” said Padhraic Garvey, head of investment-grade debt strategy at ING Groep NV in Amsterdam. “We’re going through a good period now with regards to Libors.”( YES )

Central banks around the world sought to combat the seizure in credit markets by cutting interest rates and lending record amounts of cash directly to banks. President-elect Barack Obama said Jan. 12 he wants the second half of a $700 billion financial- bailout fund available to him as “ammunition” in the event of an economic emergency and promised to direct more of the money to small businesses and homeowners.

The falling cost of borrowing for banks is luring some companies back to the credit markets. Bad Homburg, Germany-based Fresenius SE, the owner of the world’s largest kidney dialysis provider, is seeking to become the first sub-investment-grade company to sell bonds for 18 months, people familiar with the matter said yesterday.( GOOD )

‘Crisis Territory’

Libor, the benchmark for $360 trillion of financial products worldwide, is set by a panel of banks in a survey by the BBA typically before noon each day in London.

The three-month dollar Libor is still 84 basis points above the upper end of the Federal Reserve’s target rate for overnight loans, compared with an average of 12 basis points in the year before the crisis began. The spread was 332 basis points on Oct. 10, less than a month after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.( THE CAUSE )

Libors “are still very elevated,” ING’s Garvey said. “In absolute terms, they are still in crisis territory.”( TRUE )

While money-market strains may be easing, investors are still seeking the safety of the shortest-dated U.S. government debt. The rate on three-month Treasury bills was 11 basis points today, from six basis points yesterday. It was at 3.15 percent a year ago.

Economists and strategists predict the declines in three- month dollar Libor have run out of steam and the rate will be at 1.12 percent by the end of the first quarter, according to a Bloomberg survey. Implied forwards suggest( THAT'S ALL IT IS ) the rate will rise back up to 1.78 percent in the same period.

In a further sign that banks remain wary of lending to each other, overnight deposits placed with the European Central Bank by financial institutions held at more than 300 billion euros ($398 billion) for second day yesterday. The daily average in the first eight months of last year was 427 million euros.( EUROPE IS BEHIND US )

To contact the reporters on this story: Gavin Finch in London at gfinch@bloomberg.netMatthew Brown in London at mbrown42@bloomberg.net"

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