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Libor Plunges Most Since 2008 as Rate Catches Up to Fed-Cut Bets

Libor Plunges Most Since 2008 as Rate Catches Up to Fed-Cut Bets

(Bloomberg) -- One of the world’s most important short-term interest rates staged its biggest one-day drop in more than a decade Wednesday in a sign that markets are bracing for even lower U.S. borrowing costs in the face of the spreading coronavirus.

The three-month London interbank offered rate for dollars -- a benchmark for trillions of dollars in financial products globally -- sank 31.4 basis points to 1.00063%. That’s the biggest one-day slide since October 2008, the height of the global financial crisis.

The move reflects a market that’s catching up with front-end rates that had already begun pricing additional Federal Reserve rate cuts even after Tuesday’s emergency half-point reduction. Fed officials have a scheduled meeting on March 17-18.

Libor Plunges Most Since 2008 as Rate Catches Up to Fed-Cut Bets

Futures traders are pricing in about 31 basis points of further Fed rate cuts by the end of March, assuming the fed effective rate will set at around 1.09% over the next day. Overnight index swaps settled under 1% Tuesday, also suggesting more easing is expected.

It’s not just short-term rates that are indicating market concerns over the virus’s impact. The 10-year Treasury yield sank below 1% Tuesday for the first time, and it stood around 0.99% Wednesday morning as stocks showed signs of stabilizing.

To contact the reporter on this story: Alexandra Harris in New York at aharris48@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Benjamin Purvis at bpurvis@bloomberg.net, Mark Tannenbaum, Debarati Roy

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