MONEY MARKETS-One-mth dlr Libor rates up on year-end stress

Mon Dec 1, 2008 8:45am EST
 
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* One-month dollar Libor rate rises on year-end strain

* BOJ to hold emergency meeting on Tuesday

(Updates with BBA's Libor fixing, changes byline, previous SINGAPORE)

By Ian Chua

LONDON, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Signs of year-end funding stress in the bank-to-bank money market remained evident on Monday with one-month London interbank offered rates (Libor) for dollar funds drifting to a near one-month high.

European banks also continued to show their preference for hoarding cash rather than lend it out in the interbank market.

Latest data revealed European banks deposited 203.889 billion euros at the European Central Bank vault overnight as of Nov. 30. While the figure was down from Friday, the amount was still nearly a quarter of the 790.486 billion euros the ECB has outstanding in open market operations.

The one-month dollar Libor USD1MFSR= was fixed at 1.91 percent on Monday -- the highest in nearly a month -- while the corresponding rate for sterling GBP1MFSR= also rose.

See [ID:nL1582287] for latest Libor fixings.

Three-month Libor spreads over anticipated central bank rates for dollar and euro narrowed slightly, but stayed elevated, while the sterling spread widened.

The spreads are seen as a gauge of banks' willingness to lend to each other -- a wider spread suggests less inclination to lend.

Christoph Rieger, strategist at Dresdner Kleinwort in Frankfurt said despite central bank action, the spreads have not contracted much and have in fact showed a tendency to widen.

"Conditions are difficult over year-end and they won't improve before that," he said, but added the spreads should contract and Libor fixings are likely to fall in the New Year.

"Depending also on what the ECB and other central banks do, things should improve thereafter."

Official interest rates in Europe are expected to fall further this week, with both the ECB and Bank of England seen cutting borrowing costs by at least 50 basis points.

"Central banks will aggressively supply reserves right up till the end and the commercial banks will hoard those reserves right up till the end and then the bottom will drop off and rates will plummet," said John Richards, head of Asia-Pacific research at RBS Securities in Tokyo.  Continued...

 
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