Sainmhíniú wholesale money market in which banks lend to and borrow from one another Tagairt """interbank market"" A Dictionary of Finance and Banking. Ed Jonathan Law & John Smullen. Oxford University Press (OUP), 2008. Oxford Reference Online. OUP. DGT. http://www.oxfordreference.com/views/ENTRY.html?subview=Main&entry=t20.e1859 [26.1.2010]"
Nóta The importance of the market is that it allows individual banks to adjust their liquidity positions quickly, covering shortages by borrowing from banks with surpluses. This reduces the need for each bank to hold large quantities of liquid assets, thus releasing funds for more profitable lending transactions.
Sainmhíniú marché sur lequel les intermédiaires financiers privés, essentiellement les banques, échangent entre eux des dépôts à termes fixes allant de 7 jours à 1 mois,3 mois et plus Tagairt Gloss.économie,BTB
FINANCE|financial institutions and credit|banking · FINANCE|financial institutions and credit|credit policy
Sainmhíniú Referenzzinssatz (Briefkurs) für viele Finanzinstrumente des Geldmarktes, zu dem international tätige Großbanken Euro-Geldmarktgeschäfte in London abschließen. Tagairt "Gabler Wirtschaftslexikon > LIBOR (6.6.2023)"
Nóta bezieht sich auf den Interbankenhandel für kurzfristige (overnight bis zwölf Monate) Termingelder und gibt damit an, zu welchem Zins die Referenzbanken bereits sind, Festgelder am Euro-Interbankmarkt zu verleihen;beruht nicht auf tatsächlichen Transaktionen, sondern auf Angaben über Marktbeobachtungen
Sainmhíniú "rate of interest at which banks offer to lend to each other on the London interbank market" Tagairt "'London Inter Bank Offered Rate' (1.12.2023). A Dictionary of Business and Management (6 ed.). Edited by John Law. Oxford University Press, 2016."
Nóta The loans are for a minimum of £250,000 for periods from overnight up to five years. LIBOR is the most significant interest rate for international banks. It is also used as a benchmark for lending to bank customers and as a reference rate for many derivatives. In 2012 evidence emerged of a major scandal in which leading banks had manipulated LIBOR for their own profit; as a result oversight of LIBOR was transferred from the British Bankers’ Association to the Intercontinental Exchange group.