About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

ICE Benchmark Administration to Publish Test Data for ICE LIBOR this Saturday

Subscribe to our newsletter

ICE Benchmark Administration (IBA) will publish results of a three-month test of ICE LIBOR on the ICE website this Saturday March 17, 2018. The test is part of the evolution of the benchmark and ran from September 15 to December 15, 2017, during which time all 20 LIBOR panel banks were required to make additional LIBOR submissions using the waterfall methodology to the same production standard as, and in parallel with, their existing LIBOR submissions.

IBA, a subsidiary of Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), became the administrator of LIBOR in February 2014. Since then, it has invested in the benchmark and put in place new governance, oversight, technology and controls. Its goal is to evolve LIBOR and be able to publish, in all market circumstances, a wholesale funding rate anchored in panel banks’ unsecured, wholesale funding transactions to the greatest extent possible.

IBA has calculated LIBOR using submissions made under the waterfall methodology for each of the 35 LIBOR currency and tenor pairs for every applicable London business day of the testing period. The calculations apply the same trimmed arithmetic mean approach used to calculate LIBOR as it is currently published.

Following input from the LIBOR Oversight Committee and consultation with stakeholders from around the world, IBA developed the final ICE LIBOR output statement setting out a single LIBOR definition and a more standardised, transaction-data driven methodology for submissions in place of the existing LIBOR submission question. Each panel bank’s submissions in response to the output statement are determined through use of the waterfall methodology, which uses eligible transaction data where available, transaction-derived data otherwise, and, if neither is available, market data-based expert judgement.

IBA continues to work on the evolution of LIBOR, with the intention of transitioning panel banks from the existing LIBOR methodology to the waterfall methodology, subject to agreement from the LIBOR Oversight Committee and other approvals, and in the absence of regulatory objection. IBA expects to make a further announcement before commencing the transition to the waterfall methodology, if conditions have been satisfied.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: From Data to Alpha: AI Strategies for Taming Unstructured Data

Date: 16 April 2026 Time: 9:00am ET / 2:00pm London / 3:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes Unstructured data and text now accounts for the majority of information flowing through financial markets organisations, spanning research content, corporate disclosures, communications, alternative data, and internal documents. While AI has created new opportunities to extract signals, many firms are...

BLOG

Exegy to Launch First Consolidated Overnight BBO Feed for After-Hours Trading Venues

Exegy is set to introduce what it describes as the first consolidated Overnight Best Bid and Offer (OBBO) feed covering all three US after-hours equity trading venues, addressing a gap in overnight price discovery as markets move toward extended and near-continuous trading models. The new feed, due to be launched within the next few weeks...

EVENT

RepRisk Sustainability Breakfast Roundtable London

The London sustainability breakfast is part of the global roundtable thought leadership event series hosted by RepRisk in key markets, including, New York, Toronto, London, Frankfurt, Oslo, Copenhagen, Stockholm, Hong Kong and Singapore in 2026.

GUIDE

Data Lineage Handbook

Data lineage has become a critical concern for data managers in capital markets as it is key to both regulatory compliance and business opportunity. The regulatory requirement for data lineage kicked in with BCBS 239 in 2016 and has since been extended to many other regulations that oblige firms to provide transparency and a data...