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Euribor - FBE European Banking Federation

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Euribor

FBE - European Banking Federation 

European banks considered that the introduction, in 1999, of the single currency made it necessary to establish a new interbank reference rate within the Economic and Monetary Union: Euribor®.

Euribor® (Euro Interbank Offered Rate) is the benchmark rate of the large euro money market that has emerged since 1999.

It is sponsored by the European Banking Federation (FBE), which represents the interests of 4 500 banks in 24 Member States of the European Union and in Iceland, Norway and Switzerland and by theFinancial Markets Association (ACI).
Euribor® is the rate at which euro interbank term deposits are offered by one prime bank to another prime bank and is published at 11.00 a.m. CET for spot value (T+2).

Euribor® was first published on 30 December 1998 for value 4 January 1999.

The choice of banks quoting for Euribor® is based on market criteria. These banks are of first class credit standing. They have been selected to ensure that the diversity of the euro money market is adequately reflected, thereby making Euribor® an efficient and representative benchmark.

A strict Code of Conduct sets out rules covering, amongst other things:

the criteria used to determine which banks may belong to the panel of banks.
the obligations of the Panel Banks.
the tasks and the composition of the Steering Committee, which is responsible for overseeing Euribor®.

Reuters (formerly Moneyline Telerate) has been chosen as the screen service provider responsible for computing and publishing Euribor®.

Since its launch, Euribor® has become a reality on the derivatives markets and is the underlying rate of many derivatives transactions, both OTC and exchange-traded.

Euribor Historical Data



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