In light of all the inflation expectations, on a random thread here I threw out the idea that I believe that we may see a systemic shift to floating rates in the US.
Every banana republic that has had to deal with mass inflation (and even hyperinflation) has floating rate as the dominant interest rate convention, including government paper. Most saw a re-shift or re-testing of fixed rate lending during this recent bubble, e.g. 2004-2008 Mexico as they developed a nascent MBS market.
Today, I get a notice from BofA telling me that my credit card (I rarely use it, as I get better mileage and points with my amex charge card) is now going to be based of off prime rate, instead of the misnomered "fixed" rate.
I know that using prime is pretty standard too, but I find it interesting that they're getting to the point that they're moving the 800+ FICO people to floating rate....
Given what I've been reading about the circle jerk of LIBOR, it will be interesting to see if Prime makes a comeback as a benchmark.
Any others? Thoughts?
Every banana republic that has had to deal with mass inflation (and even hyperinflation) has floating rate as the dominant interest rate convention, including government paper. Most saw a re-shift or re-testing of fixed rate lending during this recent bubble, e.g. 2004-2008 Mexico as they developed a nascent MBS market.
Today, I get a notice from BofA telling me that my credit card (I rarely use it, as I get better mileage and points with my amex charge card) is now going to be based of off prime rate, instead of the misnomered "fixed" rate.
I know that using prime is pretty standard too, but I find it interesting that they're getting to the point that they're moving the 800+ FICO people to floating rate....
Given what I've been reading about the circle jerk of LIBOR, it will be interesting to see if Prime makes a comeback as a benchmark.
Any others? Thoughts?
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