Additional Comments on NASAA’s Re-proposal of Revisions to its Model Rule
SIFMA provided additional comments to the North American Securities Administrators Association, Inc. (NASAA) on the re-proposal of revisions to its…
The Honorable Maxine Waters
Chairwoman
Committee on Financial Services
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20510
The Honorable Patrick McHenry
Ranking Member
Committee on Financial Services
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20510
The Honorable Brad Sherman
Chairman
Subcommittee on Investor Protection,
Entrepreneurship and Capital Markets
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20510
The Honorable Bill Huizenga
Ranking Member
Subcommittee on Investor Protection,
Entrepreneurship and Capital Markets
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Chairwoman Waters, Ranking Member McHenry, Rep. Sherman, and Rep. Huizenga:
The undersigned organizations write in support of federal legislation to address “tough legacy”contracts that utilize LIBOR. There are trillions of dollars of outstanding contracts, securities, and loans that use LIBOR for their interest rates but do not have appropriate contractual language to address a permanent cessation of US dollar LIBOR, which will occur in June 2023. Existing interest rate fallback provisions may not address the issue at all, may result in adjustable-rate contracts becoming fixed-rate contracts based on the last known LIBOR, or may defer to a party’s judgement to replace LIBOR with a comparable interest rate index. In any case, it is likely that ineffective or ambiguous fallback provisions will result in uncertainty, litigation, and harm to consumers, businesses, and investors.
The Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC) developed and published draft legislative language that would replace ineffective LIBOR-based fallback provisions with recommended fallbacks that will take effect when LIBOR ceases publication, create a safe harbor from litigation for parties that choose ARRC-recommended rates, and not affect contracts that have effective fallbacks that do not reference LIBOR. Legislation based on the ARRC’s proposal was recently implemented in New York.
We believe that federal legislation is critical and necessary to solve this problem. Only federal legislation can uniformly address all 50 states, and only federal legislation can address issues such as the need for narrow relief from certain federal laws. Importantly, federal legislation will have a number of benefits to consumers, businesses, and investors: