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One way of measuring the distress in financial market is to look at the spread or difference in interest rates between the 3-month LIBOR — a market rate determined by borrowing and lending between large banks in London that is used as an index for short-term commercial loans — and the 3-month Treasury Bill.
In normal times, that spread hovers somewhere in the neighborhood of a half-percent. During times of distress, the spread widens.
For example, during the 1990-1991 recession the monthly average spread peaked at 1.3% in November 1990. In the current recession, the monthly average spread peaked at 3.37% in October 2008.
Courtesy of NAHB
Revitalizing the Packing District
Esplanade at Aventura
A Serene Escape in Uptown Charlotte
Raleigh, North Carolina
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