Bank Bill Swap Bid Rate (BBSY)

Bank Bill Swap Bid Rate (BBSY)

The Bank Bill Swap Bid Rate (BBSY) is an Australian benchmark interest rate quoted and dispersed by the data provider Thompson Reuters Information Service. In Australia, the BBSY is the interest rate used in the financial markets for the pricing and valuation of Australian dollar securities and used by banks to borrow money and to determine short-term floating interest rates. BBSY, or Bank Bill Swap Bid Rate, is the rate commonly used by banks, financial institutions, and investors as it determined short-term floating interest rates. The floating rate used in interest rate swaps is BBSY plus (or minus) a margin, e.g. BBSY + 35 basis points. The semi-annual fixed interest rate is 2%, and the floating rate is BBSY + 0.35% to be paid on a semi-annual basis.

BBSY, or Bank Bill Swap Bid Rate, is the rate commonly used by banks, financial institutions, and investors as it determined short-term floating interest rates.

What Is the Bank Bill Swap Bid Rate (BBSY)? 

The Bank Bill Swap Bid Rate (BBSY) is an Australian benchmark interest rate quoted and dispersed by the data provider Thompson Reuters Information Service. The BBSY is typically used by financial institutions or corporations engaging in interest rate swaps and related transactions.

BBSY, or Bank Bill Swap Bid Rate, is the rate commonly used by banks, financial institutions, and investors as it determined short-term floating interest rates.
This type of rate is used to determine many rates all over the world, not just in Australia. They may have different names but are usually referred to as "swap rates."
The rate is fairly simple as an instrument but can have powerful repercussions when it adjusts in almost any way.

Understanding BBSY

In Australia, the BBSY is the interest rate used in the financial markets for the pricing and valuation of Australian dollar securities and used by banks to borrow money and to determine short-term floating interest rates. The BBSY is managed by ASX Ltd, which operates Australia's primary national stock exchange and equity derivatives market.

The BBSY is published at 10:15 a.m. daily on Thomson Reuters and on Bloomberg LLP. The published rates are used by financial institutions nationally to calculate interest rates on financial contracts, making for a transparent and efficient process in the country’s financial system.

The BBSY is used as the base rate for debt financing. It is similar to the London Interbank Offer Rate (LIBOR). The BBSY is derived from the BBSW — Bank Bill Swap Rate — which is calculated as the average of the national best bid and best offer (NBBO), rounded to four decimal places.

This average mid-price is made available by independent authorities using a transparent algorithm based on information from numerous financial institutions. The BBSY is calculated and provided in a similar manner, except instead of mid-price, the average bid-price is used.

Example of the BBSY

A good example of where the bank bill swap bid rate comes into play is in a plain vanilla interest rate swap agreement. An interest rate swap is a contract entered into by two counterparties who agree to swap streams of interest payments with each other for a predetermined period of time. One party swaps fixed-interest payments and receives floating interest payments that are dependent on the movement of the BBSY.

In order to decide what interest rate is used to determine the payment amounts in the agreement, the BBSY is agreed upon at the inception of the agreement as the reference rate. The floating rate used in interest rate swaps is BBSY plus (or minus) a margin, e.g. BBSY + 35 basis points.

Consider two companies who enter into an interest rate swap in which company XYZ pays fixed payments to and receives floating payments from company ABC. The semi-annual fixed interest rate is 2%, and the floating rate is BBSY + 0.35% to be paid on a semi-annual basis. Payments are to be swapped on a notional principal amount of $1 million. On the day the payment amount is calculated XYZ will pay ½ x 2% x $1 million = $10,000 to ABC. Assuming the BBSY is 1.90%, ABC will remit ½ x (1.90% + 0.35%) x $1 million = $11,250 to XYZ.

Related terms:

Arrears Swap

An arrears swap is an interest rate swap where the floating payment is based on the rate at the end, rather than the beginning, of the reset period. read more

Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW)

The Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW) is a short-term interest rate used as a benchmark for the pricing of Australian dollar derivatives and securities. read more

Bermuda Swaption

A Bermuda swaption is an option on an interest rate swap with a predefined schedule of potential exercise dates instead of just one date. read more

Delayed Rate Setting Swap

A delayed rate setting swap is a type of derivative where two parties agree to exchange cash flows, but the coupon rate is set at a future date.  read more

Fixed Interest Rate

A fixed interest rate remains the same for a loan's entire term, making long-term budgeting easier. Some loans combine fixed and variable rates. read more

Floating Interest Rate

A floating interest rate is an interest rate that moves up and down with the rest of the market or along with an index. read more

Forward Swap

A forward swap, often called a deferred swap, is an agreement between two parties to exchange assets on a fixed date in the future. read more

Liability Swap

A liability swap is a financial derivative in which two parties exchange debt-related interest rates, usually a fixed rate for a floating rate. read more

London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR)

LIBOR is a benchmark interest rate at which major global lend to one another in the international interbank market for short-term loans. read more

Notional Principal Amount

Notional principal amount, in an interest rate swap, is the predetermined dollar amounts on which the exchanged interest payments are based.  read more