REUTERS-The rate banks
charge each other to borrow dollars for three months rose above 1 percent on
Wednesday for the first time since May 2009 as global interest rates
extend
their climb on expectations of accelerating growth and inflation.
The London interbank
offered rate, or LIBOR, for three-month dollars USD3MFSR= was fixed at 1.00511
percent, the highest level since 1.00688 percent on May 1, 2009, which was also
the last date the rate topped 1 percent.
That compared with
Tuesday's rate of 0.99872 percent.
Libor is a global
rate benchmark for $350 trillion worth of financial products worldwide.
Investors upgraded
their outlook on business activity following Donald Trump's victory in the U.S.
presidential election, anticipating that a Republican-controlled White House
and Congress would slash taxes, implement infrastructure spending and loosen
regulations.
That rosier view is
also coupled with the Federal Reserve's signal last month that it might raise
interest rates up to three times in 2017 as the economy approaches full
employment and inflation heads toward its 2 percent goal.
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