Swap rate curves are typically determined by dollar denominated borrowing based on LIBOR. These rates are determined by market participants and are not regulated by governments. Swap rate curves are not affected by technical market factors that affect the yields on government bonds. Swap rate curves are also not subject to sovereign credit risk (potential government default on debt) that is unique to government debt in each country. Thus swap rate curves are more comparable across countries because they reflect similar levels of credit risk. There is also a wider variety of maturities available for swap rate curves, relative to a yield curve based on US Treasury securities, which has only four on-the-run maturities of two years or more. Swap rate curves typically have 11 quotes for maturities between 2 and 30 years. |