Ted Spread

  

Categories: Trading

The Ted Spread, or TED Spread, is the difference between two interest rates for a given 3-month period: the interest rate on short-term U.S. government debt, and the interest rates of interbank loans.

TED stands for "Treasury-Euro Dollar." To get your TED Spread, the Treasury part comes from the interest rate on U.S. Treasury bills, and the Euro Dollar part comes from LIBOR.

See: LIBOR for more deets, but the TL;DR is that the London Interbank Offered Rate is the average market rate of what leading banks in London are charging each other for loans, so it’s a market rate, not a government-set rate. The federal funds rate, or fed funds rate, is set by the Federal Open Market Committee, the major committee of the Federal Reserve, the U.S.’s central bank.

The TED spread indicates the severity credit risk in the market. Since the U.S. dollar is the “it girl” currency of the world, U.S. Treasury bills are considered risk-free. Thus, the TED Spread measures the difference between the LIBOR interbank market rate and the risk-free, government-set T-bill rate.

The larger the TED spread, the higher interest rates banks are demanding, reflecting a perceived increase in default risk in the eyes of banks. A lowering TED spread means banks took a chill pill; their risk seems to be decreasing. For instance, the TED spread was sky-high when Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008, which put the other banks on their guard in terms of interbank lending.

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Finance: What is Spread?48 Views

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finance a la shmoop. what is spread? before we start just no. get your mind

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a bid and ask price under a market maker structure of trading securities. no more

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price of 37.31. note the eight cents a shared difference in the share prices.

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that dif is the spread between the two prices, and it's worth noting that in [bread is buttered]

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extremely volatile stocks, the spread widens. and in boring highly liquid

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stocks which don't move much, the spread tightens or is narrower. that is on a

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never moves much we're thinking AT&T here, [man snores at a desk]

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well that spread might be just three or four cents. so why grow? well because a

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market maker in a volatile stock doesn't want to be caught losing money on her

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inventory. if no more wire hangers suddenly gapped down to 37.10 a share [equation shown]

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well it would be likely less than the average of what the market maker paid

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Up Next

Finance: What is Spread To Treasuries?
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Spread to treasuries is an indication of risk associated with a given debt or bond offering.

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)