[House Report 117-206]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


117th Congress   }                                  {    Rept. 117-206
                        HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
 1st Session     }                                  {           Part 1

======================================================================



 
              ADJUSTABLE INTEREST RATE (LIBOR) ACT OF 2021

                                _______
                                

December 7, 2021.--Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the 
              State of the Union and ordered to be printed

                                _______
                                

  Ms. Waters, from the Committee on Financial Services, submitted the 
                               following

                              R E P O R T

                        [To accompany H.R. 4616]

    The Committee on Financial Services, to whom was referred 
the bill (H.R. 4616) to deem certain references to LIBOR as 
referring to a replacement benchmark rate upon the occurrence 
of certain events affecting LIBOR, and for other purposes, 
having considered the same, reports favorably thereon with an 
amendment and recommends that the bill as amended do pass.

                                CONTENTS

                                                                   Page
Purpose and Summary..............................................     5
Background and Need for Legislation..............................     5
Section-by-Section Analysis of the Legislation...................     8
Hearings.........................................................     9
Committee Consideration..........................................    10
Committee Votes..................................................    10
Committee Correspondence.........................................    11
Committee Oversight Findings.....................................    16
Statement of Performance Goals and Objectives....................    16
New Budget Authority and C.B.O. Cost Estimate....................    16
Committee Cost Estimate..........................................    16
Federal Mandates Statement.......................................    16
Advisory Committee Statement.....................................    16
Applicability to Legislative Branch..............................    17
Congressional Earmarks, Limited Tax Benefits, and Limited Tariff 
  Benefits.......................................................    17
Duplicative Federal Programs.....................................    17
Changes in Existing Law Minority Views...........................    17

    The amendment is as follows:
  Strike all after the enacting clause and insert the 
following:

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

  This Act may be cited as the ``Adjustable Interest Rate (LIBOR) Act 
of 2021''.

SEC. 2. FINDINGS AND PURPOSE.

  (a) Findings.--The Congress finds that--
          (1) LIBOR is used as a benchmark rate in more than $200 
        trillion of contracts worldwide;
          (2) a significant number of existing contracts that reference 
        LIBOR do not provide for the use of a clearly defined or 
        practicable replacement benchmark rate when LIBOR is 
        discontinued; and
          (3) the cessation or non-representativeness of LIBOR could 
        result in disruptive litigation related to existing contracts 
        that do not provide for the use of a clearly defined or 
        practicable replacement benchmark rate.
  (b) Purpose.--It is the purpose of this Act--
          (1) to establish a clear and uniform process, on a nationwide 
        basis, for replacing LIBOR in existing contracts the terms of 
        which do not provide for the use of a clearly defined or 
        practicable replacement benchmark rate, without affecting the 
        ability of parties to use any appropriate benchmark rate in new 
        contracts;
          (2) to preclude litigation related to existing contracts the 
        terms of which do not provide for the use of a clearly defined 
        or practicable replacement benchmark rate; and
          (3) to allow existing contracts that reference LIBOR but 
        provide for the use of a clearly defined fallback and 
        practicable replacement rate, to operate according to their 
        terms.
  (c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this Act shall be construed to 
disfavor the use of any benchmark rate on a prospective basis.

SEC. 3. DEFINITIONS.

  As used in this Act, the following terms shall have the following 
meanings:
          (1) ``Benchmark'' shall mean an index of interest rates or 
        dividend rates that is used, in whole or in part, as the basis 
        of or as a reference for calculating or determining any 
        valuation, payment or other measurement.
          (2) ``Benchmark Administrator'' means a person that publishes 
        a Benchmark for use by third parties.
          (3) ``Benchmark Replacement'' shall mean a Benchmark, or an 
        interest rate or dividend rate (which may or may not be based 
        in whole or in part on a prior setting of LIBOR), to replace 
        LIBOR or any interest rate or dividend rate based on LIBOR, 
        whether on a temporary, permanent, or indefinite basis, under 
        or in respect of a LIBOR Contract.
          (4) ``Benchmark Replacement Conforming Changes'' shall mean 
        any technical, administrative, or operational changes, 
        alterations, or modifications that--
                  (A) the Board establishes for the purpose of 
                facilitating the implementation, administration, and 
                calculation of the Board-Selected Benchmark 
                Replacement; or
                  (B) in the reasonable judgment of a Calculating 
                Person, are otherwise necessary or appropriate to 
                permit the implementation, administration, and 
                calculation of the Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement 
                under or in respect of a LIBOR Contract after giving 
                due consideration to any Benchmark Replacement 
                Conforming Changes under subparagraph (A).
          (5) ``Board'' means the Board of Governors of the Federal 
        Reserve System.
          (6)(A) ``Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement'' shall mean a 
        Benchmark Replacement identified by the Board that is based on 
        SOFR.
          (B) The Board shall adjust the Board-Selected Benchmark 
        Replacement for each category of LIBOR Contract that the Board 
        may identify to--
                  (i) apply to each LIBOR tenor; and
                  (ii) incorporate the relevant Tenor Spread 
                Adjustment.(C) For Consumer Loans, the Board-Selected 
                Benchmark Replacement shall initially reflect the 
                spread between the Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement 
                and LIBOR immediately before the LIBOR Replacement Date 
                and shall incorporate the relevant Tenor Spread 
                Adjustment over a one-year transition period.
          (7) ``Calculating Person'' shall mean, with respect to any 
        LIBOR Contract, any person (which may be the Determining 
        Person) responsible for calculating or determining any 
        valuation, payment, or other measurement based on a Benchmark.
          (8) ``Consumer Loan'' shall mean a consumer credit 
        transaction. For purposes of this paragraph, the terms 
        ``consumer'' and ``credit'' have the meaning given those terms, 
        respectively, under section 103 of the Truth in Lending Act (15 
        U.S.C. 1602).
          (9) ``Determining Person'' shall mean, with respect to any 
        LIBOR Contract, any person with the authority, right, or 
        obligation, including on a temporary basis, (as identified by 
        the provisions of the LIBOR Contract, or as identified by the 
        governing law of the LIBOR Contract, as appropriate) to 
        determine a Benchmark Replacement.
          (10) ``Fallback Provisions'' shall mean terms in a LIBOR 
        Contract for determining a Benchmark Replacement, including any 
        terms relating to the date on which the Benchmark Replacement 
        becomes effective.
          (11) ``LIBOR'' shall mean the overnight and 1-, 3-, 6-, and 
        12-month tenors of U.S. dollar LIBOR (formerly known as the 
        London interbank offered rate) as administered by ICE Benchmark 
        Administration Limited (or any predecessor or successor 
        thereof). LIBOR shall not include the 1-week or 2-month tenors 
        of U.S. dollar LIBOR.
          (12) ``LIBOR Contract'' shall mean, without limitation, any 
        contract, agreement, indenture, organizational documents, 
        guarantee, mortgage, deed of trust, lease, Security (whether 
        representing debt or equity, and including any interest in a 
        corporation, a partnership, or a limited liability company), 
        instrument, or other obligation or asset that, by its terms, 
        continues in any way to use LIBOR as a Benchmark as of the 
        applicable LIBOR Replacement Date.
          (13) ``LIBOR Replacement Date'' shall mean the first London 
        banking day after June 30, 2023, unless the Board determines 
        that any LIBOR tenor will cease to be published or cease to be 
        representative on a different date.
          (14) ``Security'' shall have the meaning assigned to such 
        term in section 2(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 
        77b(a)).
          (15) ``SOFR'' shall mean the Secured Overnight Financing Rate 
        published by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (or a 
        successor administrator).
          (16) ``Tenor Spread Adjustment'' shall mean--
                  (A) 0.00644 percent for overnight LIBOR;
                  (B) 0.11448 percent for 1-month LIBOR;
                  (C) 0.26161 percent for 3-month LIBOR;
                  (D) 0.42826 percent for 6-month LIBOR; and
                  (E) 0.71513 percent for 12-month LIBOR.

SEC. 4. LIBOR CONTRACTS.

  (a) On the LIBOR Replacement Date, the Board-Selected Benchmark 
Replacement shall, by operation of law, be the Benchmark Replacement 
for any LIBOR Contract that, after giving any effect to subsection 
(b)--
          (1) contains no Fallback Provisions; or
          (2) contains Fallback Provisions that identify neither--
                  (A) a specific Benchmark Replacement; nor
                  (B) a Determining Person.
  (b) On the LIBOR Replacement Date, any references in the Fallback 
Provisions of a LIBOR Contract to--
          (1) a Benchmark Replacement that is based in any way on any 
        LIBOR value, except to account for the difference between LIBOR 
        and the Benchmark Replacement, or
          (2) a requirement that a person (other than a Benchmark 
        Administrator) conduct a poll, survey, or inquiries for quotes 
        or information concerning interbank lending or deposit rates,
shall be disregarded as if not included in the Fallback Provisions of 
such LIBOR Contract and shall be deemed null and void and without any 
force or effect.
  (c) Subject to subsection (g)(2), a Determining Person shall have 
authority under this Act, but shall not be required, to select the 
Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement as the Benchmark Replacement.
  (d) Any selection by a Determining Person of the Board-Selected 
Benchmark Replacement pursuant to subsection (c) shall be--
          (1) irrevocable;
          (2) made by the earlier of the LIBOR Replacement Date and the 
        latest date for selecting a Benchmark Replacement according to 
        the terms of such LIBOR Contract; and
          (3) used in any determinations of the Benchmark under or in 
        respect of such LIBOR Contract occurring on and after the LIBOR 
        Replacement Date.
  (e) If a Determining Person has authority to select the Board-
Selected Benchmark Replacement under subsection (c) but does not select 
a Benchmark Replacement by the date specified in subsection (d)(2), 
then, on the LIBOR Replacement Date, the Board-Selected Benchmark 
Replacement shall, by operation of law, be the Benchmark Replacement 
for the LIBOR Contract.
  (f) If the Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement becomes the Benchmark 
Replacement for a LIBOR Contract pursuant to subsection (a), (c), or 
(e) then all Benchmark Replacement Conforming Changes shall become an 
integral part of such LIBOR Contract by operation of law. For the 
avoidance of doubt, a Calculating Person shall not be required to 
obtain consent from any other person prior to the adoption of Benchmark 
Replacement Conforming Changes.
  (g) The provisions of this Act shall not alter or impair--
          (1) any written agreement specifying that a LIBOR Contract 
        shall not be subject to this Act;
          (2) any LIBOR Contract that contains Fallback Provisions that 
        identify a Benchmark Replacement that is not based in any way 
        on any LIBOR value (including, but not limited to, the prime 
        rate or the Effective Federal Funds Rate), except that such 
        LIBOR Contract shall be subject to subsection (b);
          (3) any LIBOR Contract subject to subsection (c) as to which 
        a Determining Person does not elect to use a Board-Selected 
        Benchmark Replacement pursuant to subsection (c), except to the 
        extent that such LIBOR Contract is subject to subsection (b) or 
        (e);
          (4) the application to a Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement 
        of any cap, floor, modifier, or spread adjustment to which 
        LIBOR had been subject pursuant to the terms of a LIBOR 
        Contract; or
          (5) any provisions of Federal consumer financial law that 
        requires creditors to notify borrowers regarding a change-in-
        terms.
  (h) Except as provided in section 5(c), the provisions of this Act 
shall not alter or impair the rights or obligations of any person, or 
the authorities of any agency, under Federal consumer financial law (as 
defined in section 1002(14) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and 
Consumer Protection Act (12 U.S.C. 5481(14)).

SEC. 5. CONTINUITY OF CONTRACT AND SAFE HARBOR.

  (a) A Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement and the selection or use 
of a Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement as a Benchmark Replacement 
under or in respect of a LIBOR Contract, as well as any Benchmark 
Replacement Conforming Changes, by operation of section 4 shall 
constitute--
          (1) a commercially reasonable replacement for and a 
        commercially substantial equivalent to LIBOR;
          (2) a reasonable, comparable, or analogous rate, index, or 
        term for LIBOR;
          (3) a replacement that is based on a methodology or 
        information that is similar or comparable to LIBOR;
          (4) substantial performance by any person of any right or 
        obligation relating to or based on LIBOR; and
          (5) a replacement that has historical fluctuations that are 
        substantially similar to those of LIBOR for purposes of the 
        Truth in Lending Act and its implementing regulations.
  (b) Neither of (1) the selection or use of a Board-Selected Benchmark 
Replacement as a Benchmark Replacement or (2) the determination, 
implementation, or performance of Benchmark Replacement Conforming 
Changes, in each case by operation of section 4, shall (A) be deemed to 
impair or affect the right of any person to receive a payment, or to 
affect the amount or timing of such payment, under any LIBOR Contract 
or (B) have the effect of (i) discharging or excusing performance under 
any LIBOR Contract for any reason, claim, or defense (including, but 
not limited to, any force majeure or other provision in any LIBOR 
Contract), (ii) giving any person the right to unilaterally terminate 
or suspend performance under any LIBOR Contract, (iii) constituting a 
breach of any LIBOR Contract, or (iv) voiding or nullifying any LIBOR 
Contract.
  (c) No person shall be subject to any claim or cause of action in law 
or equity or request for equitable relief, or have liability for 
damages, arising solely out of the selection or use of a Board-Selected 
Benchmark Replacement or the determination, implementation, or 
performance of Benchmark Replacement Conforming Changes, in each case 
by operation of section 4; provided, however, that any person 
(including a Calculating Person) shall remain subject to any existing 
legal, regulatory, or contractual obligations to correct servicing or 
other ministerial errors under or in respect of a LIBOR Contract.
  (d) The selection or use of a Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement or 
the determination, implementation, or performance of Benchmark 
Replacement Conforming Changes, in each case by operation of section 4, 
shall not be deemed to--
          (1) be an amendment or modification of any LIBOR Contract; or
          (2) prejudice, impair, or affect any person's rights, 
        interests, or obligations under or in respect of any LIBOR 
        Contract.
  (e) Except as provided in either subsections (a), (b), or (c) of 
section 4, the provisions of this Act shall not be interpreted as 
creating any negative inference or negative presumption regarding the 
validity or enforceability of--
          (1) any Benchmark Replacement (including any method for 
        calculating, determining, or implementing an adjustment to the 
        Benchmark Replacement to account for any historical differences 
        between LIBOR and the Benchmark Replacement) that is not a 
        Board-Selected Benchmark Replacement; or
          (2) any changes, alterations, or modifications to or in 
        respect of a LIBOR Contract that are not Benchmark Replacement 
        Conforming Changes.

SEC. 6. PREEMPTION.

  (a) This Act and the regulations hereunder shall supersede any and 
all laws, statutes, rules, regulations, or standards of any State, the 
District of Columbia, or any territory or possession of the United 
States, insofar as they provide for the selection or use of a Benchmark 
Replacement or related conforming changes.
  (b) No provision of State or local law that expressly limits the 
manner of calculating interest, including the compounding of interest, 
shall apply to the selection or use of a Board-Selected Benchmark 
Replacement or Benchmark Replacement Conforming Changes.

SEC. 7. TRUST INDENTURE ACT OF 1939.

  Section 316 of the Trust Indenture Act of 1939 (15 U.S.C. 77ppp) is 
amended--
          (1) by striking ``and'' after ``of subsection (a),'' in 
        subsection (b); and
          (2) by inserting ``, and except that the right of any holder 
        of any indenture security to receive payment of the principal 
        of and interest on such indenture security shall not be deemed 
        to be impaired or affected by any change occurring by the 
        application of section 4 of the Adjustable Interest Rate 
        (LIBOR) Act of 2021 to any indenture security'' after ``subject 
        to such lien'' in subsection (b).

SEC. 8. RULEMAKING.

  Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the 
Board shall issue such regulations as may be necessary or appropriate 
to enable it to administer and carry out the purposes of this Act.

SEC. 9. INTERBANK OFFERED RATE TRANSITION RULE OF CONSTRUCTION.

  None of--
          (1) the selection or use of a Board-Selected Benchmark 
        Replacement as a Benchmark Replacement,
          (2) the determination, implementation, or performance of 
        Benchmark Replacement Conforming Changes; or
          (3) the application to any LIBOR Contract of, or the 
        agreement by parties thereto to terms consistent with, section 
        4,
shall be treated as a transfer, disposition, or conversion of property.

                          Purpose and Summary

    On July 22, 2021, Representative Brad Sherman introduced 
H.R. 4616, the Adjustable Interest Rate (LIBOR) Act of 2021, 
which would establish a process for certain financial contracts 
that reference the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) and do 
not contain sufficient language that would allow them to 
continue to function as originally intended after LIBOR is 
discontinued, to instead reference Secured Overnight Financing 
Rate (SOFR), or an appropriately adjusted form of SOFR without 
the need to be amended or subject to litigation. The bill 
directs the Federal Reserve Board to issue regulations 
regarding the appropriate SOFR or adjusted SOFR replacement 
reference interest rate that should be used for specific 
categories of LIBOR-based contracts that fall within the scope 
of the legislation.

                  Background and Need for Legislation

    The London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) is a daily 
reported reference rate at which large banks indicate that they 
can borrow short-term, wholesale funds from one another on an 
unsecured basis.\1\ In order to calculate LIBOR, a ``self-
selected, self-policing committee of the world's largest 
banks'' self-report their daily estimated borrowing costs to 
the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), the U.K. financial 
regulator.\2\ As of the 4th quarter of 2020, it is estimated 
that there are $223 trillion in outstanding exposures to U.S. 
Dollar (USD) LIBOR.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\Federal Reserve Bank of New York, LIBOR: Origins, Economics, 
Crisis, Scandal, and Reform, (Mar. 2014).
    \2\The Guardian, LIBOR Scandal: The Bankers Who Fixed the World's 
Most Important Number, (Jan. 2017).
    \3\Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Alternative Reference Rates 
Committee, Progress Report: The Transition from U.S. Dollar LIBOR, 
(Mar. 31, 2021).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    LIBOR's self-reporting structure created opportunities for 
individuals or institutions to manipulate or falsify data. In 
the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, upon discovering a 
widespread culture of LIBOR manipulation built around industry 
relationships,\4\ U.S. and U.K. regulators settled with various 
banking institutions, including some of the world's largest 
banks such as Barclays, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, and UBS, 
over allegations that these institutions manipulated LIBOR\5\ 
by pressuring their colleagues to report artificially low or 
high interest rates in order to manufacture trading 
opportunities.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \4\The New York Times, Deutsche Bank to Pay $2.5 Billion Fine to 
Settle Rate-Rigging Case, (Apr. 23, 2015).
    \5\The New York Times, Tracking the LIBOR Scandal, (Mar. 23, 2016).
    \6\Council on Foreign Relations, Understanding the LIBOR Scandal, 
(Oct. 12, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Though its decision was not explicitly linked to the 
numerous LIBOR rigging scandals, the FCA announced in 2017 that 
it would no longer compel banks to report LIBOR after December 
31, 2021, and would discontinue its publication.\7\ However, in 
response to the global COVID-19 pandemic, the ICE Benchmark 
Administration (IBA) announced that it would not cease 
publication of the overnight and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months USD 
LIBOR settings until June 30, 2023.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \7\Lexology, The end of LIBOR--what does that mean for 
international banks, (Dec. 12, 2019).
    \8\Bloomberg, LIBOR enters `final chapter' as global regulators set 
end dates, (Mar. 11, 2021).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    There are currently an estimated $16 trillion in 
outstanding loans, securities, and other financial instruments 
which reference USD LIBOR and, without intervention, will not 
be able to function as originally intended after LIBOR is 
discontinued.\9\ These instruments are referred to as ``tough 
legacy'' LIBOR. It is widely understood that, without federal 
action, the discontinuation of LIBOR will result in widespread 
litigation stemming from the absence of fallback language or 
other contractual provisions. On October 20, 2021, the Board of 
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve), 
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), Federal Deposit 
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), National Credit Union 
Administration (NCUA) and the Office of the Comptroller of the 
Currency (OCC), in conjunction with state bank and credit union 
regulators, issued a joint statement underscoring the 
importance of continued progress in transitioning away from 
LIBOR. The statement warned that ``failure to adequately 
prepare for LIBOR's discontinuance could undermine financial 
stability and institutions' safety and soundness and create 
litigation, operational, and consumer protection risks.''\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \9\Testimony of Michael R. Bright, CEO, Structured Finance 
Association, U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban 
Affairs, (Nov. 2, 2021).
    \10\Federal Reserve, CFPB, FDIC, NCUA, OCC, and State Bank and 
Credit Union Regulators, Joint Statement on Managing the LIBOR 
Transition, (Oct. 20, 2021).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In annual reports going back to 2012, the Financial 
Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) has repeatedly identified 
the manipulation and inherent weaknesses of LIBOR as 
undermining market integrity, and has increasingly warned about 
the market's transition away from LIBOR as a source of systemic 
risk.\11\ In 2019, FSOC identified the ``cessation of 
degradation of LIBOR'' as having the potential to 
``significantly disrupt'' financial markets.\12\ FSOC also 
expressed concerns that if market participants fail to 
``adequately adapt'' to an alternative reference rate, there 
may be a risk to the liquidity and the stability of the 
markets.\13\ These are concerns FSOC reaffirmed in its 2020 
annual report.\14\ The SEC has similarly warned that LIBOR's 
discontinuation may pose significant risks to the markets.\15\ 
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Chair of the Federal 
Reserve Jay Powell have endorsed federal legislation as the 
best solution to address the LIBOR transition for ``tough 
legacy'' contracts when they appeared before Congress.\16\ 
Federal Reserve Chair Powell has also said previously that the 
secession of LIBOR, without legislation that clearly provides 
an alternative benchmark interest rate, presents a ``big 
financial stability risk.''\17\ Former Treasury Secretary 
Steven Mnuchin also suggested that legislation may be necessary 
to address contracts that reference LIBOR and lack appropriate 
fallback language.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \11\FSOC, Annual Reports (accessed Dec. 7, 2021).
    \12\FSOC, 2019 Annual Report (Dec. 4, 2019).
    \13\Id.
    \14\FSOC, 2020 Annual Report (Dec. 3, 2020).
    \15\SEC, Staff Statement on LIBOR Transition, (Jul. 12, 2019).
    \16\American Banker, Calls intensify for Congress to intervene on 
LIBOR, (Mar. 26, 2021).
    \17\Risk.net, Fed's Powell: LIBOR Death is `Big Stability Risk', 
(Nov. 8, 2017).
    \18\American Banker, Congress may need to step in on LIBOR switch, 
Mnuchin Warns, (Dec. 5, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Following enactment of federal legislation, additional 
time-consuming steps are still required to ensure the payments 
can be billed and made on time following the cessation of 
LIBOR. First, certain components of the law require rulemaking 
which, even on the expedited basis provided for in the 
legislation, will take six months. Moreover, following the 
completion of the rulemaking, paying agents, lenders, servicers 
and other service providers need significant time to 
operationalize the law and rulemaking, accurately calculate 
payments and communicate to borrowers and investors that ensure 
successful migration across the countless number of parties 
involved. These essential operational steps are estimated to 
take 9 to 12 months, given the extensive number of contracts 
and parties involved. Lastly, financial markets will look to 
have all this settled sufficiently ahead of LIBOR's termination 
to avoid market disruptions in trading, liquidity, and 
valuations.
    In the absence of legislative direction, many trustees and 
other third parties responsible for calculating, billing, and 
making LIBOR-based payments have already notified the borrowers 
and investors of those contracts that they will need to seek 
court direction on how those payments should be calculated 
without LIBOR. These judicial proceedings can take 12-18 
months; and those proceedings must be completed prior to the 
June 2023 cessation to ensure the correct payments can be 
billed and made on time. The magnitude of potential litigation 
costs will place a considerable and unnecessary strain on our 
nation's courts and businesses already significantly impacted 
by the global pandemic; and the uncertain court outcomes can 
undermine financial stability, and risk reducing liquidity and 
value of financial contracts including fixed income bonds held 
by pension plans and savings accounts.

Scope

    This bill is designed to affect only those instruments, 
which, according to their terms, would require a calculation 
based on LIBOR after it is no longer published. Accordingly, it 
does not affect those financial instruments that will expire 
before the relevant tenor of LIBOR ceases to be published. Nor 
is this bill intended to apply to those instruments and 
contracts that clearly specify the rights of the parties and 
the calculations to be made in the event that the relevant 
LIBOR rate is no longer published, as where an instrument 
specifies a backup rate. This bill is designed to supersede all 
state, local, tribal, and territorial law.

Taxation

    Nothing in this bill is designed to affect the revenue laws 
of the United States. Earlier versions of this bill included 
provisions stating that the application of the bill and the 
adjustment of a benchmark interest rate pursuant to this bill 
did not constitute a ``sale or exchange,'' nor did it 
constitute ``a transfer, disposition, or conversion of 
property.'' It was determined that such provisions were 
unnecessary since it under existing tax law the application of 
this bill would not constitute a sale or exchange or 
disposition of any asset. Furthermore, the inclusion of any 
provision simply restating existing tax law would unnecessarily 
delay this bill.

Act does not prescribe what interest rates should be used in the future

    The sole purpose of this legislation is to provide a 
benchmark interest rate for those instruments which currently 
use U.S. Dollar LIBOR for those periods of time after LIBOR is 
no longer reported. Nothing in this bill is designed to 
encourage the future use of any particular benchmark interest 
rate, such as SOFR, or to preference SOFR or any other 
benchmark interest rate. Accordingly, no federal agency engaged 
in the regulation of depository or financial institutions 
shall, as a result of this Act, mandate, encourage, require or 
give preference to the use of SOFR or any other benchmark 
interest rate for use in any contract or instrument created 
after the enactment of the bill.

                      Section-by-Section Analysis


Section 1. Short title

    This section establishes the short title of the bill as the 
``Adjustable Interest Rate (LIBOR) Act of 2021''

Section 2. Findings & purpose

    This section details the reach of LIBOR, the significant 
number of existing contracts that do not provide for a 
replacement benchmark when LIBOR is discontinued, the potential 
of pending litigation for these contracts, and the need to 
establish a process to replace LIBOR, to limit disruption, 
preclude litigation, and to permit existing contracts to use an 
alternative replacement benchmark.

Section 3. Definitions

    This section provides various definitions.

Section 4. LIBOR contracts

    This section establishes that on the LIBOR replacement 
date, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
(BOG-FRS) selected Benchmark Replacement will replace LIBOR for 
contracts that do not provide a clearly defined replacement 
rate, that any insufficient Fallback Provision in a LIBOR 
Contract will be null and void, a Determining Person may select 
the BOG-FRS Replacement Benchmark, that this selection is 
irrevocable, but if a selection is not made, the Benchmark 
Replacement shall replace LIBOR. If the Benchmark Replacement 
does replace LIBOR, the Benchmark Replacement will become part 
of the LIBOR contract. Nonetheless, this section does not alter 
or impair a LIBOR Contract that specifies a clearly defined and 
available replacement rate.

Section 5. Continuity of contract and safe harbor

    This section clarifies that a BOG-FRS Benchmark Replacement 
for LIBOR is a commercially reasonable replacement, reasonable 
and comparable to LIBOR, and is substantial performance for a 
person benefitting or burdened by a LIBOR Contract. The 
replacement of LIBOR does not impair or affect a person's right 
to receive payment, discharge performance, unilaterally 
terminate, constitute a breach of contract, or void the LIBOR 
contract, and the use of BOG-FRA Benchmark Replacement will not 
amend or modify the LIBOR Contract. And, nothing in this 
section creates a negative inference for a non-BOG-FRS selected 
Benchmark Replacement.

Section 6. Preemption

    This section permits the bill to preempt all federal and 
state laws, rules, and regulations for the selection of a 
benchmark replacement or how interest is calculated.

Section 7. Trust Indenture Act of 1939

    This section amends section 316 of the Trust Indenture Act 
of 1939 by ensuring that the right of any bond holder of an 
indenture security to receive payment of principal or interest 
will not be impaired by LIBOR replacement.

Section 8. Rulemaking

    This section requires the BOG-FRS to issue regulations to 
administer and carry out this Act.

Section 9. Interbank offered rate transition rule of construction

    This section affirms that the selection or use of a BOG-FRS 
Benchmark Replacement and the implementation of conforming 
changes does not constitute a transfer, disposition, or 
conversion of property.

                                Hearings

    For the purposes of section 3(c)(6) of House Rule XIII, the 
Committee on Financial Services' Subcommittee on Investor 
Protection, Entrepreneurship, and Capital Markets on April 15, 
2021 held a hearing to consider H.R. 4616 entitled, ``The End 
of LIBOR: Transitioning to an Alternative Interest Rate 
Calculation for Mortgages, Student Loans, Business Borrowing 
and other Financial Products.''

                        Committee Consideration

    The Committee on Financial Services met in open session on 
July 29, 2021, and ordered H.R. 4616 to be reported favorably 
to the House with an amendment in the nature of a substitute by 
a voice vote.

                  Committee Votes and Roll Call Votes

    In compliance with clause 3(b) of rule XIII of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, the Committee advises that no 
recorded votes occurred during consideration of H.R. 4616 and 
that the committee ordered H.R. 4616 to be reported favorably 
by a voice vote. In addition, an amendment in the nature of a 
substitute, offered by Mr. Sherman was agreed to by a voice 
vote. An amendment to the amendment in the nature of a 
substitute, offered by Mr. Sherman, was agreed to by a voice 
vote.

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

  Statement of Oversight Findings and Recommendations of the Committee

    In compliance with clause 3(c)(1) of rule XIII and clause 
2(b)(1) of rule X of the Rules of the House of Representatives, 
the Committee's oversight findings and recommendations are 
reflected in the descriptive portions of this report.

             Statement of Performance Goals and Objectives

    Pursuant to clause (3)(c) of rule XIII of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives, the goals of H.R. 4616 would be to 
establish a process for certain financial contracts that 
reference LIBOR and do not contain sufficient language that 
would allow them to continue to function as originally intended 
after LIBOR is discontinued on December 31, 2021 while the 
Overnight and 1-, 3-, 6- and 12-Month USD LIBOR publication 
will cease on June 30, 2023, to instead reference SOFR or an 
appropriately adjusted form of SOFR without the need to be 
amended or subject to litigation. The bill directs the Federal 
Reserve Board to issue regulations regarding the appropriate 
SOFR or adjusted SOFR replacement reference interest rate that 
should be used for specific categories of LIBOR-based contracts 
that fall within the scope of the legislation.

               New Budget Authority and CBO Cost Estimate

    Pursuant to clause 3(c)(2) of rule XIII of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives and section 308(a) of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, and pursuant to clause 
3(c)(3) of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives and section 402 of the Congressional Budget Act 
of 1974, the Committee has requested but not yet received an 
estimate from the Director of the Congressional Budget Office.

                        Committee Cost Estimate

    Clause 3(d)(1) of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives requires an estimate and a comparison of the 
costs that would be incurred in carrying out H.R. 4616. After 
careful review, including consultation with the Congressional 
Budget Office, the Committee estimates that H.R. 4616 would not 
have a significant impact on spending.

                       Unfunded Mandate Statement

    Pursuant to Section 423 of the Congressional Budget and 
Impoundment Control Act (as amended by Section 101(a)(2) of the 
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, Pub. L. 104-4), the Committee 
does not believe H.R. 4616 contains any unfunded mandates and 
adopts as its own any future estimate of federal mandates 
regarding H.R. 4616 as amended, as prepared by the Director of 
the Congressional Budget Office.

                           Advisory Committee

    No advisory committees within the meaning of section 5(b) 
of the Federal Advisory Committee Act were created by this 
legislation.

              Application of Law to the Legislative Branch

    Pursuant to section 102(b)(3) of the Congressional 
Accountability Act, Pub. L. No. 104-1, H.R. 4616, as amended, 
does not apply to terms and conditions of employment or to 
access to public services or accommodations within the 
legislative branch.

                           Earmark Statement

    In accordance with clause 9 of rule XXI of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives, H.R. 4616 does not contain any 
congressional earmarks, limited tax benefits, or limited tariff 
benefits as described in clauses 9(e), 9(f), and 9(g) of rule 
XXI.

                    Duplication of Federal Programs

    Pursuant to clause 3(c)(5) of rule XIII of the Rules of the 
House of Representatives, the Committee states that no 
provision of H.R. 4616 establishes or reauthorizes a program of 
the Federal Government known to be duplicative of another 
federal program, a program that was included in any report from 
the Government Accountability Office to Congress pursuant to 
section 21 of Public Law 111-139, or a program related to a 
program identified in the most recent Catalog of Federal 
Domestic Assistance.

                        Changes to Existing Law

    In compliance with clause 3(e) of rule XIII of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, changes in existing law made by 
the bill, H.R. 4616, as reported, are shown as follows:

         Changes in Existing Law Made by the Bill, as Reported

  In compliance with clause 3(e) of rule XIII of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, changes in existing law made by 
the bill, as reported, are shown as follows (existing law 
proposed to be omitted is enclosed in black brackets, new 
matter is printed in italics, and existing law in which no 
change is proposed is shown in roman):

                      TRUST INDENTURE ACT OF 1939



           *       *       *       *       *       *       *
TITLE III--SHORT TITLE

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


  directions and waivers by bondholders; prohibition of impairment of 
                       holder's right to payment

  Sec. 316. (a) The indenture to be qualified--
          (1) shall automatically be deemed (unless it is 
        expressly provided therein that any such provision is 
        excluded) to contain provisions authorizing the holders 
        of not less than a majority in principal amount of the 
        indenture securities or if expressly specified in such 
        indenture, of any series of securities at the time 
        outstanding (A) to direct the time, method, and place 
        of conducting any proceeding for any remedy available 
        to such trustee, or exercising any trust or power 
        conferred upon such trustee, under such indenture, or 
        (B) on behalf of the holders of all such indenture 
        securities, to consent to the waiver of any past 
        default and its consequences; or
          (2) may contain provisions authorizing the holders of 
        not less than 75 per centum in principal amount of the 
        indenture securities or if expressly specified in such 
        indenture, of any series of securities at the time 
        outstanding to consent on behalf of the holders of all 
        such indenture securities to the postponement of any 
        interest payment for a period not exceeding three years 
        from its due date.
For the purposes of this subsection and paragraph (3) of 
subsection (d) of section 315, in determining whether the 
holders of the required principal amount of indenture 
securities have concurred in any such direction or consent, 
indenture securities owned by any obligor upon the indenture 
securities, or by any person directly or indirectly controlling 
or controlled by or under direct or indirect common control 
with any such obligor, shall be disregarded, except that for 
the purposes of determining whether the indenture trustee shall 
be protected in relying on any such direction or consent, only 
indenture securities which such trustee knows are so owned 
shall be so disregarded.
  (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of the indenture to 
be qualified, the right of any holder of any indenture security 
to receive payment of the principal of and interest on such 
indenture security, on or after the respective due dates 
expressed in such indenture security, or to institute suit for 
the enforcement of any such payment on or after such respective 
dates, shall not be impaired or affected without the consent of 
such holder, except as to a postponement of an interest payment 
consented to as provided in paragraph (2) of subsection (a), 
[and] except that such indenture may contain provisions 
limiting or denying the right of any such holder to institute 
any such suit, if and to the extent that the institution or 
prosecution thereof or the entry of judgment therein would, 
under applicable law, result in the surrender, impairment, 
waiver, or loss of the lien of such indenture upon any property 
subject to such lien, and except that the right of any holder 
of any indenture security to receive payment of the principal 
of and interest on such indenture security shall not be deemed 
to be impaired or affected by any change occurring by the 
application of section 4 of the Adjustable Interest Rate 
(LIBOR) Act of 2021 to any indenture security.
  (c) The obligor upon any indenture qualified under this title 
may set a record date for purposes of determining the identity 
of indenture security holders entitled to vote or consent to 
any action by vote or consent authorized or permitted by 
subsection (a) of this section. Unless the indenture provides 
otherwise, such record date shall be the later of 30 days prior 
to the first solicitation of such consent or the date of the 
most recent list of holders furnished to the trustee pursuant 
to section 312 of this title prior to such solicitation.

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