June 5, 2020· 52 min

This Is What Happened To LIBOR During The COVID Crisis

Orality
Model
67%
Oral-dominant (speeches, podcasts, storytelling)

Speaker Breakdown

HostTracy Alloway(1,106 words)
M:28%
HostJoe Weisenthal(917 words)
M:28%
GuestJosh Younger(7,207 words)
M:27%

Oral Indicators

Agonistic27%
literally, completely, basically
Engagement60%
you, our, your
Memory Aids100%
listen, now, so
Repetition100%
libor (99x), know (79x), like (70x)
Parallelism100%
And I'm Joe Wasenthal...., So, Joe, I know I said our Lib..., But I will say some of the epi...
Sound Patterns54%
53 question(s), alliteration: "markets move", alliteration: "barclays brief"
Formulaic Phrases8%
at the end of the day, you know what, i mean

Literate Indicators

Hedging8%
maybe, might, could
Passive Voice8%
are tied, been requested, being fed
Abstract Nouns19%
investment, recommendation, volatility
Subordination8%
because, although, while
Sentence Length52%
Avg: 18.1 words/sentence
Word Complexity47%
investment, analyze, anticipate
Academic Markers0%
Impersonal Style40%
590 personal pronouns found
Descriptive Style100%
literally, completely, actually

Description

Welcome to Part V of the Odd Lots LIBOR series, in which Tracy Alloway and Joe Weisenthal take a look at life after LIBOR, the interest rate tied to more than $350 trillion worth of financial assets. For our final episode in our series on LIBOR, we look at what this particular crisis has meant for LIBOR and the transition process. We speak with Josh Younger, a managing director at JPMorgan, who looks at what LIBOR itself did during the worst of the market stress. He also identified specific ways that the market volatility may impede some of the target dates for moving off the benchmark index. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.