WASHINGTON—U.S. regulators on Monday pressed banks to stop using the London interbank offered rate on new transactions by the end of 2021 while backing a plan to allow many existing transactions to mature before Libor fully winds down in June 2023.

The moves amount to the strongest and clearest guidance yet from regulators about the risks to banks for writing new contracts based on Libor, an interest-rate benchmark that global policy makers moved to scrap after concluding it was balky and prone to manipulation.

Entering…

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Alec Baldwin faces a new $25 million defamation suit from the family of a Marine killed in Afghanistan

The family of a Marine killed in Afghanistan has revived a defamation…

Michigan Supreme Court rejects case to remove Trump from 2024 ballot

The Michigan Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected an effort to remove former…

Pope skips homily at start of busy Holy Week during Palm Sunday Mass in St. Peter’s Square

ROME — Pope Francis decided at the last minute to skip his homily during…

Two college baseball players killed in car crash hours after winning championship

LaGRANGE, Ga. — Two LaGrange College baseball players whose team had just…