- Amendments to Rules on Transactions by Financial Companies with the Central Bank of Iceland


Rules on Transactions by Financial Companies with the Central Bank of Iceland
have been under review in recent weeks. The new rules are planned to enter into
force in coming weeks. The amendments are largely of a technical nature and do
not warrant detailed discussion. However, the review also involves changes that
need to be explained, in particular in two respects. 

The first is the decision to rename the Central Bank's lending facility for
financial companies to which the policy rate applies. This facility has been
known as repurchase agreements (repos). Strictly speaking, however, this
facility has not involved a repurchase agreement, but a loan against
collateral. Henceforth the facility will be referred to by its technically
correct name and the policy rate will continue to apply to the Central Bank's
main facility for financial companies, i.e. collateral loans. 

The second change relates to the numerical presentation of the policy interest
rate. Until now, the policy rate that the Central Bank has published in its
interest rate announcements has strictly speaking been the annual rate of
return and not the nominal interest rate. It has now been decided that all
Central Bank interest rates will in future be stated and announced as nominal
rates. When interest rates are calculated more than once a year, this means
that the nominal interest rate will be lower than the yield. Since December
2006, the yield on Central Bank loan facilities for financial companies has
been 14.25% p.a. The Central Bank's policy rate has generally been referred to
as 14.25%. Most central banks adopt a different approach and state their policy
rates in nominal terms. One consequence has been to produce misleading
comparisons between the policy rate of the Central Bank of Iceland and other
central banks. For example, the nominal rate corresponding to an annual return
of 14.25% on Central Bank loans against collateral is 13.31%. Thus in comparing
the Central Bank of Iceland's policy rate with that of other central banks, the
logical figure to use would currently be 13.31% and not 14.25%. 

When the new Rules on Transactions by Financial Companies with the Central Bank
of Iceland enter into force, it is planned to change the presentation of the
policy rate at the same time. This will not involve any change in the policy
rate itself.