While money market strategist have been discussing it for weeks, the jump in LIBOR has finally made it to the mainstream press. The Wall Street Journal writes "Libor's Rise Accelerates, Squeezing Short-Term Borrowers." They tell us, "Companies are paying the most in nearly a decade for some types of short-term borrowing, the latest threat to a long-running U.S. economic expansion and increasingly volatile markets. The three-month London interbank offered rate climbed to 2.29% in the U.S. on Monday, its highest since November 2008. Libor measures the cost for banks to lend to one another and is used to set interest rates on roughly $200 trillion in dollar-based financial contracts globally, from corporate loans to home mortgages. Libor has been rising for the last 2 1/2 years as the Federal Reserve lifts its key policy rate, but recently the pace has picked up. It has climbed nearly a full percentage point in the last six months -- outpacing the Fed -- and could rise further with the approaching end of the quarter, typically a time of elevated demand for short-term funds in the banking sector, analysts say." Bloomberg also writes, "The Rate the Banks Once Rigged Is Jumping -- and Causing Trouble." The article says, "They're calling it 'Libor's Revenge.' After years of drifting close to zero, the London interbank offered rate, a measure of what banks pay to borrow short-term from one another, has suddenly jumped. For three-month debt, it’s risen to 2.29 percent, the highest level since 2008."