“Mid-Con Letter of Credit” means that certain Irrevocable Standby Letter of Credit No. IS000034149U issued by Wells Fargo Bank, National Association to Mid-Con Energy Properties, LLC for the benefit of American Contractors Indemnity Company and/or U.S. Specialty Insurance Company, Tokyo Marine HCC Surety, in an aggregate face amount equal to $1,000,000.00.
“Relevant Governmental Body” means the Federal Reserve Board or the NYFRB, or a committee officially endorsed or convened by the Federal Reserve Board or the NYFRB, or any successor thereto.
“SOFR” means, with respect to any Business Day, a rate per annum equal to the secured overnight financing rate for such Business Day published by the SOFR Administrator on the SOFR Administrator’s Website on the immediately succeeding Business Day.
“Swingline Commitment” means, as to the Swingline Lender, $0.
“Term SOFR” means, for the applicable Corresponding Tenor as of the applicable Reference Time, the forward-looking term rate based on SOFR that has been selected or recommended by the Relevant Governmental Body.
“Unadjusted Benchmark Replacement” means the applicable Benchmark Replacement excluding the related Benchmark Replacement Adjustment.
(c) Each of the definitions of “Compounded SOFR”, “Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Website”, “Mid-Con Merger Reserve Report”, “SOFR-Based Rate” and “Third Amendment Reserve Reports” is hereby deleted in its entirety.
(d) The definition of “LIBO Screen Rate” is hereby amended by replacing each reference to “zero” contained therein with “0.25%”.
(e) The definition of “Overnight Bank Funding Rate” is hereby amended by replacing the reference to “Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Website” contained therein with “NYFRB’s Website”.
2.2 Amendment to Section 1.06. Section 1.06 is hereby amended and restated in its entirety to read as follows:
Section 1.06 Interest Rates; LIBOR Notification. The interest rate on Eurodollar Loans is determined by reference to the LIBO Rate, which is derived from the London interbank offered rate (“LIBOR”). LIBOR is intended to represent the rate at which contributing banks may obtain short-term borrowings from each other in the London interbank market. On March 5, 2021, the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) publicly announced that: (a) immediately after December 31, 2021, publication of all seven euro LIBOR settings, all seven Swiss Franc LIBOR settings, the spot next, 1-week, 2-month and 12-month Japanese Yen LIBOR settings, the overnight, 1-week, 2-month and 12-month British Pound Sterling LIBOR settings, and the 1-week and 2-month U.S. Dollar LIBOR settings will permanently cease; immediately after June 30, 2023, publication of the overnight
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