Hello readers, here we are posting some notes on
General Knowledge (Banking), which will be helpful in the upcoming RBI and
SBI exams.
RBI:
The Reserve Bank of India was established on April 1, 1935 in accordance
with the provisions of the RBI Act, 1934. RBI was nationalized in 1949 and it
is fully owned by the Government of India. RBI was established on the
recommendation of the Hilton Young Commission.
RBI’s FUNCTIONS:
- Issue
of currency notes
- Controlling
the monetary policy
- Regulator
and supervisor of the financial system
- Banker
to other banks
- Banker
to the government
- Granting
licenses to banks
- Control
over NBFIs (Non Banking Financial Institutions)
- Manager
of Foreign Exchange of India (also known as FOREX)
RBI & Monetary
Policy:
Monetary policy refers to the use of instruments under the control of
the central bank to regulate the availability, cost and use of money and
credit.
The main objectives of monetary policy in India are:
- Maintaining
price stability.
- Ensuring
adequate flow of credit to the productive sectors of the economy to
support economic growth.
- Financial
stability.
There are several direct and indirect instruments that are used in the
formulation and implementation of monetary policy.
Direct instruments:
- Cash
Reserve Ratio (CRR): The
share of net demand and time liabilities that banks must maintain as cash
balance with the Reserve Bank.
- Statutory
Liquidity Ratio (SLR): The
share of net demand and time liabilities that banks must maintain in safe
and liquid assets, such as government securities, cash and gold.
- Refinance
facilities: Sector-specific
refinance facilities (e.g., against lending to export sector) provided to
banks.
Indirect
instruments:
- Liquidity
Adjustment Facility (LAF): Consists
of daily infusion or absorption of liquidity on a repurchase basis,
through repo (liquidity injection) and reverse repo (liquidity absorption)
auction operations, using government securities as collateral.
- Open
Market Operations (OMO): Outright
sales/purchases of government securities, in addition to LAF, as a tool to
determine the level of liquidity over the medium term.
- Market
Stabilisation Scheme (MSS): This
instrument for monetary management was introduced in 2004. Liquidity of a
more enduring nature arising from large capital flows is absorbed through
sale of short-dated government securities and treasury bills. The
mobilised cash is held in a separate government account with the Reserve
Bank.
- Repo/reverse
repo rate: These
rates under the Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) determine the corridor
for short-term money market interest rates. In turn, this is expected to
trigger movement in other segments of the financial market and the real
economy.
- Bank
rate: It
is the rate at which the Reserve Bank is ready to buy or rediscount bills
of exchange or other commercial papers. It also signals the medium-term
stance of monetary policy.
Some Key financial
terms:
- APR: It stands for
Annual Percentage Rate. APR is a percentage that is calculated on the
basis of the amount financed, the finance charges, and the term of the
loan.
- ABS: Asset-Backed
Securities. It means a type of security that is backed by a pool of bank
loans, leases, and other assets.
- EPS: Earnings Per
Share means the amount of annual earnings available to common stockholders
as stated on a per share basis.
- CHAPS: Clearing
House Automated Payment System. It’s a type of electronic bank-to-bank
payment system that guarantees same-day payment.
- IPO: Initial
Public Offerings is defined as the event where the company sells its
shares to the public for the first time. (or the first sale of stock by a
private company to the public.)
- FPO: Follow on
Public Offerings: An issuing of shares to investors by a public company
that is already listed on an exchange. An FPO is essentially a stock issue
of supplementary shares made by a company that is already publicly listed
and has gone through the IPO process.(Difference: IPO is for the
companies which have not been listed on an exchange and FPO is for the
companies which have already been listed on an exchange but want to raise
funds by issuing some more equity shares.)
- RTGS: Real Time
Gross Settlement systems is a funds transfer system where transfer of
money or securities takes place from one bank to another on a “real time”.
(‘Real time’ means within a fraction of seconds.) The minimum amount to be
transferred through RTGS is Rs 2 lakh. Processing charges/Service charges
for RTGS transactions vary from bank to bank.
- NEFT: National Electronic
Fund Transfer. This is a method used for transferring funds across banks
in a secure manner. It usually takes 1-2 working days for the transfer to
happen. NEFT is an electronic fund transfer system that operates on a
Deferred Net Settlement (DNS) basis which settles transactions in batches.
(Note: RTGS is much faster than NEFT.)
- CAR: Capital Adequacy
Ratio. It’s a measure of a bank’s capital. Also known as “Capital to Risk
Weighted Assets Ratio (CRAR)”, this ratio is
used to protect depositors and promote the stability and efficiency of
financial systems around the world. It is decided by the RBI.
- NPA: Non-Performing
Asset. It means once the borrower has failed to make interest or principal
payments for 90 days, the loan is considered to be a non-performing asset.
Presently it is 2.39%.
- IMPS: Immediate Payment
Service. It is an instant interbank electronic fund transfer service
through mobile phones. Both the customers must have MMID (Mobile Money
Identifier Number). For this service, we don’t need any GPS-enabled cell
phones.
- BCBS: Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision is an institution created by the Central Bank
governors of the Group of Ten nations.
- IFSC
code: Indian
Financial System Code. The code consists of 11 characters for identifying
the bank and branch where the account in actually held. The IFSC code is
used both by the RTGS and NEFT transfer systems.
- MICR
Code: Magnetic
ink character recognition (MICR) is a character-recognition technology
used mainly by the banking industry to ease the processing and clearance
of cheques and other documents. It is at the bottom of cheques and
other vouchers and typically includes the document-type indicator, bank
code, bank account number, cheque number, cheque amount, and a control
indicator.
- MSME
and SME: Micro
Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME), and SME stands for Small and Medium
Enterprises. This is an initiative of the government to drive and
encourage small manufacturers to enjoy facilities from banks at
concessional rates.
- LIBOR: London InterBank
Offered Rate. An interest rate at which banks can borrow funds, in
marketable size, from other banks in the London interbank market.
- LIBID: London Interbank
Bid Rate. The average interest rate at which major London banks borrow
Eurocurrency deposits from other banks.
- ECGC: Export Credit
Guarantee Corporation of India. This organisation provides risk as well as
insurance cover to the Indian exporters.
- SWIFT: Society for
Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication. It operates a worldwide
financial messaging network which exchanges messages between banks and
other financial institutions.
- STRIPS: Separate Trading
for Registered Interest & Principal Securities.
- CIBIL: Credit Information
Bureau of India Limited. CIBIL is India’s first credit information bureau.
Whenever a person applies for new loans or credit card(s) to a financial
institution, they generate the CIBIL report of the said person or concern
to judge the credit worthiness of the person and also to verify their
existing track record. CIBIL actually maintains the borrower’s history.
- CRISIL: Credit Rating
Information Services of India Limited. Crisil is a global analytical
company providing ratings, research, and risk and policy advisory
services.
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