1. RBI – The Reserve Bank of India is the apex bank of the country, which
was constituted under the RBI Act, 1934 to regulate the other banks, issue of
bank notes and maintenance of reserves with a view to securing the monetary
stability in India.
2. Demand Deposit – A Demand deposit is
the one which can be withdrawn at any time, without any notice or penalty; e.g.
money deposited in a checking account or savings account in a bank.
3. Time Deposit – Time deposit is a money deposit at a banking institution
that cannot be withdrawn for a certain "term" or period of time. When
the term is over it can be withdrawn or it can be held for another term.
4. Fixed Deposits – FDs are the deposits that are repayable on fixed maturity
date along with the principal and agreed interest rate for the period. Banks
pay higher interest rates on FDs than the savings bank account.
Note: Minimum period of FD is 7 days and
maximum period is 10 years.
5. Recurring Deposits – These are also called cumulative
deposits and in recurring deposit accounts, a certain amounts of savings are
required to be compulsorily deposited at specific intervals for a specified
period.
6. Savings Account – Savings account is an account generally
maintained by retail customers that deposit money (i.e. their savings) and can
withdraw them whenever they need. Funds in these accounts are subjected to low
rates of interest.
Current Saving
Rate – 4%
7. Current Accounts – These accounts are maintained by the
corporate clients that may be operated any number of times in a day. There is a
maintenance charge for the current accounts for which the holders enjoy
facilities of easy handling, overdraft facility etc.
8. FCNR Accounts – Foreign Currency Non-Resident accounts are the ones that
are maintained by the NRIs in foreign currencies like USD, DM, and GBP etc. The
account is a term deposit with interest rates linked to the international rates
of interest of the respective currencies.
9. NRE Accounts – Non-Resident External accounts are the ones in which NRIs
remit money in any permitted foreign currency and the remittance is converted
to Indian rupees for credit to NRE accounts. The accounts can be in the form of
current, saving, FDs, recurring deposits. The interest rates and other terms of
these accounts are as per the RBI directives.
10. Cheque Book -
A small, bound booklet of cheques. A cheque is a piece of paper produced by
your bank with your account number, sort-code and cheque number printed on it.
The account number distinguishes your account from other accounts; the
sort-code is your bank's special code which distinguishes it from any other
bank.
11. Bounced Cheque - when the bank has not enough funds in the relevant account or
the account holder requests that the cheque is bounced (under exceptional
circumstances) then the bank will return the cheque to the account holder.
12. Credit Rating - This is the rating which an individual (or company) gets from
the credit industry. This is obtained by the individual's credit history, the
details of which are available from specialist organisations like CRISIL in
India.
13. Interest - The amount paid
or charged on money over time. If you borrow money interest will be charged on
the loan. If you invest money, interest will be paid (where appropriate to the
investment).
14. Overdraft - This
is when a person has a minus figure in their account. It can be authorized
(agreed to in advance or retrospect) or unauthorized (where the bank has not
agreed to the overdraft either because the account holder represents too great
a risk to lend to in this way or because the account holder has not asked for
an overdraft facility).
15. Payee - The person who
receives a payment. This often applies to cheques. If you receive a cheque you
are the payee and the person or company who wrote the cheque is the payer.
16. Payer - The person who
makes a payment. This often applies to cheques. If you write a cheque you are
the payer and the recipient of the cheque is the payee.
17. Internet Banking - Online banking (or Internet banking) allows customers to
conduct financial transactions on a secure website operated by the bank.
18. Credit Card - A
credit card is one of the systems of payments named after the small plastic
card issued to users of the system. It is a card entitling its holder to buy
goods and services based on the holder's promise to pay for these goods and
services.
19. Debit Card – Debit
card allows for direct withdrawal of funds from customers bank accounts. The
spending limit is determined by the available balance in the account.
20. Loan - A
loan is a type of debt. In a loan, the borrower initially receives or borrows
an amount of money, called the principal, from the lender, and is obligated to
pay back or repay an equal amount of money to the lender at a later time. There
are different kinds of loan such as the house loan, auto loan etc.
21. Bank Rate - This is the rate at which central bank (RBI) lends money to other
banks or financial institutions. If the bank rate goes up, long-term interest
rates also tend to move up, and vice-versa.
22. CRR - Cash reserve Ratio
(CRR) is the amount of funds that the banks have to keep with RBI. If RBI
decides to increase the percent of this, the available amount with the banks
comes down. RBI is using this method (increase of CRR rate), to drain out the
excessive money from the banks.
23. SLR - SLR stands for
Statutory Liquidity Ratio. This term is used by bankers and indicates the
minimum percentage of deposits that the bank has to maintain in form of gold,
cash or other approved securities. Thus, we can say that it is ratio of cash
and some other approved to liabilities (deposits). It regulates the credit
growth in India.
24. REPO RATE: - Rate
at which commercial banks borrow money from RBI (Reserve Bank of India).Repo
rate is also called (repurchase agreement or repurchase option).
25. REVERSE REPO RATE: is the interest rate earned by the bank for lending money to
the RBI in exchange of govt. securities or "lender buys securities with
agreement to sell them back at a predetermined rate".
26. CASH RESERVE RATIO: specifies the percentage of their total deposits the commercial
bank must keep with central bank or RBI. Higher the CRR lower will be the
capacity of bank to create credit.
27. SLR: known as Statutorily Liquidity Ratio. Each bank is required
statutorily maintain a prescribed minimum proportion of its demand and time
liabilities in the form of designated liquid asset.
OR
"Every bank has to maintain a percentage of its demand and time
liabilities by way of cash, gold etc".
28. BANK RATE: is the rate of interest which is charged by RBI on its
advances to commercial banks. When reserve bank desires to restrict expansion
of credit it raises the bank rate there by making the credit costlier to
commercial bank.
29. OVERDRAFT: It
is the loan facility on customer current account at a bank permitting him to
overdraw up to a certain agreed limit for a agreed period ,interest is payable
only on the amount of loan taken up.
Current Rates -
1. Repo rate - 8%
2. Reverse Repo rate - 7%
3. CRR - 4%
4. SLR - 22%
5. Bank rate - 9%
6. MSF - 9%
OR
"Every bank has to maintain a percentage of its demand and time liabilities by way of cash, gold etc".
Current Rates -
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