Monday, 27 October 2014

Special Banking terms for IBPS SBI BANK EXAMS

Some Basic Banking Terms

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2) Demand Deposit – A Demand deposit is the one which can be withdrawn at any time, without any notice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3) Time Deposit – Time deposit is a money deposit at a banking institution that cannot be withdrawn for a certain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 When the term is over it can be withdrawn or it can be held for another term.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. 

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. 

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) Cheque Clearing - This is the process of getting the money from the cheque- writer's account into the cheque receiver's account. 

12) Clearing Bank - This is a bank that can clear funds between banks. For general purposes, this is any institution which we know of as a bank or as a provider of banking services. 

13) 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. 

14) Credit Rating - This is the rating which an individual (or company) gets from the credit industry. This is tained by the individual's credit history, the details of which are available from specialist organisations like CRISIL in
India. 

15) Credit-Worthine ss - This is the judgement of an organization which is assessing whether or not to take a
particular individual on as a customer. An individual might be considered credit-worthy by one organisation but not by another. Much depends on whether an organization is involved with high risk customers or not. 

16) 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). 

17) 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). 

18) 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. 

19) Payer - The person who  makes a payment. This often applies to cheques. If you write a cheque you are he payer and the recipient of the cheque is the payee. 

20) Security for Loans - Where large loans are required the lending institution often needs to have a guarantee
that the loan will be paid back. This takes the form of a large item of capital outlay (typically a house) which is owned or partly owned and the amount owned is at least equivalent to the loan required. 

21) Internet Banking - Online banking (or Internet banking) allows customers to conduct financial transactions on a secure website operated by the bank. 

22) 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. 

23) 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. 

24) Loan - A loan is a type of debt. In a loan, the borrower initially receives or borrows an amount of money, alled 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. 

25) 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. 

26) 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. 

27) 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. 

28) ATM - An automated teller machine (ATM) is a computerised telecommunicati ons device that provides the
clients with access to financial transactions in a public space without the need for a cashier, human clerk or bank teller. On most modern ATMs, the customer is identified by inserting a plastic ATM card with a magnetic stripe or a plastic smart card with a chip, that contains a unique card number and some security information such as an expiration date or CVV. Authentication is provided by the customer entering a personal identification number (PIN) 

29) REPO RATE: - Under repo  transaction the borrower places with the lender certain acceptable securities against funds received and agree to reverse this transaction on a predetermined future date at agreed interest cost. Repo rate is also called (repurchase agreement or repurchase option. 

30) 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". 

31) 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. 

32) 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". 

33) 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. 

34) 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. 

35) PRIME LENDING RATE: It is the rate at which commercial banks give loan to its prime customers. 

36) IFSC: IFSC stands for Indian Financial System Code. It is an alpha-numeric code that uniquely identifies a bank- branch participating in the NEFT system.
 ii. This is an 11 digit code with the first 4 alpha characters representing the bank, The 5th character is 0 (zero) and the last 6 characters representing the bank branch. 
iii. IFSC is used by the NEFT system to identify the originating / destination banks / branches and also to
route the messages appropriately to the concerned banks / branches. For ex: SBIN0015986 :
(a) First 4 character SBIN – refers to State Bank of India. 
(b) 0 is a control number.
(c) Last six characters (015986) represents the SBI branch name. 

37) MICR : MICR stands for Magnetic Ink Character Recognition. MICR Code is a 9 numeric digit code which
uniquely identifies a bank branch participating in the ECS Credit scheme. MICR code consists of 9 digits e.g
400229128 
i. First 3 digits represent the city (400)
ii. Next 3 digits represent the bank (229)
iii. Last 3 digits represent the branch (128) The MICR Code allotted to a bank branch is printed on the MICR band of cheque leaves issued by bank branches. 

38) Cheque Truncation:\i. Truncation is the process of stopping the flow of the physical cheque issued by a
drawer at some point with the presenting bank en-route to the drawee bank branch.
ii. In its place an electronic image of the cheque is transmitted to the drawee branch by the clearing house,
along with relevant information like data on the MICR band, date of presentation, presenting bank, etc.
iii. Cheque Truncation speeds up the process of collection of cheques resulting in better service to customers, reduces the scope for clearing-relate d frauds or loss of instruments in transit, lowers the cost of collection of
cheques, and removes reconciliation- related and logistics-related problems, thus benefiting the system as
a whole. 

Sunday, 26 October 2014

5 Year Plan - Sunday Special SSC UPSC Useful

FIVE YEAR PLANS OF INDIA 
                 The Indian economy has been premised on the concept of planning. This has been carried through the Five-Year Plans, developed, executed, and monitored by the Planning Commission. With the Prime Minister as the ex-official Chairman, the commission has a nominated Deputy Chairman, who holds the rank of a Cabinet Minister.
                 
                 Montek Singh Ahluwalia is the last Deputy Chairman of the Commission (resigned on 26 May 2014). The Eleventh Plan completed its term in March 2012 and the Twelfth Plan is currently underway. Prior to the Fourth Plan, the allocation of state resources was based on schematic patterns rather than a transparent and objective mechanism, which led to the adoption of the Gadgil formula in 1969. Five-Year Plans (FYPs)
are centralized and integrated national economic programs. 
                
                Joseph Stalin implemented the first FYP in the Soviet Union in the late 1920s First Plan (1951-1956) The first Indian Prime Minister, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru presented the First Five-Year Plan to the Parliament of India and  needed urgent attention. The First Five- year Plan was launched in 1951 which mainly focused in development of the agricultural sector.
                
                The First Five-Year Plan was based on the Harrod–Domar model. At the end of the plan period in 1956, five Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) were started as major technical institutions. The University
Grant Commission (UGC) was set up to take care of funding and take measures to strengthen the higher education in the country. 
                
                 Second Plan (1956-1961) , particularly in the development of the public sector. The plan followed the Mahalanobis model, an economic development model developed by the Indian statistician Prasanta
Chandra Mahalanobis in 1953. The plan attempted to determine the optimal allocation of investment between productive sectors in order to maximise long-run economic growth. It used the prevalent state of art techniques of operations research and optimization as well as the novel applications of statistical models developed at the Indian Statistical Institute. 
                
                  Third Plan (1961– 1966) The Third Five-year Plan stressed agriculture and improvement in the production of wheat, but the brief Sino-Indian War of 1962 exposed weaknesses in the economy and shifted the focus towards the defence industry and the Indian Army. In 1965–1966, India fought a War with
Pakistan. There was also a severe drought in 1965. The war led to inflation and the priority was shifted to price stabilisation. The construction of dams continued. Many cement and fertilizer plants were also built. Punjab began producing an abundance ofwheat. Many primary schools were started in rural areas. 
                 
                 Fourth Plan (1969– 1974) At this time Indira Gandhi was the Prime Minister. The Indira Gandhi government nationalised 14 major Indian banks and the Green Revolution in India advanced agriculture. In addition, the situation in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) was becoming dire as the Indo-Pakistan War of 1971 and Bangladesh Liberation War took funds earmarked for industrial development. 
                
                 Fifth Plan (1974– 1979) The Fifth Five-Year Plan laid stress on employment, poverty alleviation (Garibi Hatao), and justice. The plan also focused on self-reliance in agricultural production and defence. In 1978 the newly elected Morarji Desai government rejected the plan. The Electricity Supply Act was amended in 1975, which enabled the central government to enter into power generation and transmission. The Indian
national highway system was introduced and many roads were widened to accommodate the increasing traffic.                  
                Sixth Plan (1980– 1985) The Sixth Five-Year Plan marked the beginning of economic liberalisation. Price controls were eliminated and ration shops were closed. This led to an increase in food prices and an increase in the cost of living. This was the end of Nehruvian socialism. Family planning was also expanded in order to prevent overpopulation. 
               
               Seventh Plan (1985–1990) The Seventh Five-Year Plan marked the comeback of the Congress Party to power. The plan laid stress on improving the productivity level of industries by upgrading of technology. The main objectives of the Seventh Five-Year Plan were to establish growth in areas of increasing economic productivity, production of food grains, and generating employment
               
               Eighth Plan (1992– 1997) Modernization of industries was a major highlight of the Eighth Plan. Under this plan, the gradual opening of the Indian economy was undertaken to correct the burgeoning deficitand foreign debt. Meanwhile India became a member of the World Trade Organization on 1 January 1995. The major objectives included, controlling population growth, poverty reduction, employment generation, strengthening the
infrastructure, institutional building, tourism management, human resource development, involvement of Panchayati rajs, Nagar Palikas, NGOs, decentralisation and people’ s participation. 
               
                Ninth Plan (1997-2002) The Ninth Five-Year Plan came after 50 years of Indian  Independence. Atal Bihari Vajpayee was the Prime Minister of India during the Ninth Five-Year Plan. The Ninth Five-Year Plan tried
primarily to use the latent and unexplored economic potential of the country to promote economic and social growth. The Ninth Five-Year Plan focused on the relationship between the rapid economic growth and the quality of life for the people of the country. The prime focus of this plan was to increase growth in the country with an emphasis on social justice and equity. 
               
               Tenth Plan (2002–2007) The main objectives of the Tenth Five-Year Plan were: Attain 8% GDP growth per year, Reduction of poverty rate by 5% by 2007, Providing gainful and high- quality employment at least to the addition to the labour force, Reduction in gender gaps in literacy and wage rates by at least 50% by 2007, 20-point program was introduced, Target growth: 8.1% – growth achieved: 7.7%, Expenditure of ₨ 43,825
crores for tenth five years 
               
               Eleventh Plan (2007-2012) The main objectives of the Eleventh Five- Year Plan were: Rapid and inclusive growth.(Poverty reduction), Emphasis on social sector and delivery of service therein, Empowerment through education and skill development, Reduction of gender inequality, Environmental sustainability, To increase the growth rate in agriculture,industry and services to 4%,10% and 9% respectively, Reduce Total Fertility Rate to 2.1, Provide clean drinking water for all by 2009. 
              
               Twelfth Plan (2012–2017) The Twelfth Five-Year Plan of the Government of India has decided for the growth rate at 8.2% but the National Development Council (NDC) on 27 Dec 2012 approved 8% growth rate for 12th five-year plan. The Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission Mr Montek Singh Ahluwalia has said that achieving an average growth rate of 9 percent in the next five years is not possible. The Final growth target has been set at 8% by the endorsement of plan at the National Development Council meeting held in New Delhi.



Friday, 24 October 2014

Trick of the day Currency

Tricks to Remember Currencies

#### RUPEE ####
Mind Tricks : PICS of MN
***PICS***
P-Pakisthan
I-India 
C-Ceylon
S-Srilanka
**MN**
M-Maritius
N-Nepal

#### POUND #### : S-E-S-U
Mind Trick : Sheshu(a name) plays in the Pond..
**S-E-S-U**
S-South Sudan
E-Egypt 
S-Syria
U-Uk

#### PESO #### : M-A-C C-P-U
MindTrick : just like MAC intosh…Cpu
**MAC**
M-Mexico
A-Argentina 
C-Chile
**CPU**
C-Columbia
P-Philipines
U-Urugya

#### KRONE ####:
Mind Trick : denMARK on his norWAY to receive Crown 
1) Denmark
2)Norway

 #### WON ####:
MindTrick : Korea’s Won in the
Battle
1)South Korea
2)North Korea

#### SHILLING ####:
MindTrick : Shilling sounds like
‘Shillong’ Both KEN and SOM like Shillong
1)Kenya
2)Somalia

#### EURO #### : BIG -FAN-PI–SMS
Mind Trick : BIG FAN of PI and wished through SMS
**BIG** 
B-Belgium
I-Ireland
G-Germany
**FAN**
F-France
A-Austria 
N-Netherland
**PI**
P-Portugal
I-Italy
**SMS**
S-Spain 
M-Malta
S-Solvania

#### DINAR #### : K-S in J-A-I-L **K-S**
K-Kuwait
S-Sudan 
**J-A-I-L***
J-Jorden
A-Algeria
I-Iraq
L-Libya

#### DOLLAR ### : Li-Ne-US -Ca-Fi-T-E-A
Mind trick: Li ne(a name) who lives in US likes Coffee(Ca- Fi) and Tea(T-E-A) **Li-Ne**
Li-Liberia
Ne-New Zealand
**US**
United States
**Ca-Fi** 
Ca-Canadian
Fi- Fizzi
**T-E-A**
T-Taiwan
E-Ethiopia
A-Australia

Thursday, 23 October 2014

TRICK OF THE DAY

 To learn HQ of some banks 

1. HQ of dena bank and all  banks, ending with India, except united bank of india is Mumbai 

2. HQ of Banks, with name starting with 'Indian' is at chennai 

3. Imagine u forgot our nation's capital, you will say 'oops delhi' Yes.. Oriental bank of commerce, PNB and panjab & sindh bank have HQ at New Dellhi 

5. United bank of india, uco bank and allahabad bank have HQ at kolkata. 

6. Banks of maharastra, bank of baroda and andhra bank have HQ at main cities in respected states/city, ie bank of maharastra at pune, bank of Baroda in Vadodara, and andhra bank at Hyderabad. 

7. Bank of south Indian names- canara and vijaya at Bangalore.

Monday, 20 October 2014

Book and Author

1- "The Narrow Road to the Deep North"----- Richard Flanagan (Man Booker Prize---- 50000 pounds--- belongs from-- Austrralia)

2-"Final Test: Exist Sachin Tendulkar "-------- Dilip D'souza

3-"Untold Story Of Indian Public Sector"---- UD Choubey

4-"A Stamp is Born" ---- C R Prakash

5-"A Man and A Motorcycle, How Hamid Karzai Came In to Power"-- Bette Dam