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IMPORTANT BANKING TERMS › wp-content › uploads › 2018 › 08 › ...MASALA BONDS Ø WHAT - The Masala bonds refer to rupee-denominated bonds through which Indian entities can

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www.anujjindal.in IMPORTANT BANKING TERMS

1. DEMAND DRAFT

Ø WHAT - The Demand Draft is a pre-paid Negotiable Instrument, wherein the Drawee

bank (the bank making the payment on behalf of drawer) undertakes to make payment

in full when the instrument is presented by the Payee (one who receives the payment)

for payment.

Ø WHY – DD is a pre-paid instrument. Therefore, the credit risk associated with the

payment is negligible.

Ø TELL ME MORE – RBI has made mandatory (w.e.f September 15, 2018) for the issuing

banks to incorporate the name of the purchaser on the face of a demand draft, pay

order and banker’s cheque.

o According to current rules framed by the central bank, any remittance of funds

by way of Demand Draft, NEFT/IMPS or any other mode and issue of travellers’

cheques for value of Rs 50,000 and above shall be effected by debit to the

customer’s account or against cheques, not against cash payment.

2. CHEQUES

Ø WHAT - A Cheque is a dated and signed document that orders Drawee bank to pay a

specific amount of money from a Drawer's account to the person in whose name the

www.anujjindal.in IMPORTANT BANKING TERMS

cheque (Payee) has been issued. The cheque is a type bill of exchange as per Negotiable

Instruments Act 1881.

(Picture similar to the above of DD. There are major three parties involved, bank being

the intermediary between drawer and payee)

Ø WHY – It is more convenient and a faster way to make monetary transactions. However,

there is a risk of default since it is not a pre-paid instrument.

Ø TELL ME MORE – There are various parties involved in the cheque-

o Drawer- The person/account holder who writes the cheque.

o Payee- Person on whose name cheque is written.

o Drawee- In cheque, drawer order their bank to draw money from his account.

The bank which holds drawer account is known as drawee.

o Validity- 3 months from the date of issue of cheque. (From April 1, 2012, RBI

reduced validity for Cheques, Drafts, Pay orders to 3 months from 6 months)

Ø Different types of cheques –

o BEARER CHEQUE – Bearer cheques are payable to the presenter or the bearer of

the cheque.

¨ He is authorized to collect the money.

¨ Endorsable

¨ No identification is required, thus risky.

¨ Example – A – Drawer, B – Payee

www.anujjindal.in IMPORTANT BANKING TERMS

¨ B can endorse the cheque to C and C can collect the amount from bank.

o BLANK CHEQUE – In this type of cheque, the drawer puts the sign on the cheque

and leave the other columns blank.

o ORDER CHEQUE – In this type of cheque, only the person whose name is

mentioned on the cheque is authorized to receive the payment.

¨ Secure and not endorsable

¨ Identification is required.

¨ If the word ‘or Bearer’ is replaced with the “or Order” in the bearer

cheque, then it becomes Order cheque.

o ANTE-DATED CHEQUE - If Cheque is issued by drawer prior to the date of signing

a cheque, this type of cheque is known as the Ante-Dated cheque. Suppose

today is 15/2/2018, but the cheque has been dated 1/2/2018.

o POST-DATED CHEQUE - If the cheque issued by the drawer to the payee for the

upcoming withdrawn date, this type of cheque is known as the Post-Dated

cheque. Suppose today is 15/2/2018 and the cheque has been dated 15/3/2018.

o COUNTER CHEQUE – These are the non-personalized cheques given to the

customers. These cheques carry only the name of the bank. They are sometimes

referred as the synonym of Blank cheques.

o STALE CHEQUE – Cheque which is presented at the bank after three months of

its issued date is known as Stale cheque.

www.anujjindal.in IMPORTANT BANKING TERMS

o CROSSED CHEQUE - A crossed cheque is one which has two short parallel lines

marked across its face.

¨ In this type of cheque, the payee cannot withdraw money in cash but

money can transfer to the payee account.

o OPEN OR UNCROSSED CHEQUE - A cheque that is not a crossed cheque. The

person whose name appears on the cheque can write the name of another

person on it, and the money will be paid to them.

o SELF CHEQUE – When the person/drawer writes the cheque in its own name,

usually to take the money in physical form, is known as self cheque.

o GIFT CHEQUE – It is the decorated cheque given by the bank, when customer

demands for it, for small amount of charge.

o MUTILATED CHEQUE – If the cheque is torn into two or more pieces, then it is

known as Mutilated cheque. The bank will not make payment against such

cheques without getting confirmation from the drawer.

o TRAVELLER CHEQUE - These type of cheques are used for withdrawal of money

while travelling. These cheques can be encashed abroad where foreign currency

is normally acceptable.

o AT PAR CHEQUE – It is acceptable at all its branches across the country.

www.anujjindal.in IMPORTANT BANKING TERMS

o BANKER’ S CHEQUE - The banker’s cheque is an instrument issued by the bank

on behalf of customer containing an order to pay a certain sum to a specified

person within the city.

3. DEMAT ACCOUNT

Ø WHAT - A Demat Account is an account that allows investors to hold their shares in an

electronic form without any physical papers held.

Ø WHY – To promote paperless transactions as it is difficult to hold shares in physical

forms.

Ø TELL ME MORE – Broadly, there are two types of Demat Account-

o Basic Services Demat Account (BSDA) - This account is designed for small

investors whose holding value of investment certificates or securities does not

exceed a couple of lakhs. Thus, the annual maintenance charge for this account is

lower.

o Regular Demat Account – This is a normal demat account which even a small

investor can open. Compared to BSDA the charges for this account are more, but

are worth it for the services and convenience it offers.

o For getting a demat account open, one needs to go to one of the Depository

Participants or DPs. DPs could be banks, brokers or financial institution that

have been allowed to provide this service. The Dps act as intermediary between

central depository and the investor.

o BENEFITS - eliminates the threat of theft, forgery, fake certificates, non-delivery,

etc., ease in buying and selling of securities, safe and convenient.

4. ELECTRONIC CLEARING SERVICE

Ø WHAT – ECS is an electronic mode of payment / receipt for transactions that are

repetitive and periodic in nature. ECS facilitates bulk transfer of monies from one bank

account to many bank accounts or vice versa.

Ø TELL ME MORE – Primarily, there are two variants of ECS - ECS Credit and ECS Debit.

o ECS Credit (Bulk Payment) is used by an institution for affording credit to a large

number of beneficiaries (for instance, employees, investors etc.) having accounts

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with bank branches at various locations within the jurisdiction of a ECS Centre by

raising a single debit to the bank account of the user institution.

o ECS Debit (Bulk Collection) is used by an institution for raising debits to a large

number of accounts (for instance, consumers of utility services, borrowers,

investors in mutual funds etc.) maintained with bank branches at various

locations within the jurisdiction of a ECS Centre for single credit to the bank

account of the user institution.

o There is no value limit on the amount of individual transactions done through

ECS Debit or ECS Credit.

5. LETTER OF CREDIT

Ø WHAT - A letter of credit is a letter from a bank guaranteeing that a buyer's payment to

a seller will be received on time and for the correct amount. In the event that the buyer

is unable to make payment on the purchase, the bank will be required to cover the full

or remaining amount of the purchase.

Ø WHY – Letter of Credit gives assurance to the seller that the payment will be made even

if there is default on buyer’s part mainly in International trade.

Ø TELL ME MORE – The Letter of Credit is issued once the credit worthiness of the Buyer is

checked.

o The Letter of Credit contains the name of the buyer, address, purchase details,

expiry date, transactional details, etc.

o They are less risky as banks conduct their own credit appraisal.

6. LETTER OF UNDERTAKING

Ø WHAT - It is a form of guarantee issued by a banking entity to a person concerned for

availing short term credit from the overseas branch of an Indian bank. These

transactions are not retail in nature and are mostly used by businesses for import of

goods

Ø WHY – The overseas bank lending to the borrower based on the LoU earns interest on

the amount, the bank issuing the LoU gets a fee and the borrower gets a credit facility at

a place where he/she may not have banking relationships.

www.anujjindal.in IMPORTANT BANKING TERMS

Ø TELL ME MORE – The borrower uses her existing credit relationship with a bank in India

to avail the required credit outside the country. Banks ask for collateral or a guarantee,

which could be in the form of fixed deposits or other assets. If the bank is convinced, it

will issue an LoU, which when given to an overseas branch of another Indian bank would

result in release of the amount in foreign currency. This amount does not come in to the

buyer’s account directly; it goes to a specific bank account of your banker back home. It

is called Nostro account. You can then decide in whose favour the payment needs to be

done.

7. LETTER OF COMFORT

Ø WHAT - It is a written document that provides a level of assurance that an obligation will

ultimately be met.

Ø WHY – They are often issued as solvency opinions that the company will remain solvent

giving assurance to the seller.

Ø TELL ME MORE – They are very risky as they do not contain information like purchase

details, expiry date, name of buyer. A letter of comfort does not imply that the parent

company guarantees repayment of the loan being sought by the subsidiary company. It

merely gives reassurance to the lending institution that the parent company is aware of

the credit facility being sought by the subsidiary company and supports its decision.

8. MASALA BONDS

Ø WHAT - The Masala bonds refer to rupee-denominated bonds through which Indian

entities can raise money from foreign markets in rupee, and not in foreign currency.

Ø WHY – They are debt instruments used by corporates to raise money from investors.

Ø TELL ME MORE – The issuance of rupee denominated bonds, protects Indian entity

against risk of currency fluctuation, typically associated with borrowing in foreign

currency.

o The first Masala bond was issued by the International Finance Corporation (IFC),

the investment arm of the World Bank dubbed as Uridashi Masala Bonds in

November 2014.

www.anujjindal.in IMPORTANT BANKING TERMS

o The Housing Development Finance Corporation (HDFC) was the first Indian

company to issue rupee-denominated bonds “masala bonds” on London Stock

Exchange (LSE) in July 2016.

o International Financial Corporation was first time issued green masala bonds in

August 2015 to raise private sector investments that address climate change in

India.

o IFC named them Masala bonds to give a local flavour by calling to mind Indian

culture and cuisine.

o Chinese bonds being named Dim-sum bonds after a popular dish in Hong Kong,

o Japanese bonds named Samurai after the country’s warrior class.

9. NATIONAL ELECTRONIC FUND TRANSFER (NEFT)

Ø WHAT - National Electronic Funds Transfer (NEFT) is a nation-wide payment system

facilitating one-to-one funds transfer. Under this Scheme, individuals, firms and

corporates can electronically transfer funds from any bank branch to any individual, firm

or corporate having an account with any other bank branch in the country participating

in the Scheme.

Ø WHY – No need of physical instruments for payment, no need of visiting the branch,

cost effective and near real time transfers.

Ø TELL ME MORE – There is no limit – either minimum or maximum – on the amount of

funds that could be transferred using NEFT.

o However, maximum amount per transaction is limited to ₹ 50,000/- for cash-

based remittances within India and also for remittances to Nepal under the

Indo-Nepal Remittance Facility Scheme.

o There are twenty-three half-hourly settlement batches run from 8 am to 7 pm

on all working days of week (Except 2nd and 4th Saturday of the month).

o NEFT is not available on the bank holidays, RBI holiday and Sunday.

10. REAL TIME GROSS SETTLEMENT (RTGS)

Ø WHAT - Under RTGS, the funds transfer takes place on a real time basis, or in other

words, at the time the request is received. It is one of the fastest interbank money

transfer facility available through banking channels in India.

www.anujjindal.in IMPORTANT BANKING TERMS

Ø WHY – No need of physical instruments for payment, no need of visiting the branch,

cost effective and real time transfers. The settlement is immediate, final and irrevocable.

Ø TELL ME MORE – ‘Real Time' means the processing of instructions at the time they are

received rather than at some later time and 'Gross Settlement' means the settlement of

funds transfer instructions occurs individually (on an instruction by instruction basis).

o The RTGS system is primarily meant for large value transactions. The minimum

amount to be remitted through RTGS is ` 2 lakh. There is no upper ceiling for

RTGS transactions.

o The RTGS service window for customer's transactions is available to banks from

9.00 hours to 16.30 hours on week days and from 9.00 hours to 14:00 hours on

Saturdays for settlement at the RBI end. But it varies from bank to bank.

11. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN RTGS AND NEFT

Ø NEFT is an electronic fund transfer system that operates on a Deferred Net Settlement

(DNS) basis which settles transactions in batches. In DNS, the settlement takes place

with all transactions received till the particular cut-off time. These transactions are

netted (payable and receivables) in NEFT whereas in RTGS the transactions are settled

individually.

Ø Timings - The RTGS service window for customer's transactions is available to banks

from 9.00 hours to 16.30 hours on week days and from 9.00 hours to 14:00 hours on

Saturdays for settlement at the RBI end and in case of NEFT, currently there are twelve

settlements from 8 am to 7 pm.

Ø Minimum Amount - RTGS facility is meant for large value transactions. For retail

customers, the minimum amount remitted through RTGS is Rs. 2 lakh. There is no

minimum amount for funds remitted via NEFT.

Ø Charges - NEFT charges don't exceed Rs. 25 (excluding service tax) per transaction while

for RTGS it does not exceed Rs. 55 (excluding service tax).

12. INTER-BANK MOBILE PAYMENT SERVICE (IMPS)

Ø WHAT - IMPS allows banks to facilitate real-time transfer and receipt of funds for

account holders through their mobile phones. The funds can be transferred in same

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bank or different specified banks. The transfer can be done using mobile phones or the

Internet banking facility at any time, including Sundays and bank holidays.

Ø WHY – It offers an instant, 24X7, interbank electronic fund transfer service through

mobile phones. IMPS facilitate customers to use mobile instruments as a channel for

accessing their bank accounts and put high interbank fund transfers in a secured manner

with immediate confirmation features.

Ø TELL ME MORE – This service is offered by National Payments Corporation of India

(NPCI).

o The Mobile Money Identification Number (MMID) is required of the

beneficiary.

o Mobile Money Identification Number (MMID) is a seven digit number of which

the first four digits are the unique identification number of the bank offering

IMPS.