Tuesday, 15 January 2019

Current Affairs on 15.01.2019

Today's Headlines from www:

*Economic Times*

📝 Business optimism falls 7% in January-March: Dun & Bradstreet

📝 FinMin wants PSU banks to bring down government equity to 52%

📝 Large deals push private equity, venture capital investment up 35% to $35.1 billion in 2018

📝 Brick and mortar to see additional sales of Rs 10,000-12,000 crore in 2020 due to recent FDI norms - Crisil

📝 BHEL bags Rs 565 cr order for solar power plants in Telangana

📝 Hindustan Copper chalks out strategy to ramp up output to 20 MT by 2024

📝 REITs may help generate 14% return annually to investors : Anarock

📝 Bharti Airtel in talks on a potential takeover of Telkom Kenya: sources

*Business Standard*

📝 Listed realty developers saddled with unsold properties worth Rs 1 trillion

📝 Lenders to bail out debt-laden Jet Airways after forensic clean chit

📝 NSE to list well-governed firms in new category to help new investors

📝 Govt may fall short of Rs 2.45-trn non-tax revenue target despite RBI funds

📝 Fund managers build positions in robust NBFCs to cash in on IL&FS overhang

📝 UK PM Theresa May mounts last-ditch bid to win support for Brexit deal

*Financial Express*

📝 OYO aims at 1 million rooms to become world's "largest" hotel chain

📝 Giant leap for RJio: Share of rural subscribers base jumps to 32% from 4.25% in 2 years

📝 Corp bond issuances hit 8-month high in December

📝 Amazon invests in Qualcomm-backed Israeli semiconductor startup

📝 Revised FDI policy might flush online sales up to Rs 40,000 cr down the drain: CRISIL

📝 India likely to overshoot fertiliser aid bill by $4.2 billion, banks may chip in: Sources

📝 Transport sector contributed 3.4 million jobs in FY18

*Mint*

📝 IAG weighs SBI General Insurance stake sale

📝 Etihad poised to take effective control of Jet Airways

📝 Stage set for RBI rate cut as retail inflation falls to 2.19%

📝 Sachin Bansal invests $100 mn in Ola in boost for Bhavish Aggarwal

📝 CapitaLand to buy Ascendas business units in $8 billion deal

📝 Auto firms cut output as inventories swell

📝 India’s crude steel output falls 1.4% to 8.936 MT in December

📝 Amazon announces sale before new e-commerce rules come into force.

Thursday, 10 January 2019

FOREIGN EXCHANGE MANAGEMENT

FOREIGN EXCHANGE MANAGEMENT

Multiple Choice Questions.
1. Foreign exchange transactions involve monetary transactions
A. among residents of the same country
B. between residents of two countries only
C. between residents of two or more countries
D. among residents of at least three countries
ANSWER: B
2. Under FEMA, the RBI has been authorised to make ------ to carry out the provisions of the Act.
A. rules
B. regulations
C. both rules and regulations
D. notifications
ANSWER: B
3. A foreign currency account maintained by a bank abroad is its
A. nostro account
B. vostro account
C. loro account
D. foreign bank account
ANSWER: A

Srinivas kante

4. 'Non-resident Bank Accounts' refer to
A. nostro account
B. vostro account
C. accounts opened in offshore centres
D. none of the above
ANSWER: B
5. Non-resident bank accounts are maintained in
A. the permitted currencies
B. the currency of the country of the bank maintaining the account
C. the currencies in which FCNR accounts are permitted to be maintained
D. Indian Rupee
ANSWER: D

Gist of Important FEDAI Rules

Gist of Important FEDAI Rules
Rule 1: Hours of Business
1.1 The exchange trading hours for Inter-bank forex market in India would be from
9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. No customer transaction should be undertaken by the
Authorised Dealers after 4.30 p.m. on any working day. 1.2 Cut-off time limit of 05.00 p.m. is not applicable for cross- currency transactions.
In terms of paragraph 7.1 of Internal Control Guidelines over Foreign Exchange
Business of Reserve Bank of India (February 2011), Authorised Dealers are
permitted to undertake cross-currency transactions during extended hours, provided
the Managements lay down the extended dealing hours. 1.3 For the purpose of Foreign Exchange business, Saturday will not be treated as
a working day. 1.4 “Known holiday” is one which is known at least 4 working days before the date. A holiday that is not a “known holiday” is defined as a “suddenly declared holiday”. Rule 2: Export Transactions
2.1. Post-shipment Credit in Rupees
(c) Application of exchange rate: Foreign Currency bills will be
purchased/discounted/ negotiated at the Authorised Dealer’s current bill buying rate
or contracted rate. Interest for the normal transit period and/or usance period shall
be recovered upfront simultaneously. (d) Crystallization and Recovery:
(ii) Authorized Dealers should formulate own policy for crystallization of foreign
currency liability into rupee liability, in case of non-payment of bills on the due
date. (iii) The policy in this regard should be transparently available to the customers. (iv) For crystallization into Rupee liability, the Authorised Dealer shall apply its TT
selling rate of exchange. The amount recoverable, thereafter, shall be the
crystallized Rupee amount along with interest and charges, if any.

(v) Interest shall be recovered on the date of crystallization for the overdue period
at the appropriate rate; and thereafter till the date of recovery of the
crystallized amount. (vi) Export bills payable in countries with externalization issues shall also be
crystallized as per the policy of the authorised dealer, notwithstanding receipt
of advice of payment in local currency. (d) Realization of Bills after crystallization: After receipt of advice of realization,
the authorised dealer will apply TT buying rate or contracted rate (if any) to convert
foreign currency proceeds. (e) Dishonor of bills: In case of dishonor of a bill before crystallization, the bank
shall recover:
(ii) Rupee equivalent amount of the bill and foreign currency charges at TT selling rate. (iii) Appropriate interest and rupee denominated charges. 2.2. Application of Interest
(c) Rate of interest applicable to all export transactions shall be as per the
guidelines of Reserve Bank of India from time to time. (d) Overdue interest shall be recovered from the customer, if payment is not
received within normal transit period in case of demand bills and on/or before
notional due date/actual due date in case of usance bills, as per RBI directive. (e) Early Realization: In case of early realization, interest for the unexpired period
shall be refunded to the customer. The bank shall also pay or recover notional swap
cost as in the case of early delivery under a forward contract. 2.3. Normal Transit Period:
Concepts of normal transit period and notional due date are linked to concessional
interest rate on export bills. Normal transit period comprises the average period
normally reckoned from the date of negotiation/purchase/discount till the receipt of
bill proceeds.
It is not to be confused with the time taken for the arrival of the goods at the destination. Normal transit period for different categories of export business are laid down as below:
(c) Fixed Due Date: In the case of export usance bills, where due dates are fixed, or are reckoned from date of shipment or date of bill of exchange etc, the actual due
date is known. Therefore, in such cases, normal transit period is not applicable. (d) Bills in Foreign Currencies – 25 days
(e) Exports to Iraq under United Nations Guidelines – Max. 120 days
(g) Bills drawn in Rupees under Letters of Credit (L/C)
(i) Reimbursement provided at centre of negotiation - 3 days
(ii) Reimbursement provided in India at centre different from centre of
negotiation - 7 days
(iii) Reimbursement provided by banks outside India - 20 days
(iv) Exports to Russia under L/C where reimbursement is provided by RBI - 20 days. (h) Bills in Rupees not under Letter of Credit - 20 days
(i) TT reimbursement under Letters of Credit (L/C)
(i) Where L/C provides for reimbursement by electronic means - 5 days
(ii) Where L/C provides reimbursement claim after certain number of days
from the date of negotiation - 5 days + this additional period. 2.4. Substitution/Change in Tenor:
(o) In case of change in the usance of a bill, interest on post-shipment credit shall
be charged to the customer, as per RBI guidelines. In addition, the bank shall
charge or pay notional swap difference. Interest on outlay of funds for such
swaps shall also be recovered from the customer at rate not below base rate
of the bank concerned. (p) It is optional for banks to accept delivery of bills under a contract made for
purchase of a clean TT. In such cases, the bank shall recover/pay notional
swap difference for the relative cover. Interest at the rate not below base rate
of the bank would be charged on the outlay of funds. 2.5. Export Bills sent for collection:
(a) Application of exchange rates: The conversion of foreign currency proceeds of
export bills sent for collection or of goods sent on consignment basis shall be
done at prevailing TT buying rate or the forward contract rate, as the case
may be. The conversion to Rupee equivalent shall be made only after the
foreign currency amount is credited to the nostro account of the bank. (b) On receipt of credit advice/statement of nostro account and compliances of
guidelines, requirements of the Bank and FEMA, the Bank shall transfer funds
for the credit of exporter’s account within two working days. (c) If the above stipulated time limit is not observed, the Bank shall pay
compensation for the delayed period at the minimum interest rate charged on
export credit. Compensation for adverse movement of exchange rate, if any, shall also be paid as per the compensation policy of the bank.

Rule 3: Import Transactions
3.1 Application of exchange rate:
(a) Retirement of import bills - Exchange rate as per forward sale contract, if
forward contract is in place. Prevailing Bills selling rate, in case there is no
forward contract. (b) Crystallization of Import - same as above bill (vide para 3.3 below)
(c) For determination of stamp - As per exchange rate provided by the duty on
import bills authority concerned. 3.2. Application of Interest:
(a) Bills negotiated under import letters of credit shall carry commercial rate of
interest as applicable to banks’ domestic advances from time to time. (b) Interest remittable on interest bearing bills shall be subject to the directive of
Reserve Bank of India in this regard. 3.3. Crystallization of Import Bill under Letters of Credit. Unpaid foreign currency import bills drawn under letters of credit shall be
crystallized as per the stated policy of the bank in this respect. Rule 4 Clean Instruments:
4.1. Outward Remittance: Outward remittance shall be effected at TT selling rate of
the bank ruling on that date or at the forward contract rate. 4.2. Encashment of foreign currency notes and instruments, Foreign currency
travelers’ cheques, currency notes, foreign currency in prepaid card, debit/credit
card will be encashed at Authorised Dealer’s option at the appropriate buying rate
ruling on the date of encashment. 4. 3. Payment of foreign inward remittance, Foreign currency remittance up to an
equivalent of USD 10,000/- shall be immediately converted into Indian Rupees. Remittance in excess of equivalent of USD 10,000 shall be executed in foreign
currency. The beneficiary has the option of presenting the related instrument for
payment to the executing bank within the period prescribed under FEMA. 4.4. The applicable exchange rate for conversion of the foreign currency inward
remittance shall be TT buying rate or the contracted rate as the case may be. 4.5. Compensation for delayed payment: Authorised Dealers shall pay or send
intimation, as the case may be, to the beneficiary in two working days from the date
of receipt of credit advice / nostro statement. In case of delay, the bank shall pay
the beneficiary interest @ 2 % over its savings bank interest rate. The bank shall
also pay compensation for adverse movement of exchange rate, if any, as per its
compensation policy

Rule 5 Foreign Exchange Contracts:
5.1. Contract amounts: Exchange contracts shall be for definite amounts and
periods. When a bill contract mentions more than one rate for bills of different
deliveries, the contract must state the amount and delivery against each such rate. 5.2. Option period of delivery: Unless the date of delivery is fixed and indicated in
the contract, the option period may be specified at the discretion of the customer
subject to the condition that such option period of delivery shall not extend beyond
one month. If the fixed date of delivery or the last date of delivery option is a known
holiday, the last date for delivery shall be the preceding working day. In case of
suddenly declared holidays, the contract shall be deliverable on the next working
day. Contracts permitting option of delivery must state the first and last dates of
delivery. For Example: 18th January to 17th February, 31st January to 29th Feb. 2012. “Ready” or “Cash” merchant contract shall be deliverable on the same day. “Value next day” contract shall be deliverable on the working day immediately
succeeding the contract date. A spot contract shall be deliverable on second
succeeding working day following the contract date. A forward contract is a contract
deliverable at a future date, duration of the contract being computed from spot value
date at the time of transaction”. 5. 3. Place of delivery: All contracts shall be understood to read “to be delivered or
paid for at the Bank” and “at the named place”. 5.4. Date of delivery: Date of delivery under forward contracts shall be:
(i) In case of bills/documents negotiated, purchased or discounted - the date of
negotiation/purchase/ discount and payment of Rupees to the customer. However, in case the documents are submitted earlier than, or later than the
original delivery date, or for a different usance, the bank may treat it as proper
delivery, provided there is no change in the expected date of realization of
foreign currency calculated at the time of booking of the contract. No early
realization or late delivery charges shall be recovered in such cases. (ii) In case of export bills/documents sent for collection - Date of payment of
Rupees to the customer on realization of the bills. (iii) In case of retirement/crystallization of import bills/documents - the date of
retirement/ crystallization of liability, whichever is earlier?
5.5. Option of delivery: In all forward merchant contracts, the merchant, whether a
buyer or a seller will have the option of delivery. 5.6. Option of usance: The merchant purchase contract should state the tenor of
the bills/documents. Acceptance of delivery of bills/documents drawn for a different
tenor will be at the discretion of the bank

5.7. Merchant quotations: The exchange rate shall be quoted in direct terms i.e. so many Rupees and Paise for 1 unit or 100 units of foreign currency. 5.8. Rounding off: Rupee equivalent of the foreign currency Settlement of all
merchant transactions shall be effected on the principle of rounding off the Rupee
amounts to the nearest whole Rupee i.e. without paise. RULE 6 Early Delivery, Extension and Cancellation of Foreign Exchange
Contracts
6.1. General
(i) At the request of a customer, unless stated to the contrary in the provisions of
FEMA, 1999, it is optional for a bank to: (a). Accept or give early delivery; or
(b). Extend the contract. (ii) It is the responsibility of a customer to effect delivery or request the bank for
extension / cancellation as the case may be, on or before the maturity date of
the contract. 6.2. Early delivery: If a bank accepts or gives early delivery, the bank shall
recover/pay swap difference, if any. 6.3. Extension: Foreign exchange contracts where extension is sought by the
customers shall be cancelled (at an appropriate selling or buying rate as on the date
of cancellation) and rebooked simultaneously only at the current rate of exchange. The difference between the contracted rate, and the rate at which the contract is
cancelled, shall be recovered from/paid to the customer at the time of extension. Such request for extension shall be made on or before the maturity date of the
contract. 6.4. Cancellation
(i) In case of cancellation of a contract at the request of a customer, (the request
shall be made on or before the maturity date) the Authorised Dealer shall
recover/ pay, as the case may be, the difference between the contracted rate
and the rate at which the cancellation is effected. The recovery/payment of
exchange difference on cancellation of forward contracts before the maturity
date may be either upfront or back-ended at the discretion of banks. (ii) Rate at which cancellation is to be effected:
(a) Purchase contracts shall be cancelled at T.T. selling rate of the
contracting Authorised Dealer
(b) Sale contracts shall be cancelled at T.T. buying rate of the contracting
Authorised Dealer

(c) Where the contract is cancelled before maturity, the appropriate forward
T.T. rate shall be applied. (bi) Notwithstanding the fact that the exchange contract between the customer
and the bank becomes impossible of performance, for whatever reason,
including Government prohibitory orders, the exchange contract shall not be
deemed to have become void and the customer shall forthwith apply to the
Authorised Dealer for cancellation, as per the provisions of paragraph 6.4.(i)
and (ii) above. (iv)
(d) In the absence of any instructions from the customer, vide para 6.1(ii), a
contract which has matured shall be cancelled by the bank on the 7th working
day after the maturity date. (e) Swap cost, if any, shall be recovered from the customer under advice to him. © When a contract is cancelled after the maturity date, the customer shall not be entitled
to the exchange difference, if any, in his favour, since the contract is cancelled on
account of his default. He shall, however, be liable to pay the exchange difference
against him. 6.5. Swap cost/gain:
(ii) In all cases of early delivery of a contract, swap cost shall be recovered from
the customer, irrespective of whether an actual swap is made or not. Such
recoveries should be made either back-ended or upfront at discretion of the
bank. (iii) Payment of swap gain to a customer shall be made at the end of the swap period. 6.6. Outlay and Inflow of funds:
Authorised Dealer shall recover interest on outlay of funds for the purpose of
arranging the swap, in addition to the swap cost in case of early delivery of a
contract.
If such a swap leads to inflow of funds, interest shall be paid to the customer. Funds
outlay / inflow shall be arrived at by taking the difference between the original
contract rate and the rate at which the swap could be arranged. The rate of interest
to be recovered / paid should be determined by banks as per their policy in this
regard.

Loans to NRIs NRI can avail the following loans:

Loans to NRIs NRI can avail the following loans:
1. Rupee Loans in India
- Up to up to any limit subject to prescribed margin. - For personal purpose, contribution to Capital in Indian
Companies or for acquisition of property. - Repayment of loan will be either from inward remittances or
from local resources through NRO accounts. 2. Foreign Currency Loans in India
- Against security of funds in FCNR-B deposits. - Maturity of loan should not exceed due date of deposits. - Repayment from Fresh remittances or from maturity proceeds of
deposits. 3. Loans to 3
rd Parties provided
- There is no direct or indirect consideration for NRE depositor
agreeing to pledge his FD. - Margin, rate of Interest and Purpose of loan shall be as per RBI
guidelines. - The loan will be utilized for personal purpose or business
purpose and not for re-lending or carrying out
Agriculture/Plantation/Real estate activities. - Loan documents will be executed personally by the depositor
and Power of attorney is not allowed. 4. Housing Loans to NRIs : HL can be sanctioned to NRIs subject to
following conditions: - Quantum of loan, Margin and period of Repayment shall be
same as applicable to Indian resident. - The loan shall not be credited to NRE/FCNR account of the
customer. - EM of IP is must and lien on assets. - Repayment from remittance abroad or by debit to NRE/FCNR
account or from rental income derived from property.

EXPORT IMPORT CREDIT MCQs


EXPORT IMPORT CREDIT MCQs

1. Minimum andmaximum amount up to which the Gold Credit card can be issued to exporter is Rs
________ lac and Rs lac. : (a) 100,1000 (b) 50, 500 (c) 100, 5000
(d) 20,200 (e) None of these as it is based on anticipated turnover.**

2. Aspertheexchangecontrolregulations,thepaymentforexportsshouldingeneralberealizedwithina
periodof:(a) 12months fromdate of shipment** (b) 3months from date of shipment
(c) 6months fromthe date of shipment (d) 1month fromdate of shipment
(e) 45 days formdate of shipment
3. Units in a special economic zone are permitted to realise and repatriate to India the full export value of
goods or software within a period of......................................... from the date of shipment.
(a) 3months (b) 6months (c) 180 days (d) 360 days (e) none of these as there is no time limit*

4. In respectof shipmentsmade toIndianownedwarehouses abroad establishedwithpermissionof RBI,
export proceeds shouldbe realizedwithin:
(a) 6 months (b)3 months (c) 9 months (d)15 months* (e) 150 days

5. RBImonitorsoverdueexportbills-not realizedwithinthestipulatedtimeby calling for ahalf yearly
statement fromADs referredtoas : (a) BEF (b)XOS** (c) GTE-1 (d) ST-9 (e) ENC

6.Packing credit advances mean :
advances granted to industrial units for packing of manufactured goods for sale in Indiaadvances granted to eligible exporters for purchase/manufacture/processing/transporting/packing etc. of goods meant for export*
(c) advancesgrantedtoimporterstoenablethemtostoreandsubsequentlysellimportedgoodslocally
(d) any one or more of the above (e) none of the above.

7. To be eligible for packing credit advances the customer :
(a) should not be in the caution list of RBI or specific approval list of ECGC
(b) must be holding importer/exporter code number allotted byDGFT
(c) should be recognised export house (d) all above (e) both (a) and (b)**

8. Packing credit advances is normally allowed for :
(a) 90 days (b) 60 days (c) 360 days (d) 180 days (e) as per requirement of the exporter**

9. `Normal Transit Period ' in the context of export financemeans:
(a) the number of days the documents take to reach destination
(b) the gap between period taken by the ship and the documents to reach destination
(c) the number of days taken by a ship to complete a voyage
(d) the number of days fixed by FEDAI and is the average period normally involved from date of negotiation to credit to
NOSTRO account.**
(e) either (a)or (b)

10. For facilities grantedupto30.6.2010, rateof interestonpost shipment credit inrupeesupto180days in
respectofusancebills is :
(a) 12% (b) 15% (c) not exceeding BPLR
(d) not exceeding BPLR minus 2.5% (e) not exceeding BPLR plus 1.5%**

11. Refinance for export credit fromRBI is available for howmany days?
(a) 90 days . (b) 180 days** (c) 360 days (d) 270 days(e) None of these

12. Refinance against eligible export finance is available from:
(a) RBI* (b) IDBI (c) ECGC (d) Exim Bank (e) None of these

13. On PCFC refinance is available to the extent of % of outstanding PCFC.
(a) 15% (b) 50% (c) 25% (d) Nil** (e) None of these

14. Forfacilitiesgrantedupto30.6.2010ConcessionalinterestrateonPostshipmentcreditinrupeesis
permittedupto:
(a) 180 days** (b) 90 days (c) 270 days (d) 360 days (e) None of these
15. Which of the following is not correct regarding Liberalised Remittance Scheme?
(a) Amount can be remitted for capital aswell as current account transactions
(b) Maximumamount that can be remitted in a financial year is restricted toUSD200,000
(c) Remittance for gift and donationwill bewithinUSD200,000 permitted under LRS
(d) Bank can allowadvance to a resident individual formaking remittance under this scheme**
(e) None of these

16_ For outward remittance formedical expenses, estimate fromthe doctor or hospital is required if the
remittance is more than USD : (a) 1 lac (b) 5 lac (c) 10 Lac (d) none of these as it is required in all cases

17. What is themaximumamount of inwardremittance that can bedone by a resident individual?
(a) USD 1 Lac (b) USD 5 lac (c) USD 10 Lac (d) None as there is no limit
*
18. How much amount can be released for remittance abroad for education on declaration basis and withou estimate
from educational institution?
(a) USD 1 Lac** (b) USD 5 lac (c) USD 10 Lac (d) None as there is no limit

19.Which of the following is true?
(a) If a bank has oversold position, Bankwill gain if the rate of foreign currency rises.
(b) If a bank has oversold position, Bankwill gain if the rate of foreign currency declines**
(c) If a bank has oversold position, Bankwill lose if the rate of foreign currency declines
(d) If a bank has overbought position, Bankwill gain if the rate of foreign currency declines
(e) None of these

20. ADsmay allowadvance remittance for import of goodswithout any ceiling.However, if the amount of
advance remittance exceedsUSD50,00,000 or its equivalent it ismandatory to obtain-
(a) unconditional irrevocable stand byUC of an international bank of repute situated outside India
(b) guarantee froman international bank of repute situated outside India(c) guarantee of anADinIndia, if such guaranteeis issuedagainst counter guarantee of aninternational
bankof reputesituatedoutside India
(d) any one of the above (e) either (a) or (b) only***

21. BEF statement containingdetailsof remittance exceedingUSD1,00,000where evidence of import is
not furnishedwithin6months fromdateof remittance is submittedby ADs toRBIon:
(a) monthlybasisby 10thof thefollowingmonth
(b) quarterlybasisby 15thof themonthfollowing closeofquarter
(c) half yearly basis forMarch/ September by 15th of succeedingmonth
(d) half yearly basis as of June/ December by 15th of succeedingmonth **(e) none of these


22. Crystallisation of import bill under UCmeans:
(a) bill is scrutinisedwhether it is as perUC terms or not
(b) it is ensured that currency of IJC and insurance is the same or not
(c) converting bill amount into Indian rupees and deciding customer's liability on due date in case of usance**
bill and on 10th day from date of receipt in case of demand bills.
(d) none of the above as the concept is gonewith the termination of PSCFC

23. ApplicationformakingpaymenttowardsimportsintoIndiahastobemadetoauthoriseddealersby
importersin:(a) ENC (b) R-3 (c) Form A-1 *(d) Form A-4 (e) none of the above


24. Advance remittance for import of goods into India is to be allowed after obtaining guarantee froman
international bank of repute situated outside India or guarantee of an AD in India against counter-guarantee of an
international bank when amount of advance remittance exceeds:
(a) US $ 10,000 (b) US $ 25,000 (c) US $5,000 (d) US $ 15,000 (e) US $ 50,00,000***

25. How much advance remittance is allowed for import of services without guarantee of a reputed
international bank?
(a) USD 1 Lac (b) USD 5 lac **(c) USD 10 Lac (d) None as there is no limit

26. Which of the following types of Bill of Lading is not acceptable by a bank under LC?
(a) On Board (b) Clean (c) Charter Party** (d) AN of these (e) None of these

27. Interest Subvention is available on rupee export credit at the rate of 2% for loan up to Rs
but
interest rate after subvention should not be less than 7%.
(a) Rs 3 lac (b) Rs 5 lakh (c) Rs 10 lakh (d) Rs 100 lakh (e) None of these**

-28. Interest rate charged by RBI on export refinance to banks is at the rate of :
(a) Bank Rate (b) Repo Rate** (c) Reverse Repo Rate (d) Base Rate (e) None of these

29. Export Refinance is provided by RBI at the rate of __________ % of eligible outstanding export credit?
(a) 15% **(b) 25% (c) 50% (d) 100% (e) None of these

30. R Return is submitted to RBI onwhich of the following dates of themonth?
(a) 7th and 2151 (b) 15th & last day **(c) 10th, 20th and last day (d) None of these

31.Overdue import demand bills and usance bills are crystalised onwhich dates?
(a)10thday&duedate **(b)15thdayand30thday (c)30thdayand60thday(d)10thdayand60thday(e)Noneofthese

132. Which of the following is incorrect regarding export declaration forms?

(a) GR formis usedfor declaration of exports other than by postwhere customoffice not linked to EDI
(b) ExportDeclaration formis not required to be submitted for exports up toUSD25000.
(c) Softex formis used for declaration of export of software in physical or electronic form.**
(d) None of these (e) All of these

33.. Presently rate of interest on pre-shipment credit in forex (PCFC) up to 180 days is not exceeding:
(a) 200 basis points above LIBOR ***(b) 100 basis points above LIBOR
(c) 150 basis points above LIBOR (d) 50 points above LIBOR (e) 350 basis points below LIBOR

34. As per current guidelines of RBI, for loans sanctioned up to 30.6.2010, rate of interest on pre-shipment credit in rupees up to
270 days should not exceed :
(a) Bank Rate plus 2.5% (b) BPLR plus 1.5% (c) BPLR minus 2.5%**
(d) Bank Rate minus 2.5% (e) lower of (a) and (b)

35. As per the exchange control regulations, the payment for exports should in general be realized within a period of:
(a) 12 months from date of shipment** (b) 360 days from date of packing of goods
(c) 180 days from the date of shipment (d) 270 days from date of shipment
(e) 180 days from the date of receipt of consignment by the buyer in foreign country

36. Which of the following is/are not true with regard to features of Gold Card Scheme for exporters:
(a) Only exporters whose accounts have been 'Standard' continuously for 3 years are eligible
(b) Gold Card holderswill be given preference is granting packing credit in foreign currency (PCFC)
(c) Time normfor disposal of fresh applications for credit under the schemewill be 25 days
(d) Gold Card for exporters will be issued for a period of 5 years (e) none of these**




EXPORTFINANCE
Case- STUDY
An exporter approaches the popular bank for pre-shipment loanwith estimated sales ofRs.100 lakh. The bank
sanctions a limit ofRs.50 lakh,with followingmargins: Pre-shipment loan on FOB value—25%; ForeignDemandBill -
10%; Foreign usance bilis—20%.
The firmgets an order forUSD50,000 (CIF) toAustralia.On 1.1.2011when theUSD/INRratewasRs.43.50 perUSD,
the firmapproached theBank for releasing pre-shipment loan (PCL),which is released.
On 31.3.2011, the firmsubmitted export documents, drawn on sight basis forUSD45,000 as full and final shipment.
The bank purchased the documents atRs.43.85, adjusted thePCL outstanding and credited the balance amount to the
firm's account, after recovering interest forNormalTransit Period (NTP). The documents were realized on
30.4.2011 after deduction of foreign bank charges of USD 450. The bank adjusted the outstanding post
shipment advance. against the bill. Bank charged interest for pre-shipment loan@7%up to 90 days and,@8%
over 90 days up to 180 days. For Post shipment credit, theBank charged interest@7%for demand bills and@7.5%
for usance (D/A) documents up to 90 days and@8.50%thereafter and on all over dues, interest@10%.
01 What is the amount that the Bank can allow as PCL to the exporter against the given export order,
considering the profit margin of 10% and insurance and freight cost of 12%?
a) Rs.2200000 b) Rs.1650000 c) R6.1485000 d) Rs.1291950
02What is the amount of post shipment advance that can be allowed by the Bank under foreign bills
purchased, for the bill submitted by the exporter?
a) Rs.19,80,000 b) Rs.17,75,925 c) Rs.19,73,250 d) Rs.21,92,500
03 What will be the period for which the Bank charges concessional interest on DP bills, from date of
purchase of the bill?
a) 90 days b) 25 days c) 31 days d) Up to date of realization
04 in the above case, when should the bill be crystallized (latest date), if the bill remains unrealized for
over two months, from the date of purchase-(ignore holidays)?
a) On 30.4.2011 b) On 24.4.2011 c) On 24.5.2011 d) On 31.5.2011
05 What rate of interest will be applicable for charging interest on the export bill at the time of realization,
for the days beyond Normal Due Date (NDD)?
a) 8% b) 7% c) 7.5% d) 10%
Ans. 1-d 2-c 3-b 4-c 5-d Explanations:
1. FOB value =
CIF Value i.e. 50000x43.5 = 2175000
Deduct Insurance & freight 12% of 2175000 = 261000
Balance = 1914000
Deduct profit margin 10% of 1914000 =191400
Balance = 1722600
Less Margin 25% = 430650
PCL = 1291950
2. 45000 x43.85=1973250
3. Concessional• rate will be charged for normal transit period of 25 days and there after overdue
interest will be charged.
4. Crystallisation will be done when the bill becomes overdue after 25 days of normal transit period. Date of
overdue will be 25.4.2011. if bill remains overdue, it will be crystalised within 30 days i.e. up to 24.5.2011.
5. Rate of interest will be 10%as the overdue interest is stated as 10%in the question.

Tuesday, 8 January 2019

ISB Recollected


ISB Recollected Questions and Exam Tips::::







Function of modem, which is not an OOP Lang.



 C C++ Java C#, questns abt DRP,



Trojan horse, sniffing, spoofing, availability, integrity, DBMS, preventive, corrective, detective controls, BCP


Monday, 7 January 2019

Bcsbi recollected questions








 
Bcsbi recollected


1) Garnishee Order received for Rs 10,000/- The minimum balance as per bank rule is Rs 3,000/- What is the course of action?



2) Right of appropriation is as per which act?



3) A teacher for the purpose of teaching enquiring bank regarding her rish categorization, as in what risk her account is classified?



4) Mr. X is having gold loan with our bank. He stand as a guarantor for Mr. Y. Now Mr. Y defaulted the loan and the account is NPA. Whether bank can hold the pledge ornaments?



5) How many CIC a bank should have membership as per guidelines ?



6) Which among the following is not CIC?



7) Which among the following is not Officially valid Documents (Answer was Ration Card)



8) Major complain received in Ombudsman for the credit card? (Wrong Billing)



9) What facility we cannot extend to Minor account ? (Overdraft facility )



10) What precaution bank take while accepting the power of attorney, Chooser the wrong answer (Power of attorney unstamped)



11) Maximum term of FCNR (B) deposit?



12) Full form of CORE in CBS?



13) Which among the following is implied needs? (Ans: Extra Attention to the service need)



14) Customer approaching for getting a pass sheet print in terms of passbook? Whether bank will issue apart from passbook?



15) The bank came to know that Mr. A, customer of your branch died on 01.09.2018. Mr. B is approaching the bank on 05.09.2018, to deposit money to that account. What will be the course of action?



16) Customer Delight Illustration by an example choosing from the options



17) Recently what and all deficiency are added to the purview of Ombudsman? (Bancassurance to ineligible/in appropriate customer & Non displaying of redressed/Ombudsman details at branch)



18) Who will appoint CEO in BCSBI?



19) Number of women representatives in various redressal forums under Consumer Protection Act?



20) How branch guide for a customer who is having a complaint? (Ans: TAT, Ombudsman details, etc)



21) The stop payment is issued, however bank honor the cheque, what will be the implication on the bank in terms of this deficiency?



22) Order cheque requires (Endorsement, Delivery or both ?)



23) Which among is not principles of banking? (Insolvency, trust, transparency etc )



24) A reduced customer complaint and increased business is a sign of (Good progress in business )



25) Example of social media marketing? (Advt in press/Internet etx)



26) Implication of a bank which is not a member of BCSBI ? (Less Image in public )



27) Mr. X an employee of the bank collects from neighbors everyday money not deposited to their account? What will be the implication ( Bank’s Image will go low, The staff will be punished, No implication on bank as the collection done not in branch time etc)



28) In terms of promotional materials internet, the bank’s ethics (Like not misleading, giving transparency, information etc)



29) Which among the given option is not a rating parameter for BCSBI for bank’s rating?



30) As per the BR act, who is having the power to conduct inspection of SCBs (NABARD)



31) Which among the following is not required to disclose as per the BCSBI codes to the person who do Forex transfer? (Answer was interest rate of beneficiary country for the term deposits)



32) A non - customer approached you for the remittance of Rs 60,000/- vide NEFT to his father in different town for the medical purpose. What will be the course of action as per BCSBI codes?



33) Mr. X issued a cheque in favor of Mr. Y in different city. He has presented to clearing to Bank. Mr. X now demanding for the original cheque to confirm the particulars entered. (Bank can give the image of cheque only)



34) The bank has send the returned cheque vide ordinary post to the payee. The same is lost in transit. How the case can be dealt to ?



35) Which among the given option is not retail banking?



36) Calculation of eligible loan by giving project cost, Reg Charge, Stamp Duty & Cost of Project @ given LTV of 90%



37) Who can authorize the alterations in the Cheque when it is presented over the counter for the payment?



38) The remittance above what amount o be strictly routed through A/c



39) The demand draft above what value to be credited or passed through account payee options?



40) What is the limit to which no processing charges for MSE loan? (Ans: 5 Lacs)



41) As per MSME CODE till what amount bank will give collateral free loan?



42) The loan given for ITI Education. The loan value is Rs 1.50 Lacs. It is a one year course Maximum moratorium can be ?



43) Demerits of credit card ( Overspending)



44) An unsolicited card is issued to a person. The bank charged Rs 100/- as fees. What is the course of action bank need to take?(Charge and Twice Value of the charges reversed)



45) Code of conduct of DSA : Which among is wrong?



46) Mr. X who is to be approached by our recovery agent old the agent to come to his company near the tea shop in the ground floor of his office, What the agent should do (Ans: No other way go only J )



47) Within how many days the customer can approach the appellate authority if they are not satisfied with the award given by Ombudsman?



48) Which among the following is not an advantage of demat services?



49) Which among the given option is not feature of endorsement?



50) The cheque given for the collection is returned unpaid, the notice is not given in 24 Hours to the party. The customer came to know after 2 months. How to compensate /deal with this situation?



51) Who controlling body for the the tele marketing ?



52) What is the pre requisite required while hiring a tele marketer for the bank?



53) The time limit for transfer of account from one branch to another branch same bank?



54) Which committee on customer service recommended that the passbook should be issued to FD holders like we issue for SB account ?



55) All the details in cheque is filled with ink, the signature is done with pencil. What will be the course of action?



56) As per the CPPAPS Committee, the evaluations are based on whose sense ? (Regulator, RBI, IBA or Customer. Answer is Customer )



57) Time frame for the settlement of death claim



58) Which among the following is not a BSBDA Account Features?



59) Time frame for the recovery agent to visit customers place ( 07:00 to 19:00)



60) As per the Copra Act, the redressal forum is (Quasi Judicial Machinery)



61) Which among to following is not right of customer as per COPRA act ( Giving criminal complaint on the service deficiency)



62) Which among the following conforms that the receiver is an active listener? (Ask question to understand the content)



63) In the following which is not the components of active listening?



64) Which is the following is not the duty of CEO of BCSBI?



65) Total number of members in Governing council of BCSBI?



66) The Change of charges if notified in 30 days, the customer is having option with in how many days to close/switch his account?



67) How many times an individual will get free credit report from CIBIL in a year ? (No free reports)



68) Time frame to give notice to the probable customers whose account to be converted to dormant/inoperative account ?



69) Notice of how many months is to be given when a branch is getting shut down where there is no branch of any bank.



70) When the usance bill is payable?



71) Nursing / restructuring of debts happen after how many days of NPA?



72) Which of the choices are not a post disbursement requirements bank do to MSE borrowers ? (Comparison with other units I guess is the answer)



73) Which is the primary distribution outlets for the banking services (Answer: Branches)



74) The ATM failed transaction beyond the stipulated waiting period of 7 days will have to be reimbursed to the customer by Onus settlement of (Card Issuing Bank, The bank whose ATM customer uses, None of these etc. )



75) Mr. X a recently current account opened customer issued with a cheque book initially. He is asked for 25 cheque books as he said some payments he need to give to group of people . What will be the course of action (Monitor the account for the issued cheque, how and what amount issued etc)



76) The time frame to rectify every breach in the code by BCSBI and reporting of the same (Ans: with in 7 days reporting and remedial action in 15 days )



77) Failure to submit the duly completed annual statement of annual compliance attracts fine not exceeding (Ans: Rs 1000/- per day )



78) Which of the following is the uses of CTS cheque clearing ( Ans: was all of these)



Cyber crime and fruad management recollected on October 20th 2018

20.10.2018 cyber crime question

1.cyber crime definition

2.3 factor pressure,opportunity,rationalisation

3.cybernetics,kybernetes,steersman,governor,cyberpunk----given 4 option

4.honey pot

5.1st worm

6.denial of service

7.buffer overflow

8.shoulder surfing

9.access control

10.script kiddles

11.john doe order

12.nigrria419

13cyber wefare

14 email spoofing

15 cyber stalking

16domain name .in represent

17.Satyam infoway ltd vs siffynet supreme court

18cyber warfare

19phishing

20zeus

21.non repudiation

22 tailgating



23.trapdoor

24.captcha.



25 .blue hat hacker

26phreaking

27. Ethical hacking

28.anonymous

29bar code matrix code

30.RFID

31.data manipulation and data definition language

32.symmetic encryption

33. Encryption and decryption

34.locard exchange principle

35.c-Dac

36.payment getway

37.payment and settlements system 2007

38 acquiring bank

39 brute force attack

40.man in the middle attack

41session hijacking

42.digital wallet

43OLTP

44 Ucpdc

45.EMV card

46.netra drdo

47CBI Specialized structure

48.electonic signature

49.DSCI set ip NASSCOM

50.US Initiative -cyber security information sharing act

51.it act andit amendment act.

52.Pki

53 .authenticity

54.maximum value that can be stored in a prepaid card 50000

55. SWIFT





By pritee Hardiha

Sunday, 6 January 2019

Today's digital banking recollected

More questions on upi, bhim, aeps, financial inclusion, information security......

Digital banking recollected
CTS
Public key
PPI max limit
Charge back atm steps
Aeps
Smart card
Financial inclusion
Sfms
Imps is a protocol
Requirements for trx at bc point
Internet banking safety precautions
Mobile banking
...

Saturday, 5 January 2019

Useful for IIBF Digital banking exam

IIBF Digital banking exam


Block Chain Technology : ICICI Bank is the first bank in the country and among the first few globally
to exchange and
authenticate remittance transaction messages as well as original international trade documents related to
purchase order, invoice,
shipping & insurance, among others, electronically on block chain in real time.
The usage of block chain technology simplifies the process and makes it almost instant—to only a few
minutes. Typically, this
process takes a few days. The block chain application co-created by ICICI Bank replicates the paperintensive
international trade
finance process as an electronic de centralised ledger, that gives all the participating entities including
banks the ability to access a
single source of information.
CODE NAME DIGITS
IFSC - Indian Financial System Code 11
MICR -Magnetic Ink Character Recognition 09
SWIFT-Society for worldwide interbank Financial Telecommunication ) 11
PAN- Permanent Account no. 10
UID /UAN – unique Identification Number 12
PIN – Postal Index Number 6
CIN-Cheque Identification Number 7
BIC ( BANK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER) 8
26. PREPAID PAYMENT INSTRUMENTS : Eligibility : Banks who comply with the eligibility criteria would
be permitted to issue all categories of pre-paid payment instruments. Non-Banking Financial Companies
(NBFCs) and other persons would be permitted to issue only semi-closed system payment instruments.
Capital requirements : Banks and Non-Banking Financial Companies which comply with the Capital
Adequacy requirements prescribed by Reserve Bank of India from time-to-time, shall be permitted to
issue pre-paid payment instruments. All other persons shall have a minimum paid-up capital of Rs 100
lakh and positive net owned funds. Safeguards against money laundering (KYC/AML/CFT) provisions -
The maximum value of any pre-paid payment instruments (where specific limits have not been prescribed
including the amount transferred) shall not exceed Rs 100,000/-.
Deployment of Money collected: Non-bank persons issuing payment instruments are required to maintain
their outstanding balance in an escrow account with any scheduled commercial bank subject to the
following conditions:- The amount so maintained shall be used only for making payments to the
participating merchant establishments. No interest is payable by the bank on such balances.
Validity: All pre-paid payment instruments issued in the country shall have a minimum validity period of six
months from the date of activation/issuance to the holder. The outstanding balance against any payment
instrument shall not be forfeited unless the holder is cautioned at least 15 days in advance as regards the
expiry of the validity of the payment instrument.
27.Money Transfer Service Scheme (MTSS) : The Reserve Bank has issued Master Directions relating
to Money Transfer Service Scheme (MTSS), which is a quick and easy way of transferring personal
remittances from abroad to beneficiaries in India.
MTSS can be used for inward personal remittances into India, such as, remittances towards family
maintenance and remittances favouring foreign tourists visiting India and not for outward remittance from
India.
The system envisages a tie-up between reputed money transfer companies abroad known as Overseas
Principals and agents in India known as Indian Agents who would disburse funds to beneficiaries in India
at ongoing exchange rates. The Indian Agents can in turn also appoint sub-agents to expand their
network. The Indian Agent is not allowed to remit any amount to the Overseas Principal. Under MTSS,
the remitters and the beneficiaries are individuals only.
The Reserve Bank of India may accord necessary permission (authorisation) to any person to act as an
Indian Agent under the Money Transfer Service Scheme. No person can handle the business of crossborder
money transfer to India in any capacity unless specifically permitted to do so by the RBI. To
become MTSS agent, min net owned funds Rs.50 lac. MTSS cap USD 2500 for individual remittance.
Max remittances 30 received by an individual in India in a calendar year. Min NW of overseas principal
USD 01 million, as per latest balance sheet.
28. IMPS
IMPS offer an instant,24*7 interbank electronic fund transfer service capable of processing person to
person, person to account and person to merchant remittances via mobile, internet and atms. It is a
multichannel and multidimensional platform that make the payments possible within fraction of seconds
with all the standards and integrity maintained for security required for even high worth transactions.
MMID - Mobile Money Identifier
Each MMID is a 7 digit code linked to a unique Mobile Number. Different MMIDs can be linked to same
Mobile Number.
Both Sender & Receiver have to register for Mobile Banking & get a unique ID called "MMID"
• Generation of MMID is a One-time process.
• Remitter (Sender) transfer funds to beneficiary (Receiver) using Mobile no. & 7digit MMID of
beneficiary.
IFS Code
11 digit alphanumeric number, available in the users Cheque book.
IMPS Fund transfer/Remittance options:
 Using Mobile number & MMID (P2P)
 Using Account number & IFS Code (P2A)
 Using Aadhaar number (ABRS)
 Using Mobile number & MMID (P2P)
 Customer Initiated - P2M(Push)
 Merchant Initiated - P2M(Pull)
Using Mobile number & MMID (P2P)
Presently, IMPS Person-to-Person (P2P) funds transfer requires the Remitter customer to make funds
transfer using Beneficiary Mobile Number and MMID. Both Remitter as well as Beneficiary needs to

register their mobile number with their respective bank account and get MMID, in order to send or receive
funds using IMPS.
Using Account number & IFS Code (P2A)
There may be cases where Remitter is enabled on Mobile Banking, but Beneficiary mobile number is not
registered with any bank account. In such cases, Remitter shall not be able to send money to the
Beneficiary using Mobile Number & MMID.
Hence on the merit of the feedback received from the banking community as well as to cater the above
mentioned need, the IMPS funds transfer has been made possible using Beneficiary account number and
IFS code as well, in addition to Beneficiary mobile number and MMID.
Customer Initiated - P2M(Push)
IMPS Merchant Payments (P2M - Person-to-merchant) service allows customers to make instant, 24*7,
interbank payments to merchants or enterprises via mobile phone. IMPS enables mobile banking users a
facility to make payment to merchants and enterprises, through various access channels such as Internet,
mobile Internet, IVR, SMS, USSD.
Sender enter details of merchant's (Customer initiated - Push)
• Merchant Mobile Number & MMID
• Amount to be transferred
• Payment reference (optional)
• Sender's M-PIN
Merchant Initiated - P2M(Pull)
IMPS Merchant Payments (P2M - Person-to-Merchant) service allows customers to make instant, 24*7,
interbank payments to merchants or enterprises via Mobile & Internet. IMPS enables mobile banking
users a facility to make payment to merchants and enterprises, through various access channels such as
Internet, mobile Internet, IVR, SMS, USSD.
Customer enter own details (Merchant Initiated - Pull)
• Customer own Mobile Number
• Customer own MMID
• OTP (generated from the Issuer Bank)