Saturday, 30 June 2018

CCP Break even analysis


BREAK EVEN ANALYSIS

 Profit

Business organisations have profit as their primary goal and various management
decisions (such as product pricing, production levels, expansion, diversification, etc.) are
aimed at subserving this goal.

 Profit, simplistically stated, is the difference between sales realisations and the costs
incurred. The profit and loss statements of organisations give details of sales
realisations as well as costs.
In other words, one could say, Profit = Sales - Costs
Profit could, therefore, be increased by increasing sales and by taking steps to see that
costs do not increase, at least correspondingly.

Profit and Loss Account:
Profit, however, is not directly related to the level of activity or volume of sales of an
organisation. Stated differently, profit does not necessarily increase or decrease directly
in proportion to the volume of sales. This is because costs consist of various
components, all of which do not vary proportionately with sales. There are some
components of costs, which vary proportionately, but there are others, which are not
dependent on the volume.

Types of costs
Broadly speaking, costs could be divided into two categories -fixed costs arid variable
costs.
 Fixed Costs
Fixed Costs are those costs which tend to remain the same irrespective of the volume of
output. In other words, they do not vary when output changes. Factory rent, Managing
Director’s salary etc. are all examples of Fixed Costs.
Fixed Costs are, however, not truly fixed at all times but only over a comparatively
shorter time period e.g. a quarter or even over a year. Over a very long period, fixed
costs may undergo some changes.
 Similarly fixed costs remain the same within a well defined range of output, but once a
new range is reached the costs change. For example one foreman may be adequate for
one shift, but once the organisation decides to operate two shifts, one more foreman
may have to be employed and the fixed costs, representing the salary of foremen, would
double. Fixed costs are, therefore, referred to as “stepped costs” also in such cases.
 Variable casts
40.1 Variable costs are those costs which do vary in relation to the output. As a result, when
output increases, variable costs go up proportionately. Raw materials consumed, stores
and spares consumed etc., are examples of variable costs.
 Semi-variable Casts:
 There are some costs which are called semi-variable costs or semi-fixed costs. These
are hybrid costs made up of a fixed element and a fully variable element. There is a
tendency for the costs to vary with output, but the variation is irregular.
 If costs could be segregated into fixed and variable costs, it becomes easier to study the
behaviour of profit in relation to volume. For a very broad understanding and use of
contribution analysis, one could divide all costs into two categories only viz, fixed costs
and variable costs. In other words, semi-fixed/semi variable costs could be treated as
fixed. If such broad analysis should indicate the need for deeper probe into the profitplans,
an in-depth study could be made by breaking up such semi-fixed/semi-variable
costs into fixed and variable components.
 Contribution
 The difference between the sales price and the variable costs is called Contribution. The
“contribution” is the term used to describe this relationship between variable costs and
selling price.
Contribution = Sales - Variable Costs
In view of the fact that variable costs by definition are directly related to sales, the
contribution will increase when sales increase and contribution will go down, when sales
go down. The two important features of contribution are:
a) Contribution increases directly in proportion to the volume i.e., there is a linear
relationship between the two and
b) if nothing is produced and sold, the variable cost is nil and the loss incurred is
equal to fixed costs.
Importance of contribution in profit planning:
 As stated earlier,
Profit = Sales - Costs
In view of the fact that we have now been able to identify that costs consist of two
components viz., fixed and variable, the above statement could be restated as under:
Profit = Sales - (Variable Costs + Fixed Costs)
or Profit =(Sales - Variable Costs)- Fixed Costs Where,
sales – variable costs = contribution.
or Profit = Contribution - Fixed Costs
In view of the fact that contribution increases directly in relation to sales and as fixed
costs by definition remain the same, profit could be maximised by increasing
contribution. In other words, organisations should have maximisation of contribution as
one of their major goals and various management decisions must subserve this goal.
Profit Volume Ratio
 The ratio of contribution to sales turnover is called profit volume ratio (or P/ V ratio). The
P/ V ratio is a measure of the rate of contribution made by each rupee of sale out of
which fixed expenses must be met.
 The profit volume ratio thus becomes an important factor in taking various management
decisions. If there are two alternatives open to the management as a result of which two
profit/volume ratios would emerge, the management would prima facie choose the
alternative which gives a higher profit volume ratio.


Certified credit professionals numericals


Numericals:



Assets
Net Fixed Assets - 800
Inventories - 300
Preliminary Expenses - 100
Receivables - 150
Investment In Govt. Secu - 50
Total Assets - 1400
Liabilities
Equity Capital - 200
Preference Capital - 100
Term Loan - 600
Bank C/C - 400
Sundry Creditors - 100
Total Liabilities – 1400


1. Debt Equity Ratio = ?
a. 1:1
b. 1:2
c. 2:1
d. 2:3
Ans - c
Explanation :
600 / (200+100) = 2 : 1
2. Tangible Net Worth = ?
a. 100
b. 200
c. 300
d. 400
Ans - b
Explanation :
Only equity Capital i.e. = 200
3. Total Liabilities to Tangible Net Worth Ratio = ?
a. 7:2
b. 11:2
c. 13:2
d. 15:2
Ans - b
Explanation :
Total Outside Liabilities / Total Tangible Net Worth : (600+400+100) / 200 = 11 : 2
4. Current Ratio = ?
a. 1:1
b. 1:2
c. 2:1
d. 3:1
Ans - a

Explanation :
(300 + 150 + 50 ) / (400 + 100 ) = 1 : 1



Q.2

Assets

Net Fixed Assets - 265

Cash - 1

Receivables - 125

Stocks - 128

Prepaid Expenses - 1

Intangible Assets - 30

Total - 550

Liabilities

Capital + Reserves - 355

P & L Credit Balance - 7

Loan From S F C - 100

Bank Overdraft - 38

Creditors - 26

Provision of Tax - 9

Proposed Dividend - 15

Total - 550

1. Current Ratio = ?

= (1+125 +128+1) / (38+26+9+15)

= 255/88

= 2.89 : 1

2. Quick Ratio = ?

(125+1)/88

= 1.43 : 11

3. Debt Equity Ratio = ?

= LTL / Tangible NW

= 100 / (362 – 30)

= 100 / 332

= 0.30 : 1

4. Proprietary Ratio = ?

= (T NW / Tangible Assets) x 100

= [(362 - 30 ) / (550 – 30)] x 100

= (332 / 520) x 100

= 64%

5. Net Working Capital = ?

= CA - CL

= 255 - 88

= 167

6. If Net Sales is Rs.15 Lac, then What would be the Stock Turnover Ratio in Times ?

= Net Sales / Average Inventories/Stock

= 1500 / 128

= 12 times approximately

7. What is the Debtors Velocity Ratio if the sales are Rs. 15 Lac?



= (Average Debtors / Net Sales) x 12

= (125 / 1500) x 12

= 1 month

8. What is the Creditors Velocity Ratio if Purchases are Rs.10.5 Lac?

= (Average Creditors / Purchases ) x 12

= (26 / 1050) x 12

= 0.3 months

.............................................



Q.3 Current Ratio of a firm is 1 : 1. What will be the Net Working Capital ?

a. 0

b. 1

c. 100

d. 200

Ans - a

Explanation :

It suggest that the Current Assets is equal to Current Liabilities hence the NWC would be

0

(since NWC = C.A - C.L)

.............................................

Q.4 Suppose Current Ratio is 4 : 1. NWC is Rs.30,000/-. What is the amount of Current

Assets ?

a. 10000

b. 30000

c. 40000

d. 50000

Ans - c

Explanation :

Let Current Liabilities = a

4a - 1a = 30,000

a = 10,000 i.e. Current Liabilities is Rs.10,000

Hence Current Assets would be

4a = 4 x 10,000 = Rs.40,000/-

.............................................

Q.5 The amount of Term Loan installment is Rs.10000/ per month, monthly average interest

on TL is Rs.5000/-. If the amount of Depreciation is Rs.30,000/- p.a. and PAT is

Rs.2,70,000/-. What would be the DSCR ?

a. 1

b. 1.5

c. 2

d. 2.5

Ans - C

Explanation :

DSCR = (PAT + Depr + Annual Intt.) / Annual Intt + Annual Installment

= (270000 + 30000 + 60000 ) / 60000 + 12000

= 360000 / 180000

= 2

.............................................

Q. 6     A Company has Net Worth of Rs.5 Lac, Term Liabilities of Rs.10 Lac. Fixed Assets worth

RS.16 Lac and Current Assets are Rs.25 Lac. There is no intangible Assets or other Non

Current Assets. Calculate its Net Working Capital.

a. 1 lac

b. 2 lac

c. - 1 lac





d. - 2 lac

Ans - c

Explanation :

Total Assets = 16 + 25 = Rs. 41 Lac

Total Liabilities = NW + LTL + CL = 5 + 10 + CL = 41 Lac

Current Liabilities = 41 – 15 = 26 Lac

Therefore Net Working Capital = CA – CL = 25 – 26 = (-) 1 Lac

.............................................

Q. 7  Merchandise costs - Rs. 250000, Gross Profit - Rs. 23000, Net Profit - Rs. 15000. Find

the amount of sales.

a. 227000

b. 235000

c. 265000

d. 273000

Ans - d

Explanation :

Amount of sales = Merchandise costs + Gross Profit

= 250000 + 23000

= 273000

.............................................

Q.8 Total Liabilities of a firm is Rs.100 Lac and Current Ratio is 1.5 : 1. If Fixed Assets and

Other Non Current Assets are to the tune of Rs. 70 Lac and Debt Equity Ratio being 3 :

1. What would be the Long Term Liabilities?

a. 40 Lacs

b. 60 Lacs

c. 80 Lacs

d. 100 Lacs

Ans - b

Explanation :

Total Assets = Total Liabilities = 100 Lac

Current Asset = Total Assets - Non Current Assets

= Rs. 100 L - Rs. 70 L

= Rs. 30 L

If the Current Ratio is 1.5 : 1

then Current Liabilities works out to be Rs. 20 Lac.

That means, Net Worth + Long Term Liabilities = Rs. 80 Lacs.

If the Debt Equity Ratio is 3 : 1,

then Debt works out to be Rs. 60 Lacs and equity Rs. 20 Lacs.

Therefore the Long Term Liabilities would be Rs.60 Lac.

.............................................

Q.9 Current Ratio = 1.2 : 1.

Total of balance sheet being Rs.22 Lac.

The amount of Fixed Assets + Non Current Assets is Rs. 10 Lac.

What would be the Current Liabilities?

a. 10 Lacs

b. b. 12 Lacs

c. 16 Lacs

d. 22 Lacs

Ans - a

Explanation :

Total Assets is Rs.22 Lac.

Fixed Assets + Non Current Assets is Rs. 10 Lac

Then Current Assets = 22 – 10 = Rs. 12 Lac.

Current Ratio = 1.2 : 1

Current Liabilities = Rs. 10 Lac

.............................................







Q.10 M/s Raj&co's balance sheet included the following accounts:

Cash: 10,000

Accounts Receivable: 5,000

Inventory: 5,000

Stock Investments: 1,000

Prepaid taxes: 500

Current Liabilities: 15,000

Find the Quick Ratio

Quick Ratio = Cash + Cash Equivalents + Short Term Investments + Marketable

Securities + Accounts Receivable) / Current Liabilities

= (10000+5000+1000) / 15000

= 16000 / 15000

= 1.07

.................................

Q.11 M/s Raj&co's balance sheet included the following accounts:

Inventory : 5,000

Prepaid taxes : 500

Total Current Assets : 21,500

Current Liabilities : 15,000

Find the Quick Ratio

Quick Ratio = (Current assets – Inventory - Advances - Prepayments Current Liabilities) /

Current Liabilities

= (21500 - 5000 - 500) / 15000

= 16000 / 15000

= 1.07

.................................

Q.12 XYZ Pvt Ltd has the following assets and liabilities as on 31st March 2015 (in Lakhs) :

Non Current Assets

Goodwill 75

Fixed Assets 75

Current Assets

Cash in hand 25

Cash in bank 50

Short term investments 45

Inventory 25

Receivable 100

Current Liabilities

Trade payables 100

Income tax payables 60

Non Current Liabilities

Bank Loan 50

Deferred tax payable 25

Find the Quick Ratio

Quick Ratio = (Cash in hand + Cash at Bank + Receivables + Marketable Securities) /



Current Liabilities

= (25+50+45+100) / 160

= 220 / 160

= 1.375

.................................





Q.14 GHI Ltd. manufacturers two products :Product G and Product H. The Variable cost of the manufacture is as

follows:

Product G Product H

Direct Material 3 10

Direct Labour (Rs.6 per hour) 18 12

Variable Overhead 4 4

Product G sells for Rs.40 and Product H at Rs.30. During the month of January, the Company is having

only 21000 of direct labour. The maximum production capacity of Product G is 5000 units and Product H is

10000 units.

From the above facts, answer the following:

I. The contribution from Product G and H together is-----

a) Rs.32

b) Rs.19

c) Rs.27

d) Rs.40

II. The contribution per labour hour from Product H is-----

e) Rs. 4

f) Rs. 2

g) Rs. 3

h) Rs. 5

III. The contribution per labour hour from Product G is-----

a) Rs.2

b) Rs.5

c) Rs.15

d) Rs.3





Q.15 Read the following and answer

Cost / unit

Raw material 50

Direct labour 20

Overheads 40

Total cost 110

No. of units 10,000

No. of units

Sold on credit 8000

Average raw material in stock : 1 month

Average work in progress : ½ month

Average finished goods in stock : ½ month

Credit by supplier : 1 month

Credit to debtor : 2 months

Take 1 year = 12 months

1) Investment of working capital in raw material inventory is

(a) 41666

(b) 50000

(c) 33333

(d) 10000

2) Investment in working capital for finished goods is

a) 45833

b) 49090

c) 56453

d) 50000

Current Affairs on June 30 2018

Gyanoji Rao:
Today's Headlines from www:

*Economic Times*

📝 India’s external debt rises by 12.4% on higher overseas borrowing and NRI deposits

📝 Nissan sets up first global digital hub in India, to hire 500 this fiscal

📝 Lenovo India eyes over 500% growth in ultra-slim laptop market

📝 Fine Organic, RITES to list on bourses on Monday

📝 22,000 rural agriculture markets to be linked by 2020: Agri Minister

Digital banking

Three party card scheme... Digital banking

The Customer. The customer initiates the payment to the merchant using his or her credit card through its issuing bank.
The Merchant. The merchant is the recipient of the customer’s payment and authorizes/settles the payment with the acquiring bank.
The Processor. The credit card processor is the third-party company that facilitates payments. The processor fulfills transactions, moving money from one account to another.
Issuer/Acquirer. The issuer and acquirer in this model is represented by the card network (e.g. Discover, American Express). In essence, payment services are provided directly to merchants and cardholders by the network without involving third party financial institution intermediaries.

Four Party card model digital banking

Digital banking ::

The Four Party Model is an academic term used to describe the credit card business model created by the banks and card association networks consisting of banks, cardholders, merchants, and networks. Most all electronic card payments are constructed on the back of the Four Party Model. The system that Visa and MasterCard run are considered Four Party models.

What are card schemes
There are two main types of card schemes: a three-party scheme and a four-party scheme. A four-party scheme is essentially the Four Party Model. The three-party scheme is commonly referred to as a closed scheme while the four-party scheme is commonly referred to as an open scheme.

As you can probably tell by the name, a three-party scheme consists of just three parties. The issuer in this model has a relationship directly with the cardholder while the acquirer has a relationship with the entity. Therefore, there is typically no charges between the acquirer and the issuer.

How the four party model works
Visa and MasterCard can be used to pay for just about anything at the vast majority of retailers in just about every country in the world. The Four Party Model is the reason this is possible. Both Visa and MasterCard permit all participating retailers, consumers, acquirers, and issuers to conduct business with one another. Essentially, the Four Party Model serves to keep the entire system together. This ensures that all parties involved, especially retailers and consumers, can enjoy secure and convenient payments that don’t involve cash.

In spite of its name, other entities have been joining the four parties of the Four Party Model. Some of these entities include technology vendors, mobile network operators, and device manufacturers. All of these entities work to provide services to one or more of the four parties of the Four Party Model. In some cases, these entities form partnerships with any of the four parties of the Four Party Model.

Steps that describe how the Four Party Model works:
The consumer receives a Visa or MasterCard account from the issuer. The account could be credit, debit, or prepaid. The account can operate via the Internet, a physical card, or mobile devices.
The consumer chooses the goods and services they wish to purchase with the Visa or MasterCard account.
The acquirer receives the transaction from the retailer.
The transaction is submitted from the acquirer to the issuer.
The issuer must approve of the transaction and tells the acquirer the retail price.
The retailer is paid by the acquirer. The merchant service charge is negotiated between the retailer and the acquirer.
The account of the consumer is debited with a retail price. This retail price appears on the statement of the merchant.

Friday, 29 June 2018

Treasury management

TREASURY MANAGEMENT ::

1. RBI pays interest on the cash balances in excess of which of the following to bank, of their
NDTL?
a) 2%
b) 3%
c) 5%
d) 6%
ans: b
2. while the exposure limits are generally left to the banks discretion. RBI has imposed
which ceiling of total business in a year with individual brokers.
a) 2%
b) 5%
c) 10%
d) 15%
ans : b
3. Ability of a business concern to borrow or build up assets on the basis of a given capital
is called.
a) debt service coverage ratio
b) good will
c) reputation
d) Leverage
ans: D

Risk management

Risk Management::(Most Important)

01 RBI implemented the Basel-III recommendations in India, w.e.f:
a) 01.01.2013, b. 31.03.2013, c. 01.04.2013, d. 30.09.2013
02 Basel III recommendations shall be completely implemented in India by:
31.03.2020, b. 31.03.2019 c. 31.03.2618 d. 31.03.2017
03 Basel III capital regulations were released by Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) during as a
Global Regulatory Framework for more resilient banks and banking systems:
December 2010, b. March 2011, c. December 2011, d. December 2012
04 Basel III capital regulations are based on 3 mutually reinforcing pillar. These pillars are (1) Pillar-1 minimum capital standards (2)

Thursday, 28 June 2018

Ratio Analysis

Ratio Analysis
Financial statements: The statement which provides us the financial position of a
Balance Sheet are called “Finance Statements”, which includes – Trading Account (in
case of Manufacturing concerns), Profit & Loss Account, Balance Sheet, Cash Flow

Financial Ratios ::: (Most useful) Very important read everyone

Financial Ratios ::: (Most useful) Very important read everyone
The broad categories in which Financial
Ratios are classified are:
 Liquidity Ratios
 Gearing Ratios
 Profitability Ratios
 Turnover Ratios
 Coverage Ratios
Liquidity Ratios
 Liquidity Ratios are important for the working
capital lenders, who provide loans for shorter
duration. As such Banks, which generally
provide working capital loans, want to know
the liquidity position of the unit over a short
term period say one year. These ratios can
be analysed in under noted two forms:
 Current Ratio
 Acid Test Ratio or Quick Ratio
Current Ratio
 Current Ratio = Current Assets / Current
Liabilities
 Acid Test Ratio = (Current Assets - Inventory)
/ Current Liabilities
Gearing Ratios
 Gearing Ratios are of two types:

CCP Ratios

Ratio Analysis::
1. Accounting ratios are relationship expressed in mathematical terms between accounting figures which
for meaningful purpose.
2. Classification: P & L Ratios
3. Balance Sheet Ratios
4. Composite or Inter-Statement Ratios.
Functional Classification
1. Profitability
2. Turnover/Activity Ratios
Financial/Solvency Ratios
3. Financial Ratios may be further classified as Short Term Ratios/Liquidity Ratios or Long Term/
Solvency Ratios

What is the 'Plowback Ratio':::CCP

What is the 'Plowback Ratio':::
The plowback ratio in fundamental analysis measures the amount of earnings retained after dividends have been paid out. It is sometimes referred to as the retention rate.
The plowback ratio, also known as the retention rate, represents the percentage of earnings that have not been paid out as dividends to shareholders. These funds might be reinvested into the business, reserved for large purchases or used to pay off liabilities. A high plowback ratio may be good if the company is growing. A lower ratio indicates the company is giving back to the investors by paying out more dividends. The plowback ratio can be calculated by subtracting the dividend payout ratio from 100.
Identify the dividend per equity share and earnings per share. Assume, for example, the dividend per equity share is quoted as 0.32 and earnings per share is 3.10.
Divide the dividend per equity share by the earnings per share. Multiply by 100 to get a percentage: 0.32/3.10 x 100 = 10.32. This is the dividend payout ratio.

Components of Credit Management :::


Loan Policy of the Bank

Influenced by market conditions, policies of other banks, own SWOT analysis, RBI guidelines
Exposure limits-single borrower/group
Exposure limits for sectors
Discretionary powers

Credit Appraisal :

Five Cs - Character, Capacity, Capital, Conditions and Collaterals
Credit delivery-documentation, creation of charges
Control and Monitoring
Rehabilitation and Recovery
Risk management-identification,
Measurement & Evaluation
Delivery
Control and Monitoring
Rehabilitation and Recovery
Credit Risk Management
Refinance

RBI Guidelines

End use of funds
Priority sector 40%(agr 18%),weaker sector 10% foreign banks 32%, small enterprises 10%, export credit 12% of ANBC/off balance sheet expo, whichever is higher. Agr, MSE, housing(20 lacs), Education(10 lacs/20 lacs abroad), Export credit, SHG, KVI, Retail
Weaker sec. –small/marginal farmers, artisans, SGSY, SC/ST, DRI, SJSRY, SLRS, SHG
Micro, small and medium enterprises
Mfg sec: Micro upto 25 lacs, Small 25 lacs to 5 crs, Medium 5 crs to 10 crs
Service : Rs 10 lacs, 10-2 crs, 2-5 crs
Credit Exposure Norms –

For individuals/groups : 15/40 of capital funds- addl 5/10 for infra.
NBFC/NBFC-AFC 10/15%- 15/20% on lent infra
Base Rate System

Wef 1/7/2010 replaced BPLR
Banks may determine actual roi
Transparent, applicable to all except DRI, bank’s own employees, against deposits, qtrly review of BR
Existing loans with BPLR to continue, switch over option to be given
Credit Restrictions

Adv against bank’s own shares
Relatives of directors/sr officers
Industries consuming ozone depleting substances
Sensitive commodities
FDRs of other banks/CD
Buy back of shares
Credit Assessment/Delivery

MPBF method
For SME upto 5 crs limits turnover method
Working capital above 10 crs , loan component 80%
For seasonal/cyclical industrial bank may exempt with approval of board.

Fair practices code

Pertains to

Loan application, processing
Appraisal, terms and conditions
Disbursement
Post sanction supervision
Discrimination, harassment in recovery, takeover of accounts

Certified credit professionals

Components of credit management:::

The components include (1) Loan policy of the bank (2) Appraisal (3) Delivery (4) Control and Monitoring (5) Rehabilitation and
recovery (6) Credit risk management (7) Refinance.
1. Loan policy : Each bank formulates its own policy for sanction of credit proposals. The policy normally provides for (a) exposure
limits for individual and group borrowers (b) exposure limits for different sectors (c) discretionary powers at various levels within the
bank.
2. Appraisal : It done on the basis of credit history, financial status, market report of the borrower, the prospects of economic

Credit Management Important MCQs

Credit Management Important MCQs:::

1. An account will be classified as substandard if it remains NPA for a
period not exceeding----months.
A. 18
B. 12
C. 24
D. 6
E. 36
Ans B

2. An account which remains in NPA category for a period of more than --
--- months will be classified as doubtful assets.
A. 18
B. 12
C. 24
D. 6
E. 36
Ans. B
3. An account guaranteed by state government will become NPA if the
interest and or instalment remain overdue for a period of
A. 90 Days
B. 180Days
C. It does not become NPA
D. Depends on case to case basis
E. As per government’s instructions
Ans A
4. In case of a consortium advance account the asset classification has to
be done on the basis of record of recovery with the
A. Bank concerned
B. Leader Bank
C. Majority of Banks
D. Majority of Banks by number
E. Majority of Banks by Share
Ans A
5. In accounts where the erosion of the value and the realizable value is
less than 10% of the outstanding, the account will be classified as
A. Substandard asset
B. Doubtful asset
C. Loss asset
D. No such guideline
E. On case to case basis
Ans C
6. In case of doubtful asset which has remained doubtful for more than 3
years the provision to be made against the secured portion is -----% of
the secured amount.
A. 20
B. 30
C. 50
D. 75
E. 100

7. In case of unsecured exposures in substandard category the provision
to be made is ----% of the total exposure.
A. 15
B. 25
C. 12.5
D. 10
E. 100
Ans B
8. What is the time limit prescribed by the DRT act for final disposal of
application filed for recovery of dues
A. 180 Days from date of receipt of application
B. No such limit is fixed
C. 180days for clean loans and 240 days for secured loans
D. 180days from close of evidence of both the sides
E. 60 Days from date of receipt of application
Ans A
9. The DRT are constituted by
A. RBI
B. Supreme court
C. High courts of respective states
D. Central Government
E. Lok adalats
Ans D
10. What is the minimum pecuniary jurisdiction of DRT
A. There is no such minimum stipulation
B. Rs.10 lacs
C. Rs.100 lacs
D. Rs.5 lacs
E. Rs.25 lacs
Ans B
11. With regard to DRT, find the incorrect-
A. The act extends to the whole of India except the state of Jammu
and Kashmir
B. Debts secured by mortgage of immoveable property are not
covered under DRT
C. The presiding officer of the tribunal is appointed by the Government
of India
D. The RRBs’ can also file suit with DRT for recovery of debt.
E. The minimum pecuniary jurisdiction of DRT is Rs.10 lac
Ans B
12. With regard to DRT an appeal to the Appellate Tribunal is to be made
within -----days of the order of the DRT.
A. 30 days
B. 45 Days
C. 60Days
D. 90Days
E. 120Days
Ans B
13. Which types of accounts fall under the CDR category
A. Standard,substandard,doubtful
B. Substandard only
C. Any kind of NPA account

D. Standard and doubtful only
E. Standard and substandard only
Ans A
14. The following organisations purchase non-performing assets from
Banks with a purpose to resolve the same.
A. Asset Management Companies
B. Asset reconstructuin companies
C. Asset recovery companies
D. Debt Recovery tribunal
E. DRAT
Ans B

Credit Management overiew

OVERVIEW CREDIT MANAGEMENT:::

Credit plays an important role in driving the national economy. It provides leverage to an entrepreneur to
undertake a project larger than what he could have undertaken without availability of credit. This results in
accelerated industrial production/services. It also enables individuals to first purchase/create assets and
repay the loan from their future earnings. Credit enables a consumer to spend more than what he would
have otherwise spent. The increased demand drives the producers to step up the production. Thus,
adequate and cheap availability of credit propels the economy to higher growth trajectory. But, there is
always a time lag between increase in demand and creation of supply to meet that demand. That is why
excessive availability of credit, specially, for non-productive purposes, puts inflationary pressure of the
economy.
Principles of Credit: (a) safety of funds (b) purpose (c) profitability (d) liquidity (e) security (f) risk spread
Types of Borrowers: A borrower can be (a) An individual (b) Sole proprietary firm (c) Partnership firm and
joint ventures (d) Hindu undivided family (e) Companies (f) Statutory corporations (g) Trusts and co-operative

Credit mangement

Certified credit professionals::

(Simple and nice read every one)

Credit management is one of the core processes for all banks and therefore, the
ability to manage its process is essential to augment interest income and to enhance
its profitability. The success of a bank crucially depends how it manages its Asset
Portfolio as it is the major source of income and has direct bearing on the bottom-
line of the Bank. This demands an ability to perceive the early warning signals, which
necessitates control of both the quantitative and qualitative aspects of credit
evaluation. Thus, managing credit risk plays an important role and its effectiveness
lies in proper identification of borrower and appraisal besides adopting an efficient
recovery and exit strategy.

MSME :: ( Most imp Exam point of view)

MSME :: ( Most imp Exam point of view)

1. A Small Manufacturing Enterprise unit is considered as Sick Industrial Unit: when account remains sub
standard for more than six months or there is erosion in the net worth due to accumulated cash losses to
the extent of 50% or more of its net worth during the previous accounting year and the unit has been in
commercial production for at least two years
2. A small scale unit (manufacturing) can be treated as micro unit if the original investment in plant and
machinery does not exceed : Rs.25 lac
3. A unit in service enterprise is considered as medium if the investment in equipment is: more than Rs 2
crore but up to Rs 5 crore.
4. A Unit will be called as Small Service Enterprise if investment in equipments is up to: Rs 2 crore.
5. Amount of maximum loan given to micro and small enterprises that is covered under-CGFTMSEscheme
: Rs.200 lac

Digital Banking Recollected questions:::

Digital Banking Recollected questions:::
1.CTS abbreviation cheque truncation system
2. What is firewall?: A software programme for protecting against unauthorized access to the information.
3.BBPS … Bhatart Bill payment sytem
4.MDR: merchant discount rate
5. minimum amount which can be remitted under RTGS by a customer: Minimum Rs. 2 lac and no Maximum.
6.Max amount of NEFT can be remitted ..no limit
7. AEPS stands for : Aadhar Enabled Payment System.
8. CPPC stands for : Central Pension Processing Cell.
9. IBPP stands for : Internet Bill Presentation & Payment.

Digital banking MCQs

Q1.The situation of reading of a data by someone other than the intended recipient is referred to as:

 a: impersonation b:eavesdropping *c: data alteration d: denial-of service attack

Q2.Hot listing of Credit card means:

 a enhancement of amount of limit in the card ,b blocking the operations of the card,* creducing the amount of limit in the card d listing the card on more than one network, e. none of the above

Q3.In a MICR cheque, which of the following code does not match the 'description:

a. first 6-digit code - cheque number, b central 09-digit code — city, bank and branch code

c. last 2-digit code — transaction code such as saving or current account, d none of the above*


Q4.The electronic system through which a company or a mutual fund can make payment of dividend to a large number of
shareholders or unit-holders: a MICR b truncation c debit clearing system, d credit clearing system*

Q5.The committee that suggested the cheque truncation system for inter-bank transactions:
a Rangarajan Committee b Shere Committee, c Vasudevan Committee d Saraf Committee*, e. None

Current Affairs on June 28th 2018

Today's Headlines from www:

*Economic Times*

📝 Disney wins US antitrust approval to buy Fox assets for $71.3 bn

📝 Bharti Airtel, Reliance Jio set for home broadband war

📝 McAfee reports 629% increase in coin miner malware in Q1 2018

📝 HCL acquires German IT firm H&D

📝 China to reduce tariffs on 8,549 types of goods from India, 4 other Asian countries

📝 Govt bonds decline, call rates finish lower

IT Security and ISB

IT Security and ISB::

Backup site: Is a location where an organisation can easily relocate following a disaster,
such as fire, flood, terrorist threat or other disruptive event. This is an integral part of the
disaster recovery plan and wider business continuity planning of an organisation. A backup
site can be another location operated by the organisation, or contracted via a company that
specialises in disaster recovery services. In some cases, an organisation will have an
agreement with a second organisation to operate a joint backup site.
There are three main types of backup sites:
• cold sites
• warm sites
• hot sites
Differences between them are determined by costs and effort required to implement each.
Another term used to describe a backup site is a work area recovery site.
1. Cold Sites: A cold site is the most inexpensive type of backup site for an organisation to
operate. It does not include backed up copies of data and information from the original
location of the organisation, nor does it include hardware already set up. The lack of
hardware contributes to the minimal start up costs of the cold site, but requires additional
time following the disaster to have the operation running at a capacity close to that prior to
the disaster.

Wednesday, 27 June 2018

KYC MCQs

KYC AML::

1) The Government had amended the Prevention of Money Laundering (Maintenance of Records) Rules,
2005, for setting up of the :
a) Central KYC Records Registry (CKYCR).
b) Centralised KYC Records Registry (CKYCR)
c) Core KYC Records Registry (CKYCR)
d) Common KYC Records Registry (CKYCR)
2) The _______ would receive, store, safeguard and retrieve the KYC records in digital form of a client, for
Compiled by Sanjay Kumar Trivedy, Divisional Manager, Govt.Link Cell, Nagpur 54 | P a g e
which necessary amendments to the Rules have been made. The KYC records received and stored could
be retrieved online by any reporting entity across the financial sector for the purpose of establishing an
account based relationship:
a) CRILC b) CKYCR c) CERSAI d) None

KYC AML Obligation of Reporting Entity

Obligation of Reporting Entity:::( Maintenance of records)

Section 12 of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002, makes it mandatory for every reporting entity to maintain a record of all transactions and submit to Director such reports at such intervals as prescribed by Rules 3,4,5,7 and 8 of Prevention of Money Laundering (Maintenance of Records) Rules, 2005.

Rule 3 of the Prevention of Money Laundering (Maintenance of Records) Rules, 2005 prescribes the kind of report which need to be submitted by the Reporting Entities.

" 3. Maintenance of records of transactions (nature and value)

(1) Every reporting entity shall maintain the record of all transactions including, the record of—

(A) all cash transactions of the value of more than ten lakh rupees or its equivalent in foreign currency;

AML KYC Important

Aml kyc short notes::: (Most imp points) ( Read everyone not only for exam useful for everyday banking Knowledge)

1. Beneficial Owners shall mean the natural person who ultimately owns or or controls a client
and/ or the person whose behalf a transaction is being conducted , and includes a person
who exercises ultimate effective control over a juridical person.
2. " controlling ownership interest " means ownership of or entitlement to more than 25 %
shares or capital for company , more than 15 % of capital or profits of the partner for
partnership firm, more than 15% of the property or capital or profits for unincorporated
association , 15 % or more in case of trust.
3. where the client or the owner of the controlling interest is a company listed on the stock
exchange , or it is a subsidiary of such company , it is not necessary to identify and verify the
identity of any shareholder or beneficial owner of such companies.
4. maintenance of record of prescribed transaction , furnishing of information of prescribed
transaction to the specified authority , verifying and maintaining records of the identity of its
clients , preserving records for 5 years : section 12 of pml act 2002.
5. According to Rule 2 (h) of PMLA rule " transaction " means a purchase , sale , loan , pledge ,
gift , transfer etc.
6. Non profit organisation ( npo ) no governmental organisation ( ngo ) promoted by united
nation (UN) or its agencies will be classified as low risk customers,

JAIIB results May 2018

JAIIB results announced

Link here
https://iibf.esdsconnect.com/result/jaiibdbf118

Tuesday, 26 June 2018

International Trade finance PDF

ISB Recollected Questions and Exam Ti


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

International trade finance recollected

International Trade finance recollected questions::
2 marks qstn from ecgc,export promotion capital goods scheme. exim ,lc, eefc, urr725 ,pcfc
1 marks from forfating, factoring, pre and post shipment ,Fedai dutydrawback urc522 heckscher ohlin theory buyers and suppliers credit forward contract , lc., channel financing merchanting trade as well these topics in .5 marks qstn bid bondand performance guarantee currency and credit risk , wharfage documentry credit time period related qstn , status holder starhouse . SEIS , liberalized remittance . NEIA (national export insurance account), ssp, src. Scp related to ECIE-ST red clause

Very important IT guidelines

Banking Sector IT guideline

The Reserve Bank of India issued new guidance in April 2011 for banks to mitigate

the risks of use of information technology in banking operations. RBI guidelines are

result of the Working Group's recommendations on information security, electronic

banking, technology risk management and cyber fraud. The Working Group was formed

under the chairmanship of G. Gopalakrishna, the executive director of RBI in April 2010.

Current Affairs on June 26 '2018

Today's Headlines

*Economic Times*

📝 Railways to place mother-of-all bulk orders worth Rs 7,000 crore

📝 Tata Steel plans to raise Rs 12,000 crore via NCD issue

📝 UltraTech Cement plans to raise Rs 9,000 crore

📝 Government-appointed panel to suggest employment-based sops for SEZ

📝 Jio signs $1 billion loan facility with ​Korea Trade Insurance

Monday, 25 June 2018

White & Brown Label ATM

White Label ATM

White Label ATMs are purely managed by third party service providers and have their label. These are branded non
bank ATM machines. Cash handling, management and logistics are provided by third party. Debit cards of all banks can be
operated through these machines. The role of the concerned bank is only limited to provide account information and back
end money transfers to the third parties managing these ATM machines. This initiative will enable the excluded segments
to avail ATM services as at present majority ATMs are confined to Urban/Metro areas only.
However, service provider levy charges which are to be either bear by the Bank or the customer. RBI has allowed
white label ATM's in India to have more penetration of ATM machines. Tata Communications Payment Solutions has
become the first company to launch this service in India under the brand name "Indicash". It has a tie up with
majority commercial banks and now you will soon see branded non bank third party white label ATM machines in
your vicinity.

Bharat Interface for Money (BHIM)

Bharat Interface for Money (BHIM)
The Bharat Interface for Money (BHIM) was rolled out by Prime Minister Narendra Modi
on 30th December 2016, in an initiative to enable fast, secure and reliable cashless
payments through mobile phones.
BHIM is inter-operable with other Unified Payment Interface (UPI) applications and bank
accounts, and has been developed by the National Payments Corporation of India
(NPCI).
The Android app is already available on the Google Play Store. As it is Aadhaarenabled,
the app puts an end to the fuss around other e-wallets. Moreover, an iOS
version will be launched soon. One must get their bank accounts registered along with a
UPI Pin for their account.
On the BHIM app, it would be or . This
user id would be your primary address, which can be used to send or request money
through other ids linked to it.
The BHIM App supports about 35 banks.
Bharat Interface for Money (BHIM) is an app that lets you make simple, easy and quick payment
transactions. BHIM is a digital payments solution app based on the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) from
the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), the umbrella organisation for all retail payments
systems in India. You can easily make direct bank to bank payments instantly and collect money using just

Current Affairs on June 25th 2018

Today's Headlines

*Economic Times*

📝 JPMorgan to sell $203-million stake in Saudi Arabia bank

📝 Lupin to launch nearly 30 products in US market in FY18

📝 First-time entrepreneurs propel Indian franchise business; industry pegged at $150 bn in 5 years

📝 IFCI to raise Rs 3,000 crore from debt to fund business growth

Sunday, 24 June 2018

Caiib ABM Re exam recollected

Recollected qus abm 24 june exam

1. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN IS AND LM CURVE

IS IS RELATED TO FISCAL POLICY OR LM CURVE IS TO MONETARY POLICY

Bond can issue for maximum period ?

Basic Principles of Information Security

Basic Principles of Information Security: For over twenty years, information security has held confidentiality, integrity and availability (known as the CIA triad) to be the core principles. There is continuous debate about extending this classic trio. Other principles such as Authenticity, Non-repudiation and accountability are also now becoming key considerations for practical security installations. Confidentiality: Confidentiality is the term used to prevent the disclosure of information to unauthorized individuals or systems. For example, a credit card transaction on the Internet requires the credit card number to be transmitted from the buyer to the merchant and from the merchant to a transaction processing network. The system attempts to enforce confidentiality by encrypting the card number during transmission, by limiting the places where it might appear (in databases, log files, backups, printed receipts, and so on), and by restricting access to the places where it is stored. If an unauthorized party obtains the card number in any way, a breach of confidentiality has occurred. Breaches of confidentiality take many forms like Hacking, Phishing, Vishing, Email-spoofing, SMS spoofing, and sending malicious code through email or Bot Networks, as discussed earlier.

Block chain Technology


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 paper-intensive 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.

Some important abbrevetions


some important abbrevetions::

SWIFT: Society for worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication
SFMS: Structured Financial Messaging System
OLTAS: Online Tax Accounting System
CBS: Centralized/ core Banking Solution
PIN: Personal Identification Number
LAN: Local Area Network (used in the same building)
MAN: Metropolitan Area Network (used in the same city)
WAN: Wide Area Network (used in different locations)
IDRBT: Institute for development & Research in Banking Technology
Banknet: Payment System Network established by RBI
NICNFT: National Informatics Centre Network (currency chest operation)
WWW: World Wide Web
HTTP: Hyper Text Transfer Protocol
URL: Uniform Resource Locator
VSAT: Very Small Aperture terminal
Firewall: Software programme that restricts unauthorized access to data and acts as a security to private network

Friday, 22 June 2018

KYC AML: PRINCIPAL OFFICER DUTIES::

KYC AML:

PRINCIPAL OFFICER DUTIES::

Overall monitoring of the implementation of the Bank‘s KYC/AML/CFT policy

Monitoring and reporting of transactions, and sharing of information, as required under the law

Interaction with MLROs in Business Groups/SBUs for ensuring full compliance with the Policy

Timely submission of Cash Transaction Reports (CTRs), Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs),Counterfeit Currency Reports (CCRs) and Non Profit Organisation Transaction Report (NTRs) to FIU-IND

Maintaining liaison with the law enforcement agencies, banks and other institutions which are involved in the fight against Money Laundering and Combating Financing of Terrorism

Ensuring submission of periodical reports to the Top Management/Board

kyc aml mcqs

KYC AML Mcq:

1.The amount beyond which cash transactions (Receipts & Payments) are to be monitored by the Commercial Banks as stipulated by the RBI in

its guidelines is -

A.Rs.5 lacs & above B. Rs.8 lacs & above C. Rs.10 lacs & above D. No such limit

2. Submission of details of PAN (Permanent Account Number) is compulsory for Fixed Deposits, Remittances, such as, DDs / TTs/ Rupee TCs,

etc., if the amount exceeds –

A. Rs.10,000/- B. Rs.25,000/- C. Rs.50,000/- D. No such limit

3. Branches should not open deposit/advances accounts of banned/ terrorist organisations as circulated by -

A.IRDA B. SEBI C. AMFI D. FIU

4. FCRA means - Foreign Contribution Regulation Acta

kyc aml recollected

KYC AML:: 


All 2 marks from case studies.


(Placement


Layering


Integration)

KYC AML MCQs

KYC :::

1. To counter money laundering in India, Government of India has come up with:

(A) Banking Regulation Act (B) Reserve Bank of India Act

(C) Prevention of Corruption Act (D) Prevention of Money Laundering Act

2. The objective of KYC/AML/CFT guidelines is

(A) to prevent banks from being used, intentionally or unintentionally, by criminal

elements for money laundering or terrorist financing activities.

(B) KYC procedures also enable banks to know/understand their customers and their

financial dealings better which in turn help them manage their risks prudently

(C) Either (A) or (B) (D) Both (A) and (B)

3. For the purpose of KYC policy, a 'Customer' is defined as :

(A) A person or entity that maintains an account and/or has a business relationship

with the bank

(B) one on whose behalf the account is maintained (i.e. the beneficial owner).

(C) beneficiaries of transactions conducted by professional intermediaries, such as Stock

Brokers, Chartered Accountants, Solicitors etc. as permitted under the law, the any

person or entity connected with a financial transaction which can pose significant

reputational or other risks to the bank, say, a wire transfer or issue of a high value

demand draft as a single transaction.

(D) All of the above

KYC AML SHORT NOTES

KYC AML :: (Short notes 1)

1. The objective of KYC/AML/CFT guidelines is to prevent banks/FIs from being used,

intentionally or unintentionally, by criminal elements for money laundering or terrorist

financing activities.

2. The PMLA came into effect from 1st July 2005. Necessary Notifications / Rules under the

said Act were published in the Gazette of India on 1st July, 2005 by the Department of

Revenue, Ministry of Finance, Government of India. The PMLA has been further amended

vide notification dated March 6, 2009 and inter alia provides that violating the prohibitions

on manipulative and deceptive devices, insider trading and substantial acquisition of

securities or control as prescribed in Section 12 A read with Section 24 of the Securities and

Exchange Board of India Act, 1992 (SEBI Act) will now be treated as a scheduled offence

under schedule B of the PMLA.

3. KYC procedures also enable banks/FIs to know/understand their customers and their

financial dealings better and manage their risks prudently.

KYC AML

KYC/AML:::
1. Cash receipt or cash payment of more than Rs 10 lakh are reported to FIU on CTR statement which
should be sent to FIU within _____ from the close of the month: 15 days.
2. Suspicious Transaction report is sent to FIU within: 7 days from confirmation of suspicion.
3. In case of transactions carried out by a non-account based customer, that is a walk-in customer, where
the amount of transaction is equal to or exceeds rupees whether conducted as a single transaction or several
transactions that appear to be connected, the customer's identity and address should be verified: fifty
thousand
4. As per KYC norms, banks are required to periodical update data. In respect of High risk customers,
full KYC exercise will be required to be done at least every: two years

KYC AML

Kyc aml::
56. Dormant / In-operative account means -
A. No debits / credits in account for certain period
B. A dead account not operated for over 10 years
C. No debit entries, but certain credit entries for certain period
D. A fixed asset account
57. The objective of verifying the employee life-styles by the employer is -
A. to know the source of income
B. to ascertain whether the employee is having any contacts with illegal organisations
C. to ascertain whether the employee is assisting organisations banned by statutory authorities
D. All of these
58. Maximum retention period of the bank records in case of suspicious transactions is -
A. 5 years B. 7 years C. 10 years D. 15 years
60. Role of the front line employees of a bank in respect of KYC guidelines is to -
A. Identify customers as per the existing instructions
B. Serve with Smile while opening the customer accounts
C. Assist the customer in filling-up the account opening forms
D. Provide efficient customer service

MSME

Development Commissioner (DC-MSME) Schemes :::

Related scheme: 1. Credit Guarantee
Description Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises, GoI and Small Industries
Development Bank of India (SIDBI), established a Trust named Credit Guarantee Fund Trust
for Micro and Small Enterprises (CGTMSE) to implement Credit Guarantee Fund Scheme for
Micro and Small Enterprises. The corpus of CGTMSE is being contributed by GoI and SIDBI.
Nature of assistance Collateral free loans up to a limit ofRs.50 lakh - for individual MSEs
Who can apply Both existing and new enterprises are eligible to be covered under the scheme.
How to apply Candidates meeting the eligibility criteria may approach banks/financial
institutions, which are eligible under the scheme, or scheduled commercial banks and select
Regional Rural Banks.

SMERA

MSME::

SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES RATING AGENCY (SMERA)

SME Rating Agency of India Ltd (SMERA) is a third party rating agency exclusively set up
for micro, smal l, and medium enterprises in India for ratings on credit worthiness.
SMERA is promoted by SIDBI and Dun & Bradstreet along with various government,
public and private sector banks. It provides ratings which enable MSME units to raise

bank loans at competitive rates of interest. SMERA's ratings are an independent thirdparty
assessment of the overall status of the MSMEs as performing entities. The ratings
comprise a composite appraisal indicator and a size indicator. Its ratings enhance the
market standing of the MSMEs among their trading partners and customers. In addition,
the agency factors in industry dynamics in its ratings through a system of comparison of
strengths and weaknesses of the MSME with other companies in the same line of
business. It is also risk profiling the clusters through special studies and these would fill
the information gap between the lender and the sector. Banks offer concessions in pricing
(0.25%-0.50%) for credit to MSMEs rated by SMERA.

PMEGP

MSME::

Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme (PMEGP) is a credit linked subsidy programme administered by the Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises, Government of India. Khadi & Village Industries Commission (KVIC), is the nodal agency at national level for implementation of the scheme. At state level the scheme is implemented through KVIC, KVIB and District Industries center.

Eligibility
Objective
To generate employment opportunities in rural as well as urban areas through setting up of self employment ventures.
To provide continuous and sustainable employment to a large segment of traditional and prospective artisans and unemployed youth, so as to help arrest migration of rural youth to urban areas.
Scope

HOUSING FOR ALL BY 2022

 MSME::

HOUSING FOR ALL BY 2022

Urbanization is one of the important realities of recent decades in India. Its urban system consists of 7933 cities and towns of different population sizes, and a population of 377.16 million (Census 2011) which is the second largest in the world. India entered into a different demographic trajectory with the net increment to urban population exceeding the net increment to rural population. The United Nations (2014) estimates that much of the population increase in India between 2015 and 2030 will take place in urban areas during which it will add 164 million people to its urban base. The scale of the projected urban population increase is extraordinary, offering both an opportunity as well as a challenge for it to mobilize its resources and capacity to manage the transition.

MSME

MSME :: ( Most imp Exam point of view)

1. A Small Manufacturing Enterprise unit is considered as Sick Industrial Unit: when account remains sub
standard for more than six months or there is erosion in the net worth due to accumulated cash losses to
the extent of 50% or more of its net worth during the previous accounting year and the unit has been in
commercial production for at least two years
2. A small scale unit (manufacturing) can be treated as micro unit if the original investment in plant and
machinery does not exceed : Rs.25 lac
3. A unit in service enterprise is considered as medium if the investment in equipment is: more than Rs 2
crore but up to Rs 5 crore.
4. A Unit will be called as Small Service Enterprise if investment in equipments is up to: Rs 2 crore.
5. Amount of maximum loan given to micro and small enterprises that is covered under-CGFTMSEscheme
: Rs.200 lac
6. As per Micro, small and medium enterprise development Act 2006, a small manufacturing enterprise is
one in which original investment in plant and machinery is: more than Rs 25 lakh and up to Rs 5 crore.
7. As per RBI guidelines, banks are required to provide__% of advance to small enterprises to units in
which original investment in plant & machinery does not exceed Rs 10 lac in the case of manufacturing
units and does not exceed Rs 4 lac in equipment in the case of service enterprises: 40%
8. As per RBI guidelines, Loans to Agro and food processing Units are eligible to be classified under
Agriculture Ancillary Activity under Agril. Finance Priority Per borrower Rs. 100.00 crores.
9. Bank limit for working capital based on turn over method: 20% of the projected sales turnover
10. Banks are required to make 40% of advance to Micro and Small enterprises to manufacturing units
with investment up to Rs 10 lakhs and/or service enterprises with investment in equipment up to: No
criteria (earlier Rs 4 lakh) and now Micro has to reach 7.00% by March 2016 & 7.5% by March
2017 of ANBC/ceobe which ever is higher.
11. Banks will not obtain collateral security in respect of loans to micro and small enterprises which are
covered by Credit Guarantee Scheme for Micro and Small enterprises?: Rs 1 crore
12. CGTMSE fee: For North East & women; Loan up to Rs 5 lakh – 0.75% p.a.; Loan more than
Rs 5 lakh – 0.85% p.a.
13. Composite loan limit for Small Manufacturing enterprises: Rs.1.00 crore
14. For being defined as Medium enterprise, the original investment in plant & machinery should be: More
than Rs 5 crore and up to Rs 10 crore.
15. For being eligible to be classified as small (service) enterprise, the original investment in equipment
should not exceed: Rs 2 crore.
16. Full form of CGTSME: Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro & Small Enterprises.
17. If a small enterprise in manufacturing has a good track record, collateral security can be waived up
to: 25.00 lacs
18. If an MSME units holds a margin of Rs.20 lac and its projected sales are Rs.400 lac, its working
capital limit will be : Rs.80 lacs
19. In case of advance granted to Micro and small enterprises, banks will not obtain collateral security up
to: Rs 10 lakh
20. In case of advance to Micro and Small manufacturing enterprises, working capital limit by a bank as
per turnover method is calculated as: 20% of projected annual turnover.
21. In case of loan guaranteed under CGTMSE, what is the extent of cover for loan upto 50 lac granted to
a women?: 80% of amount in default.
22. In case of loan to micro and small enterprises guaranteed by CGTMSE, no collateral security is
required for loans up to: Rs 100 lac.
23. Khadi Village Industry part of MSE; irrespective of investment in P&M.
24. Maximum Guarantee coverage for loans guaranteed by CGTMSE if loan up to Rs 5 lakh: 85% of the
amount in default with a maximum of Rs 425000.
25. Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises is under which Ministry: Ministry of Micro Small & Medium
Enterprises.
26. SMERA stands for: Small & Medium Enterprises Rating Agency.
27. The definition of Micro and Small enterprise in the manufacturing Sector is based on investment in :
Plant and Machinery.
28. Under CGFT scheme for MSE, for loans up to Rs 50 lac, 80% coverage is not available for: SC/ST

29. What is the maximum amount of loan covered guarantee scheme of CGTMSE for loans made to micro
and small enterprise: Rs.00.00 Lac

30. What is the rate of guarantee fees charged under CGSMSE for loan of more than Rs 5 lac to a
women?: 0.85% p.a. of limit sanctioned.
31. Advantages of Cluster based finance to MSMEs: Risk mitigation.

MSME

 MSME::

What are Debt Recovery Tribunals (DRTs)?

Debt Recovery Tribunals were established to facilitate the debt recovery involving banks and other financial institutions with their customers. DRTs were set up after the passing of Recovery of Debts due to Banks and Financial Institutions Act (RDBBFI), 1993. Appeals against orders passed by DRTs lie before Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunal (DRAT). DRTs can take cases from banks for disputed loans above Rs 10 Lakhs. At present, there are 33 DRTs and 5 DRATs functioning at various parts of the country. In 2014, the government has created six new DRTs to speed up loan related dispute settlement.

Compared to the ordinary court procedures, DRTs were able to handle large number of cases with low delay during the initial phases. Though the DRTs have made impact on recovery front, several issues related to their performance in the background of rising volume of NPAs have appeared in later period. Inadequate infrastructure coupled with insufficient number of DRTs has made them incompetent to handle the rising volume of disputes.