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The Banking Industry

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Structure of Banking

Industry

Structure of Banks in India

Structure of Banks in India

Central Bank
Central bank is responsible for regulating the banking
system of a nation.
It is essentially a banker to banks as well as banker to
the Government.
Central bank also is responsible for the monetary and
credit policies of the economy.
Central bank issues currency notes for the country and
oversees the movement of currency value in relation to
other countrys currency value.

Reserve Bank of India


The Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 established
Reserve Bank as the Central bank of India.
Regulator and Supervisory authority of the monetary
policy of India.
Supervises the financial system of the Indian economy.
Issues Indian currency note (Rupee)
Ensures stability and management of interest rate in the
economy and exchange rates in an international setting.
Regulates and supervises the payment and settlement
systems in the economy.

Role of Reserve Bank of India


Developing financial institutions and markets.
Promoting banking activities.
Ensuring safety of depositors funds in the banking
system.
Provide the supply of currency and credit for the
economy.
Manage Government debt.
Encourage financial inclusion in the society.
Encourage developmental functions in the economy.

Structure of Reserve Bank of India

Commercial Banks
Banks that accept deposits and provide loans and
advances.
Three types of commercial banks.
Public sector banks.
Private sector banks.
Foreign banks.

Structure of Public Sector Banks

Primary Functions of Commercial Banks


Accepting deposits
Surplus income and savings are mobilized as
short-term and long-term deposits for specified
interest rates.
Providing loans and advances
Fund needs of the society (individuals and
business establishments) are met through the
loans and advances at specified interest rates.
Loans are long term fund assistance.
Advances are short term fund assistance such as
cash credit, overdraft, discounting of bills.

Secondary Functions of Commercial Banks


Safe custody of valuables.
Providing foreign exchange.
Transfer of money.
Providing guarantee and letters of credit.
Providing business support services such as
providing business information, credit reports etc.

Investment Banks
Corporate financial advisory and investment service
providers.
Assist

financial

markets

and

provide

capital

intermediation services.
Provide consultancy, market research and broking
services to assist high net worth individuals and other
entities in their investment goals.
Develop ventures through project finance to support
fund needs and export finance to meet international
trade ventures.

Functions of Investment Banks


Services for individuals
Maintain financial accounts
Provide loans, lease and mortgages
Pension management
Investment management
Private banking
E-banking

Functions of Investment Banks


Services for business firms and institutions
Corporate advisory services
Investment management of institutional investors
Asset management services
Industry analysis and research
Information provision
Merger and amalgamation activities
Valuation services

Development Banks and Specialized Banks

Specialized development financial institutions.


Providers of long-term funds to economic sectors
experiencing shortage of funds.
Substantiate and bridge market gaps in developing
economies.

Illustrative Development Banks


Industrial Development Bank of India (IDBI)
Industrial Finance Corporation of India (IFCI).
National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development
(NABARD)
Export Import Bank of India (EXIM Bank)
National Housing Bank (NHB)
Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI)
Infrastructure Development Finance Company (IDFC)
Industrial Investment Bank of India (IIBI)
State Finance Corporations (SFCs)

Co-operative Banks
Established for the purpose of providing funds for nonagricultural purposes.
These banks were formed by local communities, local
geographical groups or work groups.
Based on the principles of cooperation that implies
mutual

help,

decisions.

open

membership

and

participative

Types of Co-operative Banks


State Co-operative Banks.
Apex body of co-operative banks in a state.
Central / District Co-operative Banks.
Established at the district level and report to the State
Co-operative Banks.
Primary Co-operative Banks.
Located in urban or semi-urban areas catering to the
business needs of the locality.
Located in rural areas to meet the funding needs of the
community / work group / area.

Structure of Co-operative Banks

Non Banking Finance Companies


Non Banking Financial Companies offer a wide range of
services such as hire purchase finance, lease finance
and investment services.
They

provide

financial

intermediation

and

have

expanded their products profile.


The Reserve Bank of India working group on Financial
Companies introduced registration of such companies
with net owned funds (NOF) of Rupees 5 million or
above.

Types of NBFCs
NBFCs accepting deposits
NBFCs not accepting deposits but rendering financial
intermediation services
NBFCs that are investment companies (90% or more of
their total assets are in the form of investment in
securities of their group / holding / subsidiary companies)

Mutual Funds
Mutual funds are capital market intermediaries.
Mutual funds are established as trust entities.
Mobilize money in the form of units and invest them in
portfolios to meet risk-return expectations of investors.
Mutual fund returns are shared among unit holders.

Structure of Mutual Fund

Microfinance Institutions
Small scale financial service providers.
Financial

services

are

provided

to

low-income

households and enterprises.


Microfinance is provided by alternate sector such as
Non Government Organizations (NGOs), Self Help
Groups (SHGs).

Microfinance Business Models


Joint Liability Group.
The group who are co-guarantors for other
members of the group.
Linkage with Banks.
SHGs coordinate with bank in microfinance
activities.

Risk Management
Measurement and management of banking risks in a
regulated environment
Credit risk
Liquidity risk
Market risk
Operational risk
System risk

Risk Management Structure

Risk Management in Banks


Technology driven
Model driven
Capital adequacy to absorb risk
Dynamic strategies
Integration of risk management process
Risk based bank audit and supervision
Supportive legal environment

Board of Directors

Banking Business

Risk Management Practices

Lending decision

Loan policy

Deposit mobilization

Interest rate policy

Asset mobilization

Planning asset management

Credit management

Internal rating systems

Investment decision

Setting risk tolerance level

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