Banking Terminology: A Complete List of Bank Related Terms For Bank Exams
Banking Terminology: A Complete List of Bank Related Terms For Bank Exams
Banking Terminology: A Complete List of Bank Related Terms For Bank Exams
2 Account balance Opening Account Balance / Beginning of the Day (BOD) Balance:
The balance in an account at the beginning of each business day;
includes all deposits and withdrawals that were posted from the
previous night, whether or not funds have been collected.
Closing Account Balance / End of the Day (EOD) Balance: The
account balance computed at the end of the business day, and is
the adjusted balance of the credits and debits during the business
day in the account of the customer.
3 Account
statement
Periodic statement of all the debit and credit transactions on an
account for a given statement cycle.
4 Acquirer Acquirers are banks and financial institutions that collaborate with
businesses to accept credit/debit card payments.
5 Active account A bank account in which there are regular transactions. A bank
account that is not dormant or inoperative or under an attachment
order of the court or enforcement authorities.
6 Additional
cardholder
Another member added to an existing card thus extending its usage
is called an additional cardholder. Thus by adding an additional
cardholder the existing cardholder allows him/ her to make
purchases and use the credit card. However, the responsibility to
repay the monthly outstanding balance rests with the original
(principal) cardholder.
7 Administrative
Fee
A one time non-refundable levy to bank's customers for meeting
expenses related to appraisal of loan proposals.
9 Affinity Card Credit cards linked to special organizations like sports clubs,
exclusive clubs and charities. Affinity credit cards can also help
raise funds, when a part of income from every transaction goes
toward the benefit of relevant organization.
12 Annual
percentage yield
(APY)
A percentage rate reflecting the total amount of interest paid on a
deposit account (savings, CDs etc.), based on the interest rate and
the effect of interest compounding for one year.
13 Anywhere
Banking
Customer can deposit/ withdraw cash at any branch other than the
branch in which he holds the account. Anywhere banking frees the
customer from geographical boundaries and limitations and gives
the flexibility to the customer to use his account across the board.
14 Application
Form
A form to be filled in and signed as per the Bank’s requirements to
avail Banking facilities. Requirement of details to be filled in will
vary for each facility. Applications may also require certain
specified documents also to be attached.
15 Arrears
Outstanding
The arrears outstanding comprises of the unpaid EMI’s and other
charges, if any, levied in the account.
16 Asset Cash or anything you own that can be turned into cash. This
includes property, goods, savings or investments.
These are things that people own such as buildings, vehicles,
shares and money in the bank. The opposite is liabilities. For a
bank, its assets are mainly the loans it makes
19 Automatic
Funds Transfer
An arrangement that moves funds from one account to another
automatically on a pre-arranged schedule; for example, every
payday or once a month.
20 Automatic
payment
An arrangement that authorizes payments to be deducted
automatically from a bank account (usually a savings/current
account) to pay bills (such as insurance payments, rent, mortgage
or loan payments). Payments are usually scheduled to be made on
a certain day of the month.
21 Available
balance
The available balance is the account balance in the account that is
available for immediate use at any given point of time
22 Available Credit Available credit is your credit limit minus your current balance. It
is the unused portion of your credit line.
23 Average daily
balance
The average balance in a deposit account, equals the sum of the
daily account balances during an accounting period, usually a
monthly or a quarterly cycle, divided by the number of days in the
accounting period. Banks normally specify certain minimum
average daily balance to be maintained in current and savings
accounts.
24 Bad Credit A term used to describe a poor credit rating including an account
in default. Common practices which can damage your credit rating
include late or missed payments, exceeding the limit on cards,
defaulting on loans or declaring bankruptcy. "Bad Credit" can
result in the denial of future credit.
25 Balance
Transfer
Transferring balances from one credit card to another, usually to
take advantage of a lower interest rate. Transfers are limited to the
available credit on the receiving card.
27 Banker's
Cheque
A cheque issued by a branch of a bank against consideration
received. Banker's cheque are valid for a certain period as
indicated on the face of the cheque. (also called Pay Order).
28 Bankruptcy A legal action, in which a person who is not able to repay his loans
satisfactorily, is declared bankrupt by a court order. The collateral
or security in this case becomes liable to be attached by
administration to satisfy creditors.
Base Rate New reference rate used by banks for loan pricing w.e.f July 2010.
Base rate captures cost of deposits, cost of capitals and unallocable
(common) overheads. Banks are not allowed to lend base rate
except for certain specified category or borrowers.
30 Bill discounting Under this type of lending, Bank takes the bill drawn by borrower
on his (borrower's) customer and pay him immediately deducting
some amount as discount/commission. The Bank then presents the
Bill to the borrower's customer on the due date of the Bill and
collect the total amount. If the bill is delayed, the borrower or his
customer pay the Bank a pre-determined interest depending upon
the terms of transaction.
31 Bill Pay
Service
Bill Pay is a service of Online Banking from bank that allows you
to pay your bills online. In addition you can elect to receive e-Bills
- electronic versions of your paper bills - from your bank credit
card and a variety of companies currently offering e-Bills.
33 Billing Cycle The number of days between your last statement date and your
current statement date. Most service providers follow a monthly
billing cycle.
34 Billing
Statement
A monthly bill from your credit card issuer which describes and
summarizes the activity on your account including the outstanding
balance, purchases, payments, credits, finance charges and other
transactions for the month.
35 Borrower The person/legal entity who is taking the loan with the promise to
repay it back with interest under the credit or loan agreement.
36 Bounced cheque A cheque, which a bank returns unpaid because there is not
enough available balance in the account or for other reasons.
38 Budget The financial record you use to keep track of the money you earn,
how much you spend and what you spend it on. Your budget also
includes savings and how much you pay to your creditors.
39 Business Credit
Card
A reward credit card, that comes with special features and rewards
for corporate users. Business credit card builds credit history for
the associated business. They are a good way to separate business
expenses from personal ones.
40 Calendar Year Commencing from the day and month of a year to the previous
day and month of the next year. A calendar year commencing on
1st March will end on 29th February if next year is a leap year at
28th February.
41 Canceled cheque A cheque that has been not paid and cancelled by the drawer –
Account holder.
42 Capital
Adequacy Ratio
Capital Adequacy Ratio is the capital to assets ratio which banks
are required to maintain against risks. It is also known as Capital to
Risk (Weighted) Assets Ratio (CRAR).
43 Card Holder Cardholder is a person who owns a debit or credit card issued by a
credit card company, financial institution or bank.
44 Card Issuer A bank, financial institution, credit union, or agency that issues a
credit card to public or its members is called a card issuer.
45 Card member
Agreement
The issuer's terms and conditions relating to your credit card
account. The Card member Agreement is between the customer
and the card issuing company and is a legal document. (When you
sign up for a credit card understand the terms and Conditions).
46 Carpet Area The area inside the walls of a room, measured from wall to wall
including the door jams. In simple terms it is the area usable as
floor level inside a room.
47 Cash Advance
(Credit Card)
Applies to an advance taken against a credit card account. The
advance may be through a cash withdrawal at an automated teller
machine, bank teller or by use of a convenience check. This cash
is an instant loan from your credit card account. The credit card
company will apply finance charges from the day you take the
advance until the day you pay it off. A transaction fee may also be
charged based on the amount of your withdrawal.
48 Cash Advance
Fee
A one-time fee for cash advances in addition to normal finance
charges. This fee is usually a percentage of the advance amount.
49 Cash Back
Credit Card
It is a special type of reward credit card, which pays back in cash.
Whenever you use your cash back credit card to make purchases, a
percentage of it is returned back to you. The cash back rewards can
be redeemed as gift vouchers, or hard cash.
50 Cash Reserve
Ratio (CRR)
Cash Reserve Ratio is the amount of mandatory funds that
commercial banks have to keep with RBI. It is always fixed as a
percentage of total demand and time liabilites.
51 Certificate of
Title (Title Deed)
An official document, showing the ownership or title of the
property in question is called the certificate of title/title deeds. It
describes various details about the property such as the area,
location, registered owner and other factors and charges related to
the property.
52 Certificate of
Deposit (CD)
A time deposit that is payable at the end of a specified term. CDs
generally pay a fixed interest rate and generally offer a different
interest rate than other types of deposit accounts. If an early
withdrawal from the CD prior to the end of the term is permitted, a
penalty is usually assessed. CD is sold at discount value and being
a money market instrument, can be transferred to other person
through negotiaion.
53 Certified cheque A cheque for which the bank guarantees payment. Banks in India
do not generally, certify cheques.
54 Charge back A credit card transaction, which is returned or not honored, is
called a charge back. Usually done by the credit card holder in
response to faulty products, credit card fraud, a dispute or noncompliance
with the rules and regulations, charge back restores the
funds back with the credit card.
55 Charge back
Period
It is the time period from a particular credit card transaction within
which, the credit card holder must initiate a charge back.
56 Charge Card A card that requires full payment of the balance before the end of
the billing period. It is not a line of credit and no interest is
charged.
57 Cheque
for Collection
An instrument drawn on another Bank or Branch tendered by a
customer of a Bank or by his representative, at the branch or in the
drop box provided for the purpose for collecting the amount of the
cheque.
58 Cheque
purchase
Bank may, at its sole discretion, purchase local/outstation cheque
tendered for collection at the specific request of the customer or as
per prior arrangement subject to levy of service charges.
59 Cheque return
fee / EMI return
fee)
This is a ‘service charge’ that would be levied in the account due
to return of cheque sent for collection/EMI cheque. Usually, both
the collecting bank and paying bank leavy cheque eturn charges on
their customers.
60 Clear Title When the property in question is free from any doubt, is not
disputed and is not having any encumbrances it is said to have a
clear title.
61 Co-borrower A person who applies for any loan with the primary borrower and
takes on the responsibility for repayment of the debt. This is done
to improve the eligibility for loan and simultaneously mitigating
the risk of banks who can exercise the option of recovery from
both parties- jointly as well as severally.
62 Co-Branded
Card
It is a special type of credit card which is sponsored by both the
credit card issuing company and the participating retail company
or vendor. Co-branded credit card carries special deals and savings
from the participating merchants.
63 Collateral An asset pledged to a lender to guarantee repayment. Collateral
could include savings, bonds, insurance policies, jewelry, property
or other items that are pledged to pay off a loan if payments are
not made according to the contract. Collateral is not required for
unsecured credit card accounts.
64 Collected
Balance
The balance in a deposit account, not including deposited items
that have not yet been paid, or collected. See also Glossary term,
"account balance." It is also known as cleared balance.
65 Combined
Balance
Any combination of balances from linked accounts, such as
savings, current and CDs. Can be used to meet the balance
required to waive the monthly fee on some accounts.
66 Commitment Fee It is an interest, which is charged on a loan applicant if he doesn’t
withdraw the sanctioned loan within a stipulated time period.
67 Common Areas Areas such as staircase, lifts, sanitation ducts, electricity ducts,
airconditioning
ducts etc. kept aside for common use by the property
owners. This area is generally divided proportionately in relation
to the size of property and charged accordingly.
68 Compound
Interest
Interest which is calculated not only on the initial principal but
also the accumulated interest of prior periods. The more frequently
interest is compounded, the higher the effective rate. In India
interest on loans and advances is compounded on monthly basis as
per RBI order.
69 Consolidation
Loan
If you owe money to several creditors, you can combine your
payments and balances into a single account with one creditor.
This can be done in several ways. For example, you can transfer
several high interest credit card balances onto one card with a
lower rate. If you own a home, you can consolidate your debt with
a low-interest home equity loan. Or, you can get a loan
specifically designed for this purpose.
70 Contact Point
Verification
This refers to contact by bank staff on the phone numbers/ address
provided by the customer to establish correctness of the contact
points. CPV is an important parameter in banks and a negative
verification can lead to decline of the banking facilities sought.
169 Non-Home
Branch
The other networked branches of a Bank under the Core Banking
system that facilitate conducting of transactions to a customer
having his account with a 'Home' branch.
170 Non-performing
Assets (NPA)
Any loan account that has been classified by a bank or financial
institution as sub-standard, doubtful or loss assets in terms of asset
classification norms of RBI.
171 Non-taxable
Income
Money you earn that is not taxed by the Government. This money
can come from several sources including disability pay or legal
settlements due to personal injury.
172 Obligation of the
Borrower
The things, which a borrower has to take, care of after taking the
loan. These include proper repayment, providing the banks with
post-dated cheque and following the terms written in the loan
agreement carefully.
173 Online Banking A service that allows the account holder to access their account
information and conduct a set of pre defined banking transactions,
such as bill payment, fund transfer using the Internet facility.
However, a customer needs to have Customer ID and a unique Net
Banking Password in order to undertake this facility.
174 Outstanding
Balance
The total amount that you owe on a credit card or other loan.
175 Outstanding
Cheque
Outstanding cheque is issued by the company but not yet cleared
by the bank. In preparing the bank reconciliation, it is deducted
from the bank balance. The exception is an uncleared Certified
cheque, which is not considered outstanding since both parties, the
company and the bank, know about it and have subtracted it.
176 Outstation
Cheque
Cheque deposited by the customer of a branch for credit to his/her
account and not payable at Local clearing at the centre where the
branch is situated.
177 Outward
Remittances
Remittance of funds from the account maintained by a customer or
separately on his instructions to another account with the same
bank or another banks in the manner indicated by the customer
(Demand drafts, electronic funds transfer, telegraphic transfers
etc.). Banks may levy service charges for affecting the
remittances.
178 Over the Credit
Limit
(Credit Card)
When the amount you owe is more than the limit on your credit
line. Any combination of purchases, cash advances, fees or finance
charges may cause you to exceed your credit limit.
For example, you will be over the credit limit if you spend Rs.
20,000 when you have Rs. 10,000 of your credit line left. If you go
over your credit limit, you will be charged an extra fee each month
until the amount of money you owe is less than or equal to your
credit line.
179 Overdraft An overdraft occurs when you do not have enough available funds
in your account to cover a cheque or other withdrawal, but the
bank pays the items and overdraws your account.
180 Overdraft
Protection
A service that allows a account to be linked to another account that
helps provide protection against returned items or overdrafts.
When your checking account does not have sufficient available
funds to cover a cheque, funds are automatically transferred from
the available balance in the linked account to cover the cheque.
Choices can include using a savings account, credit card or a line
of credit account as the linked account to provide protection.
181 Overlimit Fees Whenever a credit card holder crosses his credit limits an overlimit
fees is charged on his account.
182 Partprepayment
Making Partial prepayment towards the Principal of the loan
account.
183 Partprepayment
fee
The quantum of charges levied at the time of Part pre-payment.
184 Passbook Book issued by a bank or financial institutions to record deposits,
withdrawals, and interest earned in a savings account.
185 Past Due The status of an account when the minimum payment has not been
received by the due date.
186 Payee
(Drawee)
The person who receives a payment. This often applies to cheque.
If you receive a cheque you are the payee and the person or
company who wrote the cheque is the payer or drawer.
187 Payer
(Drawer)
The person who makes a payment. This often applies to cheque. If
you write a cheque you are the payer and the recipient of the
cheque is the payee.
188 Penal interest Additional interest, over and above the contracted rate, that is
levied by lenders on amounts that remain unpaid beyond the due
date and / or non-adherence to the terms of sanction.
189 Penalty on
Premature
Withdrawal of
Fixed Deposit
It is a penalty on the premature breakage of a Fixed Deposit. If a
customer keeps a deposit with a bank for a fixed tenure and in the
event of the depositor withdrawing the deposit before the due
maturity date, the banks can charge a Penalty sum on premature
withdrawal.
190 Periodic Rate The interest rate described in relation to a specific amount of time.
For example, the monthly periodic rate is the cost of credit per
month; the daily periodic rate is the cost of credit per day.
191 Personal
Identification
Number (PIN)
Personal identification number (PIN) is a secret number given to
an account holder to be used when they put their credit card or
cash card into an automatic teller machine (ATM). If the number
they use is correct they will be allowed to access their account.
192 Plinth area The external area of the whole building including the balconies but
excluding the common area in apartment blocks, commercial
buildings and spaces.
193 Point Of Sale
(POS)
Point of Sale refers to the location at which a payment of a card
transaction occurs, usually by way of a device such as a credit card
terminal or cash register.
194 Post Dated
Cheque (PDCs)
Mode of
Repayment
A payment mode wherein the customer provides Post Dated
Cheque (PDCs) for the repayment of the loan dues.
195 Postal Charges Charges for dispatch of instruments for collection/remittances on
behalf of a customer. Normally postal charges are recovered from
instrument on actual basis.
196 Posting Date The date that a purchase, cash advance, fee, service charge or
payment is recorded on your charge or credit account.
197 Power of
Attorney
It is an instrument of law empowering a specified person or
persons to act for and in the name of the person executing it. The
person for whom the act is done or who is so represented is called
principal. The person who is so authorized to do or represent is
called agent. It may be either notarized or registered depending on
the transaction.
198 Pre-Approved
Credit
Credit card or a line of credit that is approved based upon
available data without further information supplied by the
potential Card member.
199 Pre-Closure Closure of the loan account prior to the tenure fixed for the
account.
200 Prepayment When a portion or the entire amount of the principal of a loan is
paid before it is due.
201 Previous
Balance
The total balance due at the end of the last billing cycle.
202 Prime Lending
Rate
The minimum short-term interest rate charged by commercial
banks to their most creditworthy clients. It is a reference interest
rate used by banks for its lending purposes.
Note: The Benchmark Prime Lending Rate (BPLR) used by
banks for loan pricing till June 30, 2010 was different from
this as BPLR was a reference rate based on average cost).
203 Prime Rate The Prime Rate is the rate on which each bank fixes its own prime
lending rate for advances.
204 Principal
Outstanding
The balance principal amount in the loan (i.e. Loan amount
disbursed less Principal repaid till date) taken from the Bank.
205 Processing Date
(card
transaction)
It is the date on which the transaction is processed by the acquiring
bank.
206 Processing Fee The charges colleted by the Bank to process the customer’s loan
application.
207 Promissory Note A promissory note is a binding legal document that a borrower
signs to obtain a loan. It lists your rights and responsibilities under
the loan agreement, including how and when the loan must be
repaid. Rights and responsibilities for credit card accounts are
listed in the Card member Agreement.
208 Property Tax The tax levied by local corporations, municipal bodies on a
property. This tax has to be paid by the legal owner of the
property.
209 Provisional
Interest and
Principal
Certificate
A certificate issued informing the ‘projected’ interest payment and
principal repayment for the loan account for the upcoming
financial year based on the current financial year. This helps
borrower in tax planning.
210 Real Time Gross
Settlement
(RTGS)
RTGS is a system through which electronic instructions can be
given by banks to transfer funds from their account to the account
of another bank. The RTGS system is maintained and operated by
the RBI and provides a means of efficient and faster funds transfer
among banks facilitating their financial operations. As the name
suggests, funds transfer between banks takes place on a ‘real time’
basis. Therefore, money can reach the beneficiary instantaneously
and the beneficiary’s bank has the responsibility to credit the
beneficiary’s account within two hours.
211 Recurring
Billing
In recurring billing the credit card holder authorizes a merchant or
vendor to charge his credit card on a regular basis.
212 Reference A person who can vouch for your reliability, employment history
or other factor needed to determine your creditworthiness/
employability.
213 Refinancing Repayment of existing loan by a fresh loan, usually on better terms
and conditions. In case of loans secured through mortgage of
property etc., the same asset is taken over as security. Banks also
refinance their loans to certain category of borrowers through
specified refining agencies which provide refinance with matching
repayment schedule.
214 Repayment The process of returning of the borrowed loan amount. The
repayment has to be made for the entire tenure of the loan amount.
Based on fixed or floating interest rates on the loan amount, the
banks or financial institution decides on an EMI which has to be
paid on or before a date mentioned in the loan agreement every
month.
215 Repayment
Holiday /
Moratorium
period
A specified period of time during which recovery of loan remains
suspended under a mutual agreement between the lender and the
borrower. Interest continues to be charged on the loan during this
period.
216 Repayment
Mode
It refers to the payment instruction given by the customer for the
repayment of the loan dues. Cash, cheque, ECS and other
electronic channels are the primary payment modes.
217 Repayment
Schedule
(amortization
schedule)
The repayment schedule provides the details of the interest and
principal components of the EMIs payable by the customer on a
monthly basis.
218 Repo Rate Repo Rate is the interest rate for secured overnight or short term
financing involving the sale and repurchase of securities. It is
basically the rate at which RBI lends to commercials banks for
meeting the short term deficits. RBI varies Repo rate from time to
time to achieve its monetary policy objectives.
219 Rests Rests refers to the length of time between the dates on which the
interest (on loans and deposits) is compounded. Eg: monthely,
quarterly, half-yearly, yearly.
220 Returned
Cheque
When you do not have enough available funds in your account
(including any overdraft protection transfer from another account)
to cover a cheque, the bank may decide not to pay the cheque and
to return it to the payee. A returned item fee may be charged to
your account.
221 Revalidation Duly authenticated extension of the validity period for
negotiation/payment of cheque/draft or a negotiable instrument.
222 Reverse
Mortgage
A financial product, which provides senior citizens with funds
against their home equity. Senior citizens can get a regular amount
monthly, quarterly or as a lump sum. They can live in their homes
for their lifetime and after that banks can recover the amount by
selling the property or if the heirs of the property want they can
claim it by repaying the dues to the bank.
223 Revolving Credit A credit agreement that allows consumers to pay all or part of the
outstanding balance on a loan or credit card. As credit is paid off,
it becomes available again to use for another purchase or cash
advance.
224 Reward Points
(Cards)
A loyalty scheme that supplies benefits based upon the card's
usage. Benefits are usually in the form of points that can be
redeemed for gift vouchers, gift items or services, such as airline
tickets, discounts on purchases or cash refunds. The credits
accumulated toward these benefits are often a percentage of each
purchase.
225 Safe Custody Documents and articles placed with the Bank for safe keeping
under mutually agreed terms and conditions and payment of
fee/rent on a regular basis.
226 Sale deed It is a legal document, which transfers the ownership of the
property or objects for a mentioned price. Every sale deed has to
be registered with appropriate authority.
227 Savings Account An account maintained by a customer with a bank for the purpose
of accumulating funds over a period of time. Only the account
owner or a duly authorized agent may withdraw funds deposited in
a savings account. It attracts a modest rate of interest, which is
fixed by RBI and is considerably lower than the rates applicable
on the Fixed Deposits. There is generally a limit on the number of
transactions that can be done without attracting a charge.
229 Secured Card A credit card that is guaranteed by a cash deposit held in a special
savings account or certificate of deposit. The deposit must remain
in the account until the credit line is closed or the issuer decides
security is no longer necessary. The credit line on the card is
usually equal to the amount of the deposit. If the Card member
defaults on the card, the issuer will apply the deposit toward the
outstanding balance.
229 Secured Debt Debt for which repayment is guaranteed through collateral
property of equal or greater value than the amount of the loan. If
you do not repay the loan, the issuer may take possession of the
collateral. Collateral may be an asset such as a car or a home or, in
the case of a secured credit card, a cash deposit held by the issuer.
For example, a mortgage is a secured debt in which the home is
collateral. If the person fails to repay the loan, the bank may take
the home as payment.
230 Security
Documents
This refers to the list of original documents to be collected from
the customer towards the security of the loan amount
sanctioned/disbursed
231 Service Charges Charges levied by a Bank for providing various banking services.
(The Tariff Schedule for commonly availed banking services is
displayed on the Branch Notice Board and on the Bank's Website.)
232 Simple Interest Simple interest is calculated solely as a percentage of the principal
sum from the date of the availment to the date of repayment (also
see compount interest).
233 Stamp Duty It is the duty to be paid to appropriate authority on the different
documents used in the loan process. Stamp duty varies from state
to state and the stamp duty should be adequate enough so as to
make the documents valid and enforceable.
234 Standing
Instruction
Signed instructions given by a customer to his/her Bank to make
regular transfer of funds for specified purposes and valid for the
period indicated by the customer until the instruction is
withdrawn.
235 Statutory
Liquidity Ratio
(SLR)
SLR is the portion that banks need to invest in the form of cash,
gold or government approved securities. The quantum is specified
as some percentage of the total demand and time liabilities of the
bank and is set by the Reserve Bank of India (also see Cash
Reserve Ratio).
236 Stop Payment When you ask a bank not to pay a cheque or payment you have
written or authorized. Stop payments are generally placed on lost
or stolen cheques or on cheques related to disputed purchases.
Banks usually levy charges for registering stop payment
instructions.
237 Stored-Value
Card
Stored-value card is a special type of credit card, which has a
stored money value. Stored value card can be reloadable, in which
case more money can be added to the stored value card and can be
reused.
238 Surcharge Surcharge is an additional charge imposed for a specific service,
product or purpose. It is a fee charged on a card transaction by the
acceptor to cover the additional cost of taking a card rather than
cash or cheque.
239 Taxable Income Any money you earn or receive - such as salary, bonuses or
interest from investments - that can be taxed by the government.
Taxable income is the Total Income net of permissible deductions.
240 Tenure of the
Loan
The repayment period assigned for the account.
Total Tenure - The period for which the loan has been granted
Balance Tenure - The balance period for which the EMIs need to
be paid. Personal loans, car loans, education loans have shorter
tenures as compared to home loans. Some banks and financial
institutions extend the loan tenure for an extra fee or a slight
increase in interest rates.
241 Tenure of Fixed
Deposit
It is the period for which a customer deposits a sum of amount
with a Bank. This tenure is generally fixed and the customer
cannot withdraw his deposit before the tenure expires. The amount
can be withdrawn before the fixed tenure by paying pre-payment
penalty.
242 Time deposit An account for a fixed term with the understanding that the funds
will remain on deposit until the end of the term. Penalties for early
withdrawals may apply.
243 Transaction
Account
Linked Home
Loans
A special home loan that allows the customer to link a transaction
account to his/her loan account. The interest is then calculated
periodically on the loan outstanding less balance maintained in the
transaction account. These loans help the customer reduce their
interest payment by parking their extra liquidity in the linked
account. Majority of the Home Loan players today offer this
product under different names.
244 Transaction
Date
The date a purchase is made or cash is withdrawn. Some
companies assess interest from the transaction date, others from
the posting date. (See processing date)
245 Transaction Fee An extra charge for various credit activities such as using an ATM
or receiving a cash advance.
246 Transfer of
funds
A movement of funds from one account to another.
247 Travelers
cheque
Travellers' cheque - are issued through banks acting as sales
agents, or sold directly to the public. The purchaser pays for the
cheque in advance, and signs them twice - once when ordering the
cheque and once when cashing them. The cheques are payable by
the issuing company, sold in numerous foreign currencies, and are
insured against loss or theft
248 Uncollected
funds
Refers to items deposited in an account that have not yet been
collected, or paid, by the bank on which they were drawn
249 Unsecured Debt This is debt that is not guaranteed by collateral; therefore, no
assets are committed in the event of default. If the issuer is unable
to collect on the loan, its value is lost. Most credit cards are
unsecured.
(As the Card member’s promise is the only guarantee, credit card
issuers require more information regarding income and credit
history than with a secured loan.)
A loan where no collateral or security is given or charged to the
lender. Unsecured lending is viewed as higher risk than secured
lending and interest rates are generally higher to reflect this.
250 Valuation Before disbursal of a loan against a property, usually the bank
conducts a valuation check on the property being offered as
collateral. This is done to find out the market value of the
property. The value of the property will be a factor considered
while granting the loan.
251 Variable
Expenses
Variable expenses are those that can change from month to month.
Variable expenses include necessities that can be reduced (such as
food and utilities) and non-essentials that could be eliminated
(e.g., long distance telecall charges, cable, magazine subscriptions,
etc). Reducing these expenses is the simplest step in getting
control of your finances.
252 Variable Interest
Rate
An interest rate that is not fixed but can vary within a pre-fixed
band by the loan-issuing bank. For example some credit card
issuers charge variable Interest rate on the outstanding un-paid
balance depending upon the credit score or credit
behavior/payment pattern of the customer.
An interest rate that is not fixed but can vary within a pre-fixed
band by the loan-issuing bank. For example some credit card
issuers charge variable Interest rate on the outstanding un-paid
balance depending upon the credit score or credit
behavior/payment pattern of the customer. (See floating rates)
253 Wire transfer An electronic payment service for transferring funds by wire (for
example, through the Federal Reserve Wire Network or the
Clearing House Inter Bank Payments System).
254 Withdrawal A removal of funds from an account.
255 Zero Balance Zero balance is when the total outstanding balance is paid and
there are no new charges or cash advances during a billing cycle.