Adv Acc - Banking
Adv Acc - Banking
Adv Acc - Banking
BANKING COMPANIES
NPA CLASSIFICATION
Q. 1 CLASSIFICATION OF NPA
On 31st March, 2018 Maya Bank Ltd. finds that:
(1) On a term loan of Rs.2 crores, interest for the last three quarters is in arrears
beyond the due date.
(2) The amount of Rs.10 lakhs of a discounted bill were due on 31st January, 2018
but the same has not been received.
(3) On a term loan of Rs.1 crore, interest for the last one month is past due.
Which of the above advances, will be treated as non-performing assets (NPA) as on 31st
March, 2018?
Find out the income to be recognised for the year ended 31st Mar, 2018.
Interest partly realized in NPAs can be taken to income. If financial position of the
customer is good and will be in a position to return the money, then journal entry will be
Party’s Loan a/c Dr.
To Interest a/c
If there is any doubt regarding customer’s ability to pay, the debt becomes doubtful and
the interest accrued on doubtful debts at the end of the accounting year should not be
credited to Interest Account because it remains unrealized and would artificially inflate the
profit of the bank company. In such cases, the following entry is to be passed:
If some portion of the loan is repaid by the customer, then entry will be:
Bank a/c Dr.
To Party’s Loan a/c
• When a bank discounts a bill of exchange, full amount of discount earned is credited
to “Discount Account”
At the end of the year
Q. 4 On 31st Mar, 2018, Uncertain Bank Ltd. had a balance of Rs. 9 Crores in “rebate on bills
discounted” account. During the year ended 31st Mar, 2019, Uncertain Bank Ltd. discounted
Bills of exchange of Rs. 4000 crores charging interest at 18% per annum the average period
of discount being for 73 days. Of these, bills of exchange of Rs. 600 crores were due for
realisation from the acceptors/customers after 31st Mar, 2019, the average period outstanding
after 31st Mar, 2019, being 36.5 days. Uncertain Bank Ltd. asks you to pass journal entries
and show the ledger accounts pertaining to:
Q. 5 The following is an extract from Trial Balance of overseas Bank Ltd. as on 31.3.2019
Rs. Rs.
Bills discounted 12,64,000
Rebate on bills discounted not due on 31st Mar 2018 22160
Discount received 105708
Calculate Rebate on Bills Discounted as on 31-3-2019 and show necessary journal entries.
The bank may accept bills receivable of customers for collection on their behalf. These bills
are recorded in a special book known as “Bills for Collection Register”. Unless these bills are
collected no entry is required. On the collection of bill, cash will be debited with the amount
received and customer’s account will be credited by the amount after deducting commission,
and commission charged will be credited to Commission account. Bills held by the bank for
collection are shown as information below the Balance Sheet as per new format.
Q. 6 From the following information prepare “Bills for collection (Asset) a/c and Bills for
Collection (Liability) a/c.
2 Sub-Standard Advances
a. Secured Exposures 15
b. Unsecured Exposures 25
c. Unsecured Exposures in respect of 20
Infrastructure loan accounts where
certain safeguards such as escrow
accounts are available
3 Doubtful Advances
a. Unsecured Portion 100
b. Secured Portion
i. Doubtful upto 1 year 25
ii. Doubtful > 1 year and upto 3 40
years
iii. Doubtful > 3 years 100
Q. 7 From the following information, find out the amount of provisions to be shown in the
Profit and Loss Account of a commercial bank.
DICGC/ECGC GURANTEE
• DICGC – Deposit Insurance & Credit Guarantee Corporation
• ECGC – Export Credit Guarantee Corporation
• If the advances are guaranteed by ECGC/DICGC coverage, the provision is required
to be made only for the balance in excess of amount guaranteed
• In case, the bank also holds a security in respect of an advance guaranteed by
ECGC/DICGC, the realisable value of the security should be deducted from the
outstanding balance before the ECGC/DICGC guarantee is off-set.
• In addition, 25%/40%/100% of the secured portion should be provided for, depending
upon the period for which the advance has been considered as a doubtful asset, as
follows:
Period for which the advance has been considered as doubtful % of provision on
secured portion
Upto 1 year 25
More than 1 year and upto 3 years 40
More than 3 years 100
Compute necessary provisions to be made for the year ended 31st Mar, 2018.
A bank is frequently called upon to accept or endorse a bill of exchange on behalf of its
customer. For greater security, the drawer of the bill wants acceptance of the drawee bank.
The bank incurs a liability by accepting bills on behalf of its customers. On maturity of the bill,
the bank pays and collects the amount from its customer. Generally, the bank requires the
customer to deposit the security equal to the sum of the bill accepted. The bill accepted
register is used for recording particulars of bills accepted and/or endorsed and securities
provided.
At the end of the accounting period, if there are any outstanding bills, it is shown as
“contingent liability” as per the new format. As per the new format, Acceptances,
Endorsements and other obligation are off Balance Sheet items. In the general ledger, no
account is maintained for this. The details are maintained on the memorandum basis. A
Record of the particulars of bills accepted as well as securities collected from the customer
is kept in the Bills Accepted Register. A bank may not treat this book as part of system of its
accounts. In such a case, no further record of the transactions is kept until the bill matures
for payment. If the bill, at the end of its term, has to be retired by the bank and the amount
cannot be collected from the customer on demand, the bank reimburses itself by disposing
of the security deposited by the customer.
Q. 9 From the following details prepare “Acceptance, Endorsements and other Obligation
A/c” as would appear in the general ledger. On 1.4.2018 Acceptances not yet satisfied stood
at Rs. 22,30,000. Out of which Rs. 20 lacs were subsequently paid off by clients and bank had
to honour the rest. A scrutiny of Acceptance Register revealed the following:
Profit and Loss Account for the year ended 31st March
Schedule No. Amount
I Income:
Interest earned 13
Other Income 14
Total
II Expenditure:
Interest expended 15
Operating expenses 16
Provisions and Contingencies
Total
III Profit/Loss:
Net Profit/Loss (-) for the year
Profit/Loss (-) brought forward
Total
IV Appropriations:
Transfer to statutory reserves
Transfer to other reserves
Transfer to proposed dividend
Balance carried over to balance sheet
Total
Note:
When there is opening and/or closing rebate on bills discounted, adjust the discount during
the year for the same.
Brokerage/Commission/Dividend/Exchange Xxxx
Profit/Loss on revaluation/sale/exchange Xxxx
transactions
Miscellaneous Xxxx
Salary Xxxx
Rent Xxxx
Insurance Xxxx
Advertisement etc. Xxxx
Q. 10 From the following information, prepare Profit and Loss Account of Indian Bank Ltd.,
for the year ended 31.12.2018.
Rs. In (000’s)
Interest on Fixed Deposits 430
Interest on loans 650
Discount on bill discounted 415
Interest on overdrafts 210
Interest on cash credit 410
Interest on savings bank deposits 125
Salaries and allowances 140
Rent, taxes, insurance and lighting 40
Locker rent 7
Repairs to bank property 2
Commission, exchange and brokerage 24
Director’s fees and allowances 25
Provident fund contribution 12
Local committee fees and allowances 10
Audit fees 12
Additional information:
a. Rebate on bills discounted on 31.12.2017 Rs.19,000
b. Rebate on bills discounted on 31.12.2018 Rs.26,000
c. Bad debts to be written off Rs.40,000
d. Provide for taxation Rs.50,000
Q. 11 Some of the items in the Trial Balance of Modern Bank Ltd. as on December 31,
2018 were as follows:
You are required to prepare the Profit and Loss Account of the bank, maintaining the
provisions for income tax at Rs.84,000 and provision for bad debts at Rs.52,000 for the year
ended December 31, 2018. All workings should form part of your answer.
Capital adequacy ratio is the ratio which determines the bank's capacity to meet the time
liabilities and other risks such as credit risk, operational risk, etc. To be precise, a bank's
capital is the "cushion" for potential losses, and protects the bank's depositors and other
lenders.
Every bank should maintain a minimum capital adequacy ratio based on capital funds and
risk assets. All banks (excluding RRB’s) are required to maintain a capital adequacy ratio (or
Capital to Risk Weighted Assets Ratio) which is specified by RBI from time to time. At present
capital adequacy ratio is 9%.
TIER – II CAPITAL
Note: The quantum of Tier II Capital is limited to a maximum of 100% of Tier I Capital. It may
be clarified that the Tier II capital of a bank can exceed its Tier I Capital; however, in such a
case, the excess will be ignored for the purpose of computing the capital adequacy ratio.
II) Investments
Government and other approved securities 0
Others (net of depreciation provided) 100%
Non Funded Risk Assets = Face Value of “Off Balance Sheet Items” x Credit
Conversion Factor x Risk weights
Step: 3
Capital Adequacy Ratio= [CAPITAL FUNDS/RISK WEIGHTED ASSETS] X 100
Q. 12 A commercial bank has the following capital funds and assets. Segregate the capital
funds into Tier I and Tier II capitals. Find out the risk-adjusted asset and risk weighted
assets ratio -.
Capital Funds: Rs. In Lakhs
Equity Share Capital 4,80,00
Statutory Reserve 2,80,00
Capital Reserve (Rs. 280 lakhs were due to revaluation of assets & sale) 12,10
Assets:
Cash Balance with RBI 4,80
Balances with other Bank 12,50
Certificate of Deposits with other 28,50
Commercial Banks
Other Investments 782,50
Loans and Advances:
(i) Guaranteed by government 128,20
(ii) Guaranteed by public sector undertakings of Government of India 702,10
(iii) Others 52,02,50
Premises, furniture and fixtures 182,00
Other Assets 201,20
Off-Balance Sheet Items:
Acceptances, endorsements and letters of credit 37,02,50