Friday, November 7, 2014

Basics of Banking

Let us dive in straight! Come along!

Banks - are financial institutions that enable circulation of money/ currency. They function on a golden rule that

Assets = Liabilities


Understanding Assets = Liabilities in a basic sense


Money in                                         =                        Money Out

1.) Deposits                                                                                     1.)   Lending                 
2.) Loan Interests                                                                            2.)   Institutional costs
3.) Bonds                                                                                         3.)   Investments
4.) Interbank borrowing                                                                  4.)  Interbank Lending
                                                                                                        5.)  Deposit / Bond interest payment

Please do not be puzzled seeing unknown jargons (if any). Everything is explained below :) If people find it too basic, please be patient for future posts. Or else, please continue :-) 

Interest rates

When market conditions are good the interest rates for both deposits and lending are super low sometimes tending to zero.

Understanding the interest rates:

When the economy/ market condititons are not so good, banks need money and we lend them ( Hurray! This was the first time I started to look at it in this perspective! ) in the form of deposits and they woo us at this time by giving attractive interest rates ( higher in this case). As the banks give us higher interest rates for deposits, they have to set their lending ( for eg.  mortgage) rates higher than the deposit interest rates.

When the market conditions are good, money influx in banks are high and hence the deposit / lending rates start tending towards zero.

Do you know that banks lend money to each other?

Banks raise money in the form of  deposits ( short term/ long term) , current accounts, savings accounts, bonds (explained later) etc., They lend money as mortgages at higher interest rates, endure institutional costs, make investments ( buy shares, commodities (explained later)) and lend money to other banks for a day or several days/months at a particular interest rate, if the other banks have deficit, or they are of a certain model. ( For eg., JP Morgan Chase a world renowned bank does have borrowing as their main source of raising funds!) . The borrowing of money in-between banks to raise funds is called as the Inter-bank borrowing and lending money between two banks is Inter-bank lending

Overnight money-market rate:

When a bank lends money to the other just for a day or over-night, the interest rate for that transaction is called as the overnight money-market rate. This rate plays a major role in the analysis of the economic conditions prevalent at that  particular time period.



Let's Begin!!

This blog is for all the dummy pieces out there like me, trying to grasp the fundamentals or basics of banking and finance.  I am feeling that  I am going to undertake a task now , which I do not know of how it is going to turn out! 

So let's begin!!