Estimates of the wealth of the top five richest person of the world are:
Mukesh Ambani - $63.2 billion
Carlos Slim Helu - $62.3 billion
Bill Gates - $62.3 billion
Warren Buffett - $55.9 billion
Lakshmi Mittal - $50.9 billion
Contributed by FinManAc at 12:25 PM 0 comments
Labels: Bill Gates, Corporate World News, Finance, General News, India, Money, News, Reliance, Sensex
Contributed by FinManAc at 7:56 AM 0 comments
Labels: Crude Oil, Dollar, Interest Rate, Oil News, Oil Price, OPEC
"Axis Bank was first of the new private banks to have begun operations in 1994, after the Government of India allowed new private banks to be established. The Bank was promoted jointly by the Administrator of the specified undertaking of the Unit Trust of India (UTI - I), Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) and General Insurance Corporation Ltd. and other four PSU companies, i.e. National Insurance Company Ltd., The New India Assurance Company, The Oriental Insurance Corporation and United Insurance Company Ltd."Unit Trust of India (UTI) was a government institution. After the split of UTI in 2002, its subsidaries UTI Securities, UTI MF and UTI Bank were allowed to retain the UTI brand name for five years till January 2008. Due to the maturity of the agreement UTI Bank had decided to shed the UTI brand and went ahead with a much more modern sounding name - Axis Bank.
Contributed by FinManAc at 12:01 PM 0 comments
Labels: Banking, Banking News, India, Indian banking system
"Mortgage and leveraged finance-related write-downs in our FICC business depressed our financial performance for the quarter. In light of difficult credit markets and additional analysis by management during our quarter-end closing process, we re-examined our remaining CDO positions with more conservative assumptions. The result is a larger write-down of these assets than initially anticipated," said Stan O'Neal, chairman and chief executive officer. "We expect market conditions for subprime mortgage-related assets to continue to be uncertain and we are working to resolve the remaining impact from our positions," Mr. O'Neal continued. "Away from the mortgage-related areas, we continue to believe that secular trends in the global economy are favorable and that our businesses can perform well, as they have all year."
Source :Merrill Lynch Press Release
Contributed by FinManAc at 10:04 AM 0 comments
Labels: Banking News, Brokerage firm, Results, securitization, Subprime, Subprime loss
Disclaimer: FINMANAC has taken due care and caution in compilation of data for its blog. The views and investment tips expressed above are the personal view and should not be taken as only base for any investment decision. FINMANAC advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decision.
The core business of banks is to take deposit from public and lend to individuals, industries, business etc. These loans carry risk of becoming bad debt (debtor is unable to return its debt) and hence non-performing. Since the major deposit of bank comes from public, the government and regulatory authorities are worried that the bank might be tempted to operate on thin capital and expose the depositors to undue credit risk. Therefore, banks all over world are required to keep a specified percentage of their loan portfolio as capital and if some loan goes bad, the loss is borne by the capital and not by depositors. Banks hence are required to maintain a capital adequacy ratio specified by the regulatory bodies.
Basel norm is a framework of capital adequacy for banks. These norms set the guidelines to estimate the amount of capital assets of specified kind should bank hold to absorb losses. The assessment of such losses that bank can incur decides the proportion of liquid asset banks must have at hand to meet those losses in case they are incurred. The loss can be based on the risk exposure i.e. credit, operational or market risks etc. The higher the risk of loss associated with an investment, the more of liquid asset will have to be maintained. A 100 percent risk-weight loss implies that the whole of the investment can be lost under certain conditions and a zero percent risk-weight indicates that the concerned asset is risk-free.
The Basel II norms is improvement over the earlier Basel I norms. India had adopted Basel I in 1999 and subsequently based upon recommendation of Steering committee , the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) issued draft guidelines for Basel II in 2005. Three major inadequacy of Basel I norms were –
Regarding the first issue, in Basel I, banks were required to keep 8 percent of loan as capital, whether the borrower is a first class blue chip company, with little or no risk, or it is a third rate company with poor track record. Basel II introduced the concept of 5 different risk weights, 20%, 30%, 50%, 100% and 150%. For the highest rated borrower, banks need to keep only 20% of 8 percent or 1.6 percent (8x 20%) of the credit exposure as capital. The RBI has retained the higher base level of 9 percent against world level of 8%.
For the second issue, value of security has been given due consideration while computing the capital charge for a loan.
Taking the last point, the Basel I rule prescribed the same amount of capital whether the loan was for a short period or for a very long period. As the period gets longer the risk associated with the loan increases. Basel II has made some distinction between short and long-term loans given by one bank to another.
The “credit worthiness” is to be determined by the rating accorded by independent credit rating agencies. And over a period of time, the credit rating given by banks themselves for borrowers could be adopted.
The operational risk is covered by Basic Indicator Approach which prescribes a capital charge of 15 per cent of the average gross income for the preceding three years to be maintained.
The revised framework of Basel II, consists of three-mutually reinforcing pillars –
The first pillar offers three distinct options for computing capital requirement for credit risk and three other options for computing capital requirement for operational risk. The different options for credit risk are Standardized approach, Foundation Internal Rating-Based approach and Advanced Internal Rating-Based Approach. The available options for computing capital for operational risk are Basic indicator approach, Standardized approach and Advanced Measurement approach.
The second pillar is concerned with supervisory review process by national regulators for ensuring assessment of risk and associated capital adequacy of banking institutions.
The third pillar provides norms of disclosure by banks of key information regarding their risk exposure & capital positions and hence aims at improving market disciple.
Contributed by Saurav at 9:43 AM 0 comments
Labels: Banking, Banking Gyaan, Basel Gyaan, Basel I, Basel II, India, Indian banking system
Banks - how they function - they basically take money from people who have money and give to those who need it on a higher interest
Oldest Indian bank which is functioning now is SBI, established in 1806, which was known at that time as "Bank of Bengal"
Most of the old banks were headquartered at Calcutta, as it was prime centre of trade
After Independence, most of the banks were nationalised. In 1991 private banks were also allowed to function.
Some Public sector banks – SBI and its subsidiaries, Bank of India, Allahabad Bank, Bank of Baroda etc
Some Private owned banks – ICICI, HDFC, UTI Bank etc.
Banking Terminology
CAR – cash adequacy ratio – basically, government wants banks to keep some amount of money in cash.
CRR – cash reserve ratio – presently 6.75% in India – it is the ratio of cash to net demands and time liabilities (NDTL) of bank. RBI asks bank to keep a certain percent of amount of NDTL in form of cash. This ratio varies between 3 to 20%
SLR – statuary liquidity ratio - It is the amount of money that bank has to deposit to RBI. This rate varies from 25% to 40%
Now this trust collects money from the bondholders and gives it to Originator. And now this originator can lend of this money to more borrowers. Selling off the loans to a trust is known as Securitization.
Contributed by Deeps at 7:22 AM 0 comments
Labels: Banking Gyaan, Crisis, Finance Gyaan, securitization, Subprime, Subprime Gyaan
Contributed by FinManAc at 1:20 AM 0 comments
Labels: capital budgeting, Corporate Finance, Corporate Finance Gyaan, Money
= Market Capitalization / Earnings
where
Market Capitalization = Number of shares outstanding * Market price of a share
For calculating the earnings there are several variations.
1. Following measure of Earnings are generally used
Earnings after tax (EAT) {most commonly used}
Earnings before tax (EBT)
Earnings before interest and tax (EBIT)
Earnings before depreciation interest and tax (EBIDT)
Earnings before depreciation interest tax and amortization (EBIDTA)
2. For which period the earnings should be taken for?
Generally the earnings are for a period of one year. Now since prices change on every trading day and can be tracked the earnings can be measured efficiently only for a larger period of time generally a quarter. Another question which arises is which period should be considered. There are two variations to this:
TTM (trailing twelve months) – for past 4 quarters
Annual – For last financial year
Leading – Using projected EPS
Can P/E ratio be negative?
Sometimes companies earn zero profit or even run into losses. Is the P/E ratio significant there? For knowing this we have to find out the purpose of finding the P/E ratio.
What is the purpose of P/E ratio?
It shows how much the investors are willing to par for one dollar of company’s earnings. When compared with the industry average and leader we can find out the level of confidence that investors have in the company. But P/E ratio alone is not a sufficient measure to arrive at any conclusion about the stock.
What are the limitations of P/E ratio?
Inability to capture non-monetary aspects.
No standard for using a measure of earnings
Doesn’t cover the past growth and the future growth projection
Can be interpreted in different ways
A one period exceptional income can distort the picture
Contributed by FinManAc at 4:08 AM 0 comments
Labels: Corporate Finance, Corporate Finance Gyaan, Markets, P/E
Contributed by FinManAc at 6:40 AM 0 comments
Labels: Corporate Finance Gyaan, Gyaan, Inflation, Interest Rate
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