financial system in india- a brief overview dr. ajit kumar, agm & mof, cab, pune

29

Upload: gerik

Post on 16-Jan-2016

28 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

“In today’s fast-changing environment knowledge was power and power be it regulatory or supervisory – without knowledge was a subject of ridicule.” Dr.Y.V.Reddy. Financial System in India- a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE. Financial System?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE
Page 2: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

“In today’s fast-changing environment knowledge was power and power be it regulatory or supervisory – without knowledge was a subject of ridicule.”

Dr.Y.V.Reddy

Financial System in India-

a Brief OverviewDr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF,

CAB, PUNE

Page 3: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Financial System?

Financial System encompasses a group of intermediaries which facilitates the flow of funds from the areas of surplus to the areas of deficit. It is a composition of various institutions, markets and laws, practices, money managers, analysts, transactions and claims and liabilities. This facilitates the exchange of financial instruments like deposits and loans, corporate stocks and bonds, government bonds etc.

Page 4: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Financial System

Page 5: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Financial System

Page 6: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

A financial market can be defined as the market in which financial assets are created or transferred. As against a real transaction that involves exchange of money for real goods or services, a financial transaction involves creation or transfer of a financial asset.

Financial Market

Page 7: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Financial Market

The place where people and organisations wanting to borrow money are brought together with those having surplus funds is called financial market. It may or may not have a particular physical existence.

Page 8: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Major Intermediaries of Financial System

M ajor PlayersNABARD, SIDBI,NH B

EXIM Bank, etc.

Financial Institutions(IFCI,SIDBI,IIBI)

(IVCF,ICICI Ven,TFCI)

Next Slide...

Banks

DepositTaking

Non-DepositTaking(271)

NBFCs(12,385)

Reserve Bank of India

Prim ary M arket

SecondaryM arket

Capital Market

SEBI

LifeInsurance

General Insurance

Insurance Com panies

IRD A

A sub com m ittee headed by RBI Governor

Financial Stability Developm ent Council

Page 9: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Intermediaries of Indian Financial System contd...

Public SectorBanks

(26)

Private SectorBanks(7+13)

Foreign Banks(41)

Regional RuralBanks

(86)

LAB(4)

Com ercial Banks

Next S lide...

Cooperative CreditInstitutions

Banks

Page 10: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Intermediaries of Indian Financial System contd...

StateCooperative

Banks(31)

DisrtictCentral

CooperativeBanks (370)

Prim aryAgricultural

Credit Societies(93,413)

Short Term Structure(94,531)

State CooperativeAgricultureand Rural

Developm ant Banks(20)

Prim ary CooperativeAgriculture and

Rural Developm entBanks (697)

Long Term Structure(717)

Rural CooperativeCredit Institution

(94,531)

Urban Cooperative Banks(1618)

(52+1566)

Cooperative Credit Institution(96,419)

Page 11: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Segments of Financial Market

Money Market: A market where short term funds are borrowed and lent is called money market. Funds are traded for a maximum period of one year e.g. bills rediscounting, commercial papers, treasury bills etc. It is liquid and provides an avenue for equilibrating the short-term surplus funds of lenders and the requirements of borrowers.

Short term Money market is the focal point of monetary policy actions.

Page 12: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Bill Market

Bill Market: A commercial bill of exchange is drawn to evidence the commercial transactions between two parties, the buyer and the seller, the seller drawing the bill and the buyer accepting to make payment of the bill on or before the date of maturity. The seller may get the bill discounted with his banker.

Page 13: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Comercial Paper Market

Commercial Paper Market: CP is an unsecured money market instrument issued in the form of promissory notes. Corporates, PDs and select FIs are eligible to issue CP. It was introduced in 1990.

Corporates issuing CP should have (a) a minimum tangible net worth to the extent of Rs.4.00 cr.

Page 14: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Commercial Paper…

(b) company has been sanctioned working capital limit by bank/s or all-India FI/s; and (c) the borrowal account of the company is classified as Standard Asset.

This is issued at a discount to face value in multiples of Rs.5.00 lakh.The CPs can be issued for a maturity period ranging from 7 days to one year.

Page 15: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Commercial Paper

All eligible participants are required to obtain the credit rating from either CRISIL or ICRA or CARE or the FITCH Ratings India Pvt. Ltd. and must have the prescribed minimum credit rating.

An FI can issue CP within the overall umbrella limit fixed by the RBI, i.e. issue of CP together with other instruments (term money borrowing, term deposit, CDs, ICDs) should not exceed 100% of its net owned funds as per the latest B/S.

Page 16: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Certificate of Deposit

It is a negotiable money market instrument and issued in dematerialised form or as a Usance Promissory Note, for funds deposited at a bank or other eligible financial institution for a specified time period.

CDs can be issued by (i) SCBs excluding RRBs and LABs(ii) Select all-India Fis to raise short term resources.

Banks- Any amountFIs-within the overall umbrella limit fixed by…

Page 17: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Certificate of Deposit

..RBI (not to exceed 100% of its NOF).Minimum amt of CD- Rs.1.00 lakh.Maturity- not < 7 days, not >one year.Issued on a discount on face value.Banks req. to maintain CRR/SLR on CDs.Bank’s can not buy back their own CD

before maturity and can not grant loans against CD.

Page 18: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Treasury Bills

Treasury Bills: These are a kind of finance bills (do not reflect any trade transaction), which are in the nature of promissory notes, issued by the government under discount for a fixed period, not exceeding one year. TBs were first issued in India in October 1917 aimed at raising resources for financing the First World War.

Page 19: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Call & Notice Money Market

Call Money Market: This market deals with extremely short-period uncollateralised loans. Funds are borrowed or lent for a day (overnight).

Notice Money: When money is borrowed for more than a day and up to 14 days, it is called as “Notice Money” market.

Transactions on a call money market are generally conducted over the telephone. Lenders issue RBI cheque in favour of the borrowing bank.

Page 20: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Limit on Call lending/ borrowing

Partcipant Borrowing Lending

SCBs Not to exceed 100%

Of capital fund on a fortnightly basis.(125%)

Not to exceed 25% of their capital fund on ½ mnly basis (50%)

Co-op Bk. Not to exceed 2% of the deposit on day-to day basis.

No Limit

PDs Not to exceed 200% of NOF on fortnightly basis

Not to exceed 25% of NOF

FI/MF/Ins Not permitted Completely phased out w.e.f. Aug 6,2005

Page 21: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Forex Market

A market for the purchase and sale of foreign currencies is called a ‘foreign exchange market’. It is the largest market in the world and is a 24 hour market. The daily turnover of the market stands at about 2 trillion dollars, with at least 80% of all the deals being represented by transactions for the purpose of earning profit from gambling on the exchange rate differences.

The forex market is an over the counter market and there is no single market place.

Page 22: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Forex Market- Types of transactions

Spot Transactions: An inter-bank transactions whereby the purchase of foreign exchange, and delivery and payment for the same takes place between banks on the following second business day is referred to as ‘spot transaction’ and the rate quoted in such transaction is called ‘spot rate’. The date of settlement is known as value date.

Forward Transaction: Where a specified amount of one currency is exchanged for a specified amount of another currency at a future value …

Page 23: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Forex Market- Types of transactions

…date is known as‘forward transaction’.Under this transaction exchange rate is determined at the time of agreement.The rate quoted is called as ‘forward rate’, normally quoted for value dates of one, two,three, six and twelve months.

Swap Transaction: The simultaneous sale and purchase of a given amount of foreign exchange for different value dates is referred to as ‘swap transactions’.

Page 24: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Derivatives

Derivatives are fundamentally contingent contracts/ instruments whose values are derived from some underlying instruments like currency, bonds, stock indices, interest rates, commodities etc. There are generally three main players involved in a derivative transaction: Hedgers, Traders and Speculators.

Derivatives perform an important economic function of price discovery.

Page 25: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Types of Derivatives

Foreign exchange derivatives (forward, foreign exchange swap, currency swap, currency options)

Interest rate derivatives (forward rate agreement, interest rate swap, interest rate options, interest rate caps/ floor/ collar)

Equity and stock index derivatives

Page 26: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Types of Derivatives

Commodity derivativesCredit derivatives (credit default swap,

credit linked notes) What are futures?What is option?Types of Option:

Page 27: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Types of Option

European Option: The option which can be exercised by the buyer only on the date of maturity is called European option.

American Option: This can be exercised on any working day before the maturity date.

The price agreed to by the buyer with the seller is known as strike price.

Page 28: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Derivatives

For a buy option:If S.P.=Current Price,It is at the money callIf Strike Price< C.P., It is in the money callIf S.P.>C.P., It is out of the money callTHE REVERSE WILL APPLY FOR PUT

OPTION.

Page 29: Financial System in India-  a Brief Overview Dr. Ajit Kumar, AGM & MoF, CAB, PUNE

Thank You

for your kind attention.