MCQs
Total Questions : 550
| Page 53 of 55 pages
Answer: Option B. -> To take over the functions of Agricultural Refinance Corporation of India
Answer: (b)
Answer: (b)
Question 522. What is the purpose of setting up of Small Finance Banks (SFBs) in India?
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
- To supply credit to small business units
- To supply credit to small and marginal farmers
- To encourage young entrepreneurs to set up business particularly in rural areas.
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
Answer: Option C. -> (i) & (ii) only
Answer: (c)
The objectives of setting up small finance banks are
to promote financial inclusion by providing provision of savings vehicles and supply of credit to small business units;
small and marginal farmers; micro and small industries; and other unorganized sector entities, through high technology-low cost operations.
They are required to extend 75% of their loans to priority sectors and 50% of their loan portfolio shall constitute loans of up to 25 lacs.
The scope of activities for small finance banks will be,
Basic banking activities of acceptance of deposits and lending to unserved and underserved sections including small business units, small and marginal farmers, micro and small industries and unorganized sector entities and there will not be any restriction in the area of operations.
They will be required to maintain CRR and SLR. They will be set up as differentiated banks for serving niche interests
Small Finance Banks are not particularly for rural areas.
RBI released guidelines for 'on-tap' licensing of Small Finance Banks. Urban Cooperative Banks and Payment Banks can apply for conversion into SFB.
‘On-tap’ means any time they can apply for conversion into SFB and they don’t need to wait for a time window when RBI will grant licenses.
Answer: (c)
The objectives of setting up small finance banks are
to promote financial inclusion by providing provision of savings vehicles and supply of credit to small business units;
small and marginal farmers; micro and small industries; and other unorganized sector entities, through high technology-low cost operations.
They are required to extend 75% of their loans to priority sectors and 50% of their loan portfolio shall constitute loans of up to 25 lacs.
The scope of activities for small finance banks will be,
Basic banking activities of acceptance of deposits and lending to unserved and underserved sections including small business units, small and marginal farmers, micro and small industries and unorganized sector entities and there will not be any restriction in the area of operations.
They will be required to maintain CRR and SLR. They will be set up as differentiated banks for serving niche interests
Small Finance Banks are not particularly for rural areas.
RBI released guidelines for 'on-tap' licensing of Small Finance Banks. Urban Cooperative Banks and Payment Banks can apply for conversion into SFB.
‘On-tap’ means any time they can apply for conversion into SFB and they don’t need to wait for a time window when RBI will grant licenses.
Answer: Option C. -> Both 1 and 2
Answer: (c)
Answer: (c)
Answer: Option C. -> Commodity Futures Market
Answer: (c)
Answer: (c)
Answer: Option C. -> Reserve Bank of India
Answer: (c)
The Reserve Bank has been conducting Consumer Confidence Survey (CCS) since June 2010.
The survey captures qualitative responses on questions pertaining to economic conditions, household circumstances, income, spending, prices and employment prospects.
The survey results are based on the views of the respondents and are not necessarily shared by the Reserve Bank of India. It is conducted in 6 rounds in a year.
Answer: (c)
The Reserve Bank has been conducting Consumer Confidence Survey (CCS) since June 2010.
The survey captures qualitative responses on questions pertaining to economic conditions, household circumstances, income, spending, prices and employment prospects.
The survey results are based on the views of the respondents and are not necessarily shared by the Reserve Bank of India. It is conducted in 6 rounds in a year.
Answer: Option A. -> July - June
Answer: (a)
Answer: (a)
Answer: Option B. -> An increase in the level of consumer spending
Answer: (b)
Answer: (b)
Answer: Option A. -> Commercial Banks
Answer: (a)
Answer: (a)
Answer: Option C. -> increase CRR and increase Bank rate
Answer: (c)
Answer: (c)
Question 530. Consider the following statements regarding the “spread” charged over the external benchmark rate by the banks:
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
- The spread will be decided by the banks
- The spread will change with the change of external benchmark rate
- The spread may be different for different categories of loans
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
Answer: Option B. -> (i) & (iii) only
Answer: (b)
Every Bank calculates its own MCLR Rate based on marginal cost of deposits, operational costs, reserve requirements and tenor premium. So MCLR (or Base Rate) is an “internal benchmark” that varies from bank to bank. Banks link their lending rate with MCLR.
But, the transmission of policy (repo) rate changes to the lending rate of banks under the MCLR framework has not been satisfactory due to various reasons like:
Banks feared that they will lose the depositors/customers if they will reduce the deposit rate first, and since the deposit rate was not reduced, MCLR (or base rate) was also not coming down.
Government offering higher interest rates on its own small savings schemes like Kisan Vikas Patra, Sukanya Samriddhi Scheme, PPF etc.
Hence, RBI has made it mandatory for banks to link all new floating rate personal or retail loans and floating rate loans to MSMEs to an external benchmark effective October 1, 2019.
Banks can choose one of the four external benchmarks –
repo rate,
three-month Treasury bill yield,
six-month treasury bill yield or
any other benchmark interest rate published by Financial Benchmarks India Pvt. Ltd.
Banks are not mandated to link their deposit rates with an external benchmark rate.
Now, suppose Axis Bank links its loan rates as per following: Home Loan = repo rate + 3% (3% is called the Spread) Education Loan = repo rate + 4% Personal Loan = repo rate + 5%
Here, all the loans are linked to the repo rate, which is an external benchmark, on which Axis Bank does not have any control. So, the moment RBI changes the repo rate, it will automatically be transmitted to all the lending rates at the same moment for the new loans (Even if the bank links the lending rate with Treasury bill yield; when RBI changes repo rate, the T-bill yield also changes in the market immediately).
The purpose of linking the lending rate with an external benchmark is the faster transmission of repo rate into the lending rate and this mechanism is more transparent also. Adopting multiple benchmarks by the same bank is not allowed within a loan category
Banks are free to decide the components of spread and the amount of spread. But in general, the spread consists of credit risk premium, business strategy, operational costs of banks etc. While the banks will be free to decide on the spread over the external benchmark, credit risk premium can change only when the borrower’s credit assessment undergoes a substantial change. The other components of the spread like operating cost can be altered once in three years.
The interest rate under the external benchmark shall be reset at least once in three months. This means that if a borrower has taken a loan on 1st Jan 2020 and RBI changes the repo rate on 1st Feb 2020, then the borrower may not get the immediate benefit of the rate cut as the interest rate on his loan will only get revised at the latest by 1st April 2020 (within three months of the loan taken).
RBI has mandated banks to link the lending rate with an “anchor rate” like MCLR or repo rate (while MCLR was the internal rate of banks, but the repo is an external rate). But there is no mandate for NBFCs to link their lending rates.
Answer: (b)
Every Bank calculates its own MCLR Rate based on marginal cost of deposits, operational costs, reserve requirements and tenor premium. So MCLR (or Base Rate) is an “internal benchmark” that varies from bank to bank. Banks link their lending rate with MCLR.
But, the transmission of policy (repo) rate changes to the lending rate of banks under the MCLR framework has not been satisfactory due to various reasons like:
Banks feared that they will lose the depositors/customers if they will reduce the deposit rate first, and since the deposit rate was not reduced, MCLR (or base rate) was also not coming down.
Government offering higher interest rates on its own small savings schemes like Kisan Vikas Patra, Sukanya Samriddhi Scheme, PPF etc.
Hence, RBI has made it mandatory for banks to link all new floating rate personal or retail loans and floating rate loans to MSMEs to an external benchmark effective October 1, 2019.
Banks can choose one of the four external benchmarks –
repo rate,
three-month Treasury bill yield,
six-month treasury bill yield or
any other benchmark interest rate published by Financial Benchmarks India Pvt. Ltd.
Banks are not mandated to link their deposit rates with an external benchmark rate.
Now, suppose Axis Bank links its loan rates as per following: Home Loan = repo rate + 3% (3% is called the Spread) Education Loan = repo rate + 4% Personal Loan = repo rate + 5%
Here, all the loans are linked to the repo rate, which is an external benchmark, on which Axis Bank does not have any control. So, the moment RBI changes the repo rate, it will automatically be transmitted to all the lending rates at the same moment for the new loans (Even if the bank links the lending rate with Treasury bill yield; when RBI changes repo rate, the T-bill yield also changes in the market immediately).
The purpose of linking the lending rate with an external benchmark is the faster transmission of repo rate into the lending rate and this mechanism is more transparent also. Adopting multiple benchmarks by the same bank is not allowed within a loan category
Banks are free to decide the components of spread and the amount of spread. But in general, the spread consists of credit risk premium, business strategy, operational costs of banks etc. While the banks will be free to decide on the spread over the external benchmark, credit risk premium can change only when the borrower’s credit assessment undergoes a substantial change. The other components of the spread like operating cost can be altered once in three years.
The interest rate under the external benchmark shall be reset at least once in three months. This means that if a borrower has taken a loan on 1st Jan 2020 and RBI changes the repo rate on 1st Feb 2020, then the borrower may not get the immediate benefit of the rate cut as the interest rate on his loan will only get revised at the latest by 1st April 2020 (within three months of the loan taken).
RBI has mandated banks to link the lending rate with an “anchor rate” like MCLR or repo rate (while MCLR was the internal rate of banks, but the repo is an external rate). But there is no mandate for NBFCs to link their lending rates.