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  2. Teeming and lading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teeming_and_Lading

    Teeming and lading is a bookkeeping fraud also known as short banking, delayed accounting, and lapping. It involves the allocation of one customer 's payment to another customer's account to make the books balance, often to hide a shortfall or theft .

  3. Endogenous money - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endogenous_money

    The theory is based on three main claims: Loans create deposits: for the banking system as a whole, drawing down a bank loan by a non-bank borrower creates new deposits (and the repayment of a bank loan destroys deposits). So while the quantity of bank loans may not equal deposits in an economy, a deposit is the logical concomitant of a loan ...

  4. Mental accounting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_accounting

    In mental accounting theory, the framing effect defines that the way a person subjectively frames a transaction in their mind will determine the utility they receive or expect. [11] The concept of framing is adopted in prospect theory , which is commonly used by mental accounting theorists as the value function in their analysis (Richard Thaler ...

  5. Ponzi scheme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponzi_scheme

    Ponzi schemes typically result in criminal charges when authorities discover them but, other than pump and dump schemes, economic bubbles do not typically involve unlawful activity, or even bad faith on the part of any participant. Laws are only broken if someone perpetuates the bubble by knowingly and deliberately misrepresenting facts to ...

  6. Diamond–Dybvig model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond–Dybvig_model

    A 2007 run on Northern Rock, a British bank. The Diamond–Dybvig model is an influential model of bank runs and related financial crises.The model shows how banks' mix of illiquid assets (such as business or mortgage loans) and liquid liabilities (deposits which may be withdrawn at any time) may give rise to self-fulfilling panics among depositors.

  7. What is a demand deposit account (DDA)? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/demand-deposit-account-dda...

    A certificate of deposit (CD) is an example of a time deposit account. CDs come with terms that typically range from three months to 10 years. CDs come with terms that typically range from three ...

  8. Bank run - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_run

    No bank has enough reserves on hand to cope with all deposits being taken out at once. [17] [better source needed] Diamond and Dybvig developed an influential model to explain why bank runs occur and why banks issue deposits that are more liquid than their assets. According to the model, the bank acts as an intermediary between borrowers who ...

  9. Money creation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_creation

    When commercial banks lend money today, they expand the amount of bank deposits in the economy. [20] The banking system can expand the money supply of a country far beyond the amount of reserve deposits created by the central bank, meaning contrary to popular belief, most money is not created by central banks.