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  2. Loan-to-deposit ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loan-to-deposit_ratio

    Loan-to-deposit ratio, in short LTD ratio or LDR, is a ratio between the banks total loans and total deposits.The ratio is generally expressed in percentage terms If the ratio is lower than one, the bank relied on its own deposits to make loans to its customers, without any outside borrowing.

  3. CASA ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CASA_ratio

    CASA ratio stands for current and savings account ratio. CASA ratio of a bank is the ratio of deposits in current, and saving accounts to total deposits. A higher CASA ratio indicates a lower cost of funds, because banks do not usually give any interests on current account deposits and the interest on saving accounts is usually very low 3–4%. [1]

  4. Fixed deposit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_deposit

    A fixed deposit (FD) is a tenured deposit account provided by banks or non-bank financial institutions which provides investors a higher rate of interest than a regular savings account, until the given maturity date. It may or may not require the creation of a separate account.

  5. Net stable funding ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_Stable_Funding_Ratio

    Some of the weights for longer term or "structural term assets" are as follows: [5] 100% of loans longer than one year; 95% of demand deposits, and retail or small business deposits with maturities of less than one year; 90% of less stable demand and term deposits by retail and small businesses;

  6. Reserve requirement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reserve_requirement

    Reserve ratio (%) Notes Australia: Zero: Statutory reserve deposits abolished in 1988, replaced with 1% non-callable deposits [12] Bangladesh: 6.00: Raised from 5.50, effective from 15 December 2010 Brazil: 21.00: Term deposits have a 33% RRR and savings accounts a 20% ratio. [22] Bulgaria: 10.00

  7. Funds transfer pricing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funds_Transfer_Pricing

    The fund-raising (deposit taking) units raise funds from the market at a particular rate and lend the same to the central office at a higher rate. For a deposit-raising unit, the difference between interest paid to the deposit-holders and interest receivable from the central office is the contribution to the bank's profitability.

  8. Postal savings system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postal_savings_system

    Japan Post Bank, part of the post office was the world's largest savings bank with 198 trillion yen (US$1.7 trillion) of deposits as of 2006, [22] much from conservative, risk-averse citizens. The state-owned Japan Post Bank business unit of Japan Post was formed in 2007, as part of a ten-year privatization programme, intended to achieve fully ...

  9. Monetary base - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monetary_base

    Interest rates, especially on federal funds (ultra-short-term loans between banks), are themselves influenced by open market operations. The monetary base has traditionally been considered high-powered because its increase will typically result in a much larger increase in the supply of demand deposits through banks' loan-making, a ratio called ...

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