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    Investment Bank

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    Investment banks do not engage in retail banking DIFFERENCES WITH COMMERCIAL BANKING DIFFERENCES WITH COMMERCIAL BANKING DEPOSITS LOANS DIFFERENCES WITH COMMERCIAL BANKING 1933 Glass-Steagall Act In the US‚ Investment and Commercial banking activities were separated - I.B.’s were no longer allowed to receive customer deposits and offer retail banking services. - Comm. Banks no longer allowed to underwrite securities. Glass-Steagall Act repealed in 1999. Today Today‚ large US banks (e.g.‚ Bank of

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    capitec bank

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    Resources and capabilities of capitec bank: 1. What resources and capabilities made Capitec successful? Capabilities- The individuals who came together to start Capitec came from a strong financial and micro-lending background; they had a very good understanding of the banking systems. They started this business well equipped. Resources- Capitec was originally capitalized with R350 million was worth R2.2 billion and the results which were released in September 2006 showed a 23% return on

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    Power Point

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    ran on two IBM 7090 computers. SABRE was migrated to IBM System/360 computers in 1972‚ and became an IBM product first as Airline control Program (ACP) and later as Transaction Processing Facility (TPF). In addition to airlines TPF is used by large banks‚ credit card companies‚ and hotel chains. The Hewlett-Packard NonStop system (formerly Tandem NonStop was a hardware and software system designed for Online Transaction Processing (OLTP) introduced in 1976. The systems were designed for transaction

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    Role of Banks

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    ID : 1613946 CLASS: TUTORIAL 13 (12339) Banks play a central role in the economy‚ they create and maintain the flow of money between surplus and deficit unit and by this facilitate the process of production‚ distribution‚ exchange and consumption of wealth. If there were no bank activities‚ a large of amount of capital of the economy would be idle. Hence‚ banking activities are vital for the development of an economy. Another function of the bank is risk spreading. They transform risky asset

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    IDBI Bank

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    IDBI BANK LIMITED Unaudited Financial Results for the quarter/ half year ended September 30‚ 2013 ( ₹ in Lacs) Sr. No. Particulars Quarter Ended September June 30‚ 30‚ 2013 2013 (Reviewed) 1 (a) (b) (c) (d) 2 3 4 5 (i) (ii) 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) (a) (b) (c) (d) (v) 18 19 (a) (b) Interest earned (a)+(b)+(c)+(d) Interest/discount on advances/bills Income on investments Interest on balances with Reserve Bank

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    Daiwa Bank

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    | Daiwa Bank | A Case Study | | Background and History Daiwa Bank‚ or Osaka Nomura Bank as it was first called‚ was founded in 1918 in Osaka‚ Japan by Tokushichi Nomura. It was created mainly to take advantage of the new capital Japan had amassed from foreign commercial ventures and domestic industrialization. Its securities division experienced huge growth in volume and profits that it almost functioned as different entity. Japanese industry spectacularly grew in the 1930s‚ but after

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    bank 301

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    value and the issue price‚ is the cost of borrowing to the issuer and the gain for the buyer of the P note. The roles of the parties to a P-note issue are dealers and lead managers. Most P-note issue is done by major commercial banks‚ investment banks and merchant banks. The lead manager would arrange for a dealer panel of market participants. The roles of the dealers are to distribute the notes in the market and to have good success with investors and to also oversee a secondary market for the

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    Why Banks

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    Why do banks and other financial intermediaries exist in modern society‚according to the theory of finance? There are multiple approaches to answering this question. The traditional view of banks as financial intermediaries sees them as simultaneously fulfilling the financial-service needs of savers (surplusspending units) and borrowers (deficit-spending units)‚ providing both a supply of credit and a supply of liquid assets. A newer view sees banks as delegated monitors who assess and evaluate

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    Test Bank

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    Module C Legal Liability   True / False Questions   1. Auditors are potentially liable for monetary damages and subject to criminal penalties for failure to perform professional services properly.    True    False   2. Auditors cannot be held liable to their clients for failure to detect material management fraud.    True    False   3. Joint and several liability is a doctrine that allows a successful plaintiff to recover the full amount of a damage award from any defendant regardless

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    Bank of Japan

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    BANK OF JAPAN’S MEETING IN MARCH 2006: AN END TO THE QUANTITATIVE EASING POLICY? Japan underwent a decade-long odyssey with deflation and the zero-bound problem. Economic activity in Japan slowed precipitously following the collapse of the socalled bubble economy in December 1989‚ and Japan began to experience deflation by early 1995. During this initial period‚ while the economy was slowing‚ forecasters and policymakers consistently underestimated the extent of Japan’s economic malaise. Consequently

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