Glossary of Financial and Banking Terms
Glossary of Financial and Banking Terms
A
Acceptances
Promise to pay created when the drawee of a time draft stamps or writes the word ‘accepted’ above his signature and a designated payment date.
Accounting Policies
The specific principles, bases, conventions, rules and practices adopted by an entity in preparing and presenting Financial Statements.
Associate
An entity in which the investor has significant influence and which is neither a subsidiary nor an interest in a joint venture.
Available-for-Sale
All assets not in any of the three categories, namely, held-to-maturity, fair value through profit or loss and loans and receivables.
B
Basel II
The capital adequacy framework issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) in the form of the ‘International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards’.
Basel III
The BCBS issued the Basel III rules text, which presents the details of strengthened global regulatory standards on bank capital adequacy and liquidity.
Basis Point (BP)
One hundredth of a percentage point (0.01%); 100 basis points is 1 percentage point. Used in quoting movements in interest rates or yields on securities.
C
Capital Adequacy Ratio
The ratio between capital and risk-weighted assets as defined in the framework developed by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and as modified by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka to suit local requirements.
Cash Equivalents
Short-term highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash and which are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value.
Collective Impairment Provisions
Also known as portfolio impairment provisions. Impairment assessment on a collective basis for homogeneous groups of loans that are not considered individually significant and to cover losses which have been incurred but have not yet been identified at the Reporting Date.
Commitments
Credit facilities approved but not yet utilised by the clients as at the date of the Statement of Financial Position.
Contingencies
A condition or situation existing at date of the Statement of Financial Position where the outcome will be confirmed only by occurrence or non-occurrence of one or more future events.
Cost/Income Ratio
Represents the proportion of total operating expenses to total operating income.
Corporate Governance
The process by which corporate entities are governed. It is concerned with the way in which power is exercised over the management and direction of entity, the supervision of executive actions and accountability to owners and others.
Correspondent Bank
A bank in a foreign country that offers banking facilities to the customers of a bank in another country.
Credit Risk
Risk of financial loss if a customer or counterparty fails to meet an obligation under a contract.
Credit Ratings
An evaluation of a corporate’s ability to repay its obligations or the likelihood of not defaulting, carried out by an independent rating agency.
Currency Swaps
The simultaneous purchase of an amount of a currency for spot settlement and the sale of the same amount of the same currency for forward settlement.
D
Deferred Taxation
Sum set aside for income tax in the Financial Statements that may become payable/receivable in a financial year other than the current financial year.
Derivatives
A derivative is a financial instrument or other contract, the value of which changes in response to some underlying variable (e.g. an interest rate).
Dividend Cover
Profit after tax divided by gross dividends. This ratio measures the number of times dividend is covered by current year’s distributable profits.
Dividend Yield
Dividend per share as a percentage of its market value.
E
Earnings per Ordinary Share (EPS)
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders divided by the number of ordinary shares in issue.
Effective Tax Rate
Provision for taxation excluding deferred tax expressed as a percentage of the profit before taxation.
Equity Method
This is a method of accounting whereby the investment is initially recognised at cost and adjusted thereafter for the post-acquisition changes in the investor’s share of net assets of the investee. The profit or loss of the investor includes the investor’s share of the profit or loss of the investee.
F
Fair Value
The amount for which an asset could be exchanged, or a liability settled, between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s length transaction.
Fair Value Through Profit or Loss
A financial asset/liability: Acquired/incurred principally for the purpose of selling or repurchasing it in the near term, part of a portfolio of identified financial instruments that are managed together and for which there is evidence of a recent actual pattern of short-term profit-taking, or a derivative (except for a derivative that is a financial guarantee contract).
Finance Lease
A lease in which the lessee acquires all the financial benefits and risks attaching to ownership of the asset under leased.
Financial Instrument
A financial instrument is any contract that gives rise to both a financial asset in one entity and a financial liability or equity instrument in another entity.
Forward Exchange Contract
Agreement between two parties to exchange one currency for another at a future date at a rate agreed upon today.
G
Group
A group is a parent and all its subsidiaries.
Guarantees
Three party agreement involving a promise by one party (the guarantor) to fulfil the obligations of a person owing a debt if that person fails to perform.
H
Hedging
A strategy under which transactions are effected with the aim of providing cover against the risk of unfavourable price movements (Interest Rate, Prices and Commodities, etc.).
Held-to-Maturity
Debt assets acquired by the entity with positive intention to be held-to-maturity.
High Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA)
Assets that are unencumbered, liquid in markets during a time of stress and, ideally, be central bank eligible. These include, for example, cash and claims on central governments and central banks.
I
Impaired Loans
Loans where individual identified impairment provisions have been raised and also include loans which are collateralised or where indebtedness has already been written down to the expected realisable value. The impaired loan category may include loans, which, while impaired, are still performing.
Impairment
This occurs when recoverable amount of an asset is less than its carrying amount.
Impairment Provisions/Allowances
Impairment provisions are a provision held as a result of the raising of a charge against profit for the incurred loss. An impairment provisions may either be identified or unidentified and individual (specific) or collective (portfolio).
Intangible Asset
An intangible asset is an identifiable non-monetary asset without physical substance.
Interest Spread
Represents the difference between the average interest rate earned on interest earning assets and the average interest rate paid on interest bearing liabilities.
K
Key Management Personnel (KMP)
Key management personnel are those persons having authority and responsibility for planning, directing and controlling the activities of the entity, directly or indirectly, including any Director (whether executive or otherwise) of that entity.
L
Liquid Assets
Assets that are held in cash or in a form that can be converted to cash readily, such as deposits with other banks, Bills of Exchange and Treasury Bills and Bonds.
Loans and Receivables
Conventional loan assets that are unquoted (originated or acquired).
Loan-to-Value Ratio (LTV)
The LTV ratio is a mathematical calculation which expresses the amount of a first mortgage lien as a percentage of the total appraised value of real property. The LTV ratio is used in determining the appropriate level of risk for the loan and therefore the correct price of the loan to the borrower.
Loss Given Default (LGD)
LGD is the percentage of an exposure that a lender expects to lose in the event of obligor default.
M
Market Capitalisation
Number of ordinary shares in issue multiplied by the market value of a share as at a date.
Market Risk
This refers to the possibility of loss arising from changes in the value of a financial instrument as a result of changes in market variables such as interest rates, exchange rates, credit spreads and other asset prices.
Materiality
The relative significance of a transaction or an event, the omission or misstatement of which could influence the economic decisions of users of Financial Statements.
N
Net Interest Income (NII)
The difference between the amount a bank earns on assets such as loans and securities and the amount it pays on liabilities such as deposits, refinance funds and inter-bank borrowings.
Net Interest Margin (NIM)
The margin is expressed as net interest income divided by average interest earning assets.
Non Controlling Interest
Equity in a Subsidiary not attributable, directly or indirectly, to a Parent.
O
Open Credit Exposure Ratio
Total net non-performing loans and advances expressed as a percentage of regulatory capital base.
Operational Risk
This refers to the risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people and systems or from external events.
P
Parent
A Parent is an entity that has one or more Subsidiaries.
Price Earnings Ratio (P/E Ratio)
Market price of a share divided by earnings per share.
Probability of Default (PD)
PD is an internal estimate for each borrower grade of the likelihood that an obligor will default on an obligation.
Provision Cover
Total provisions for loan losses expressed as a percentage of net non-performing loans and advances before discounting for provisions on non-performing loans and advances.
R
Related Parties
One party has the ability to control the other party or exercise significant influence over the other party in making financial and operating decisions, directly or indirectly.
Return on Average Assets (ROA)
Profit after tax expressed as a percentage of the average assets.
Risk-Weighted Assets
The sum total of assets as per the Statement of Financial Position and the credit equivalent of assets that are not on the Statement of Financial Position multiplied by the relevant risk-weighting factors.
Repurchase Agreement
Contract to sell and subsequently repurchase securities at a specified date and price.
Return on Average Equity (ROE)
Net profit attributable to owners expressed as a percentage of average ordinary shareholders’ equity.
Reverse Repurchase Agreement
Transaction involving the purchase of securities by a bank or a dealer and resale back to the seller at a future date at a specified price.
S
Segment Reporting
Disclosure of Bank’s assets, income and other information, broken down by activity and geographical area.
Specific Impairment Provisions
Impairment is measured individually for loans that are individually significant to the Bank.
Statutory Reserve Fund
A capital reserve created as per the provisions of the Banking Act No. 30 of 1988.
Subsidiary
An entity, including an unincorporated entity such as a partnership, which is controlled by another entity (known as the Parent).
T
Tier I Capital
Core capital representing permanent shareholders’ equity and reserves created or increased by appropriations of retained earnings or other surpluses.
Tier II Capital
Supplementary capital representing revaluation reserves, general provisions and other capital instruments, which combine certain characteristics of equity and debt such as hybrid capital instruments and subordinated term debts.
Y
Yield to Maturity
Discount rate at which the present value of future cash flows would equal the security’s current price.