Recap Banking Concepts – May 2026
The Banking Tutor Recap Banking Concepts – May 2026
2421. Nagging
A dark pattern practice due to which a user is
disrupted and annoyed by repeated and persistent interactions, in the form of
requests, information, options, or interruptions, to effectuate a transaction
and make some commercial gains, unless specifically permitted by the user.
2422. Joint Probability
A joint probability is the chance that two or more
events will happen at the same time. For a joint probability to work, both
events must be independent of one another. For instance, it's the likelihood of
flipping a coin and getting heads and rolling a die and getting a six.
2423. GARCH Process
The generalized autoregressive conditional
heteroskedasticity (GARCH) process is an econometric model for estimating
volatility in financial markets. GARCH is widely used by financial institutions
to forecast returns, optimize portfolios, and manage the risk of stocks, bonds,
and other assets.
2424. Knowledge process outsourcing (KPO)
Knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) is the outsourcing
of core, information-related business activities. KPO involves contracting out
work to individuals who typically have advanced degrees and expertise in a
specialized area.
2425. Group of Seven (G7)
The Group of Seven is an intergovernmental political
and economic forum consisting of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the
United Kingdom and the United States; additionally, the European Union is a
"non-enumerated member".
2426. Investment Bank
An investment bank facilitates large financial
transactions and offers advisory services for IPOs and mergers.
2427. Social Loafing
Social loafing is the psychological tendency for
individuals to put forth less effort when working in a group compared to
working alone.
2428. Horn Effect
The Horn Effect is a cognitive bias where one negative
trait or impression of a person, product, or situation causes overall
perception to be skewed negatively.
2429. Credit Derivatives
Credit derivatives are financial instruments that
transfer the credit risk of an underlying portfolio of securities from one
party to another party without transferring the underlying portfolio.
2430. Credit Default Swaps (CDS)
Credit Default Swaps (CDS) are derivative contracts
that transfer credit risk from a buyer to a seller, acting as insurance against
borrower default.
2431. Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO)
A Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO) is a structured
financial product that pools income-generating assets—such as mortgages, bonds,
and loans—into a single security, which is then divided into tranches with
varying risk and return levels. Sold to institutional investors, CDOs allow
banks to transfer credit risk and free up capital.
2432. Collateralized Loan Obligations (CLOs)
Collateralized Loan Obligations (CLOs) are single
securities backed by a diversified pool of corporate loans, usually senior
secured loans to non-investment grade companies. CLOs securitize these loans
into different tranches (risk layers) with varying credit ratings, maturities,
and coupons, paying investors through a waterfall structure.
2433. Collateralized Loan Obligations (CLOs) Vs.
Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs)
Collateralized
Loan Obligations (CLOs) and Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) are both
structured finance products that pool debt into tranches with varying risk
levels. The primary difference is their underlying collateral: CLOs are backed
by senior secured corporate loans, while CDOs often hold riskier, diverse
assets including mortgages or bonds.
2434. Collateralized Bond Obligation (CBO)
A Collateralized Bond Obligation (CBO) is a
structured, asset-backed security (a type of CDO) that pools a portfolio of
high-yield (junk) bonds to create investment-grade securities. These bonds are
packaged into tranches based on risk/return profiles, allowing investors to
access high-yield potential with lower risk than buying individual bonds.
2435. Synthetic CDO
A synthetic CDO (Collateralized Debt Obligation) is a
complex financial product that provides exposure to the credit risk of
underlying assets—such as mortgages or corporate bonds—without owning them.
Instead of holding physical cash assets, it uses derivatives, primarily Credit
Default Swaps (CDSs), to replicate the cash flows of a traditional CDO,
allowing investors to bet on the performance of debt.
2436. CDO-squared
A collateralized debt obligation squared (CDO-squared)
is a highly complex, high-risk financial product structured as a special
purpose vehicle (SPV) that invests in tranches of other CDOs rather than
directly in bonds or loans. They amplify risk through a double layer of
securitization, often resulting in severe losses when underlying assets, such
as subprime mortgages, default.
2437. Swaption
A swaption
(swap option) is a financial derivative providing the right—but not the
obligation—to enter into an interest rate swap on a specified future date.
Buyers pay an upfront premium for this flexibility to hedge against or
speculate on rate changes. They are primarily used for managing interest rate
risk on anticipated debt.
2438. European swaption
European swaption is a swaption that can be exercised
only on the exercise date.
2439. American swaption
American swaption is a swaption that can be exercised
on any date between the origination and exercise dates, as well as on the
exercise date.
2440. Bermudian swaption
Bermudian swaption is a swaption that can be exercised on several
predetermined dates in between the origination and exercise dates.
2441. Synthetic Securitization (Significant Risk
Transfer - SRT):
Synthetic Securitization is a mechanism where a bank uses credit derivatives
or financial guarantees to transfer the credit risk of a portfolio to
investors, without selling the actual loans, allowing for the retention of
client relationships while optimizing capital.
2442. Credit Linked Note (CLN)
A Credit Linked Note (CLN) is a structured financial
product that functions like a bond but has its repayment tied to the
creditworthiness of a third party, known as the reference entity.
2443. Domino Effect
The domino effect in finance is a chain reaction where
the failure or distress of one financial institution, sector, or asset class
causes a rapid, cascading collapse of others due to high interconnectedness,
similar to falling dominoes. It transforms isolated shocks into systemic
crises, often driven by panic selling, liquidity shortages, and loss of
investor confidence.
2444. Risk-Adjusted Performance Measurement (RAPM)
Risk-adjusted
performance measurement (RAPM) is an analytical framework used to evaluate the
return of an investment, portfolio, or business unit by explicitly accounting
for the amount of risk taken to achieve those returns.
2445. Multifactor models
Multifactor models are financial frameworks that use
several independent variables, or "factors," to explain and predict
asset returns and risk.
2446. Risk Data Aggregation and Risk Reporting (RDARR)
(aka BCBS 239)
Risk Data Aggregation and Risk Reporting (RDARR) is a
critical framework used primarily by financial institutions to define, gather,
and process risk data to measure performance against their risk appetite.
2447. GARP Code of Conduct (Global Association of Risk
Professionals (GARP)
The GARP Code of Conduct outlines essential ethical
responsibilities for risk professionals, focusing on integrity, competence,
confidentiality, and conflict management.
2448. Expected Loss (EL)
Expected Loss is the average amount an institution
anticipates losing over a specific period, such as a year. It is considered a
predictable cost and is typically managed as an operating expense. The average
amount a company anticipates losing during normal business operations.
2449. OTC Exchange of India (OTCEI)
The OTC Exchange of India (OTCEI), established in 1990
and based in Mumbai, was India's first national, screen-based, floorless
exchange designed for smaller, high-tech companies to raise capital. It
revolutionized trading with computerized, transparent, and nationwide trading,
allowing companies with lower paid-up capital to list.
2450. Hedging with Derivatives
Hedging with derivatives is a risk management strategy
used by investors and firms to offset potential losses in an asset by taking an
opposite position in a derivative contract (futures, options, swaps).
2451. Interest Rate Sensitivity
Interest rate sensitivity measures how strongly financial asset prices,
portfolio values, or net interest income react to rate fluctuations, primarily
using duration for bonds and repricing gaps for banking portfolios.
Sekhar Pariti
01-06-2026 +91
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