Saturday, July 18, 2026

BTL 920 - ECLGS 5.0

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 920                                                                                18-07-2026

ECLGS 5.0

The Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) 5.0 is an initiative launched by the Government of India on May 5, 2026, to provide additional liquidity and credit support to businesses. Managed by the National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company Limited (NCGTC), the program targets an additional credit flow of 2,55,000 crore (including 5,000 crore earmarked specifically for the airline sector) to help enterprises manage short-term financial mismatches caused by the West Asia geopolitical crisis.

Core Objectives & Financial Impact

Crisis Response: Designed to provide timely financial relief to mitigate supply chain disruptions and cash-flow pressures.

Job Preservation: Designed to support continuous domestic business operations, prevent corporate layoffs, and stabilize market ecosystems.

Eligibility Criteria

Existing Limits: Available to business enterprises, MSMEs, and scheduled passenger airlines that held fund-based working capital limits from Member Lending Institutions (MLIs) as of March 31, 2026.

Credit Standing: The borrower's credit facilities must be categorized as "Standard" (explicitly excluding SMA-2 classifications) as of March 31, 2026, and remain non-NPA at disbursement.

Compliance Documentation: MSME borrowers are strictly required to possess a valid Udyam Registration Number or an Udyam Assist Certificate (UAC) to qualify under MSME provisions.

Scheme Exclusions: Borrowers who have already utilized the Credit Guarantee Scheme for Exporters (CGSE) are excluded up to their utilized CGSE amount. Specific non-MSME sectors listed under internal banking annexures are also restricted.

Quantum of Assistance & Loan Caps

Standard Sectors: MSMEs and non-MSMEs can access additional funding up to 20% of their peak fund-based working capital outstanding during Q4 of FY 2025–26, capped at a maximum of 100 crore per borrower.

Government Guarantee & Lending Terms

Guarantee Cover: Government-backed assurance covers 100% of the default amount for MSMEs and 90% for non-MSMEs and airlines. No guarantee fee is charged to the MLI or the borrower.

Interest Rate Caps: For standard commercial banks and financial institutions, interest rates are strictly capped at 9% p.a. (structured as EBLR + 0.75% for MSMEs and MCLR + 0.75% for non-MSMEs). Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) can charge up to a maximum rate of 13% p.a..

Loan Tenor: Standard business loans carry a repayment period of 5 years (including a 1-year principal moratorium). The airline sector receives a relaxed tenor of 7 years (including a 2-year principal moratorium).

Fee Disclaimers: Participating lenders are banned from charging processing fees, documentation charges, or pre-payment penalties on ECLGS 5.0 accounts.

Application Route: Eligible business owners must file and process their credit requests digitally via the government's centralized Jan Samarth Portal or approach their respective bank relationship managers.

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

 

DBC 2499 - Initial Offering Date

 

The Banking Tutor

Daily Banking Concept 

No. 2499                                            18-07-2026

                         Initial Offering Date 

This date signals when trading begins and when the market starts determining the security’s value.

Friday, July 17, 2026

DBC 2498 - Cash On Delivery

 

The Banking Tutor

  Daily Banking Concept

 No. 2498                                             17-07-2026

                           Cash On Delivery

 Cash on delivery (COD) is a payment method where customers pay for goods upon receiving them, often with cash or card, allowing consumers without credit access to shop.

Thursday, July 16, 2026

DBC 2497 - Financial Distress

 

The Banking Tutor

  Daily Banking Concept

 No. 2497                                              16-07-2026

Financial Distress 

Financial distress occurs when an individual or organization cannot meet financial obligations due to insufficient resources or income.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

BTL 919 - Scenario Analysis

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 919                                                                                15-07-2026

Scenario Analysis

Scenario analysis in banking is a risk-management technique used to forecast the impact of future events on a bank's financial health. By modeling variables like interest rate shifts or loan defaults, banks stress-test portfolios to evaluate capital adequacy and strategic resilience.

Core Applications in Banking

Banks utilize scenario analysis across multiple operational verticals to ensure stability and regulatory compliance:

Credit Risk: Simulating economic downturns to estimate potential loan defaults and provision adequate reserves.

Liquidity & ALM (Asset/Liability Management): Projecting cash flows and net interest margins under varying rate environments.

Operational Risk: Modeling disruptive events—such as cyberattacks or human error—to build resilience.

Capital Planning: Meeting mandatory frameworks by subjecting balance sheets to extreme supervisory conditions.

The Analytical Process

Developing a scenario model requires distinct, structured phases:

Define Drivers: Identify key risk factors relevant to the institution (e.g., inflation rates, GDP growth, or sector-specific shocks).

Develop Narratives: Create baseline, upside, and downside scenarios (often spanning 1 to 5 years depending on the objective).

Quantify Impact: Use statistical modeling and historical data to translate qualitative narratives into quantitative impacts on net income, liquidity, and capital ratios.

Strategic vs. Regulatory Use

While similar, banks distinguish between strategic planning and regulatory stress testing:

Stress Testing: Mandated by authorities, this focuses on short-to-medium-term, severe, and predefined conditions to ensure solvency.

Scenario Planning: A broader tool used by bank executives to evaluate long-term business models, prepare for multiple plausible futures, and make dynamic capital reallocations.

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

 


DBC 2496 - Qualified Dividends

 

The Banking Tutor

 Daily Banking Concept 

No. 2496                                               15-07-2026

                        Qualified Dividends 

A qualified dividend is an ordinary dividend, but it is reported to the IRS and taxed at capital gains tax rates.

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

DBC 2495 - Doji Candle Pattern

 

The Banking Tutor

 Daily Banking Concept

 No. 2495                                             14-07-2026

                         Doji Candle Pattern 

A doji is a single candlestick pattern in which the open and close prices of the security or market are the same or very close to it.