DBC 2465 - Trimmed Mean
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2465
Trimmed Mean
A trimmed mean is a central measure in
statistics that adjusts the average by removing a specific portion of extreme
values from a sample.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2465
Trimmed Mean
A trimmed mean is a central measure in
statistics that adjusts the average by removing a specific portion of extreme
values from a sample.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2464
Street Expectation
The Street expectation, also known as an
earnings estimate or earnings expectation, is the average estimate of a public
company’s quarterly earnings and revenues. It is set by securities analysts'
forecasts.
The Banking Tutor’s Lessons
BTL 908 12-06-2026
Free Rider
A free rider is a person or
entity who receives the benefits of a good, service, or collective effort
without paying for it or contributing to its cost. This behavior relies on
others to bear the burden of effort or expense while the rider reaps the
reward.
The "Free Rider Problem"
(Economics)
In economics, this concept is
famously known as the free-rider problem. It typically occurs with public
goods (such as national defense, public parks, or street lighting).
The issue: Because these
goods are generally available to everyone, individuals have an incentive to
avoid paying for them, hoping others will cover the cost.
The consequence: If too many
people adopt this mentality, the funding or maintenance of the service fails,
leading to market failure.
Common Examples
Beyond economics, free riding
applies to several real-world situations:
Group Projects: A student who
does no work but receives the same grade as the rest of the group.
Unions: A non-union worker at
a company who enjoys higher wages and benefits negotiated by the union, without
paying union dues.
Public Broadcasting: Viewers
or listeners who enjoy high-quality programs on public networks without ever
donating to support them.
International Relations: A
country that benefits from the military protection or global environmental
treaties of its allies without contributing its fair share of resources.
How to Prevent Free Riding
To solve this problem,
systems are often designed to ensure that everyone contributes:
Taxation: Governments collect
taxes to fund services like roads and police, making participation mandatory so
no one can "ride for free".
Exclusion: Toll roads or
subscription-based websites use mechanisms to physically or digitally block
people who haven't paid.
Sekhar Pariti
+91 9440641014
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2463
Free Rider Problem
Many benefit
from collective resources, goods, or services in an economy, but free riders do
not contribute to the costs. When free riding occurs, payers may choose to
contribute less, knowing that free riders aren’t paying their fair share or
anything at all.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2462
Shell Corporation
A shell
corporation is a corporation without active business operations or significant
assets. These types of corporations are not all necessarily illegal, but they
are sometimes used illegitimately, such as to disguise business ownership from
law enforcement or the public.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2461
Joint supply is an economic term referring to
a product or process that can yield two or more outputs. Common examples occur
within the livestock industry: cows can be utilized for milk, beef, and hide.
The Banking Tutor’s Lessons
BTL 907 09-06-2026
Liquidity Mining
Liquidity mining is a
Decentralized Finance (DeFi) strategy where users deposit ("mine")
their crypto assets into a smart contract-based pool to provide liquidity for
traders. In exchange, providers earn passive income through trading fees and newly
minted governance or protocol tokens.
Working of Liquidity Mining
The Pool: Users lock a pair
of cryptocurrency assets (e.g., ETH and USDC) of equal value into a smart
contract.
The Trader: Traders swap
tokens directly through this pool instead of relying on a traditional
buyer/seller order book.
The Reward: Providers are
compensated with a cut of the swap transaction fees and additional protocol
tokens, which are distributed proportional to their share of the pool.
Primary Uses
Automated Market Making
(AMM): Pools utilize locked assets to allow users to instantly swap tokens
(e.g., swapping ETH for USDC) without requiring a direct buyer/seller.
Lending and Borrowing: Users
supply crypto to lending protocols so others can borrow against their
collateral.
Platform Bootstrapping: New
projects use liquidity mining to distribute governance tokens widely and
attract a critical mass of initial capital.
Real-World Applications &
Mechanisms
Earning Trading Fees:
Whenever a trade is executed through a pool, a fraction of the transaction fee
is proportionally distributed back to the liquidity providers (LPs).
Yield Farming/Governance
Rewards: Protocols often distribute extra rewards—such as the platform's native
governance token—to incentivize users to provide assets to specific pools. This
allows providers to earn compound yields.
Stablecoin Swaps: Providing
liquidity for stablecoin pairs (e.g., USDT/USDC) minimizes price volatility and
allows users to earn yield with less exposure to market fluctuations.
Cross-Asset Bridges:
Liquidity is heavily utilized to secure and fuel bridges that move digital
assets across different blockchain networks (e.g., Ethereum to Solana).
Popular Platforms & Tools
To start liquidity mining,
you need to connect your crypto wallet to a decentralized exchange (DEX) or
yield aggregator. Some of the most widely used platforms include:
Uniswap: A leading
decentralized exchange where anyone can provide liquidity for various token
pairs.
PancakeSwap: A popular DEX
for swapping and mining across multiple blockchain networks.
DeFi Llama: A comprehensive
data analytics dashboard used to track and compare yields across hundreds of
different liquidity pools.
Core Risks
While liquidity mining can
yield high returns, it requires navigating specific risks:
Impermanent Loss: This
happens when the price ratio of the two deposited tokens diverges from when you
deposited them. If one token's price drops significantly or skyrockets, you may
end up with a less favorable balance than if you had just held the tokens in
your wallet.
Smart Contract
Vulnerabilities: Because liquidity pools are governed by code, bugs or exploits
in the smart contract can lead to a total loss of deposited funds.
Rug Pulls / Project Failure:
Yields or reward tokens that look extremely high often originate from brand-new
or untrustworthy projects. If the project token's price collapses, your overall
earnings will also plummet.
Sekhar Pariti
+91 9440641014