Thursday, July 9, 2026

BTL 917 - Shadow Credit

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 917                                                                                09-07-2026

Shadow Credit

The term "Shadow Credit" holds different meanings depending on whether you are dealing with personal consumer banking, corporate finance, or macroeconomics.

In Personal Banking: Fraud & Dispute Resolution (Shadow Reversal)

In Retail banking, shadow credit refers to a temporary, provisional amount  deposited into your account while the bank investigates a disputed or fraudulent transaction.

If you report an unauthorized electronic transaction (UPI, debit/credit card fraud), regulations like the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Limited Liability Clause require the bank to credit the disputed amount back to your account within 10 working days.

The "Shadow" Aspect: It acts as a temporary placeholder so you aren't left out of pocket. The bank has up to 90 days to investigate. If the probe finds you were not at fault, the credit becomes permanent. If negligence or fraud on your part is proven, the bank will revoke this credit.

Utilising Shadow Credit - Some banks freeze this specific portion of the balance until the investigation concludes, while others let you use it but hold you liable if the dispute is rejected.

In Credit Cards: The "Shadow Limit"

A shadow limit is an undisclosed, flexible buffer above your official credit card limit.

Hidden Cushion: It is invisible on your mobile app, statements, or bank dashboards.

Emergency Approval: It allows transactions to pass through seamlessly even if you slightly exceed your limit, preventing embarrassing card declines at a checkout counter.

Dynamic Calculation: This limit is determined algorithmically in real-time based on your repayment track record, internal credit score ("shadow scores"), and spending history. It is primarily offered on premium or high-end cards.

In Corporate Finance: Unreported Debt

For businesses, shadow credit refers to debt liabilities that do not explicitly appear on a company's primary balance sheet as formal bank debt.

Examples: It includes trade payables (money owed to vendors), inter-corporate loans, post-dated cheques used as collateral, and overdue legal or statutory dues.

The Risk: Commercial bankers look closely for hidden shadow credit because it secretly strains a company’s cash flow and artificially inflates their apparent repayment capability.

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

 

DBC 2490 - Equity Financing

 

The Banking Tutor 

                       Daily Banking Concept

 No. 2490                                              09-07-2026

Equity Financing 

Equity financing is the method of raising capital by selling shares of ownership in a company, allowing businesses to obtain funds from various investors without incurring debt.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

DBC 2489 - Acquisitions

 

The Banking Tutor

 Daily Banking Concept

 

No. 2489                                               08-07-2026

 Acquisitions 

An acquisition occurs when one company purchases another entity, providing the acquiring company ownership and control over the acquired company's assets and operations.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

DBC 2488 - Migration

 

The Banking Tutor 

                       Daily Banking Concept 

No. 2488                                               07-07-2026

 Migration 

Migration is the general term for any movement of people or animals from one region to another. 

Migrate: The broad, umbrella term for moving. It doesn't specify an origin or a destination, and it can be temporary or seasonal. 

Emigrate: Leaving your home country to live elsewhere. Think of the "E" in emigrate as standing for "Exit". 

Immigrate: Entering a new country to live permanently. Think of the "I" in immigrate as standing for "Into" or "In".

Monday, July 6, 2026

BTL 916 - Honey Pot

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 916                                                                                06-07-2026

Honey Pot

In banking and finance, a Honeypot is an intentionally created decoy system, database, or fake account designed to lure cybercriminals away from real, sensitive assets.

When hackers interact with this deceptive environment, security teams receive immediate alerts and can safely study the attacker's methods.

Honey Pots are used in following ways:

Decoy Accounts: Banks may set up fake accounts (such as a simulated high-level executive account) to attract hackers. Any access or transaction attempts immediately trigger a security response.

Simulated Infrastructure: Institutions deploy decoy servers, payment APIs, and databases populated with dummy data to study phishing and malware attacks.

Honeytokens: Fake files, documents, or credentials placed within a network to act as digital tripwires; if these are accessed or downloaded, security teams are instantly notified of an insider threat or breach.

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

 

DBC 2487 - Person Resident Outside India (PROI)

 

The Banking Tutor 

                     Daily Banking Concept 

No. 2487                                            06-07-2026 

Person Resident Outside India (PROI) 

Person Resident Outside India (PRIO), a residential status defined under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA). The term primarily applies to Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) and Overseas Citizens of India (OCIs) who spend less than 182 days in India during the preceding financial year.

Sunday, July 5, 2026

DBC 2486 - Solvency

 

The Banking Tutor 

                      Daily Banking Concept 

No. 2486                                            05-07-2026 

Solvency 

Solvency refers to a company's capacity to fulfill long-term debts and financial commitments, reflecting its financial health and operational longevity.