Recap DBC June 2026
Recap Banking Concepts – June 2026
2452. Guns-and-Butter Curve
The guns-and-butter curve
illustrates opportunity cost by showing trade-offs between military and
non-military spending.
2453. High-Low
Index
The high-low index assesses
market trends by comparing the number of stocks reaching their 52-week highs to
those hitting their 52-week lows. It serves as a tool for investors and traders
to gauge the prevailing market direction, particularly for major indices like
the S&P 500.
2454. Joint Demand
Joint (or complementary
demand) occurs when two or more goods or services are demanded together to
satisfy a single want. Because these items are interdependent, a change in the
demand or price for one directly affects the demand for the others.
2455. Insurance Deductibles
Deductibles are the
out-of-pocket costs that you must pay before your insurance coverage kicks in
and pays out your claims.
2456. Light
House Initiative
The "Lighthouse
Initiative" (LHI) primarily refers to several distinct national and global
development programs. In India, it is a
prominent Public-Private Partnership targeting either rural sanitation or youth employment.
2457. Repayment
Repayment is the process of
returning borrowed money to a lender over time, typically through scheduled
payments that cover both the principal and interest.
2458. Political Risk
Insurance
Political risk insurance
provides financial protection to investors, financial institutions, and
businesses that face the possibility of losing money because of political
events. It protects against the possibility that a government will take some
action that causes the insured to experience a large financial loss.
2459. Earnings Announcement
An earnings announcement is a
company's official report of profitability for a quarter or a year, released on
a scheduled date during earnings season. It follows analysts' estimates and
often fuels speculation that moves share prices, which is why accurate,
regulated reporting matters to investors and markets.
2460. Time Charter Equivalent
Time charter equivalent (TCE)
is a performance metric in the shipping industry that measures a vessel’s daily
revenue efficiency. It’s calculated by subtracting voyage expenses like fuel
and port fees from total voyage revenue.
2461. Joint Supply
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
2466. Average Indexed Monthly
Earnings
Average indexed monthly
earnings (AIME) is a key figure used to determine a person's Social Security
benefits by serving as the foundation for calculating their primary insurance
amount (PIA). AIME is based on an individual's 35 highest-earning years during
their working life.
2467. GARUDA
GARUDA, or Green-Channel: AIF
Rollout Upon Document Acknowledgement, aims to streamline the Processing of
Placement Memorandums (PPMs) filed with SEBI and further ease fundraising by
AIFs.
2468. U-Shaped Economy
Recovery
A U-shaped recovery is an
economic scenario where an economy suffers a sharp recessionary decline,
lingers at the bottom with prolonged stagnation, and then gradually returns to
its previous peak, usually over 12–24 months.
2469. W-Shaped
Economy Recovery
A W-shaped economic recovery,
also known as a "double-dip recession," occurs when an economy
experiences a sharp recession, a brief period of growth, a second sharp
decline, and finally a sustained recovery. When charted on a graph, these economic
indicators form the letter "W".
2470. Order-To-Trade Ratio
(OTR)
The Order-to-Trade Ratio
(OTR) measures the number of orders placed, including modifications and
cancellations, relative to trades executed by a trading member.
A high OTR indicates
excessive order placement with low execution or creating ‘noise’, often linked
to algorithmic or high-frequency trading. Exchanges impose penalties on high
OTR to curb market manipulation, reduce system congestion, and ensure fair trading.
2471. Invisible Farmers
The term "invisible
farmers" refers to women who are actively engaged in agricultural
production and farm management but remain largely unrecognised within formal
systems of ownership, entitlements, decision-making, and as beneficiaries of
farmer-centric government schemes.
2472. Pick-and-Shovel Play
A pick-and-shovel play is an
investment strategy that targets companies supplying essential tools or
services within an industry, instead of investing directly in the industry's
end products.
2473. Fundamental Analysis
Fundamental analysis is a
technique to measure a company's value based on its financials and other
objective metrics, as opposed to market price trends.
2474. Coverage
Initiated
Coverage initiated refers to
the announcement that a brokerage or analyst has issued its first rating or
research on a stock, typically leading to increased trading volume and investor
interest.
2475. Profit Warnings
A profit warning is a
company-issued note stating that its earnings won't meet previously expected
levels.
2476. Chain-Weighted CPI
The chain-weighted Consumer
Price Index (CPI) provides a dynamic measure of inflation by adjusting for
changes in consumer behavior and spending patterns over time.
2477. Discounted Future
Earnings Valuation
Discounted future earnings is
a valuation method used to estimate a company's worth by forecasting its future
earnings, then discounting those earnings back to the present value using an
appropriate discount rate.
2478. Value Investing
Value investing involves
picking stocks that seem to be trading for less than their book value.
2479. Fill or Kill (FOK)
Order
A fill or kill (FOK) order is
a type of trading order that requires a transaction to be executed immediately
and fully, or else it is cancelled.
2480. Relief Rally
A relief rally is a
short-term rise in stock prices after a period of decline, giving investors a
temporary break from falling markets. These rallies occur when financial
markets react to economic news that is better or less severe than expected.
2481. Supply
Management
Supply management involves
overseeing internal processes and relationships with suppliers to ensure that a
business obtains the necessary materials and services for efficient operations
and growth.
Sekhar Pariti
01-07-2026 +91
94406 41014

