Tuesday, May 19, 2026

DBC 2439 - American swaption

 

The Banking Tutor 

                Daily Banking Concept -  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.

Monday, May 18, 2026

BTL 900 - The Care Economy

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 900                                                                                18-05-2026

The Care Economy

Care Economy is the sum of all paid and unpaid activities that provide care and support to people. Care Economy includes care for children, the elderly, and people with disabilities. Care Economy has the potential to generate huge employment in the future. Despite having vast potential, the care work across the countries remains plagued by low wages and non-compensation. 

The Care economy is a cornerstone of sustainable development and social well-being. By recognizing its value, investing in its infrastructure, and addressing systemic inequalities, societies can build more resilient and inclusive economies.

Care Economy Definition

The Care Economy, also known as the Purple Economy, encompasses both unpaid and paid caregiving activities. Unpaid work involves nursing or cooking for family members, while paid care work involves domestic workers providing services in exchange for remuneration. Traditionally, caregiving was solely women's responsibility, but it is now shared equally among all family members.

Care Economy Need

Care Economy’s need arises due to the necessity to focus on growth and at the same time cater to the demand of the elderly population. Care Economy also helps support the formal economy and bridges the gender divide. The details are as mentioned below:

Core of Growth: It helps in sustaining human activity for present and future generations by providing regular care work. According to estimates by the WEF, if unpaid work is compensated, then it would represent 9% of Global GDP.

Supports Formal Sector Employees: The employees working in the formal sector can sustain their work because their children, older parents, and loved ones are being taken care of by care workers.

Growing Elderly Population: The Care Economy supports the older population, who are its primary beneficiaries. As their numbers grow steadily, the demand for care services increases. 

According to United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) estimates, by 2050, 20% of India's population will be aged 60 and above. This demographic shift further expands the need for a robust Care Economy.

Promoting Gender Equality: The care work traditionally fell on women disproportionately increasing inequality. It limited their participation in paid economic tasks leading to their limited growth.

Care Economy Features

The features of the Care Economy include it being women-centric and most of the workers work without remuneration. The details are explained below:

Unpaid Work: It forms a crucial part of the Care Economy as most of the work is not paid for as against paid work in a Monetized Economy.

Role of Women: The majority of work is still done by women in the Care Economy. They spend more time than men in care work. 

Women spend 3.2 times more time than men in care work.

Human Capital Development: It supports Human Capital Development by taking care of young children, the disabled, etc.

Care Economy and Monetized Economy

Care Economy can be distinguished from a Monetized Economy based on the idea that while a Monetized Economy involves activities that receive direct payments and are included in GDP on the other hand Care Economy includes activities that are either unpaid or paid low-wages.

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

DBC 2438 - European Swaption

 

The Banking Tutor

Daily Banking Concept -  2438

European Swaption

 

European swaption is a swaption that can be exercised only on the exercise date.

DBC 2437 - Swaption

 

The Banking Tutor 

                Daily Banking Concept -  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.

 

Saturday, May 16, 2026

DBC 2436 - CDO Squared

 

The Banking Tutor 

                Daily Banking Concept -  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.

 

Friday, May 15, 2026

BTL 899 - Joint Demand, Derived Demand & Composite Demand

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 899                                                                                15-05-2026

Joint Demand, Derived Demand & Composite Demand

Joint demand refers to complementary goods demanded together to satisfy a single need (e.g., printers and ink), while composite demand refers to a single commodity with multiple, alternative uses (e.g., electricity for lighting, heating, or machinery). Joint demand involves interconnected goods, whereas composite demand signifies varied uses for one resource.

Joint Demand (Complementary)

When two or more goods are required together to satisfy a single want or function. Demand for one item rises, the demand for the other rises; if the price of one increases, the demand for both decreases.

Examples: Car and petrol ; Needle and thread ; Tea powder and milk ; Computer and software.

Composite Demand (Alternative Uses)

When a commodity is demanded for multiple, different purposes. The total demand for the product is the sum of its different uses; an increase in demand for one use reduces availability for others.

Examples:

Steel: Used for automobiles, construction, and utensils.

Electricity: Used for lighting, heating, and industrial motors.

Milk: Used for cheese, butter, yogurt, or direct consumption.

Coal: Used for power generation, heating, and cooking.

Derived Demand (Input-Output Relationship)

Derived demand is the demand for a resource or intermediate good that stems from the demand for a final product (e.g., steel demand depends on car demand), while joint demand occurs when two or more goods are demanded together to satisfy a single want (e.g., printers and ink). Derived demand implies dependency, while joint demand implies complementarity. Derived demand arises because the item is needed to produce something else.

Example 1: Demand for construction workers is derived from the demand for new buildings.

Example 2: Demand for microchips is derived from the demand for laptops.

Key Differences

Joint demand is complementary, while composite demand is alternative.

Joint demand involves multiple goods, whereas composite demand usually refers to one good with many uses.

In joint demand, a price rise in one item reduces demand for the other. In composite demand, increased demand for one use raises the price for all uses.

Derived demand focuses on the production chain (e.g., car  steel), whereas joint demand focuses on simultaneous consumption (e.g., printer + ink).

In joint demand, the products are roughly equals (shoes and socks), while in derived demand, one is an input for the other (leather for shoes).

In joint demand, a high price for one good reduces the demand for its complement. In derived demand, the demand for the input is directly proportional to the volume of the final good.

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

DBC 2435 - Synthetic CDO

 

The Banking Tutor 

                Daily Banking Concept -  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.