Title: Banking
1Banking
2MK, p.73,4 Reading
- 1. COMMERCIAL BANKS
- 2. INVESTMENT BANKS
- 3. PRIVATE BANKS
- 4. HEDGE FUNDS
- 5. STOCKBROKERS
- 6. ISLAMIC BANKS
- 7. NON-BANK FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES
3MK 14 p. 74 Vocabulary
- 1. DEPOSIT
- 2. LOAN
- 3. CAPITAL
- 4. SHARES
- 5. BONDS
- 6. MERGER
- 7. TAKEOVER BID
- 8. STOCKBROKING
- 9. PORTFOLIO
- 10. RETURNS
- 11. BANKRUPT
- 12. DEREGULATION
- 13. CONGLOMERATE
- 14. INTEREST
4The bare essentials (RB, p. 56) Part I
- go bust go bankrupt
- deposit ? loan
- borrow ? lend
- interest price of loans or reward for deposit
5The bare essentials (RB, p. 56) Part I
- 7 interest rates
- 8 depositors
- 9 shortages
- 10 borrow
- 11 central bank
- 12 goes bust /bankrupt
- 1 bank account
- 2 cash
- 3 in
- 4 deposits
- 5 interest
- 6 loans
6The bare essentials (RB, p. 56) Part II
- debit (withdraw money from) an account
- ? credit (deposit money into) an account
- securities stocks bonds...
- cartels ? regulators
- foreign currencies , , , , kn...
- transactions payment, debiting, crediting
7The bare essentials (RB, p. 56) Part II
- 18 foreign currency
- 19 securities
- 20 investments
- 21 payment system
- 22 cartels
- 23 regulators
- 13 payments
- 14 debit
- 15 credit
- 16 transaction
- 17 financials services
8The bare essentials (RB, p. 56)
- Why are retail/commercial banks useful?
- How do retail banks make a profit?
- How can you pay for goods? List different types
of payment. - Explain investment banks deal in securities
and derrivatives, and manage payments on behalf
of their clients. - Explain Regulators ... their chief concern
remains that banks are sound.
9RB p. 57 II
- 8 go bust (bankrupt)
- 9 make payments
- 10 offer financial services
- 11 give financial advice
- 12 exchange foreign currency
- 13 deal in securities/derivatives
- 14 manage investments
- 1 take deposit
- 2 pay interest
- 3 make loans
- 4 charge interest
- 5 manage depositors mny
- 6 make losses
- 7 borrow money
10RB p. 57 III FIND WORDS
- a computerized machine that allows bank customers
to withdraw money, check their balance and so on
-gt _____ - an account which is debited too much is -gt
________ - the amount of money in a financial repository,
such as a checking account, at any given
moment-gt _________ - an instruction to a bank to pay fixed sums of
money to certain people or organizations at
stated times -gt _______ _________ -
11RB p. 57 III FIND WORDS
- a computerized machine that allows bank customers
to withdraw money, check their balance and so on
-gt ATM - an account which is debited too much is -gt in the
red - the amount of money in a financial repository,
such as a checking account, at any given moment-gt
balance - an instruction to a bank to pay fixed sums of
money to certain people or organizations at
stated times -gt standing order -
12More banking vocabulary guess VERB account
- o_ _ n an account o_ _ _ d _ _ _ an account
- c_ _ s _ an account c_ _ _ g _ sth. to an
account - w_ _ _ d _ _ _ money from an account
- d _ p _ _ _ t money in an account
- d _ _ _ t money from an account (take money
from) - c _ _ d _ t money to an account (add money to)
- a current account p_ y _ a small interest
- s _ tt _ _ an account
- h _ _ d an account (with ZABA)
13Verb account
- open an account overdraw (..) account
- close an account charge sth. to an account
- withdraw money from an account
- deposit money in an account /di pozit/
- debit money from (...) account (take money from)
- credit money to an account (add money to)
- a current account pays a small interest
- settle an account
- hold an account (with ZABA)
- READER P 57, task III
14MK, 73/Lead-in find the terms that are defined
below
- An account that pays interest, but usually cannot
be used for paying cheques, and on which notice
is often required to withdraw money. - A card issued by a financial company giving the
holder an option to borrow funds, usually at
point of sale. These cards charge interest. - An account that generally pays little or no
interest, but allows the holder to withdraw his
or her cash without any restrictions. - An electronic card issued by a bank which allows
bank clients access to their account to withdraw
cash or pay for goods and services.
15MK, p. 73 find the terms that are defined below
- An account that pays interest, but usually cannot
be used for paying cheques, and on which notice
is often required to withdraw money. Savings/
deposit (BrE) time/notice account (AmE) - A card issued by a financial company giving the
holder an option to borrow funds, usually at
point of sale. These cards charge interest.
Credit card - An account that generally pays little or no
interest, but allows the holder to withdraw his
or her cash without any restrictions. Current
(BrE) checking account (AmE) - An electronic card issued by a bank which allows
bank clients access to their account to withdraw
cash or pay for goods and services. Debit card
16RB p. 58 Bank statements
- What are bank statements for?
- How often are they sent to bank account holders?
- What kind of information do they contain?
- Tasks
- RB, p. 58 / I
- RB, p. 58 / II
17(No Transcript)
18RB p. 58 Bank statements -KEY
- MONTHLY MAINTENANCE CHARGE
- ACCOUNT NUMBER
- ACCOUNT SUMMARY
- DETAILED CHECK LIST
- DEPOSITS AND OTHER CREDITS
- STATEMENT PERIOD
- WITHDRAWAL LIST
- ATM LOCATIONS USED
- CHECKS AND OTHER DEBITS
19MK 14 p.74 match up - solution
- PASS laws
- PAY interest,
- PROVIDE services, capital
- RAISE capital
- RECEIVE deposits,
- SHARE profits/losses
- CHARGE interest, advice
- DO business
- GIVE advice
- ISSUE bonds, shares/stocks
- MAKE profits, laws
- OFFER advice, loans
20Services offered by banks and financial
institutions.Say which institution offers which
service.
- Receive, hold deposits
- Investment services for the wealthy
- Raise funds/capital
- Riskier investments, higher returns
- Finance international trade
- Make a loan
- Banking that follows the principles of Sharia law
- Offer financial advice
- Arrange takeovers and mergers
- Issue government bonds
- Department stores offering personal loans, credit
cards
21The Glass-Steagall ActFind answers
- When was this law passed?
- What did it do?
- When was it repealed?
- What was the result?
- Explain financial deregulation
22The Glass-Steagall Act
- When was this law passed? - gt in 1934
- What did it do? -gt separated commercial banks
from investment banks and stockbroking firms - When was it repealed? -gt in 1999
- What was the result? -gt intl. conglomerates
banking stockbrokinginsurance services - financial deregulation changes in laws that
give financial institutions more freedom in how
they compete
23MK p.76 Microfinance Listening
- Listen for terms defined below
- Assets promised by a borrower to a lender if the
borrower cannot repay the loan. - The managing of investments in ways that produce
as much profit as possible while limiting the
danger of losses. - Reducing risk by investing in a variety of assets
/ lending money to large number of people.
24MK p.76 Microfinance Listening KEY
- Listen for terms defined below
- Assets promised by a borrower to a lender if the
borrower cannot repay the loan - collateral - The managing of investments in ways that produce
as much profit as possible while limiting the
danger of losses risk management (tool) - Reducing risk by investing in a variety of assets
/ lending money to a large number of people - risk diversification
25Microfinancing Listening
- Listen and compare your answers
- 1 In microfinance, what replaces normal financial
collateral? - 2 What is the risk management tool Anna-Kim
mentions? - 3 Why is lending money to poor people not
necessarily as risky as it sounds? - 4 Why are conventional banks now developing
microcredit products? - 5 In which three continents are there successful
microfinance schemes ?
26Microfinancing Listening
- Listen and compare your answers
- 1 In microfinance, what replaces normal financial
collateral? SOCIAL COLLATERAL - 2 What is the risk management tool Anna-Kim
mentions? VERY SMALL LOANS - 3 Why is lending money to poor people not
necessarily as risky as it sounds? PORTFOLIO OF
DIVERSIFIED RISK - 4 Why are conventional banks now developing
microcredit products? GOOD FOR BUSINESS - 5 In which three continents are there successful
microfinance schemes ? ASIA, LATIN AMERICA,
AFRICA
27Microfinancing quiz
- 1. What is microfinancing?
- Giving loans to poor people
- Financing microtechnology.
- 2. Microfinancing is risky.
- Yes
- No
28- 3. Decide which statement is true
- In microfinancing the loans are very small so
defaults are rare. - In microfinancing a large number of people are
given small loans and so the risk is diversified. - 4. What kind of collateral do banks use when
giving microloans? - Social
- Financial
29- 5. What motivates micro-borrowers to repay their
loans? - The bank can take away their property.
- Their lending group will put peer pressure on
them to make them pay.