A Loan is a kind of a debt where a borrower borrows a desired amount of money from the bank, keeping a security along with the condition that the sum received will be paid back in Equated Monthly Installments along with a rate (fixed/floating/flat) of interest: i.e - an amount charged on the loan issued. A deposit is a kind of an investment where the customer invests a certain amount of money in a scheme for a certain period of time in exchange of an interest which a bank pays at the end of the tenure of that scheme. With the kind of influx and financial regulations that is going on in the finance sector, various financial houses, private and public sector banks offers suitable schemes to their customers to either opt for a loan or to go in for a deposit.
A Term Loan is defined as a loan which is repaid through
regular periodic payments referred as Equated Monthly Installments or EMI, usually
over a period of 1 to 10 years. If you approach a bank for a loan of one lac
(1,00,000 INR), the bank after going through various calculations based on your
eligibility criteria which mainly depends on your monthly income & your liabilities
decides to provide the amount. You get the loan and agree to repay it within a
period of somewhere between 6 months to 4 years. This is an example of term
loan. Failure to repay the loan within the stipulated period will only result in
the bank confiscating the security that you provided as a guarantee while
taking the loan. Short term loans whether personal or commercial/business are
taken for shorter repayment duration hence making the repayment options all the
more easier for the borrower. A short term personal loan is taken for personal
usage such as home house
renovations, wedding, vacation planning etc. Short term business loans are mainly
provided to raise working capital of your business. They are appropriate for
both new and existing businesses. When dealing with new businesses, most banks
will grant only shorter-term loans, because short-term loans are less risky
than loans with longer terms.
A Term Deposit is a deposit held at a financial institute
and has a fixed term. These are generally short-term deposits
with maturities ranging anywhere from a month to a few years. When a term
deposit is made, the account holder can only withdraw the amount after the
term has ended or by giving a predetermined number of days notice. Term
deposits are an extremely safe investment and are therefore very appealing to
conservative, low-risk investors. Currently banks also offer flexible-term
deposits (flexi deposits), which is a combination of a term-deposit facility
and a savings account. Here the account holder is asked to deposit a certain
amount from his savings account as a term deposit. This amount can be withdrawn
if the required withdrawal amount isn’t available in your savings account. Once
the amount that you withdraw from your term deposit is deposited in your
savings account, the same amount that you withdrew is deducted from your savings
account and deposited to your term deposit account.
Now comes the big question??? How are these two major terms
related to each other? Well a bit of common sense does provide the answer. For
instance you make in a term deposit of a lac for 3 years. The bank agrees to
pay you an interest of 9% p.a. So at the end of 3 years going through the
interest rate the amount that will be provided to you will approximately be
around a lac and thirty thousand (1,30,000 INR). Now once you deposit the
amount into a term deposit scheme for 3 years you will not be entitled to
operate through that account. So what the bank usually does is loan this
particular amount for a period that is lesser then the period of deposit. Now
take another case: Say the bank could have 1 lac loaned to a company or
individual for 3 years at 12% p.a, then at the end of the tenure the bank would
re-collect an amount of around a lac and
forty thousand (1,40,000 INR). So the bank profits by 10,000 INR. So the sole
purpose of these two functions; i.e loans and deposits is financial regulation.
You please a customer and at the same time you get business done for your bank.
Most banks uses this theory to get a large part of their revenue streaming in.
| Additional articles about Loans |
|
|
| About the author |
Financial adviser and banking counselor employed with one of India’s leading financial institutes. To read about term loans & term deposits in detail click
here and
here.
|
| Please Rate This Article |
Number of ratings: 0
Rating: 0