Build your professional network on facebook via our app Go to app
 
 
 

Banking and finance crisis

Tags : banking, banking and finance crisis, coming crisis, investment planning, recession, baking investment
Industry : Asset Management, Banking, Insurance, Investment Banking
Functional Area : India
Share
 
 
 
About "Banking and finance crisis " topic:

Good and bad things are a part of our day to day life. Things keep on changing so do security levels. Investment is risky but sometimes it is worth it. Anyways sometimes it is better to beware than to suffer. Lets talk about the various crisis in this sector.

3 debates on topic: "Banking and finance crisis "
Start a new discussion on the topic ...
 
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
Start Debate
 
(rate this)
Yes 
5
VS
2
 No
Suryanarayan Murthy  |  Argues in support of  "No"  |  8 months ago
The Indian mind set is slowly changing. 20 years back, yes, people are scared of a debt. With the younger generation, willing to take risks, the times are changing.
abhijeet  |  Argues in support of  "Yes"  |  10 months ago
Need to strong indian low need makoka tadaa
 support: 
 
 
Debate: "Indians do not like to be indebted " deleted from your view.
Undo
 
(rate this)
Yes 
2
VS
0
 No
Barkha Agarwal  |  Argues in support of  "Yes"  |  10 months ago
Wholesale produce terminal markets are located in large cities — near consumers rather than growers. The two largest, Los Angeles and New York City, make up 16 percent of the total wholesale market for produce in the fresh market. Terminal...
 support: 
 
 
Debate: "Can Terminal Market be a wholesale market?" deleted from your view.
Undo
 
(rate this)
Yes 
3
VS
0
 No
MS_Pi  |  Argues in support of  "Yes"  |  7 months ago
Yes Mr. Manikanta Raj! This conservative approach by banks helped us during recession. Even today our indian banks are safe and strong. Nothing can touch them !
 support: 
 
 
Debate: "is Indian banks are free from financial crisis" deleted from your view.
Undo
 
Other knowledge matching "Banking and finance crisis " topic
Activity: 1 referals , 1 comments, 20 views  
Recovery of its due has been a hectic exercise for the Banks in the absence of a special legislation. ‘Non-performing Assets’ were growing and a need was felt to reduce the ‘Non-performing Assets’ of the Banks drastically. As the recovery through Courts was a difficult exercise for the Banks, initially, a special legislation called ‘The Recovery of Debts due to Banks and Financial Institutions Act, 1993’ was enacted creating a Special Tribunal called ‘Debt Recovery Tribunal’. Under the Act, the Banks are entitled to approach the Tribunal by filing an ‘Original Application’ which is similar to filing a suit in Civil Court proceedings. However, unlike the ‘Civil Court’ which is supposed to follow the ‘Civil Procedure Code’, a special and simple procedure has been prescribed under ‘The Recovery of Debts due to Banks and Financial Institutions Act, 1993’. At the end of adjudication, the Tribunal is supposed to grant a certificate called ‘Recovery Certificate’ infavour of the Bank...
Posted by: Sr. Associate, UBS
Activity: 9 referals , 1 comments, 314 views  
Day trading refers to the practice of buying and selling financial instruments within the same trading day such that all positions will usually (not necessarily always) be closed before the market close of the trading day. This is different from After-hours trading. Traders that participate in day trading are called day traders. Some of the more commonly day-traded financial instruments are stocks, stock options, currencies, and a host of futures contracts such as equity index futures, interest rate futures, and commodity futures. Day trading used to be the preserve of financial firms and professional investors and speculators. Many day traders are bank or investment firm employees working as specialists in equity investment and fund management. However, day trading has become increasingly popular among casual traders due to advances in technology, changes in legislation, and the popularity of the internet. First of all let me give you few tips that you must follow if you are going...
Posted by: B.Com. M.B.A.(Fin.)
Activity: 10 referals , 3 comments, 539 views  
Hyderabad June 7:  Bulls may be loading up stocks and nudging up the Sensex in anticipation of fresh economic reforms by the UPA Government, but recessionary fears continue to cast a gloom in the job market, especially for the fresh MBA pass-outs this year. Despite some recent positive signals in the recession-hit economies, fresh MBA graduates still have to deal with constricted campus placements and lower availability of jobs. A survey by the Hyderabad chapter of the Indian Institute of Management (Ahmedabad) Alumni Association has shown that so far hardly 20 to 30 per cent of the pass-outs from the 90-odd MBA colleges in Hyderabad this year have been able to land jobs. “It is a more or less similar story elsewhere in the country. Campus placements have dwindled beyond expectation,” the alumni association says. Collecting data from the 90-odd MBA colleges in Hyderabad, the association points out that 20 to 30 per cent of the 10,000 graduates who passed out this year have been...
Leading recruitment from Bangalore
 
 
Similar Topics
Crisis show us who strong we really are and how do we tackle a situation....
1 trends , 4 insight , 1 debates  
Global financial markets have suffered a serious impact from the financial...
2 insight , 10 debates , 7 idea contests  
every crisis is an opportunity
2 insight , 1 idea contests , 1 question  
The banking and finance sector is doing extremely well from last five years...
15 debates , 19 idea contests  
Most newspapers have written extensively about the financial crises of major...
3 insight , 6 idea contests , 1 question