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RBI’S CAPITAL A/C NAME OF GROUP MEMBERS NAME ROLL NO KAJAL BHALSOD 5161 KRISHNA BHARATIYA 5162 NILAM RATHOD 5198 AMI VALERA 5223 VANDITA ZALA 5227 CAPITAL A/C:INTRODUCTION THE Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1973 (FERA) was repealed and a new Act called the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA) came into force with effect from June 1, 2000, with a view to facilitating external trade and payments and promoting orderly development and maintenance of foreign exchange market in India. UNDER the FEMA, foreign exchange transactions are divided into two broad categories - current account and capital account transactions. THE Reserve Bank, in consultation with the Government of India, has notified comprehensive, simple and transparent regulations under the FEMA, 1999 for capital account transactions. The regulations distinctly indicate the types of permissible capital account transactions, simplified procedures for undertaking transactions and the returns that have to be submitted to the Reserve Bank. The regulations grant substantial powers to the Authorised Dealer Category – I banks to undertake capital account transactions on behalf of their clients. CAPITAL A/C VS CURRENT A/C Transactions that alter the assets or liabilities, including contingent liabilities outside India, of persons resident in India or assets or liabilities in India of persons resident outside India are classified as capital account transactions. All other transactions are current account transactions. Current account shows current year transactions and capital account shows both current transactions relating to businessman and initial capital of businessman. According to FEMA Act 2000, "There is no restrictions on holding or exchanging of foreign currency under Current Account . But Any foreign currency is under capital account , then it must be controlled under the regulations of RBI." In partnership , partners can make current account separately from capital account in which they can show only their salary, interest on capital and interest on drawing etc. and in capital account, they can show only their capital invested in the business of partnership. Current account is the net balance of international transactions of currently produced goods and services. Capital account is the net balance of international (investment) capital transactions. Capital Account Transactions Capital account transaction is defined as a transaction which:Alters the assets or liabilities, including contingent liabilities, outside India of persons resident in India. example: a resident of India acquires an immovable property outside India or acquires shares of a foreign company. This way his/her overseas assets are increased Alters the assets or liabilities in India of persons resident outside the India. Example: a non-resident acquires immovable property in India or acquires shares of an Indian company or invest in a Wholly Owned Subsidiary or a Joint Venture with a resident of India. This way his/her assets in India are increased A list of some of the most common capital account transactions Transfer or issue of any foreign security by a person resident in India Transfer or issue of any security by a person resident outside India Transfer or issue of any security or foreign security by any branch, office or agency in India of a person resident outside India Any borrowing or lending in rupees in whatever form or by whatever name called between a person resident in India and a person resident outside India Deposits between persons resident in India and persons resident outside India Export, import or holding of currency or currency notes. Transfer of immovable property outside India, other than a lease not exceeding five years, by a person resident in India. Acquisition or transfer of immovable property in India, other than a lease not exceeding five years, by a person resident outside India. Giving of a guarantee or surety in respect of any debt, obligation or other liability incurred(i) By a person resident in India and owed to a person resident outside India; or (ii) By a person resident outside India. The permitted capital account transactions The permitted capital account transactions have been classified into two categories:1. Capital account transactions by persons resident in India 2. capital account transactions by non- residents Capital account transactions by persons resident in India Investment in foreign securities. Foreign currency loans raised in India and abroad. Acquisition and transfer of immovable property outside India. Guarantees issued in favor of a person resident outside India. Export, import and holding of currency or currency notes. Loans and overdrafts (borrowings) from a person resident outside India. Maintenance of foreign currency accounts in India and outside India. Taking out the insurance policy from an insurance company outside India. Capital account transactions by non- residents Acquisition and transfer of immovable property in India. Guarantee in favor of, or on behalf of, a person resident in India. Import and export of currency/currency notes into/from India. Deposits between a person resident in India and a person resident outside India. Foreign currency accounts in India of a non-resident. Remittance of the assets in India held by a non-resident. Prohibitions on capital account transactions A nonresident person shall not make investment in India in any form, in any company or partnership firm or proprietary concern or any entity, whether incorporated or not, which is engaged or proposes to engage:I. In the business of chit fund. II. In agricultural or plantation activities. III. In real estate business, or construction of farm houses. CAPITAL ADEQUACY RULES OF RBI DEFINATION Capital adequacy rules relate to the minimum amount of capital (equity) that institutions must hold relative to their assets set by financial market regulators. These rules are designed to ensure that capital is sufficient to absorb likely losses. CONCEPTS OF CAPITAL ADEQUACY NORMS Types of capital Tier I capital Tier II capital Capital which is first readily available to protect the unexpected losses is called as Tier-I Capital. It is also termed as Core Capital. Capital which is second readily available to protect the unexpected losses is called as Tier-II Capital. Tier-I Capital consists of :- Tier-II Capital consists of :Undisclosed Reserves and Paid-Up Capital Perpetual Preference Shares. Revaluation Reserves (at discount of 55%). Hybrid (Debt / Equity) Capital. Subordinated Debt. General Provisions and Loss Reserves. Paid-Up Capital. Statutory Reserves. Other Disclosed Free Reserves Reserves which are not kept side for meeting any specific liability. Capital Reserves : Surplus generated from sale of Capital Assets. RISK WEIGHTED ASSETS Capital Adequacy Ratio is calculated based on the assets of the bank. The values of bank's assets are not taken according to the book value but according to the risk factor involved. The value of each asset is assigned with a risk factor in percentage terms. RISK WEIGHTED ASSETS Capital Adequacy Ratio is calculated based on the assets of the bank. The values of bank's assets are not taken according to the book value but according to the risk factor involved. The value of each asset is assigned with a risk factor in percentage terms. RISK WEIGHTED ASSETS Capital Adequacy Ratio is calculated based on the assets of the bank. The values of bank's assets are not taken according to the book value but according to the risk factor involved. The value of each asset is assigned with a risk factor in percentage terms. SUBORDINATED DEBT These are bonds issued by banks for raising Tier II Capital. They are as follows :- Fully paid up instruments. Unsecured debt. Subordinated to the claims of other creditors. This means that the bank's holder's claims for their money will be paid at last in order of preference as compared with the claims of other creditors of the bank. The bonds should not be redeemable at the option of the holders. The repayment of bond value will be decided only by the issuing bank. What is capital account convertibility? CAC defined it as the freedom to convert local financial assets into foreign financial assets and vice versa at market determined rates of exchange without any sort of intermediation and regulation. In layman's terms, full capital account convertibility allows local currency to be exchanged for foreign currency without any restriction on the amount. local merchants can easily conduct transnational business without needing foreign currency exchanges to handle small transactions. CAC is mostly a guideline to changes of ownership in foreign or domestic financial assets and liabilities. In case a currency Is fully capital account convertible, then anybody from anywhere In the world can Invest In any assets In that currency. CAC also allows the people and companies not only to convert one currency to other but also free cross-border movement of those currencies, without the intervention of the law of the country concerned. CAC in India is regulated as follows: All types of liquid capital assets must be able to be exchanged freely, between any two nations in the world, with standardized exchange-rates. The amounts must be a significant amount (in excess of $500,000). Capital inflows should be invested in semi-liquid assets, to prevent churning and excessive outflow. Institutional investors should not use CAC to manipulate fiscal policy or exchange rates. Excessive inflows and outflows should be protected by national banks to provide security. Why is CAC such an emotive issue? CAC is widely regarded as one of the hallmarks of a developed economy. It is also seen as a major comfort factor for overseas investors since they know that anytime they change their mind they will be able to re-convert local currency back into foreign currency and take out their money. In a bid to attract foreign investment, many developing countries went in for CAC in the 80s not realizing that free mobility of capital leaves countries open to both sudden and huge inflows as well as outflows, both of which can be potentially destabilizing. More important, that unless you have the financial institutions, capable of dealing with such huge flows countries may just not be able to cope as was demonstrated by the East Asian crisis of the late nineties. In India, the Tarapore committee had laid down a threeyear road-map ending 1999-2000 for CAC. It also cautioned that this time-frame could be speeded up or delayed depending on the success achieved in establishing certain pre-conditions — primarily fiscal consolidation, strengthening of the financial system and a low rate of inflation. With the exception of the last, the other two preconditions have not yet been achieved. Implies progressive integration of the domestic financial system with international financial flows. Regarded as one of the hallmarks of a developed economy. Signals openness of the economy Comfort factor for overseas investors. Encourages global capital flows into the country Indian businesses - access to cheaper external credit (Global rates + Country risk) - without having to ask permission of the RBI. High Risk – High Gain – Good Times – Chance of huge inflows of foreign capital; Bad times – Chance of an enormous outflow of capital Chance of “export of domestic savings” - for capital scarce developing countries this could curb domestic investment Exposes an economy to extreme volatility on account of “hot money” flows Pros: •Increases competition and reduces inefficiency; aids price discovery •Allows access to funds at global rates (plus country risk) •Disciplines domestic policy and exchange rate monitoring. •Integrates economy to global trade and capital flows. •Capital controls ineffective with open trade, human movement. •Natural direction of evolution for Developing economies (globalization) Cons: • No evidence linking improved growth to CAC (Bhagwati, Rodrik, Stiglitz) • Increases vulnerability to herd behaviour, contagion, sentiment. • Downside exceeds upside – High Risk, High/Moderate Gain. • Reduces monetary, exchange rate autonomy for a nation.