Principles and Practice of Bank Lending Flashcards
What is Lending?
Lending can be defined as the giving of an asset with the expectation that an equivalent value will be returned at a future point in time.
What is a Loan?
A loan is an asset for the lender and a liability for the borrower. From the lender’s perspective, the loan is an asset that is expected to be repaid with compensation for the costs and risks of lending. From the borrower’s perspective, the loan is a liability that requires to be repaid with compensation for the costs of receiving the benefits of borrowing.
What is the Bank Rate?
Bank Rate is the interest rate at which a nation’s central bank lends money to domestic banks, often in the form of very short-term loans.
Managing the bank rate is a method by which central banks affect economic activity. Lower bank rates can help to expand the economy by lowering the cost of funds for borrowers, and higher bank rates help to rein in the economy when inflation is higher than desired.
What is Capped Interest?
Capped interest is where, although interest rates can fluctuate, they are subject to a specified ceiling, or ‘interest cap’.
What is Simple Interest?
Simple interest is where there is no compounding of interest; interest is determined simply by multiplying the principal by the rate by the number of time periods. Interest charged on a loan of £1,000 taken over 12 months at a simple rate of 12% per annum would therefore be £120 (£10 a month).
What is Compound Interest?
Compound interest is interest on the principal amount plus whatever interest has already accrued.
There are two factors that add up to make compound interest: interest paid on the principal, and interest paid on accrued interest.
Principal is the amount borrowed or invested, and interest is a percentage cost or profit based on the principal amount. In practice, compound interest works by calculating interest on an entire balance, including past interest that’s been added to the balance.
What is Standard Variable Rate (SVR)?
The standard variable rate (SVR) is the standard rate of interest that lenders use, and is the rate to which a borrower is usually automatically switched when any fixed or initial offer rate period expires. In the UK, this rate is usually a few percentage points higher than Bank Rate, to which it is linked, meaning it varies with changes in Bank Rate.
What is the Annual Equivalent Rate (AER)?
The annual equivalent rate (AER), for savings and current accounts in credit, and the effective annual rate (EAR), for borrowing and overdrafts, are annualised rates of interest, including the compounding effect of charging or paying interest more frequently than once a year. The more frequently interest is applied during a year, the higher the effective annual rate will be.
What is the Annual Percentage Rate (APR)?
In the UK, the annual percentage rate (APR) is the annualised interest rate, including the effects of both compounding interest and other (non-interest) charges, e.g., an annual fee. In the US, the APR does not take into account the effect of compounding interest.
What else might a lend do (as well as interest)?
As well as charging interest, lenders may also charge fees to cover their expenses and generate profit, for example
- An arrangement fee for arranging the loan
- A valuation fee for valuing a borrower’s assets, e.g., their property
- Legal fees associated with arranging the loan
- A higher lending charge — a fee charged by some mortgage lenders where the amount borrowed exceeds a given percentage of the value of the property. This fee may be used by the lender to buy an insurance policy that protects it against loss in the event that the borrower is unable to repay their mortgage, and the lender has to sell the property at a loss.
What is the link between Risk & Return?
The higher the risk, the higher the return the lender will require. That’s why lenders charge higher interest rates for high-risk loans — if the borrower is unable to repay their loan further down the line, the interest already paid on the loan can reduce the lender’s loss.
A key point is that risk is about dealing with uncertainty; it’s about calculating how likely it is that an event, such as a loan not being repaid, might happen, as well as the impact of that event in terms of the potential harm it could cause to the bank, its customers, and even the economy
What is the Standards of Lending Practice?
The Standards of Lending Practice were introduced by the UK’s Lending Standards Board, becoming effective in October, 2016. The Lending Standards Board (LSB) works to a single, clear remit: to promote fair lending. Its vision is to ensure that all personal and small business borrowers receive a fair deal from their lender as set out in the Standards of Lending Practice (LSB, 2019). The Standards are voluntary and set the benchmark for good lending practice in the UK, outlining the way registered firms are expected to deal with their customers throughout the entire product life cycle.
What does each Standard contain?
a customer outcome
an overall statement of how a firm intends to achieve this outcome
a detailed set of standards that demonstrate the approach.
A separate section covers governance and oversight, setting out the framework firms should have in place to ensure that the Standards are implemented and operate effectively.
Recognising that there is more than one way to achieve fair customer outcomes, the Standards provide a level of flexibility, allowing firms to tailor their practice around a customer’s individual circumstances.
What are the six main areas the Standards of Lending Practice covers for Personal Customers?
- Financial promotions and communications
- Product sale
- Account maintenance and servicing
- Money management
- Financial difficulty
- Consumer vulnerability
What are the eight main areas the Standards of Lending Practice covers for Business Customers?
- Product information
- Product sale
- Declined applications
- Product execution
- Credit monitoring
- Financial difficulty
- Portfolio management
- Vulnerability.