SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE encompasses the latest Reserve Bank of India (RBI) circulars, digital banking limits, and statutory updates relevant for the 2026 Circle Based Officer exam. Key areas include the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2026, Mudra Tarun Plus limits (₹20 Lakh), and the Unified Lending Interface (ULI). Mastering these topics is essential for the high-weightage professional knowledge section.

About 200 MCQ test for SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Topic | SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE |
| Total Questions | 200 MCQs |
| Level | Moderate to Hard (Officer Level) |
| Target Exams | SBI CBO 2026 EXAM |
| Updated | 2026 |
Mastering SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE is crucial for clearing the SBI CBO 2026 EXAM. In this guide, we cover the 200 most important questions derived from recent financial developments. The next part of 200 more MCQs will be published later. This comprehensive mock test is specifically designed for SBI CBO 2026 EXAM candidates to help you master concepts like Digital Lending, IBC amendments, and revised KYC norms quickly.
Why This SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE Test Matters?
Exam Weightage: The Banking Knowledge section forms the core of the objective test in CBO, directly testing your operational and regulatory awareness.
Important Topics: The SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE syllabus covers:
- RBI Circulars (2025-2026): Updates on Ombudsman, KYC, and Digital Lending.
- Government Schemes: PMEGP, MUDRA (Tarun Plus), and PMJJBY/PMSBY revisions.
- Legal Frameworks: SARFAESI, IBC, and Negotiable Instruments Act.
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SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE – Top 200 Questions for SBI CBO 2026 EXAM
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The Reserve Bank of India issued a notification on January 17, 2026, introducing the new Integrated Ombudsman Scheme. According to this notification, on which date will the new RB-IOS, 2026 officially come into effect, replacing the 2021 framework?
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer is July 1, 2026. While the notification was released in January 2026, the Reserve Bank of India specified a transition period for Regulated Entities. The scheme becomes operationally effective from July 1, 2026. This aligns with the beginning of the second quarter of the financial year. Until that date, the existing provisions of the 2021 Scheme remain legally active, though banks are expected to prepare for the new compensation limits immediately.
Correct Answer is July 1, 2026. While the notification was released in January 2026, the Reserve Bank of India specified a transition period for Regulated Entities. The scheme becomes operationally effective from July 1, 2026. This aligns with the beginning of the second quarter of the financial year. Until that date, the existing provisions of the 2021 Scheme remain legally active, though banks are expected to prepare for the new compensation limits immediately.
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The Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) classifies loans into specific categories based on the stage of growth of the beneficiary unit. Which of the following correctly identifies the loan limit for the newly introduced “Tarun Plus” category?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: The Tarun Plus category covers loans above ₹10 Lakh and up to ₹20 Lakh. Concept Definition: MUDRA Classification. Structural Breakdown: 1. Shishu: Up to ₹50,000. 2. Kishore: Above ₹50,000 and up to ₹5 Lakh. 3. Tarun: Above ₹5 Lakh and up to ₹10 Lakh. 4. Tarun Plus: Above ₹10 Lakh and up to ₹20 Lakh. Historical Context: The “Tarun Plus” category was introduced (announced in Budget 2024-25) to support entrepreneurs who have successfully repaid their previous Tarun loans and need further capital for expansion.
Direct Answer: The Tarun Plus category covers loans above ₹10 Lakh and up to ₹20 Lakh. Concept Definition: MUDRA Classification. Structural Breakdown: 1. Shishu: Up to ₹50,000. 2. Kishore: Above ₹50,000 and up to ₹5 Lakh. 3. Tarun: Above ₹5 Lakh and up to ₹10 Lakh. 4. Tarun Plus: Above ₹10 Lakh and up to ₹20 Lakh. Historical Context: The “Tarun Plus” category was introduced (announced in Budget 2024-25) to support entrepreneurs who have successfully repaid their previous Tarun loans and need further capital for expansion.
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Under the RBI KYC Directions, the periodicity for “Periodic Updation” (Re-KYC) of customer identification data varies by risk category. Which of the following combinations is CORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: B
The Rule: The mandatory cycles for updating KYC documents are: 1. High Risk: At least once in every 2 years. 2. Medium Risk: At least once in every 8 years. 3. Low Risk: At least once in every 10 years. Exam Memory Tip: Remember the sequence “2-8-10”. This applies even if there is no change in the customer’s status, though Low Risk customers have relaxed “self-declaration” norms if their details haven’t changed.
The Rule: The mandatory cycles for updating KYC documents are: 1. High Risk: At least once in every 2 years. 2. Medium Risk: At least once in every 8 years. 3. Low Risk: At least once in every 10 years. Exam Memory Tip: Remember the sequence “2-8-10”. This applies even if there is no change in the customer’s status, though Low Risk customers have relaxed “self-declaration” norms if their details haven’t changed.
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As per the latest amendments to the Master Direction on KYC, identifying a customer as a “Money Mule” requires banks to check for specific “Red Flag Indicators.” Which of the following is considered a high-risk indicator for a potential mule account?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Sudden high velocity followed by immediate withdrawal. Concept: Mule Indicators. The Pattern: Mules are used to “pass-through” stolen money. The money enters and leaves instantly (to prevent the bank from freezing it). Red Flag: A previously low-activity account suddenly receiving large sums that are immediately siphoned off (via ATM cash out or further transfer), leaving the balance at zero or minimum, is the classic “Mule” signature.
Direct Answer: Sudden high velocity followed by immediate withdrawal. Concept: Mule Indicators. The Pattern: Mules are used to “pass-through” stolen money. The money enters and leaves instantly (to prevent the bank from freezing it). Red Flag: A previously low-activity account suddenly receiving large sums that are immediately siphoned off (via ATM cash out or further transfer), leaving the balance at zero or minimum, is the classic “Mule” signature.
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According to the Reserve Bank of India’s harmonization of Turn Around Time (TAT) framework, what is the mandatory timeline for a bank to pro-actively reverse a failed ATM transaction where the account is debited but cash is not dispensed?
Explanation
Correct: C
The correct timeline is T plus 5 calendar days. Under the RBI circular on Harmonisation of Turn Around Time (TAT) and customer compensation for failed transactions (2019), if a customer’s account is debited but cash is not dispensed from an ATM (including micro-ATMs), the card-issuing bank must pro-actively reverse the amount within a maximum of T plus 5 calendar days. Here, ‘T’ stands for the day of the transaction. If the reversal is done within this period, no compensation is payable.
The correct timeline is T plus 5 calendar days. Under the RBI circular on Harmonisation of Turn Around Time (TAT) and customer compensation for failed transactions (2019), if a customer’s account is debited but cash is not dispensed from an ATM (including micro-ATMs), the card-issuing bank must pro-actively reverse the amount within a maximum of T plus 5 calendar days. Here, ‘T’ stands for the day of the transaction. If the reversal is done within this period, no compensation is payable.
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As of February 2026, what are the maximum per-transaction limit and the maximum total balance limit allowed in a “UPI Lite” on-device wallet?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Transaction Limit: ₹1,000; Wallet Balance: ₹5,000. Historical Context: Originally, the limits were ₹500 per transaction and ₹2,000 total balance. Regulatory Update: To encourage wider adoption of small-value digital payments, the RBI enhanced these limits (announced in late 2024/2025). This allows users to pay for slightly larger daily expenses (like groceries or fuel) without entering a PIN, while keeping the risk capped at ₹5,000.
Direct Answer: Transaction Limit: ₹1,000; Wallet Balance: ₹5,000. Historical Context: Originally, the limits were ₹500 per transaction and ₹2,000 total balance. Regulatory Update: To encourage wider adoption of small-value digital payments, the RBI enhanced these limits (announced in late 2024/2025). This allows users to pay for slightly larger daily expenses (like groceries or fuel) without entering a PIN, while keeping the risk capped at ₹5,000.
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Scenario: Mr. Sharma is discharged from a hospital in Mumbai on February 10, 2026. His final bill is ₹4,20,000. He attempts to pay the full amount via a single UPI transaction to the hospital’s verified merchant QR code. Based on current regulations, will this transaction succeed?
Explanation
Correct: C
Concept: Application of Enhanced Limits (Category Code 5 Lakh). Rule: As of Dec 2023 (and in force in 2026), the RBI raised the UPI transaction limit to ₹5 Lakh specifically for payments to Hospitals and Educational Institutions. Condition: The merchant (Hospital) must be classified under the correct Merchant Category Code (MCC). If the merchant is “verified” under this category, a single transaction of ₹4.2 Lakh is permissible. Contrast: If this were a payment to a jewelry store (standard merchant), it would fail (limit ₹1 Lakh).
Concept: Application of Enhanced Limits (Category Code 5 Lakh). Rule: As of Dec 2023 (and in force in 2026), the RBI raised the UPI transaction limit to ₹5 Lakh specifically for payments to Hospitals and Educational Institutions. Condition: The merchant (Hospital) must be classified under the correct Merchant Category Code (MCC). If the merchant is “verified” under this category, a single transaction of ₹4.2 Lakh is permissible. Contrast: If this were a payment to a jewelry store (standard merchant), it would fail (limit ₹1 Lakh).
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Under the “Simplified Procedure” for settling claims without a nomination, up to what amount can a Commercial Bank settle a claim without insisting on a Succession Certificate?
Explanation
Correct: D
Correct Answer: D Concept: Simplified Settlement Thresholds (2025). To reduce legal hardship, RBI standardized the thresholds for settling claims based on a simple Indemnity Bond (without court orders): Commercial Banks: Rupees 15 Lakh. Co-operative Banks: Rupees 5 Lakh. Banks may set a higher limit at their discretion, but they cannot set a lower one for this simplified process.
Correct Answer: D Concept: Simplified Settlement Thresholds (2025). To reduce legal hardship, RBI standardized the thresholds for settling claims based on a simple Indemnity Bond (without court orders): Commercial Banks: Rupees 15 Lakh. Co-operative Banks: Rupees 5 Lakh. Banks may set a higher limit at their discretion, but they cannot set a lower one for this simplified process.
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As per the revised MSME classification norms (effective from April 1, 2025), which of the following criteria correctly defines a “Micro Enterprise”?
Investment in Plant and Machinery or Equipment does not exceed ₹2.5 Crore.Investment in Plant and Machinery or Equipment does not exceed ₹1 Crore.Annual Turnover does not exceed ₹10 Crore.Annual Turnover does not exceed ₹5 Crore.Select the correct combination:
Investment in Plant and Machinery or Equipment does not exceed ₹2.5 Crore.Investment in Plant and Machinery or Equipment does not exceed ₹1 Crore.Annual Turnover does not exceed ₹10 Crore.Annual Turnover does not exceed ₹5 Crore.Select the correct combination:
Explanation
Correct: A
CRITICAL UPDATE (2025-26): The Union Budget 2025-26 revised the MSME limits to encourage scale and combat inflation. Old Limit (Pre-2025): Investment < ₹1 Cr / Turnover < ₹5 Cr. New Limit (Current 2026): A Micro Enterprise is now defined as an entity where the Investment does not exceed ₹2.5 Crore AND Turnover does not exceed ₹10 Crore. (Note: Both conditions must be met concurrently).
CRITICAL UPDATE (2025-26): The Union Budget 2025-26 revised the MSME limits to encourage scale and combat inflation. Old Limit (Pre-2025): Investment < ₹1 Cr / Turnover < ₹5 Cr. New Limit (Current 2026): A Micro Enterprise is now defined as an entity where the Investment does not exceed ₹2.5 Crore AND Turnover does not exceed ₹10 Crore. (Note: Both conditions must be met concurrently).
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As per the RBI (Co-Lending Arrangements) Directions, 2025 (effective January 1, 2026), what is the minimum percentage of the individual loan amount that the Originating Entity (NBFC) must retain on its books?
Explanation
Correct: B
CRITICAL UPDATE (Jan 2026): Old Rule (2020): Minimum retention was 20 per cent. New Rule (2025/26): To encourage the co-lending model and release capital for NBFCs, the RBI reduced the mandatory retention share to 10 per cent of the individual loan exposure. Impact: This allows NBFCs to originate more loans with the same capital base while still maintaining “skin in the game”. The bank takes the remaining 90 per cent.
CRITICAL UPDATE (Jan 2026): Old Rule (2020): Minimum retention was 20 per cent. New Rule (2025/26): To encourage the co-lending model and release capital for NBFCs, the RBI reduced the mandatory retention share to 10 per cent of the individual loan exposure. Impact: This allows NBFCs to originate more loans with the same capital base while still maintaining “skin in the game”. The bank takes the remaining 90 per cent.
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As of February 2026, banks are preparing for the transition from the “Incurred Loss” model to the “Expected Credit Loss” (ECL) framework. According to the RBI’s roadmap, the ECL framework is proposed to be fully implemented for all commercial banks by:
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: The proposed implementation date is April 1, 2027. Concept Definition: ECL (Expected Credit Loss) is a forward-looking provisioning model where banks estimate potential future losses rather than waiting for a default to occur. Structural Breakdown: 1. Implementation Date: April 1, 2027. 2. Glide Path: Banks are allowed a transition period (up to 5 years, ending 2031) to absorb the capital impact of the initial jump in provisions. 3. Stages: Assets will be classified into Stage 1 (12-month ECL), Stage 2 (Significant risk increase), and Stage 3 (Impaired). Historical Context: This moves Indian banking to align with global IFRS 9 standards, replacing the traditional IRAC norms (90-day rule) which were criticized for being “too little, too late.”
Direct Answer: The proposed implementation date is April 1, 2027. Concept Definition: ECL (Expected Credit Loss) is a forward-looking provisioning model where banks estimate potential future losses rather than waiting for a default to occur. Structural Breakdown: 1. Implementation Date: April 1, 2027. 2. Glide Path: Banks are allowed a transition period (up to 5 years, ending 2031) to absorb the capital impact of the initial jump in provisions. 3. Stages: Assets will be classified into Stage 1 (12-month ECL), Stage 2 (Significant risk increase), and Stage 3 (Impaired). Historical Context: This moves Indian banking to align with global IFRS 9 standards, replacing the traditional IRAC norms (90-day rule) which were criticized for being “too little, too late.”
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Regarding the “Tarun Plus” loan category under the Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) as referenced in Budget 2026, identify the INCORRECT statement.
The maximum loan limit under “Tarun Plus” is ₹20 Lakh.It is available to any entrepreneur, including first-time borrowers (startups).It specifically targets entrepreneurs who have successfully repaid previous loans under the “Tarun” category.The guarantee cover for these loans is provided by the CGFMU (Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units).
The maximum loan limit under “Tarun Plus” is ₹20 Lakh.It is available to any entrepreneur, including first-time borrowers (startups).It specifically targets entrepreneurs who have successfully repaid previous loans under the “Tarun” category.The guarantee cover for these loans is provided by the CGFMU (Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units).
Explanation
Correct: B
Statement 2 is INCORRECT. While the limit is indeed ₹20 Lakh (Statement 1 is Correct), raised from the previous ₹10 Lakh cap, it is NOT for first-time borrowers. It is strictly for existing entrepreneurs who have a track record of successfully repaying a loan under the “Tarun” (₹5 Lakh to ₹10 Lakh) category (Statement 3 is Correct). This ensures that the higher risk of ₹20 Lakh is only taken on proven borrowers. The guarantee is provided by CGFMU (Statement 4 is Correct).
Statement 2 is INCORRECT. While the limit is indeed ₹20 Lakh (Statement 1 is Correct), raised from the previous ₹10 Lakh cap, it is NOT for first-time borrowers. It is strictly for existing entrepreneurs who have a track record of successfully repaying a loan under the “Tarun” (₹5 Lakh to ₹10 Lakh) category (Statement 3 is Correct). This ensures that the higher risk of ₹20 Lakh is only taken on proven borrowers. The guarantee is provided by CGFMU (Statement 4 is Correct).
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According to the RBI guidelines on Customer Liability in Unauthorized Electronic Banking Transactions (valid as of February 2026), in which of the following scenarios does a customer have “Zero Liability”?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: The customer has Zero Liability in cases of third-party breach if reported within 3 working days. Concept Definition: “Zero Liability” means the customer bears no financial loss for a fraudulent transaction. Structural Breakdown: Under the RBI Charter of Customer Rights and the Master Circulars, Zero Liability is granted in two specific cases: 1. Contributory Fraud or Negligence by the Bank: If the fraud occurs due to a lapse on the part of the bank (e.g., employee fraud or system compromise), the customer has zero liability regardless of when they report it. 2. Third-Party Breach: If the deficiency lies neither with the bank nor the customer (e.g., a malware attack or skimming), AND the customer notifies the bank within 3 working days of receiving the alert. Historical or Related Context: If the customer reports after 3 days but within 7 days, they face “Limited Liability.” If they report after 7 days, the liability is determined by the Board Approved Policy of the bank.
Direct Answer: The customer has Zero Liability in cases of third-party breach if reported within 3 working days. Concept Definition: “Zero Liability” means the customer bears no financial loss for a fraudulent transaction. Structural Breakdown: Under the RBI Charter of Customer Rights and the Master Circulars, Zero Liability is granted in two specific cases: 1. Contributory Fraud or Negligence by the Bank: If the fraud occurs due to a lapse on the part of the bank (e.g., employee fraud or system compromise), the customer has zero liability regardless of when they report it. 2. Third-Party Breach: If the deficiency lies neither with the bank nor the customer (e.g., a malware attack or skimming), AND the customer notifies the bank within 3 working days of receiving the alert. Historical or Related Context: If the customer reports after 3 days but within 7 days, they face “Limited Liability.” If they report after 7 days, the liability is determined by the Board Approved Policy of the bank.
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Under the ambit of the Reserve Bank Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2026, what is the specific asset size threshold for Non-Banking Financial Companies, also known as NBFCs, to be covered?
Explanation
Correct: B
The threshold is Assets of Rupees 100 Crore and above. The scheme mandates that NBFCs (excluding Housing Finance Companies) with an asset size of Rupees 100 Crore or more are automatically covered. This limit has been retained to ensure that systemically important NBFCs are accountable. For Urban Cooperative Banks (UCBs), the threshold remains different, based on deposits of Rupees 50 Crore or more. Entities below these limits do not fall under the Ombudsman but are handled by the Customer Education and Protection Cell.
The threshold is Assets of Rupees 100 Crore and above. The scheme mandates that NBFCs (excluding Housing Finance Companies) with an asset size of Rupees 100 Crore or more are automatically covered. This limit has been retained to ensure that systemically important NBFCs are accountable. For Urban Cooperative Banks (UCBs), the threshold remains different, based on deposits of Rupees 50 Crore or more. Entities below these limits do not fall under the Ombudsman but are handled by the Customer Education and Protection Cell.
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As per the RBI directive on “Framework for Due Diligence and Risk Management of AePS Touchpoint Operators” (effective January 1, 2026), if an AePS Touchpoint Operator (ATO) remains inactive for a specific continuous period, the acquiring bank must perform a fresh KYC (Re-KYC) before reactivating them. What is this inactivity period?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: 3 months. Concept: AePS Touchpoint Operator (ATO) Monitoring. Regulatory Update (Jan 2026): To prevent “dormant” IDs from being misused by fraudsters (who often buy inactive IDs to commit transaction fraud), RBI mandated that any ATO ID that shows no activity (financial or non-financial) for 3 continuous months must be deactivated. The acquiring bank cannot simply “switch it back on.” They must conduct a fresh KYC (Know Your Customer) process to verify the agent’s physical presence.
Direct Answer: 3 months. Concept: AePS Touchpoint Operator (ATO) Monitoring. Regulatory Update (Jan 2026): To prevent “dormant” IDs from being misused by fraudsters (who often buy inactive IDs to commit transaction fraud), RBI mandated that any ATO ID that shows no activity (financial or non-financial) for 3 continuous months must be deactivated. The acquiring bank cannot simply “switch it back on.” They must conduct a fresh KYC (Know Your Customer) process to verify the agent’s physical presence.
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Regarding the “One Agent – One Bank” model implemented to secure the Aadhaar Enabled Payment System (AePS), which of the following statements is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Option A is INCORRECT. The “One Agent – One Bank” Rule: As of the January 1, 2026 effectivity, the RBI strictly enforces exclusivity. An agent can serve only one acquiring bank at a time. The reason is to prevent “ID Hopping,” where a fraudulent agent blocked by Bank A immediately switches to Bank B to continue scamming. It ensures a single bank is fully accountable for the agent’s due diligence.
Direct Answer: Option A is INCORRECT. The “One Agent – One Bank” Rule: As of the January 1, 2026 effectivity, the RBI strictly enforces exclusivity. An agent can serve only one acquiring bank at a time. The reason is to prevent “ID Hopping,” where a fraudulent agent blocked by Bank A immediately switches to Bank B to continue scamming. It ensures a single bank is fully accountable for the agent’s due diligence.
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As of February 2026, which of the following pairs of Bank Type and its corresponding Total PSL Target is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: C
Correction: The total PSL target for Small Finance Banks (SFBs) is 60 per cent as of February 2026, not 75 per cent. The RBI lowered this target in the revised Master Direction (2025) to provide operational breathing room to these banks. Correct Pairs: Domestic SCBs: 40 per cent. RRBs: 75 per cent. Foreign Banks: 40 per cent.
Correction: The total PSL target for Small Finance Banks (SFBs) is 60 per cent as of February 2026, not 75 per cent. The RBI lowered this target in the revised Master Direction (2025) to provide operational breathing room to these banks. Correct Pairs: Domestic SCBs: 40 per cent. RRBs: 75 per cent. Foreign Banks: 40 per cent.
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If a bank fails to reverse a failed ATM transaction within the stipulated T plus 5 days, what is the mandatory compensation amount payable to the customer per day of delay?
Explanation
Correct: B
The mandatory compensation is Rupees 100 per day. As per the RBI guidelines for authorized Payment Systems, if the bank fails to re-credit the customer’s account within T plus 5 calendar days after a failed ATM transaction, it must pay the customer a compensation of Rupees 100 for every day of delay beyond the T plus 5 timeline. This compensation must be credited to the customer’s account automatically (suo moto) without the customer having to claim it.
The mandatory compensation is Rupees 100 per day. As per the RBI guidelines for authorized Payment Systems, if the bank fails to re-credit the customer’s account within T plus 5 calendar days after a failed ATM transaction, it must pay the customer a compensation of Rupees 100 for every day of delay beyond the T plus 5 timeline. This compensation must be credited to the customer’s account automatically (suo moto) without the customer having to claim it.
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When a Reporting Entity (RE) opens a new account for a customer, it must upload the KYC data to the Central KYC Records Registry (CKYCR). What is the strict timeline for this upload?
Explanation
Correct: C
The Deadline: The RBI Master Direction mandates that Regulated Entities must capture the KYC information and upload it to the CKYCR system within 10 days of the commencement of the relationship (account opening). Effect: Once uploaded, the customer receives a 14-digit CKYC Identifier (KIN), which can be used at other banks to avoid submitting documents again.
The Deadline: The RBI Master Direction mandates that Regulated Entities must capture the KYC information and upload it to the CKYCR system within 10 days of the commencement of the relationship (account opening). Effect: Once uploaded, the customer receives a 14-digit CKYC Identifier (KIN), which can be used at other banks to avoid submitting documents again.
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With reference to the Amendment Directions dated December 29, 2025, regarding the reliance on Central KYC Records Registry (CKYCR), consider the following statements:
The Regulated Entity (RE) that uploads or updates the customer’s KYC records in CKYCR is responsible for verifying the identity and address of the customer.An RE downloading KYC records from CKYCR is fully exempted from all Customer Due Diligence (CDD) responsibilities, including transaction monitoring.An RE downloading records from CKYCR is not required to re-verify the identity or address of the customer, provided the records are current and valid.
Select the correct combination:
The Regulated Entity (RE) that uploads or updates the customer’s KYC records in CKYCR is responsible for verifying the identity and address of the customer.An RE downloading KYC records from CKYCR is fully exempted from all Customer Due Diligence (CDD) responsibilities, including transaction monitoring.An RE downloading records from CKYCR is not required to re-verify the identity or address of the customer, provided the records are current and valid.
Select the correct combination:
Explanation
Correct: B
The Legislation: The RBI (Commercial Banks – KYC) Amendment Directions, 2025 (Dec 29, 2025) clarified the liability matrix for CKYCR. Analysis of Statements: Statement 1 is Correct: The “Explanation” added to Paragraph 65 explicitly states that the RE uploading or updating the record is responsible for the core verification of identity/address. Statement 2 is Incorrect: The downloading RE is NOT exempted from all CDD. The direction states: “The bank downloading… shall remain responsible for all aspects of CDD procedure… except verification of identity and/or address.” This means they must still perform risk categorization, transaction monitoring, and other due diligence. Statement 3 is Correct: The downloading RE is relieved specifically from the burden of re-verifying the identity/address if the downloaded CKYCR data is current and compliant.
The Legislation: The RBI (Commercial Banks – KYC) Amendment Directions, 2025 (Dec 29, 2025) clarified the liability matrix for CKYCR. Analysis of Statements: Statement 1 is Correct: The “Explanation” added to Paragraph 65 explicitly states that the RE uploading or updating the record is responsible for the core verification of identity/address. Statement 2 is Incorrect: The downloading RE is NOT exempted from all CDD. The direction states: “The bank downloading… shall remain responsible for all aspects of CDD procedure… except verification of identity and/or address.” This means they must still perform risk categorization, transaction monitoring, and other due diligence. Statement 3 is Correct: The downloading RE is relieved specifically from the burden of re-verifying the identity/address if the downloaded CKYCR data is current and compliant.
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As per the revised Three-Tier structure for Housing Loans (effective April 2025), what is the maximum loan limit for housing loans to individuals in Tier-2 Metropolitan centers (population 10 Lakh to 50 Lakh) to be eligible for PSL classification?
Explanation
Correct: C
Updated Tier Structure (2026): The RBI revised the limits to account for population density and cost. Tier 1 (Mega Metros > 50L): ₹50 Lakh. Tier 2 (Metros 10L – 50L): ₹45 Lakh (Cost Ceiling ₹57 Lakh). Tier 3 (Others < 10L): ₹35 Lakh. Note: This question reflects the specific limit for standard Metros, distinct from the Mega-Metros.
Updated Tier Structure (2026): The RBI revised the limits to account for population density and cost. Tier 1 (Mega Metros > 50L): ₹50 Lakh. Tier 2 (Metros 10L – 50L): ₹45 Lakh (Cost Ceiling ₹57 Lakh). Tier 3 (Others < 10L): ₹35 Lakh. Note: This question reflects the specific limit for standard Metros, distinct from the Mega-Metros.
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Consider the following statements regarding the Default Loss Guarantee (DLG) in Digital Lending:
Assertion (A):
The RBI has capped the Default Loss Guarantee (DLG) cover on any outstanding digital lending portfolio at 5%.Reason (R):
The RBI intends to prevent “Synthetic Securitisation” and ensure that Regulated Entities retain the primary credit risk rather than offloading it entirely to unregulated Fintechs.
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Both statements are true, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion. Concept Definition: DLG, also known as FLDG or First Loss Default Guarantee, is an arrangement where a Lending Service Provider compensates the Lender for defaults. Structural Breakdown: The Rule (A): The RBI Circular explicitly caps DLG at 5% of the loan portfolio amount. The Logic (R): Prior to this rule, Fintechs often offered 100% guarantees, effectively acting as lenders without a license. This resembled “Synthetic Securitisation,” which involves transferring risk without transferring the asset. Causal Reasoning: By capping the guarantee at 5%, the RBI ensures the Regulated Entity keeps “skin in the game” for the remaining 95% of the risk. This forces them to perform rigorous underwriting instead of relying blindly on the Fintech’s guarantee.
Direct Answer: Both statements are true, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion. Concept Definition: DLG, also known as FLDG or First Loss Default Guarantee, is an arrangement where a Lending Service Provider compensates the Lender for defaults. Structural Breakdown: The Rule (A): The RBI Circular explicitly caps DLG at 5% of the loan portfolio amount. The Logic (R): Prior to this rule, Fintechs often offered 100% guarantees, effectively acting as lenders without a license. This resembled “Synthetic Securitisation,” which involves transferring risk without transferring the asset. Causal Reasoning: By capping the guarantee at 5%, the RBI ensures the Regulated Entity keeps “skin in the game” for the remaining 95% of the risk. This forces them to perform rigorous underwriting instead of relying blindly on the Fintech’s guarantee.
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Under the Special Mention Account (SMA) framework for early identification of stress, an account is classified as “SMA-1” when the principal or interest payment is overdue for which of the following periods?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: SMA-1 classification applies when the overdue period is between 31 and 60 days. Concept Definition: The Special Mention Account (SMA) framework is a preventive tool to identify incipient stress in loan accounts before they turn into NPAs (which happens at >90 days). Banks must report SMA status to the Central Repository of Information on Large Credits (CRILC). Structural Breakdown: The 3 categories are: 1. SMA-0: Principal or interest overdue between 1 and 30 days. 2. SMA-1: Principal or interest overdue between 31 and 60 days. 3. SMA-2: Principal or interest overdue between 61 and 90 days. Causal Reasoning: This granular classification forces banks to initiate corrective action plans early. If an account crosses 60 days (SMA-2), it triggers immediate resolution processes under the Prudential Framework for Resolution of Stressed Assets.
Direct Answer: SMA-1 classification applies when the overdue period is between 31 and 60 days. Concept Definition: The Special Mention Account (SMA) framework is a preventive tool to identify incipient stress in loan accounts before they turn into NPAs (which happens at >90 days). Banks must report SMA status to the Central Repository of Information on Large Credits (CRILC). Structural Breakdown: The 3 categories are: 1. SMA-0: Principal or interest overdue between 1 and 30 days. 2. SMA-1: Principal or interest overdue between 31 and 60 days. 3. SMA-2: Principal or interest overdue between 61 and 90 days. Causal Reasoning: This granular classification forces banks to initiate corrective action plans early. If an account crosses 60 days (SMA-2), it triggers immediate resolution processes under the Prudential Framework for Resolution of Stressed Assets.
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Regarding the “Out of Order” status for Cash Credit (CC) or Overdraft (OD) facilities, consider the following conditions:
The outstanding balance remains continuously in excess of the sanctioned limit/drawing power for 90 days.The outstanding balance is less than the sanctioned limit/drawing power, but there are no credits continuously for 90 days.The outstanding balance is less than the sanctioned limit/drawing power, but credits during the previous 90 days are not enough to cover the interest debited during the same period.Which of the above conditions classifies the account as “Out of Order”?
The outstanding balance remains continuously in excess of the sanctioned limit/drawing power for 90 days.The outstanding balance is less than the sanctioned limit/drawing power, but there are no credits continuously for 90 days.The outstanding balance is less than the sanctioned limit/drawing power, but credits during the previous 90 days are not enough to cover the interest debited during the same period.Which of the above conditions classifies the account as “Out of Order”?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: An account is treated as “Out of Order” if any one of the three listed conditions is met. Concept Definition: For revolving facilities like CC/OD, where there are no fixed repayment dates for principal, the concept of “Overdue” is replaced by “Out of Order.” Structural Breakdown: Condition 1 (Limit Breach): Outstanding Balance > Sanctioned Limit OR Drawing Power for 90 days. Condition 2 (No Velocity): Balance is within limit, but NO credits (deposits) for 90 days. Condition 3 (Interest Coverage): Balance is within limit and there are credits, but the sum of credits < sum of interest debited in the previous 90-day period. Causal Reasoning: The third condition is critical; a borrower might deposit small amounts to keep the account “active,” but if they aren’t even covering the interest charged, the debt is effectively compounding, signaling stress.
Direct Answer: An account is treated as “Out of Order” if any one of the three listed conditions is met. Concept Definition: For revolving facilities like CC/OD, where there are no fixed repayment dates for principal, the concept of “Overdue” is replaced by “Out of Order.” Structural Breakdown: Condition 1 (Limit Breach): Outstanding Balance > Sanctioned Limit OR Drawing Power for 90 days. Condition 2 (No Velocity): Balance is within limit, but NO credits (deposits) for 90 days. Condition 3 (Interest Coverage): Balance is within limit and there are credits, but the sum of credits < sum of interest debited in the previous 90-day period. Causal Reasoning: The third condition is critical; a borrower might deposit small amounts to keep the account “active,” but if they aren’t even covering the interest charged, the debt is effectively compounding, signaling stress.
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Under the KYC Directions, 2025, a “Beneficial Owner” (BO) is determined based on controlling ownership interest. What is the specific ownership threshold for determining the Beneficial Owner of a Company versus a Trust?
Explanation
Correct: B
Concept: Beneficial Owner (BO) refers to the natural person(s) who ultimately own or control a juridical person. The Structure (Thresholds): 1. Company: The BO is the natural person having a controlling ownership interest of more than 10% (reduced from the earlier global standard of 25% in older years) of the shares, capital, or profits. 2. Trust: The BO includes the author, trustees, and beneficiaries with 10% or more interest in the trust, or any natural person exercising ultimate effective control. 3. Partnership / Unincorporated Association: The threshold is more than 15% of property/capital/profits. Key Nuance: Note the distinction: Companies/Trusts are pegged at the 10% mark, whereas Partnerships/Associations are at 15%.
Concept: Beneficial Owner (BO) refers to the natural person(s) who ultimately own or control a juridical person. The Structure (Thresholds): 1. Company: The BO is the natural person having a controlling ownership interest of more than 10% (reduced from the earlier global standard of 25% in older years) of the shares, capital, or profits. 2. Trust: The BO includes the author, trustees, and beneficiaries with 10% or more interest in the trust, or any natural person exercising ultimate effective control. 3. Partnership / Unincorporated Association: The threshold is more than 15% of property/capital/profits. Key Nuance: Note the distinction: Companies/Trusts are pegged at the 10% mark, whereas Partnerships/Associations are at 15%.
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Regarding the enhanced compensation limits in the RB-IOS, 2026, consider the following statements:
The maximum compensation for any actual loss suffered by the complainant is capped at Rupees 30 Lakh.The maximum compensation specifically for mental agony and harassment is capped at Rupees 3 Lakh.Which of the statements above is or are correct?
The maximum compensation for any actual loss suffered by the complainant is capped at Rupees 30 Lakh.The maximum compensation specifically for mental agony and harassment is capped at Rupees 3 Lakh.Which of the statements above is or are correct?
Explanation
Correct: C
Both statements are correct. The 2026 Scheme introduced a significant hike in compensation limits to account for inflation and higher-value digital frauds. The Limit for Actual Loss increased from Rupees 20 Lakh (in 2021) to Rupees 30 Lakh. The Limit for Mental Agony increased from Rupees 1 Lakh (in 2021) to Rupees 3 Lakh. This structure applies to all covered entities, including banks and NBFCs.
Both statements are correct. The 2026 Scheme introduced a significant hike in compensation limits to account for inflation and higher-value digital frauds. The Limit for Actual Loss increased from Rupees 20 Lakh (in 2021) to Rupees 30 Lakh. The Limit for Mental Agony increased from Rupees 1 Lakh (in 2021) to Rupees 3 Lakh. This structure applies to all covered entities, including banks and NBFCs.
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The 2025 Directions have institutionalized the Video-Based Customer Identification Process (V-CIP). Which of the following conditions is MANDATORY for a valid V-CIP?
The V-CIP process must be operated/triggered from the domain of the Regulated Entity (RE), not a third-party vendor’s domain.The live video interaction must include geo-tagging to ensure the customer is physically present in India.The process can be fully automated using AI without any human intervention from the RE’s side.
The V-CIP process must be operated/triggered from the domain of the Regulated Entity (RE), not a third-party vendor’s domain.The live video interaction must include geo-tagging to ensure the customer is physically present in India.The process can be fully automated using AI without any human intervention from the RE’s side.
Explanation
Correct: A
The V-CIP Protocol: Statement I (Domain): Mandatory. The V-CIP application/activity log must be under the control and domain of the RE. Links to third-party domains (like Zoom/Skype hosted externally) are prohibited for the core process. Statement II (Geo-tagging): Mandatory. The RE must capture the live location (latitude/longitude) to ensure the customer is in India during the process. Statement III (Automation): Incorrect. While AI/Face Match is used for assistance, the V-CIP must involve a live audio-visual interaction with an Official of the RE. It cannot be a fully automated, human-less flow.
The V-CIP Protocol: Statement I (Domain): Mandatory. The V-CIP application/activity log must be under the control and domain of the RE. Links to third-party domains (like Zoom/Skype hosted externally) are prohibited for the core process. Statement II (Geo-tagging): Mandatory. The RE must capture the live location (latitude/longitude) to ensure the customer is in India during the process. Statement III (Automation): Incorrect. While AI/Face Match is used for assistance, the V-CIP must involve a live audio-visual interaction with an Official of the RE. It cannot be a fully automated, human-less flow.
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What is the current annual premium payable by a subscriber for the Pradhan Mantri Jeevan Jyoti Bima Yojana (PMJJBY) for the coverage period starting June 1, 2025?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: The annual premium is ₹436. Concept Definition: PMJJBY is a one-year renewable term life insurance scheme offering coverage for death due to any reason. Structural Breakdown: 1. Premium: Revised from ₹330 to ₹436 per annum (effective since June 1, 2022). 2. Coverage Amount: ₹2 Lakh (₹2,00,000). 3. Eligibility: Individuals aged 18 to 50 years with a savings bank account. Historical Context: The premium was originally ₹330 but was hiked to ₹436 in 2022 due to a high claim ratio. This rate remains applicable for the 2025-26 cycle.
Direct Answer: The annual premium is ₹436. Concept Definition: PMJJBY is a one-year renewable term life insurance scheme offering coverage for death due to any reason. Structural Breakdown: 1. Premium: Revised from ₹330 to ₹436 per annum (effective since June 1, 2022). 2. Coverage Amount: ₹2 Lakh (₹2,00,000). 3. Eligibility: Individuals aged 18 to 50 years with a savings bank account. Historical Context: The premium was originally ₹330 but was hiked to ₹436 in 2022 due to a high claim ratio. This rate remains applicable for the 2025-26 cycle.
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According to the provisions of the SARFAESI Act, 2002, the measures of the Act do NOT apply if the outstanding amount of debt due to the secured creditor is less than which of the following thresholds?
Explanation
Correct: C
The provisions of the SARFAESI Act do not apply if the amount due is less than Rupees 1.00 Lakh. Statutory Reference: Section 31(h) of the SARFAESI Act states that the Act does not apply to any security interest created in financial assets for an amount not exceeding one lakh rupees. Additional Threshold: Furthermore, Section 31(j) specifies that the Act also does not apply if the remaining debt is less than 20% of the principal amount and interest. Both conditions serve to prevent the invoking of harsh enforcement measures for trivial amounts.
The provisions of the SARFAESI Act do not apply if the amount due is less than Rupees 1.00 Lakh. Statutory Reference: Section 31(h) of the SARFAESI Act states that the Act does not apply to any security interest created in financial assets for an amount not exceeding one lakh rupees. Additional Threshold: Furthermore, Section 31(j) specifies that the Act also does not apply if the remaining debt is less than 20% of the principal amount and interest. Both conditions serve to prevent the invoking of harsh enforcement measures for trivial amounts.
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As of February 2026, what are the minimum default thresholds required to initiate the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) and the Pre-Packaged Insolvency Resolution Process (PPIRP), respectively?
Explanation
Correct: B
CIRP Threshold: Under Section 4 of the IBC, the Central Government raised the minimum default threshold for initiating CIRP to Rupees 1 Crore to prevent the overburdening of Tribunals with small cases. PPIRP Threshold: The Pre-Packaged Insolvency Resolution Process (PPIRP), designed specifically for MSMEs, has a lower default threshold of Rupees 10 Lakhs. Rationale: The lower limit for PPIRP ensures that smaller MSMEs can access the resolution framework, while the higher CIRP limit filters out trivial cases for larger corporates.
CIRP Threshold: Under Section 4 of the IBC, the Central Government raised the minimum default threshold for initiating CIRP to Rupees 1 Crore to prevent the overburdening of Tribunals with small cases. PPIRP Threshold: The Pre-Packaged Insolvency Resolution Process (PPIRP), designed specifically for MSMEs, has a lower default threshold of Rupees 10 Lakhs. Rationale: The lower limit for PPIRP ensures that smaller MSMEs can access the resolution framework, while the higher CIRP limit filters out trivial cases for larger corporates.
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Under the Priority Sector Lending norms applicable in 2026, loans to individuals for educational purposes, including vocational courses, are eligible for priority sector classification up to what limit?
Explanation
Correct: C
The Limit: The eligible limit for Education Loans under Priority Sector Lending remains fixed at ₹25 Lakh per borrower. The eligible limit for Education Loans under Priority Sector Lending was increased from ₹20 Lakh to ₹25 Lakh in the Revised Guidelines (March 2025) to account for rising education costs. Scope: This limit applies regardless of whether the course is pursued in India or abroad. Any amount sanctioned above ₹25 Lakh would not be classified as Priority Sector (or the excess would be disqualified depending on specific reporting formats, but ₹25 Lakh is the classification cap).
The Limit: The eligible limit for Education Loans under Priority Sector Lending remains fixed at ₹25 Lakh per borrower. The eligible limit for Education Loans under Priority Sector Lending was increased from ₹20 Lakh to ₹25 Lakh in the Revised Guidelines (March 2025) to account for rising education costs. Scope: This limit applies regardless of whether the course is pursued in India or abroad. Any amount sanctioned above ₹25 Lakh would not be classified as Priority Sector (or the excess would be disqualified depending on specific reporting formats, but ₹25 Lakh is the classification cap).
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Regarding the Priority Sector Lending limit for Renewable Energy projects, which of the following statements correctly describes the borrower limits as of February 2026?
Explanation
Correct: A
Renewable Energy Limits: 1. Corporate/Project Limit: Loans to borrowers for purposes like solar based power generators, biomass-based power generators, wind mills, and micro-hydel plants are eligible for Priority Sector Classification up to ₹35 Crore. 2. Individual Household Limit: Loans to individuals (e.g., for rooftop solar installation) are capped at ₹10 Lakh per borrower. The loan limit for Renewable Energy borrowers (solar generators, biomass, etc.) was enhanced to ₹35 Crore (up from ₹30 Crore) in the 2025 guidelines. The individual household limit remains ₹10 Lakh.
Renewable Energy Limits: 1. Corporate/Project Limit: Loans to borrowers for purposes like solar based power generators, biomass-based power generators, wind mills, and micro-hydel plants are eligible for Priority Sector Classification up to ₹35 Crore. 2. Individual Household Limit: Loans to individuals (e.g., for rooftop solar installation) are capped at ₹10 Lakh per borrower. The loan limit for Renewable Energy borrowers (solar generators, biomass, etc.) was enhanced to ₹35 Crore (up from ₹30 Crore) in the 2025 guidelines. The individual household limit remains ₹10 Lakh.
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Under the Reserve Bank of India’s “Positive Pay System” (PPS) directives, banks are mandatorily required to enable this facility for all account holders issuing cheques for amounts of:
Explanation
Correct: A
The Positive Pay System (PPS) is a fraud prevention tool where the issuer re-confirms key details of the cheque (date, beneficiary, amount) to the bank electronically. The RBI directive mandates that banks must provide this facility to all account holders for cheques of 50,000 Rupees and above. While the facility is mandatory for banks to offer at this threshold, it is generally discretionary for the customer to use it, although banks may consider making it mandatory for cheques of 5 Lakh Rupees and above to limit liability.
The Positive Pay System (PPS) is a fraud prevention tool where the issuer re-confirms key details of the cheque (date, beneficiary, amount) to the bank electronically. The RBI directive mandates that banks must provide this facility to all account holders for cheques of 50,000 Rupees and above. While the facility is mandatory for banks to offer at this threshold, it is generally discretionary for the customer to use it, although banks may consider making it mandatory for cheques of 5 Lakh Rupees and above to limit liability.
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Effective January 3, 2026, the Reserve Bank of India implemented “Phase 2” of the Continuous Clearing System for cheques. What is the mandatory “Confirmation Window” for drawee banks under this specific phase?
Explanation
Correct: B
Under the “Continuous Clearing” framework (Phase 2) which became active on January 3, 2026, the Reserve Bank of India moved away from fixed batch processing to a near-real-time model. For cheques presented during the business window (10:00 AM to 4:00 PM), the drawee bank is mandated to confirm payment or return the instrument within T plus 3 clear hours (where T is the time of presentation). If the drawee bank fails to provide a status update within this specific 3-hour window, the system triggers a “Deemed Approval,” automatically settling the funds in favor of the presenting bank to ensure faster credit to the beneficiary.
Under the “Continuous Clearing” framework (Phase 2) which became active on January 3, 2026, the Reserve Bank of India moved away from fixed batch processing to a near-real-time model. For cheques presented during the business window (10:00 AM to 4:00 PM), the drawee bank is mandated to confirm payment or return the instrument within T plus 3 clear hours (where T is the time of presentation). If the drawee bank fails to provide a status update within this specific 3-hour window, the system triggers a “Deemed Approval,” automatically settling the funds in favor of the presenting bank to ensure faster credit to the beneficiary.
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), supported by Budget 2026, is rolling out the “Unified Lending Interface” (ULI). What is the primary function of the ULI platform?
Explanation
Correct: B
ULI enables “Frictionless Credit” via seamless data flow. Often called the “UPI for Credit,” ULI is a digital platform designed to speed up loan approvals, especially for rural borrowers. Currently, a farmer needs to physically fetch land records to get a loan. ULI connects the Lender (Bank) directly to the Data Provider (State Land Record Database, Satellite Data) via standard APIs. It does not replace the Account Aggregator (which handles financial data like bank statements). ULI handles non-financial data (land, weather, satellite info) critical for agri/MSME credit.
ULI enables “Frictionless Credit” via seamless data flow. Often called the “UPI for Credit,” ULI is a digital platform designed to speed up loan approvals, especially for rural borrowers. Currently, a farmer needs to physically fetch land records to get a loan. ULI connects the Lender (Bank) directly to the Data Provider (State Land Record Database, Satellite Data) via standard APIs. It does not replace the Account Aggregator (which handles financial data like bank statements). ULI handles non-financial data (land, weather, satellite info) critical for agri/MSME credit.
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Effective from October 1, 2022, a significant eligibility amendment was made to the Atal Pension Yojana (APY). Who among the following is specifically excluded from joining the scheme after this date?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: Income Tax Payers are excluded. Concept Definition: The “Taxpayer Exclusion Rule” was introduced to better target the subsidy. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: Any citizen who is or has been an income tax payer (as per the Income Tax Act, 1961) is not eligible to join APY from October 1, 2022. 2. Consequence: If an income tax payer joins APY on or after this date, the account will be closed, and the accumulated pension wealth will be returned to the subscriber. 3. Rationale: The scheme is intended for the poor and underprivileged sections of society, not for those who are already economically well-off.
Direct Answer: Income Tax Payers are excluded. Concept Definition: The “Taxpayer Exclusion Rule” was introduced to better target the subsidy. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: Any citizen who is or has been an income tax payer (as per the Income Tax Act, 1961) is not eligible to join APY from October 1, 2022. 2. Consequence: If an income tax payer joins APY on or after this date, the account will be closed, and the accumulated pension wealth will be returned to the subscriber. 3. Rationale: The scheme is intended for the poor and underprivileged sections of society, not for those who are already economically well-off.
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Regarding the consequences faced by a borrower classified as a “Wilful Defaulter,” which of the following statements is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: Statement D is INCORRECT. Wilful Defaulters are liable to be removed from the boards of other companies. Concept Definition: The “Fit and Proper” criteria for directorships are violated by Wilful Default status. Structural Breakdown: 1. Section 29A of IBC: They are barred from being resolution applicants (cannot buy back their own firm). 2. Board Membership: Lenders must mandate the removal of such persons from the boards of any other company seeking credit. 3. Credit Freeze: No new funds. 4. Cooling Period: The 5-year ban on new ventures (Option B) applies after they pay up/clear the default, acting as a lingering penalty.
Direct Answer: Statement D is INCORRECT. Wilful Defaulters are liable to be removed from the boards of other companies. Concept Definition: The “Fit and Proper” criteria for directorships are violated by Wilful Default status. Structural Breakdown: 1. Section 29A of IBC: They are barred from being resolution applicants (cannot buy back their own firm). 2. Board Membership: Lenders must mandate the removal of such persons from the boards of any other company seeking credit. 3. Credit Freeze: No new funds. 4. Cooling Period: The 5-year ban on new ventures (Option B) applies after they pay up/clear the default, acting as a lingering penalty.
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According to the RBI (Project Finance) Directions, 2025, a project loan for an Infrastructure project can retain its “Standard Asset” classification if the DCCO is deferred due to reasons beyond the promoter’s control (exogenous reasons), provided the deferment does not exceed:
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: For Infrastructure projects, the deferment can be up to 3 years from the original DCCO while retaining Standard status. Concept Definition: This is a regulatory forbearance to account for the complex delays (environmental clearances, land acquisition) inherent in infrastructure projects. Structural Breakdown: 1. Infrastructure Projects: Max deferment of 3 years. 2. Non-Infrastructure Projects (including CRE): Max deferment of 2 years (reduced/harmonized in 2025 norms). 3. Condition: The account must otherwise be standard, and the revised repayment schedule must be viable. Causal Reasoning: Infrastructure projects have long gestation periods and high public utility; hence, the regulator allows a longer leash (3 years) compared to commercial projects (2 years) before classifying them as stressed.
Direct Answer: For Infrastructure projects, the deferment can be up to 3 years from the original DCCO while retaining Standard status. Concept Definition: This is a regulatory forbearance to account for the complex delays (environmental clearances, land acquisition) inherent in infrastructure projects. Structural Breakdown: 1. Infrastructure Projects: Max deferment of 3 years. 2. Non-Infrastructure Projects (including CRE): Max deferment of 2 years (reduced/harmonized in 2025 norms). 3. Condition: The account must otherwise be standard, and the revised repayment schedule must be viable. Causal Reasoning: Infrastructure projects have long gestation periods and high public utility; hence, the regulator allows a longer leash (3 years) compared to commercial projects (2 years) before classifying them as stressed.
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Consider the following statements regarding the “India Climate Finance Taxonomy” (Draft Framework 2025/26):
Assertion (A):
The taxonomy classifies economic activities into “Green” (Tier 1) and “Transition” (Tier 2) categories.Reason (R):
This distinction is necessary to allow financing for “Hard-to-Abate” sectors (like steel and cement) that cannot immediately become zero-carbon but need funds to adopt low-carbon technologies.
Explanation
Correct: A
Both are true and R explains A. A “Taxonomy” is a rulebook that defines what counts as “Sustainable Investment.” Tier 1 (Green) covers activities that are inherently low-carbon (e.g., Solar Power, EV manufacturing). Tier 2 (Transition) is critical for India because we cannot shut down steel plants overnight. We need to finance their shift to greener tech (e.g., Green Hydrogen steel). If we only had a “Green” tag, these sectors would be starved of capital. Hence, the “Transition” tag (Reason) justifies the dual-tier structure (Assertion).
Both are true and R explains A. A “Taxonomy” is a rulebook that defines what counts as “Sustainable Investment.” Tier 1 (Green) covers activities that are inherently low-carbon (e.g., Solar Power, EV manufacturing). Tier 2 (Transition) is critical for India because we cannot shut down steel plants overnight. We need to finance their shift to greener tech (e.g., Green Hydrogen steel). If we only had a “Green” tag, these sectors would be starved of capital. Hence, the “Transition” tag (Reason) justifies the dual-tier structure (Assertion).
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As per the Banking Laws (Amendment) Act, 2025, what is the maximum number of nominees a depositor can now appoint for a single deposit account?
Explanation
Correct: D
Correct Answer: D. Four individuals. Concept: Multiple Nominations Limit (2025 Amendment). Structure: Old Rule: Only one nominee was allowed per account (individual capacity). New Rule (Effective Nov 1, 2025): The Act amended Section 45ZA of the Banking Regulation Act to allow a depositor to nominate up to four individuals. Context: This facility allows for either Simultaneous nomination (sharing the money) or Successive nomination (priority list) for deposit accounts. This change was introduced to provide flexibility to depositors and reduce disputes among heirs.
Correct Answer: D. Four individuals. Concept: Multiple Nominations Limit (2025 Amendment). Structure: Old Rule: Only one nominee was allowed per account (individual capacity). New Rule (Effective Nov 1, 2025): The Act amended Section 45ZA of the Banking Regulation Act to allow a depositor to nominate up to four individuals. Context: This facility allows for either Simultaneous nomination (sharing the money) or Successive nomination (priority list) for deposit accounts. This change was introduced to provide flexibility to depositors and reduce disputes among heirs.
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As per the current PMEGP guidelines (valid in 2026), what are the maximum admissible project costs for setting up a new enterprise in the Manufacturing and Service sectors respectively?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Manufacturing ₹50 Lakh; Service ₹20 Lakh. Concept Definition: Project Cost Ceilings. Structural Breakdown: 1. Manufacturing Sector: The limit was enhanced from ₹25 Lakh to ₹50 Lakh to account for inflation and technology costs. 2. Service/Business Sector: The limit was enhanced from ₹10 Lakh to ₹20 Lakh. 3. Significance: If a project cost exceeds these limits, the remaining amount must be funded by the bank without any government subsidy component. The subsidy is calculated only up to these caps.
Direct Answer: Manufacturing ₹50 Lakh; Service ₹20 Lakh. Concept Definition: Project Cost Ceilings. Structural Breakdown: 1. Manufacturing Sector: The limit was enhanced from ₹25 Lakh to ₹50 Lakh to account for inflation and technology costs. 2. Service/Business Sector: The limit was enhanced from ₹10 Lakh to ₹20 Lakh. 3. Significance: If a project cost exceeds these limits, the remaining amount must be funded by the bank without any government subsidy component. The subsidy is calculated only up to these caps.
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Regarding the “Upgradation of Loan Accounts” classified as NPAs, consider the specific regulatory requirement clarified by the RBI: “An NPA account can be upgraded to Standard Asset category only if __.” Which statement correctly fills the blank?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: An NPA can only be upgraded to Standard if the entire arrears (interest + principal) are paid. Concept Definition: This is known as the “Clean Record” or “Zero Tolerance” on arrears for upgradation. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: Partial payments do not allow for an upgrade. If the borrower pays 90% of the overdue amount, the account remains NPA. 2. Implications: This prevents “evergreening” where borrowers pay just enough to slip under the 90-day radar. 3. Exception: For accounts undergoing restructuring, upgradation happens only after a “monitoring period” of satisfactory performance (usually 1 year), but for normal NPAs, immediate upgradation requires full clearance of overdues.
Direct Answer: An NPA can only be upgraded to Standard if the entire arrears (interest + principal) are paid. Concept Definition: This is known as the “Clean Record” or “Zero Tolerance” on arrears for upgradation. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: Partial payments do not allow for an upgrade. If the borrower pays 90% of the overdue amount, the account remains NPA. 2. Implications: This prevents “evergreening” where borrowers pay just enough to slip under the 90-day radar. 3. Exception: For accounts undergoing restructuring, upgradation happens only after a “monitoring period” of satisfactory performance (usually 1 year), but for normal NPAs, immediate upgradation requires full clearance of overdues.
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Scenario: The Reserve Bank of India imposes “All Inclusive Directions” on a stressed Co-operative Bank, restricting depositors from withdrawing funds. Under Section 18A of the DICGC Act, what is the timeline for DICGC to pay the insured amount to the depositors?
Explanation
Correct: B
The timeline is Within 90 days. This is known as the 90-Day Payout Rule, introduced by the DICGC (Amendment) Act, 2021. Timeline Breakdown: 1. First 45 Days: The bank must submit the claim list (depositor details) to DICGC. 2. Next 45 Days: DICGC must verify the data and remit the payment to the depositors. 3. Total: 90 Days. Significance: Prior to this amendment in 2021, depositors often had to wait for the final liquidation order, which could take years. Section 18A ensures interim relief even while the bank is under moratorium.
The timeline is Within 90 days. This is known as the 90-Day Payout Rule, introduced by the DICGC (Amendment) Act, 2021. Timeline Breakdown: 1. First 45 Days: The bank must submit the claim list (depositor details) to DICGC. 2. Next 45 Days: DICGC must verify the data and remit the payment to the depositors. 3. Total: 90 Days. Significance: Prior to this amendment in 2021, depositors often had to wait for the final liquidation order, which could take years. Section 18A ensures interim relief even while the bank is under moratorium.
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Which of the following terms best describes the “UPI Circle” feature introduced by the NPCI, and what is the primary operational relationship it establishes between users?
Explanation
Correct: B
Concept Definition: “UPI Circle” is a feature designed by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) to enable Delegated Payments. It allows a “Primary User,” who holds the bank account, to link a “Secondary User,” such as a family member or employee, to their UPI ID. Structural Breakdown: 1. Primary User: This user controls the funding account and sets the spending limits. 2. Secondary User: This user can initiate payments using the Primary’s account. They can do this either independently under “Full Delegation” or with approval under “Partial Delegation.” 3. Capacity: A Primary User can authorize up to 5 Secondary Users. Historical Context: Launched broadly between late 2024 and early 2025, this feature targets financial inclusion for dependents, such as minors or the elderly, who may not have their own bank accounts. It effectively replaces the need for physical “Add-on Cards” in the digital UPI ecosystem.
Concept Definition: “UPI Circle” is a feature designed by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) to enable Delegated Payments. It allows a “Primary User,” who holds the bank account, to link a “Secondary User,” such as a family member or employee, to their UPI ID. Structural Breakdown: 1. Primary User: This user controls the funding account and sets the spending limits. 2. Secondary User: This user can initiate payments using the Primary’s account. They can do this either independently under “Full Delegation” or with approval under “Partial Delegation.” 3. Capacity: A Primary User can authorize up to 5 Secondary Users. Historical Context: Launched broadly between late 2024 and early 2025, this feature targets financial inclusion for dependents, such as minors or the elderly, who may not have their own bank accounts. It effectively replaces the need for physical “Add-on Cards” in the digital UPI ecosystem.
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Consider the following assertion and reason regarding the “Deemed Approval” mechanism in CTS
2026.
2026.
Assertion (A):
In Phase 2 of the CTS Continuous Clearing, if a drawee bank does not confirm the status of a cheque within 3 hours of presentation, it is automatically treated as passed/paid.Reason (R):
The Reserve Bank of India aims to shift the burden of verification entirely to the Presenting Bank to reduce the workload on Drawee Banks.
Explanation
Correct: C
Assertion (A) is True: The “Deemed Approval” mechanism is a core feature of the 2026 Continuous Clearing rules. If the drawee bank is silent for T+3 hours, the system assumes the cheque is good for payment to prevent delays. Reason (R) is False: The burden of verification (checking signatures, balance, stop payments) remains strictly with the Drawee Bank. The rule does not shift this burden to the Presenting Bank; rather, it enforces operational discipline on the Drawee Bank to verify faster. The goal is efficiency, not a transfer of liability.
Assertion (A) is True: The “Deemed Approval” mechanism is a core feature of the 2026 Continuous Clearing rules. If the drawee bank is silent for T+3 hours, the system assumes the cheque is good for payment to prevent delays. Reason (R) is False: The burden of verification (checking signatures, balance, stop payments) remains strictly with the Drawee Bank. The rule does not shift this burden to the Presenting Bank; rather, it enforces operational discipline on the Drawee Bank to verify faster. The goal is efficiency, not a transfer of liability.
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In the context of “Settlement of Claims for Missing Persons,” a bank can settle a claim before the statutory 7-year waiting period if the claimant produces which specific set of documents?
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer: B. An FIR and a Non-Traceable Report issued by the police. Concept: Missing Person Settlement (Simplified). The Law: Legally, a person is “presumed dead” only if unheard of for 7 years (Section 108, Indian Evidence Act). The Exception: To avoid hardship for small amounts, RBI allows banks to settle claims earlier if the claimant provides: 1. FIR (First Information Report) lodged with the police. 2. Non-Traceable Report issued by the police (stating the person could not be found after investigation). Note: The bank will also take an Indemnity Bond to protect itself in case the missing person returns alive.
Correct Answer: B. An FIR and a Non-Traceable Report issued by the police. Concept: Missing Person Settlement (Simplified). The Law: Legally, a person is “presumed dead” only if unheard of for 7 years (Section 108, Indian Evidence Act). The Exception: To avoid hardship for small amounts, RBI allows banks to settle claims earlier if the claimant provides: 1. FIR (First Information Report) lodged with the police. 2. Non-Traceable Report issued by the police (stating the person could not be found after investigation). Note: The bank will also take an Indemnity Bond to protect itself in case the missing person returns alive.
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Scenario: An NBFC has a total digital loan portfolio of ₹100 Crore sourced through a specific Fintech partner. They have a Default Loss Guarantee (DLG) arrangement. If the actual defaults in this portfolio amount to ₹8 Crore, what is the maximum amount the Fintech partner can legally reimburse the NBFC under the current RBI guidelines?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: ₹5 Crore. Concept Definition: Application of the 5% DLG Cap. The Calculation: 1. Portfolio Size: ₹100 Crore. 2. Regulatory Cap: 5% of the Portfolio Amount = 0.05 * 100 = ₹5 Crore. 3. Actual Default: ₹8 Crore. The Outcome: Even though the default is ₹8 Crore, the Fintech (Lending Service Provider) can only pay up to the capped amount of ₹5 Crore. The Impact: The remaining loss of ₹3 Crore (₹8 Crore – ₹5 Crore) must be absorbed by the NBFC. This forces the NBFC to be careful about who they partner with, as they cannot offload 100% of the risk.
Direct Answer: ₹5 Crore. Concept Definition: Application of the 5% DLG Cap. The Calculation: 1. Portfolio Size: ₹100 Crore. 2. Regulatory Cap: 5% of the Portfolio Amount = 0.05 * 100 = ₹5 Crore. 3. Actual Default: ₹8 Crore. The Outcome: Even though the default is ₹8 Crore, the Fintech (Lending Service Provider) can only pay up to the capped amount of ₹5 Crore. The Impact: The remaining loss of ₹3 Crore (₹8 Crore – ₹5 Crore) must be absorbed by the NBFC. This forces the NBFC to be careful about who they partner with, as they cannot offload 100% of the risk.
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Before an account becomes “Unclaimed” (at 10 years), it is first classified as “Inoperative” or “Dormant.” According to RBI guidelines, what is the specific period of non-operation (no customer-induced transaction) after which a Savings or Current account is classified as Inoperative?
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer: B. Over 2 years. Concept: Inoperative Account Trigger. The Rule: A Savings or Current Account constitutes “Inoperative” if there are no Customer-Induced Transactions in the account for a period of over two years. Impact: Once classified as Inoperative, the bank must segregate the account in the system to prevent fraud. Penalties for non-maintenance of minimum balances are not applicable to inoperative accounts. Interest must still be credited.
Correct Answer: B. Over 2 years. Concept: Inoperative Account Trigger. The Rule: A Savings or Current Account constitutes “Inoperative” if there are no Customer-Induced Transactions in the account for a period of over two years. Impact: Once classified as Inoperative, the bank must segregate the account in the system to prevent fraud. Penalties for non-maintenance of minimum balances are not applicable to inoperative accounts. Interest must still be credited.
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Consider the following statements regarding the “Margin Money” requirements under the Stand-Up India Scheme:
The scheme envisages a margin money requirement of up to 15% of the project cost.The borrower is required to bring in a minimum of 10% of the project cost as their own contribution.The remaining margin money (gap) can be provided through convergence with other Central or State Government schemes.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
The scheme envisages a margin money requirement of up to 15% of the project cost.The borrower is required to bring in a minimum of 10% of the project cost as their own contribution.The remaining margin money (gap) can be provided through convergence with other Central or State Government schemes.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: All statements (1, 2, and 3) are correct. Concept Definition: Margin Money (Borrower’s Equity). Structural Breakdown: 1. Revised Norms: Originally, the margin was 25%. It was reduced to 15% (Budget 2021) to make it easier for SC/ST and Women entrepreneurs. 2. Own Contribution: The borrower must pay at least 10% from their own pocket. 3. Convergence: If the scheme requires 15% margin and the borrower pays 10%, the remaining 5% can come from state subsidies or other support schemes.
Direct Answer: All statements (1, 2, and 3) are correct. Concept Definition: Margin Money (Borrower’s Equity). Structural Breakdown: 1. Revised Norms: Originally, the margin was 25%. It was reduced to 15% (Budget 2021) to make it easier for SC/ST and Women entrepreneurs. 2. Own Contribution: The borrower must pay at least 10% from their own pocket. 3. Convergence: If the scheme requires 15% margin and the borrower pays 10%, the remaining 5% can come from state subsidies or other support schemes.
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Consider the following statements regarding the PMEGP Subsidy Lock-in:
Assertion (A):
The Margin Money (Subsidy) released by KVIC is kept in a separate Term Deposit Receipt (TDR) in the name of the beneficiary for a lock-in period of 3 years.Reason (R):
This lock-in period ensures that the unit remains functional and the loan is not merely adjusted against the subsidy immediately, preventing “fly-by-night” operators.
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R explains A. Concept Definition: Subsidy Adjustment Mechanism. Structural Breakdown: 1. Mechanism: The subsidy is not given to the borrower as cash. It is held by the bank in a Term Deposit Receipt (TDR). 2. Interest: No interest is paid on this TDR, and no interest is charged on the loan amount equal to the TDR. 3. Adjustment: Only after successful physical verification of the unit after 3 years, the TDR is liquidated and adjusted against the loan principal.
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R explains A. Concept Definition: Subsidy Adjustment Mechanism. Structural Breakdown: 1. Mechanism: The subsidy is not given to the borrower as cash. It is held by the bank in a Term Deposit Receipt (TDR). 2. Interest: No interest is paid on this TDR, and no interest is charged on the loan amount equal to the TDR. 3. Adjustment: Only after successful physical verification of the unit after 3 years, the TDR is liquidated and adjusted against the loan principal.
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Consider the following statements regarding the “Turnover Method” (Nayak Committee) and “Maximum Permissible Bank Finance” (Tandon Committee):
The Nayak Committee norms are generally applicable for working capital limits up to 50 million rupees (5 Crores).The Tandon Committee Method II calculates MPBF as 75% of (Current Assets minus Current Liabilities).The Nayak Committee assumes a minimum borrower margin of 5% of the annual turnover.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
The Nayak Committee norms are generally applicable for working capital limits up to 50 million rupees (5 Crores).The Tandon Committee Method II calculates MPBF as 75% of (Current Assets minus Current Liabilities).The Nayak Committee assumes a minimum borrower margin of 5% of the annual turnover.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Explanation
Correct: B
Statement 1 is Correct: The Nayak Committee suggested a simplified method for the MSME sector. Under this method, Working Capital is assessed as 25% of the projected Annual Turnover. This is typically used for limits up to ₹5 Crores (though some banks may apply it to higher limits per internal policy). Statement 3 is Correct: Of this 25% requirement, the bank provides 20% of the turnover as a loan, and the borrower must bring in 5% as margin. Statement 2 is Incorrect: The Tandon Committee Method II (the more conservative method) calculates MPBF as: (0.75 * Current Assets) – Current Liabilities. Clarification: It is Method I that calculates it as 0.75 * (Current Assets – Current Liabilities). Method II requires the borrower to finance 25% of the Total Current Assets, not just the gap.
Statement 1 is Correct: The Nayak Committee suggested a simplified method for the MSME sector. Under this method, Working Capital is assessed as 25% of the projected Annual Turnover. This is typically used for limits up to ₹5 Crores (though some banks may apply it to higher limits per internal policy). Statement 3 is Correct: Of this 25% requirement, the bank provides 20% of the turnover as a loan, and the borrower must bring in 5% as margin. Statement 2 is Incorrect: The Tandon Committee Method II (the more conservative method) calculates MPBF as: (0.75 * Current Assets) – Current Liabilities. Clarification: It is Method I that calculates it as 0.75 * (Current Assets – Current Liabilities). Method II requires the borrower to finance 25% of the Total Current Assets, not just the gap.
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Regarding the consequences faced by a borrower classified as a “Wilful Defaulter,” which of the following statements is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: Statement D is INCORRECT. Wilful Defaulters are liable to be removed from the boards of other companies. Concept Definition: The “Fit and Proper” criteria for directorships are violated by Wilful Default status. Structural Breakdown: 1. Section 29A of IBC: They are barred from being resolution applicants (cannot buy back their own firm). 2. Board Membership: Lenders must mandate the removal of such persons from the boards of any other company seeking credit. 3. Credit Freeze: No new funds. 4. Cooling Period: The 5-year ban on new ventures (Option B) applies after they pay up/clear the default, acting as a lingering penalty.
Direct Answer: Statement D is INCORRECT. Wilful Defaulters are liable to be removed from the boards of other companies. Concept Definition: The “Fit and Proper” criteria for directorships are violated by Wilful Default status. Structural Breakdown: 1. Section 29A of IBC: They are barred from being resolution applicants (cannot buy back their own firm). 2. Board Membership: Lenders must mandate the removal of such persons from the boards of any other company seeking credit. 3. Credit Freeze: No new funds. 4. Cooling Period: The 5-year ban on new ventures (Option B) applies after they pay up/clear the default, acting as a lingering penalty.
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Scenario: Ms. Rina, a shopkeeper aged 58, wishes to enroll in a social security scheme. She has a functional savings bank account but no prior insurance. She approaches you to join PMJJBY and PMSBY. Based on the eligibility rules (as of 2026), what is the correct course of action?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: She can only join PMSBY. Concept Definition: Application of Age Limits. Structural Breakdown: 1. PMJJBY Eligibility: Entry is strictly 18 to 50 years. Since Rina is 58, she is ineligible to join PMJJBY. 2. PMSBY Eligibility: Entry is 18 to 70 years. Rina (58) is well within this limit. Historical Context: This scenario highlights the “protection gap” for those above 50 who did not join PMJJBY earlier.
Direct Answer: She can only join PMSBY. Concept Definition: Application of Age Limits. Structural Breakdown: 1. PMJJBY Eligibility: Entry is strictly 18 to 50 years. Since Rina is 58, she is ineligible to join PMJJBY. 2. PMSBY Eligibility: Entry is 18 to 70 years. Rina (58) is well within this limit. Historical Context: This scenario highlights the “protection gap” for those above 50 who did not join PMJJBY earlier.
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When an account is classified as a “Sub-standard Asset,” what is the general provisioning requirement on the secured portion of the outstanding balance?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: The general provision on the secured portion of a Sub-standard asset is 15%. Concept Definition: A Sub-standard asset is one that has remained NPA for a period less than or equal to 12 months. Structural Breakdown: 1. Secured Portion: 15% provision. 2. Unsecured Portion: 25% provision. Causal Reasoning: The 15% figure assumes that since the bank has collateral (security), the loss given default (LGD) will be lower than an unsecured loan, but the asset is still stressed, requiring a significant buffer compared to the 0.40% for standard assets.
Direct Answer: The general provision on the secured portion of a Sub-standard asset is 15%. Concept Definition: A Sub-standard asset is one that has remained NPA for a period less than or equal to 12 months. Structural Breakdown: 1. Secured Portion: 15% provision. 2. Unsecured Portion: 25% provision. Causal Reasoning: The 15% figure assumes that since the bank has collateral (security), the loss given default (LGD) will be lower than an unsecured loan, but the asset is still stressed, requiring a significant buffer compared to the 0.40% for standard assets.
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Regarding “Pipeline Flows” (credits or cheques received in the name of a deceased depositor after their death), which of the following approaches are authorized by the RBI?
The bank may return the instrument to the remitter with the remark “Account Holder Deceased”.The bank may open a temporary account styled “Estate of Mr. X, Deceased” to credit such flows.The bank may credit the funds directly to the Nominee’s personal savings account.
The bank may return the instrument to the remitter with the remark “Account Holder Deceased”.The bank may open a temporary account styled “Estate of Mr. X, Deceased” to credit such flows.The bank may credit the funds directly to the Nominee’s personal savings account.
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer: B. 1 and 2 only. Concept: Pipeline Flows Management. Scenario: A dividend warrant or pension arrives after the customer dies. Authorized Approaches: 1. Return to Remitter: The bank sends it back so the remitter can issue a new payment to the heirs. (Statement 1 is Correct). 2. Estate Account: Upon request from the legal heirs, the bank can open a temporary account named “Estate of Deceased” to collect these proceeds. (Statement 2 is Correct). 3. Statement 3 is Incorrect: The bank cannot strictly “endorse” a cheque drawn for the deceased into the Nominee’s personal account. It must go through the Estate account or be re-issued by the remitter.
Correct Answer: B. 1 and 2 only. Concept: Pipeline Flows Management. Scenario: A dividend warrant or pension arrives after the customer dies. Authorized Approaches: 1. Return to Remitter: The bank sends it back so the remitter can issue a new payment to the heirs. (Statement 1 is Correct). 2. Estate Account: Upon request from the legal heirs, the bank can open a temporary account named “Estate of Deceased” to collect these proceeds. (Statement 2 is Correct). 3. Statement 3 is Incorrect: The bank cannot strictly “endorse” a cheque drawn for the deceased into the Nominee’s personal account. It must go through the Estate account or be re-issued by the remitter.
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Consider the following statements:
Assertion (A):
A customer cannot approach the RBI Ombudsman for a fraud dispute regarding a cheque of ₹7 Lakh if they did not verify the details under the Positive Pay System (PPS).Reason (R):
RBI guidelines state that only cheques compliant with Positive Pay System instructions will be accepted under the dispute resolution mechanism for amounts above the mandatory threshold.
Explanation
Correct: A
Concept: PPS & Dispute Rights. Logic: Assertion (A) is True: If a bank has made PPS mandatory (likely for ₹7 Lakh), or even if optional, the RBI has stated that customers forgoing this security tool lose the right to claim “Bank Negligence” under the Ombudsman scheme if the cheque is altered. Reason (R) is True: The circular explicitly forbids access to the dispute mechanism for non-compliant cheques to force adoption of the safety measure. Causal Link: Because the customer ignored the PPS rule (R), they are barred from the dispute mechanism (A).
Concept: PPS & Dispute Rights. Logic: Assertion (A) is True: If a bank has made PPS mandatory (likely for ₹7 Lakh), or even if optional, the RBI has stated that customers forgoing this security tool lose the right to claim “Bank Negligence” under the Ombudsman scheme if the cheque is altered. Reason (R) is True: The circular explicitly forbids access to the dispute mechanism for non-compliant cheques to force adoption of the safety measure. Causal Link: Because the customer ignored the PPS rule (R), they are barred from the dispute mechanism (A).
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According to the RBI (Project Finance) Directions, 2025, a project loan for an Infrastructure project can retain its “Standard Asset” classification if the DCCO is deferred due to reasons beyond the promoter’s control (exogenous reasons), provided the deferment does not exceed:
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: For Infrastructure projects, the deferment can be up to 3 years from the original DCCO while retaining Standard status. Concept Definition: This is a regulatory forbearance to account for the complex delays (environmental clearances, land acquisition) inherent in infrastructure projects. Structural Breakdown: 1. Infrastructure Projects: Max deferment of 3 years. 2. Non-Infrastructure Projects (including CRE): Max deferment of 2 years (reduced/harmonized in 2025 norms). 3. Condition: The account must otherwise be standard, and the revised repayment schedule must be viable. Causal Reasoning: Infrastructure projects have long gestation periods and high public utility; hence, the regulator allows a longer leash (3 years) compared to commercial projects (2 years) before classifying them as stressed.
Direct Answer: For Infrastructure projects, the deferment can be up to 3 years from the original DCCO while retaining Standard status. Concept Definition: This is a regulatory forbearance to account for the complex delays (environmental clearances, land acquisition) inherent in infrastructure projects. Structural Breakdown: 1. Infrastructure Projects: Max deferment of 3 years. 2. Non-Infrastructure Projects (including CRE): Max deferment of 2 years (reduced/harmonized in 2025 norms). 3. Condition: The account must otherwise be standard, and the revised repayment schedule must be viable. Causal Reasoning: Infrastructure projects have long gestation periods and high public utility; hence, the regulator allows a longer leash (3 years) compared to commercial projects (2 years) before classifying them as stressed.
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Under the RBI’s Limited Liability framework for unauthorized electronic transactions reported between 4 to 7 working days, the maximum liability of the customer is capped based on the account type. Which of the following pairs is INCORRECTLY matched?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Option B is incorrectly matched. Correct Rule: The trap here is that the higher liability slab (Rupees 25,000) applies to Current/Overdraft accounts with limits > Rupees 25 Lakh, NOT Savings Accounts. For “All other Savings Bank accounts” (non-BSBD), the liability is capped at Rupees 10,000, regardless of the balance. The Structure (Reporting 4-7 Days): 1. Rupees 5,000 for BSBD Accounts. 2. Rupees 10,000 for Standard Savings, Pre-paid instruments, Gift Cards, Credit Cards (limit up to Rupees 5 Lakh), and Current/OD (limit up to Rupees 25 Lakh). 3. Rupees 25,000 for Current/OD accounts (limit > Rupees 25 Lakh) and Credit Cards (limit > Rupees 5 Lakh).
Direct Answer: Option B is incorrectly matched. Correct Rule: The trap here is that the higher liability slab (Rupees 25,000) applies to Current/Overdraft accounts with limits > Rupees 25 Lakh, NOT Savings Accounts. For “All other Savings Bank accounts” (non-BSBD), the liability is capped at Rupees 10,000, regardless of the balance. The Structure (Reporting 4-7 Days): 1. Rupees 5,000 for BSBD Accounts. 2. Rupees 10,000 for Standard Savings, Pre-paid instruments, Gift Cards, Credit Cards (limit up to Rupees 5 Lakh), and Current/OD (limit up to Rupees 25 Lakh). 3. Rupees 25,000 for Current/OD accounts (limit > Rupees 25 Lakh) and Credit Cards (limit > Rupees 5 Lakh).
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As per the current guidelines of the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY), what is the maximum limit for the Overdraft (OD) facility available to eligible account holders, and what is the upper age limit to avail this facility?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: The correct overdraft limit is ₹10,000 and the upper age limit is 65 years. Concept Definition: PMJDY is the National Mission for Financial Inclusion. The Overdraft (OD) facility acts as a small credit line for account holders to meet emergency needs. Structural Breakdown: 1. OD Limit: Enhanced from ₹5,000 to ₹10,000. 2. Unconditional OD: Up to ₹2,000 is available without strict conditions. 3. Age Limit: Revised from 18–60 years to 18–65 years. Historical Context: The enhancement in OD limit and age criteria was implemented in 2018 to sustain engagement in PMJDY accounts. The basic OD is available after satisfactory operation of the account for 6 months.
Direct Answer: The correct overdraft limit is ₹10,000 and the upper age limit is 65 years. Concept Definition: PMJDY is the National Mission for Financial Inclusion. The Overdraft (OD) facility acts as a small credit line for account holders to meet emergency needs. Structural Breakdown: 1. OD Limit: Enhanced from ₹5,000 to ₹10,000. 2. Unconditional OD: Up to ₹2,000 is available without strict conditions. 3. Age Limit: Revised from 18–60 years to 18–65 years. Historical Context: The enhancement in OD limit and age criteria was implemented in 2018 to sustain engagement in PMJDY accounts. The basic OD is available after satisfactory operation of the account for 6 months.
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Regarding the UDGAM (Unclaimed Deposits – Gateway to Access inforMation) Portal, which of the following actions can a user NOT perform on the portal?
Explanation
Correct: C
Correct Answer: C. File a direct claim and receive the money directly from RBI into their bank account. Concept: UDGAM Architecture. Function: UDGAM is a Search Engine, not a Payment Gateway. 1. You Can: Find out if you have money and where it is (Bank Name + UDRN). 2. You Cannot: Claim it online through the portal. The Process: After finding the record on UDGAM, you must take the UDRN and KYC documents to the respective bank branch. The Bank will pay you (and claim reimbursement from RBI). RBI does not deal with the public directly for refunds.
Correct Answer: C. File a direct claim and receive the money directly from RBI into their bank account. Concept: UDGAM Architecture. Function: UDGAM is a Search Engine, not a Payment Gateway. 1. You Can: Find out if you have money and where it is (Bank Name + UDRN). 2. You Cannot: Claim it online through the portal. The Process: After finding the record on UDGAM, you must take the UDRN and KYC documents to the respective bank branch. The Bank will pay you (and claim reimbursement from RBI). RBI does not deal with the public directly for refunds.
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Which of the following statements regarding “Sovereign Green Bonds” (SGrBs) and the “Greenium” concept are Correct?
SGrBs are classified as “Specified Securities” under the Fully Accessible Route (FAR) for non-residents.“Greenium” refers to the higher interest rate the government pays to investors for green projects.Funds raised from SGrBs cannot be used for nuclear power projects.
SGrBs are classified as “Specified Securities” under the Fully Accessible Route (FAR) for non-residents.“Greenium” refers to the higher interest rate the government pays to investors for green projects.Funds raised from SGrBs cannot be used for nuclear power projects.
Explanation
Correct: B
Statement 1 is Correct: SGrBs are eligible for FAR, meaning FPIs can invest in them without any limits. Statement 2 is Incorrect: “Greenium” (Green Premium) means a lower yield (interest rate). Investors accept a lower return because of the safety and ESG value of the bond. The government saves money (pays less interest). Statement 3 is Correct: The Green Bond Framework explicitly excludes Nuclear Power, large Hydro (>25MW), and biomass from protected areas.
Statement 1 is Correct: SGrBs are eligible for FAR, meaning FPIs can invest in them without any limits. Statement 2 is Incorrect: “Greenium” (Green Premium) means a lower yield (interest rate). Investors accept a lower return because of the safety and ESG value of the bond. The government saves money (pays less interest). Statement 3 is Correct: The Green Bond Framework explicitly excludes Nuclear Power, large Hydro (>25MW), and biomass from protected areas.
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Regarding the “Key Fact Statement” (KFS) under the RBI Digital Lending Guidelines, which of the following pairs of components and their treatment is INCORRECTLY matched?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Option B is the incorrect match, making it the correct answer. Concept Definition: The APR is the effective annualized cost of credit to the borrower. Regulatory Correction: Under the Digital Lending Guidelines, the APR MUST be “all-inclusive.” It typically includes the cost of any third-party products, such as insurance, if they are mandatory or bundled as part of the credit facilitation. Excluding them would violate the transparency norms intended to show the “Total Cost of Credit.” Other Options: Penal Charges: This is matched correctly. They must be absolute figures and cannot be capitalized. Cooling-off: This is matched correctly. The period is 3 days for long-term loans of 7 days or more, and 1 day for short-term loans.
Direct Answer: Option B is the incorrect match, making it the correct answer. Concept Definition: The APR is the effective annualized cost of credit to the borrower. Regulatory Correction: Under the Digital Lending Guidelines, the APR MUST be “all-inclusive.” It typically includes the cost of any third-party products, such as insurance, if they are mandatory or bundled as part of the credit facilitation. Excluding them would violate the transparency norms intended to show the “Total Cost of Credit.” Other Options: Penal Charges: This is matched correctly. They must be absolute figures and cannot be capitalized. Cooling-off: This is matched correctly. The period is 3 days for long-term loans of 7 days or more, and 1 day for short-term loans.
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With reference to the IBC (Amendment) Bill, 2025 regarding the admission of insolvency applications, consider the following statements:
The Adjudicating Authority “must” admit a Section 7 application if debt and default are established.The amendment legislatively overrides the Supreme Court’s Vidarbha Industries judgment which gave NCLT discretionary power to reject applications based on solvency.The record of default with an Information Utility is now conclusive proof for admission.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
The Adjudicating Authority “must” admit a Section 7 application if debt and default are established.The amendment legislatively overrides the Supreme Court’s Vidarbha Industries judgment which gave NCLT discretionary power to reject applications based on solvency.The record of default with an Information Utility is now conclusive proof for admission.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Explanation
Correct: D
Context (2025 Amendment): The 2025 Bill mandated strict admission norms. Statement 1 and 2 Correct: The amendment clarifies that the NCLT has no discretion to reject an application if a debt exists and a default has occurred. This explicitly overrules the Vidarbha Industries Power Ltd ruling, which had allowed Tribunals to pause insolvency if the company had valid receivables. Statement 3 Correct: To speed up admission, the record of default with an Information Utility is treated as conclusive evidence, removing the need for lengthy arguments on the existence of default.
Context (2025 Amendment): The 2025 Bill mandated strict admission norms. Statement 1 and 2 Correct: The amendment clarifies that the NCLT has no discretion to reject an application if a debt exists and a default has occurred. This explicitly overrules the Vidarbha Industries Power Ltd ruling, which had allowed Tribunals to pause insolvency if the company had valid receivables. Statement 3 Correct: To speed up admission, the record of default with an Information Utility is treated as conclusive evidence, removing the need for lengthy arguments on the existence of default.
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Regarding the provisioning norms for “Doubtful Assets,” consider the following matching of Doubtful Categories (based on age) with their required provision percentages on the secured portion:
Doubtful-I (Up to 1 year) — 25%Doubtful-II (1 to 3 years) — 40%Doubtful-III (More than 3 years) — 100%Which of the above pairs are correctly matched?
Doubtful-I (Up to 1 year) — 25%Doubtful-II (1 to 3 years) — 40%Doubtful-III (More than 3 years) — 100%Which of the above pairs are correctly matched?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: All three pairs are correctly matched. Concept Definition: Doubtful Assets are those that have remained in the Sub-standard category for 12 months. Provisioning on the secured portion increases as the asset stays in the Doubtful category longer. Structural Breakdown: 1. D1 (0-1 year in Doubtful): 25% provision. 2. D2 (1-3 years in Doubtful): 40% provision. 3. D3 (>3 years in Doubtful): 100% provision. Causal Reasoning: The “sliding scale” logic implies that the longer an asset remains unpaid, the realizable value of the security (collateral) likely deteriorates or becomes difficult to liquidate, necessitating a higher coverage ratio.
Direct Answer: All three pairs are correctly matched. Concept Definition: Doubtful Assets are those that have remained in the Sub-standard category for 12 months. Provisioning on the secured portion increases as the asset stays in the Doubtful category longer. Structural Breakdown: 1. D1 (0-1 year in Doubtful): 25% provision. 2. D2 (1-3 years in Doubtful): 40% provision. 3. D3 (>3 years in Doubtful): 100% provision. Causal Reasoning: The “sliding scale” logic implies that the longer an asset remains unpaid, the realizable value of the security (collateral) likely deteriorates or becomes difficult to liquidate, necessitating a higher coverage ratio.
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The “Stand-Up India” scheme mandates that loans must be provided for setting up a “Greenfield Enterprise.” In the context of this scheme, what does the term “Greenfield Enterprise” strictly imply?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: It refers to the first-time venture of the beneficiary. Concept Definition: Greenfield vs. Brownfield. Structural Breakdown: 1. Greenfield: A new project built from scratch. Under Stand-Up India, it specifically means the applicant is starting a business for the first time. 2. Sector: Initially limited to Manufacturing, Services, and Trading, it now includes Agri-allied activities (like fisheries, dairy, etc.). 3. Exclusion: It does not cover the expansion or modernization of existing businesses (which would be “Brownfield”).
Direct Answer: It refers to the first-time venture of the beneficiary. Concept Definition: Greenfield vs. Brownfield. Structural Breakdown: 1. Greenfield: A new project built from scratch. Under Stand-Up India, it specifically means the applicant is starting a business for the first time. 2. Sector: Initially limited to Manufacturing, Services, and Trading, it now includes Agri-allied activities (like fisheries, dairy, etc.). 3. Exclusion: It does not cover the expansion or modernization of existing businesses (which would be “Brownfield”).
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Scenario: Ms. Geeta, an aspiring entrepreneur from a Rural area belonging to the SC category, applies for a PMEGP loan to start a pottery unit. The total project cost is ₹10 Lakh. What is the Rate of Subsidy (Margin Money) she is eligible to receive from the government?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: She is eligible for a 35% subsidy. Concept Definition: Subsidy Calculation Matrix. Structural Breakdown: 1. Beneficiary Category: Special Category (includes SC, ST, OBC, Women, Minorities, Ex-Servicemen, NER). Ms. Geeta falls under Special Category. 2. Location: Rural Area. 3. The Matrix: General Category + Urban Area = 15% Subsidy. General Category + Rural Area = 25% Subsidy. Special Category + Urban Area = 25% Subsidy. Special Category + Rural Area = 35% Subsidy (This is the highest slab).
Direct Answer: She is eligible for a 35% subsidy. Concept Definition: Subsidy Calculation Matrix. Structural Breakdown: 1. Beneficiary Category: Special Category (includes SC, ST, OBC, Women, Minorities, Ex-Servicemen, NER). Ms. Geeta falls under Special Category. 2. Location: Rural Area. 3. The Matrix: General Category + Urban Area = 15% Subsidy. General Category + Rural Area = 25% Subsidy. Special Category + Urban Area = 25% Subsidy. Special Category + Rural Area = 35% Subsidy (This is the highest slab).
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Scenario: Mr. Raj, an APY subscriber, fails to maintain the required balance in his savings account for the monthly contribution auto-debit. The contribution for April 2026 remains unpaid. What is the consequence of this default?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: He must pay the arrears plus a penalty. Concept Definition: Default Charges in APY. Structural Breakdown: 1. Penalty Structure: Banks collect a penalty for delayed contributions based on the contribution amount: ₹1 per month for contribution up to ₹100. …up to ₹10 per month for contributions above ₹1,001. 2. Status: The account is not closed immediately; it is classified as a “default” account. 3. Dormancy Timeline: After 6 months: Account Frozen. After 12 months: Account Deactivated. After 24 months: Account Closed.
Direct Answer: He must pay the arrears plus a penalty. Concept Definition: Default Charges in APY. Structural Breakdown: 1. Penalty Structure: Banks collect a penalty for delayed contributions based on the contribution amount: ₹1 per month for contribution up to ₹100. …up to ₹10 per month for contributions above ₹1,001. 2. Status: The account is not closed immediately; it is classified as a “default” account. 3. Dormancy Timeline: After 6 months: Account Frozen. After 12 months: Account Deactivated. After 24 months: Account Closed.
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What is the insurance premium rate paid to DICGC as of the financial year 2025-26, and who bears the burden of this cost?
Explanation
Correct: B
The premium is 12 paise per 100 Rupees of assessable deposits per annum, and the cost is borne entirely by the insured bank. The bank cannot pass this cost to the depositor. Structural Breakdown: Current Rate: 12 paise per 100 Rupees (Effective since April 1, 2022). Statutory Cap: The DICGC Act allows the corporation to raise the premium up to a maximum of 15 paise per 100 Rupees, but this requires RBI approval. Payment Cycle: Banks pay this premium in advance on a half-yearly basis.
The premium is 12 paise per 100 Rupees of assessable deposits per annum, and the cost is borne entirely by the insured bank. The bank cannot pass this cost to the depositor. Structural Breakdown: Current Rate: 12 paise per 100 Rupees (Effective since April 1, 2022). Statutory Cap: The DICGC Act allows the corporation to raise the premium up to a maximum of 15 paise per 100 Rupees, but this requires RBI approval. Payment Cycle: Banks pay this premium in advance on a half-yearly basis.
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Consider the following account holding patterns to determine insurance coverage limits:
Account A is held by “Mr. X and Mr. Y” (Jointly).Account B is held by “Mr. X, Mr. Y, and Mr. Z” (Jointly).Account C is held by “Mr. Y and Mr. X” (Jointly, names reversed).How many separate insurance limits of Rupees 5 Lakh are applicable here?
Account A is held by “Mr. X and Mr. Y” (Jointly).Account B is held by “Mr. X, Mr. Y, and Mr. Z” (Jointly).Account C is held by “Mr. Y and Mr. X” (Jointly, names reversed).How many separate insurance limits of Rupees 5 Lakh are applicable here?
Explanation
Correct: C
3 separate limits are applicable. The rule of Distinct Ownership Groups applies here. The Rule: A joint account’s “capacity” is determined by the exact combination and order of names. Account A (X and Y): This is Unique Group 1. It gets a Rupees 5 Lakh limit. Account B (X, Y, and Z): This is Unique Group 2 (The presence of Z makes it distinct). It gets a separate Rupees 5 Lakh limit. Account C (Y and X): This is Unique Group 3 (The order of names is different; The first holder is Y, not X). Under DICGC rules, a change in the order of names constitutes a different capacity. It gets a separate Rupees 5 Lakh limit.
3 separate limits are applicable. The rule of Distinct Ownership Groups applies here. The Rule: A joint account’s “capacity” is determined by the exact combination and order of names. Account A (X and Y): This is Unique Group 1. It gets a Rupees 5 Lakh limit. Account B (X, Y, and Z): This is Unique Group 2 (The presence of Z makes it distinct). It gets a separate Rupees 5 Lakh limit. Account C (Y and X): This is Unique Group 3 (The order of names is different; The first holder is Y, not X). Under DICGC rules, a change in the order of names constitutes a different capacity. It gets a separate Rupees 5 Lakh limit.
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[Updated Feb 2026] Consider the following statements regarding the “Continuous Clearing” of cheques under CTS:
As of January 2026 (Phase 2), the clearing cycle has shifted from batch processing to “Real-Time” or “Continuous” clearing with settlement occurring within hours.Under the new regime, cheques presented up to 4:00 PM are cleared and credited on the same day.The “Paper to Follow” (P2F) physical movement of cheques is now mandatory for all values above ₹1 Lakh.Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
As of January 2026 (Phase 2), the clearing cycle has shifted from batch processing to “Real-Time” or “Continuous” clearing with settlement occurring within hours.Under the new regime, cheques presented up to 4:00 PM are cleared and credited on the same day.The “Paper to Follow” (P2F) physical movement of cheques is now mandatory for all values above ₹1 Lakh.Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Explanation
Correct: B
Concept: CTS Reforms 2025-2026 (Speed of Clearing). Statement Analysis: Statement 1 is Correct: Phase 2 of the CTS reform (effective Jan 2026) introduced Continuous Clearing. Cheques are processed as they are presented (scanned) rather than waiting for an end-of-day batch. Statement 2 is Correct: This enables Same-Day Settlement (T+0) for cheques deposited within banking hours (e.g., by 4 PM), drastically reducing the float time. Statement 3 is Incorrect: The entire logic of Cheque Truncation System (CTS) is stopping the physical movement of cheques. “Paper to Follow” (P2F) is generally abolished/minimized, not made mandatory for ₹1 Lakh. The digital image is the legal tender.
Concept: CTS Reforms 2025-2026 (Speed of Clearing). Statement Analysis: Statement 1 is Correct: Phase 2 of the CTS reform (effective Jan 2026) introduced Continuous Clearing. Cheques are processed as they are presented (scanned) rather than waiting for an end-of-day batch. Statement 2 is Correct: This enables Same-Day Settlement (T+0) for cheques deposited within banking hours (e.g., by 4 PM), drastically reducing the float time. Statement 3 is Incorrect: The entire logic of Cheque Truncation System (CTS) is stopping the physical movement of cheques. “Paper to Follow” (P2F) is generally abolished/minimized, not made mandatory for ₹1 Lakh. The digital image is the legal tender.
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Which of the following best describes the primary operational difference between the legacy Electronic Clearing Service (ECS) and the modern National Automated Clearing House (NACH)?
Explanation
Correct: C
Concept: NACH vs. ECS (Evolution). Structure: Governance: ECS was RBI-driven (Legacy). NACH is NPCI-driven (Modern). Architecture: ECS had regional centers (local clearing). NACH is a centralized web-based system covering the entire country (removing geographical barriers). Key Advantage: NACH integrates a Dispute Management System (DMS) and Mandate Management System (MMS), which ECS lacked. This reduces turnaround time and friction in bulk processing.
Concept: NACH vs. ECS (Evolution). Structure: Governance: ECS was RBI-driven (Legacy). NACH is NPCI-driven (Modern). Architecture: ECS had regional centers (local clearing). NACH is a centralized web-based system covering the entire country (removing geographical barriers). Key Advantage: NACH integrates a Dispute Management System (DMS) and Mandate Management System (MMS), which ECS lacked. This reduces turnaround time and friction in bulk processing.
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Which of the following correctly distinguishes between “Vishing” and “Smishing” as modes of social engineering attacks in banking?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Vishing is Voice-Phishing; Smishing is SMS-Phishing. Concept Definitions: Phishing is the broad category of social engineering where attackers masquerade as trusted entities (usually via email). Vishing (Voice Phishing) is when the fraudster uses telephone calls (often using IVR or human imposters posing as bank officials) to trick the victim into revealing OTPs, CVVs, or passwords. Smishing (SMS Phishing) is when the fraudster uses text messages (SMS) containing malicious links or urgent warnings (e.g., “Your KYC is expired, click here”) to steal data or install malware.
Direct Answer: Vishing is Voice-Phishing; Smishing is SMS-Phishing. Concept Definitions: Phishing is the broad category of social engineering where attackers masquerade as trusted entities (usually via email). Vishing (Voice Phishing) is when the fraudster uses telephone calls (often using IVR or human imposters posing as bank officials) to trick the victim into revealing OTPs, CVVs, or passwords. Smishing (SMS Phishing) is when the fraudster uses text messages (SMS) containing malicious links or urgent warnings (e.g., “Your KYC is expired, click here”) to steal data or install malware.
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Consider the following statements regarding the Co-Lending Model (CLM) between Banks and Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs):
The NBFC acts as the single point of interface for the customer.The Bank must take a minimum of 80% share of the individual loans on its books.The NBFC must retain a minimum of 20% share of the individual loans on its books.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
The NBFC acts as the single point of interface for the customer.The Bank must take a minimum of 80% share of the individual loans on its books.The NBFC must retain a minimum of 20% share of the individual loans on its books.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: All statements are correct. Concept Definition: The Co-Lending Model (CLM) allows banks (which have cheap capital) and NBFCs (which have better reach) to lend together. Structural Breakdown: 1. Risk Sharing (The 80:20 Rule): The Bank takes the bulk of the asset (minimum 80%), and the NBFC is required to keep “skin in the game” (minimum 20%). 2. Interface: The NBFC creates the customer relationship and services the loan. To the customer, it looks like a single loan, but the backend has two lenders. 3. Pricing: The interest rate charged to the borrower is a Blended Rate (a weighted average of the Bank’s rate and the NBFC’s rate).
Direct Answer: All statements are correct. Concept Definition: The Co-Lending Model (CLM) allows banks (which have cheap capital) and NBFCs (which have better reach) to lend together. Structural Breakdown: 1. Risk Sharing (The 80:20 Rule): The Bank takes the bulk of the asset (minimum 80%), and the NBFC is required to keep “skin in the game” (minimum 20%). 2. Interface: The NBFC creates the customer relationship and services the loan. To the customer, it looks like a single loan, but the backend has two lenders. 3. Pricing: The interest rate charged to the borrower is a Blended Rate (a weighted average of the Bank’s rate and the NBFC’s rate).
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As per the revised guidelines (effective 2025), loans to Start-ups (as defined by Ministry of Commerce and Industry) are eligible for Priority Sector Lending classification up to what limit?
Explanation
Correct: C
Rule: Loans to Start-ups (conforming to the official definition) are eligible for PSL classification across multiple categories (Agri, MSME, etc.). The maximum loan limit for such classification is ₹50 Crore. Context: This limit is crucial for banks looking to support the startup ecosystem while meeting their targets.
Rule: Loans to Start-ups (conforming to the official definition) are eligible for PSL classification across multiple categories (Agri, MSME, etc.). The maximum loan limit for such classification is ₹50 Crore. Context: This limit is crucial for banks looking to support the startup ecosystem while meeting their targets.
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According to the Income Recognition norms for Non-Performing Assets (NPAs), which of the following statements is NOT correct?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: Statement C is NOT correct. Fees and commissions from NPAs must also be recognized strictly on a realization basis, regardless of security. Concept Definition: The “Record of Recovery” principle dictates income recognition for NPAs. Standard assets use “Accrual Basis” (assuming income will come), while NPAs use “Cash Basis” (booking income only when cash hits the till). Structural Breakdown: 1. Reversal Rule: When an account turns NPA, all unrealized interest previously booked must be reversed (debited from P&L). 2. Cost Recovery: In strict accounting, recoveries in NPAs are often first applied to principal and then to interest, though regulatory reporting allows booking interest if fully recovered. 3. Exception C Correction: Even fees/commissions are subject to the same risk; booking them on accrual would inflate profits with “paper money” that may never be received.
Direct Answer: Statement C is NOT correct. Fees and commissions from NPAs must also be recognized strictly on a realization basis, regardless of security. Concept Definition: The “Record of Recovery” principle dictates income recognition for NPAs. Standard assets use “Accrual Basis” (assuming income will come), while NPAs use “Cash Basis” (booking income only when cash hits the till). Structural Breakdown: 1. Reversal Rule: When an account turns NPA, all unrealized interest previously booked must be reversed (debited from P&L). 2. Cost Recovery: In strict accounting, recoveries in NPAs are often first applied to principal and then to interest, though regulatory reporting allows booking interest if fully recovered. 3. Exception C Correction: Even fees/commissions are subject to the same risk; booking them on accrual would inflate profits with “paper money” that may never be received.
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According to the RBI norms for Standard Asset Provisioning, what is the required provision percentage for the “General” category of advances (i.e., loans not falling under Agriculture, SME, or Commercial Real Estate)?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: The provision requirement for General Standard Assets is 0.40%. Concept Definition: Standard Assets are not NPAs, but banks must still set aside a small buffer (provision) against latent risks. This is known as “Standard Asset Provisioning.” Structural Breakdown: 1. Agriculture & SME: 0.25% (Lowest risk weight preference). 2. Commercial Real Estate (CRE): 1.00% (Highest risk). 3. CRE-Residential Housing (CRE-RH): 0.75%. 4. General (All others): 0.40%. Historical Context: These rates have been stable for several years. The differential rates are used by the RBI as a policy tool to encourage or discourage lending to specific sectors (e.g., higher provision for CRE discourages speculative real estate lending).
Direct Answer: The provision requirement for General Standard Assets is 0.40%. Concept Definition: Standard Assets are not NPAs, but banks must still set aside a small buffer (provision) against latent risks. This is known as “Standard Asset Provisioning.” Structural Breakdown: 1. Agriculture & SME: 0.25% (Lowest risk weight preference). 2. Commercial Real Estate (CRE): 1.00% (Highest risk). 3. CRE-Residential Housing (CRE-RH): 0.75%. 4. General (All others): 0.40%. Historical Context: These rates have been stable for several years. The differential rates are used by the RBI as a policy tool to encourage or discourage lending to specific sectors (e.g., higher provision for CRE discourages speculative real estate lending).
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With reference to the procedure under Section 13 of the SARFAESI Act, consider the following statements:
The secured creditor must issue a demand notice giving the borrower 60 days to discharge the liabilities.The borrower has the right to make a representation or objection to the notice, and the secured creditor must respond within 15 days.If the borrower fails to pay, the creditor can take possession of the asset under Section 13(4) immediately after the 30th day.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
The secured creditor must issue a demand notice giving the borrower 60 days to discharge the liabilities.The borrower has the right to make a representation or objection to the notice, and the secured creditor must respond within 15 days.If the borrower fails to pay, the creditor can take possession of the asset under Section 13(4) immediately after the 30th day.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Explanation
Correct: A
Statement 1 is Correct: Under Section 13(2), the secured creditor must send a notice in writing to the borrower to discharge in full his liabilities within 60 days from the date of notice. Statement 2 is Correct: As per Section 13(3A), if the borrower makes any representation or raises any objection, the secured creditor shall consider it. If the creditor rejects the objection, they must communicate the reasons for non-acceptance within 15 days of receipt of such representation. Statement 3 is Incorrect: The secured creditor can take recourse to measures under Section 13(4), such as taking possession, only after the expiry of the 60-day period mentioned in the demand notice, not 30 days.
Statement 1 is Correct: Under Section 13(2), the secured creditor must send a notice in writing to the borrower to discharge in full his liabilities within 60 days from the date of notice. Statement 2 is Correct: As per Section 13(3A), if the borrower makes any representation or raises any objection, the secured creditor shall consider it. If the creditor rejects the objection, they must communicate the reasons for non-acceptance within 15 days of receipt of such representation. Statement 3 is Incorrect: The secured creditor can take recourse to measures under Section 13(4), such as taking possession, only after the expiry of the 60-day period mentioned in the demand notice, not 30 days.
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Consider the following statements regarding appeals under the SARFAESI Act:
Assertion (A):
An appeal to the Debt Recovery Appellate Tribunal (DRAT) against a DRT order cannot be entertained unless the borrower deposits a certain percentage of the debt due.Reason (R):
The pre-deposit condition is designed to prevent frivolous appeals and ensure that the appellate mechanism is not used merely to delay recovery proceedings.
Explanation
Correct: A
Statutory Rule (Assertion): Section 18 of the SARFAESI Act stipulates that an appeal to the DRAT cannot be entertained unless the borrower deposits with the Appellate Tribunal 50% of the amount of debt due as claimed by the secured creditors or determined by the DRT, whichever is less. Logic (Reason): The Supreme Court has upheld that this pre-deposit is mandatory. The rationale is indeed to curb frivolous litigation intended solely to stall the recovery process and delay the auction of assets. Thus, Reason R correctly explains the legislative intent behind Assertion A.
Statutory Rule (Assertion): Section 18 of the SARFAESI Act stipulates that an appeal to the DRAT cannot be entertained unless the borrower deposits with the Appellate Tribunal 50% of the amount of debt due as claimed by the secured creditors or determined by the DRT, whichever is less. Logic (Reason): The Supreme Court has upheld that this pre-deposit is mandatory. The rationale is indeed to curb frivolous litigation intended solely to stall the recovery process and delay the auction of assets. Thus, Reason R correctly explains the legislative intent behind Assertion A.
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Consider the following statements regarding the “Waterfall Mechanism” under Section 53 of the IBC:
Assertion (A):
In the distribution of liquidation proceeds, the dues of the Government are paid after the dues of Unsecured Financial Creditors.Reason (R):
The 2025 Amendment clarified that statutory dues do not automatically create a “Secured Charge” unless explicitly provided by a consensual transaction, overriding the Rainbow Papers judgment.
Explanation
Correct: A
The Hierarchy (Assertion): Under Section 53, Unsecured Financial Creditors are at Rank 4. Government Dues are at Rank 5. Thus, the Government gets paid after unsecured lenders. The Legal Battle (Reason): The Rainbow Papers judgment had ruled that State Tax acts could create a “Secured Creditor” status for the Government. The 2025 Amendment legislatively clarified that “Security Interest” under IBC requires a consensual agreement, effectively restoring the lower priority of Government dues to ensure credit availability.
The Hierarchy (Assertion): Under Section 53, Unsecured Financial Creditors are at Rank 4. Government Dues are at Rank 5. Thus, the Government gets paid after unsecured lenders. The Legal Battle (Reason): The Rainbow Papers judgment had ruled that State Tax acts could create a “Secured Creditor” status for the Government. The 2025 Amendment legislatively clarified that “Security Interest” under IBC requires a consensual agreement, effectively restoring the lower priority of Government dues to ensure credit availability.
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Consider the following statements:
Assertion (A):
Banks cannot insist on collateral security for loans sanctioned under the Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) up to ₹10 Lakh.Reason (R):
All eligible MUDRA loans are covered under the Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units (CGFMU), which reimburses the bank in case of default.
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R explains A. Concept Definition: Collateral-Free Lending. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: RBI guidelines mandate that no collateral is required for MSME loans up to ₹10 Lakh. 2. The Enabler: Banks are comfortable taking this risk because the CGFMU (managed by NCGTC) acts as the silent guarantor. 3. Causal Link: Without the CGFMU guarantee mechanism (R), banks would not be able to offer collateral-free loans (A) to high-risk micro borrowers.
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R explains A. Concept Definition: Collateral-Free Lending. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: RBI guidelines mandate that no collateral is required for MSME loans up to ₹10 Lakh. 2. The Enabler: Banks are comfortable taking this risk because the CGFMU (managed by NCGTC) acts as the silent guarantor. 3. Causal Link: Without the CGFMU guarantee mechanism (R), banks would not be able to offer collateral-free loans (A) to high-risk micro borrowers.
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According to Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, what is the maximum term of imprisonment prescribed for the offence of dishonour of a cheque?
Explanation
Correct: B
Section 138 of the NI Act creates a criminal offence for the dishonour of a cheque due to insufficiency of funds. The punishment prescribed includes: 1. Imprisonment: For a term which may be extended to two years, OR 2. Fine: Which may extend to twice the amount of the cheque, OR 3. Both. In the context of 2026 legal standards, the Supreme Court (in Sumit Bansal v. M/s MGI Developers, Jan 2026) clarified that multiple dishonoured cheques in a single transaction constitute separate offences, reinforcing the severity of this two-year maximum penalty per offence.
Section 138 of the NI Act creates a criminal offence for the dishonour of a cheque due to insufficiency of funds. The punishment prescribed includes: 1. Imprisonment: For a term which may be extended to two years, OR 2. Fine: Which may extend to twice the amount of the cheque, OR 3. Both. In the context of 2026 legal standards, the Supreme Court (in Sumit Bansal v. M/s MGI Developers, Jan 2026) clarified that multiple dishonoured cheques in a single transaction constitute separate offences, reinforcing the severity of this two-year maximum penalty per offence.
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As per Section 6 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, which of the following is the defining characteristic that distinguishes a “Cheque” from a standard Bill of Exchange?
Explanation
Correct: A
The definition of a “Cheque” under Section 6 of the Negotiable Instruments Act serves as the foundational distinction in banking law. A “Cheque” is technically a Bill of Exchange, but it has two specific non-negotiable characteristics: 1. Specified Banker: It must be drawn on a specified banker. 2. Payable on Demand: It must not be expressed to be payable otherwise than on demand. This definition explicitly includes the “electronic image of a truncated cheque” and a “cheque in the electronic form.” Unlike a standard Bill of Exchange (defined in Section 5), which often requires “acceptance” by the drawee and can be payable after a fixed period (usance), a cheque never requires acceptance and is always payable immediately upon presentation.
The definition of a “Cheque” under Section 6 of the Negotiable Instruments Act serves as the foundational distinction in banking law. A “Cheque” is technically a Bill of Exchange, but it has two specific non-negotiable characteristics: 1. Specified Banker: It must be drawn on a specified banker. 2. Payable on Demand: It must not be expressed to be payable otherwise than on demand. This definition explicitly includes the “electronic image of a truncated cheque” and a “cheque in the electronic form.” Unlike a standard Bill of Exchange (defined in Section 5), which often requires “acceptance” by the drawee and can be payable after a fixed period (usance), a cheque never requires acceptance and is always payable immediately upon presentation.
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Section 10 of the NI Act defines “Payment in Due Course.” Which of the following conditions is NOT required to claim protection under this section?
Explanation
Correct: C
“Payment in Due Course” (Section 10) is the gold standard for a paying banker to be discharged of liability. The statutory requirements are: 1. Payment in accordance with the Apparent Tenor (what appears on the face of the cheque). 2. Payment in Good Faith and Without Negligence. 3. Payment to the person in Possession of the instrument under circumstances that do not arouse suspicion. There is absolutely no requirement in Section 10 for “biometric verification.” While banks may use biometrics for internal KYC, it is not a condition for the statutory protection of Payment in Due Course.
“Payment in Due Course” (Section 10) is the gold standard for a paying banker to be discharged of liability. The statutory requirements are: 1. Payment in accordance with the Apparent Tenor (what appears on the face of the cheque). 2. Payment in Good Faith and Without Negligence. 3. Payment to the person in Possession of the instrument under circumstances that do not arouse suspicion. There is absolutely no requirement in Section 10 for “biometric verification.” While banks may use biometrics for internal KYC, it is not a condition for the statutory protection of Payment in Due Course.
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A “Material Alteration” renders a negotiable instrument void under Section
87. Which of the following changes is NOT considered a Material Alteration?
87. Which of the following changes is NOT considered a Material Alteration?
Explanation
Correct: C
A “Material Alteration” is any change that alters the legal character or liabilities of the parties. Section 87 states that such alterations void the instrument. Common examples include changing the date, amount, or payee. However, Section 125 explicitly permits certain alterations, considering them “authorized.” Crossing a cheque (adding two parallel lines) is a safety measure that restricts how the money is collected (via a bank account only). Since this promotes security and does not prejudice the drawer’s liability, the Act treats it as a non-material (valid) alteration.
A “Material Alteration” is any change that alters the legal character or liabilities of the parties. Section 87 states that such alterations void the instrument. Common examples include changing the date, amount, or payee. However, Section 125 explicitly permits certain alterations, considering them “authorized.” Crossing a cheque (adding two parallel lines) is a safety measure that restricts how the money is collected (via a bank account only). Since this promotes security and does not prejudice the drawer’s liability, the Act treats it as a non-material (valid) alteration.
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Section 131 of the Negotiable Instruments Act provides statutory protection to a “Collecting Banker.” Which of the following is the primary condition that must be satisfied for a banker to claim this protection?
Explanation
Correct: B
Section 131 protects a collecting banker from liability for “Conversion” (wrongful handling of someone else’s property) if the title to the cheque is defective. The four pillars of this protection are: 1. Good Faith. 2. Without Negligence. 3. Acting for a Customer. 4. Pre-existing Crossing: The cheque must be crossed before it reaches the banker for collection. If a banker takes an open (uncrossed) cheque and crosses it themselves for clearing, they lose the protection of Section 131 and act as a private agent, fully liable for any defects in title.
Section 131 protects a collecting banker from liability for “Conversion” (wrongful handling of someone else’s property) if the title to the cheque is defective. The four pillars of this protection are: 1. Good Faith. 2. Without Negligence. 3. Acting for a Customer. 4. Pre-existing Crossing: The cheque must be crossed before it reaches the banker for collection. If a banker takes an open (uncrossed) cheque and crosses it themselves for clearing, they lose the protection of Section 131 and act as a private agent, fully liable for any defects in title.
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Under Section 85(1), a Paying Banker is discharged from liability if he pays an “Order Cheque” in due course, even if:
Explanation
Correct: B
Section 85(1) provides a crucial shield to the Paying Banker regarding Endorsements. Drawer’s Signature: The banker is expected to know their own customer’s signature. If they pay on a forged drawer’s signature, they are liable (no protection). Payee’s Endorsement: The banker cannot possibly know the signatures of all payees and endorsees in the world. Therefore, the law protects the banker if they pay in good faith on an endorsement that looks regular, even if it turns out to be forged. This is an exception to the general rule that “Forgery conveys no title.”
Section 85(1) provides a crucial shield to the Paying Banker regarding Endorsements. Drawer’s Signature: The banker is expected to know their own customer’s signature. If they pay on a forged drawer’s signature, they are liable (no protection). Payee’s Endorsement: The banker cannot possibly know the signatures of all payees and endorsees in the world. Therefore, the law protects the banker if they pay in good faith on an endorsement that looks regular, even if it turns out to be forged. This is an exception to the general rule that “Forgery conveys no title.”
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Under the updated RBI Guidelines for “Settlement of Death Claims,” once the bank receives all the necessary documents from the claimant (nominee or legal heir), within what time period is the bank mandatorily required to settle the claim?
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer: B. Within 15 days. Concept: Turnaround Time (TAT) for Death Claims. The Regulation: The RBI Master Direction explicitly states that banks must ensure that all claims in respect of deceased depositors (including Safe Deposit Lockers and articles in safe custody) are settled within a period not exceeding 15 days from the date of receipt of the claim along with all necessary documents. This timeline applies regardless of whether the claim is by a nominee or legal heir, provided the documentation is complete.
Correct Answer: B. Within 15 days. Concept: Turnaround Time (TAT) for Death Claims. The Regulation: The RBI Master Direction explicitly states that banks must ensure that all claims in respect of deceased depositors (including Safe Deposit Lockers and articles in safe custody) are settled within a period not exceeding 15 days from the date of receipt of the claim along with all necessary documents. This timeline applies regardless of whether the claim is by a nominee or legal heir, provided the documentation is complete.
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According to the RBI Master Direction on Customer Service, what is the minimum threshold limit up to which banks are advised to settle claims in respect of deceased depositors without insisting on legal representation (like a Succession Certificate) in the absence of a nominee?
Explanation
Correct: C
Correct Answer: C. Rupees 15 Lakh. Concept: Threshold for Simplified Settlement. The Rule: The RBI has advised banks to adopt a “Simplified Settlement Procedure” for claims where there is no nominee or Will. The Limit: Under the RBI (Settlement of Claims in respect of Deceased Customers) Directions, 2025, the minimum threshold for simplified settlement (without legal representation) has been raised to Rupees 15 Lakh for Commercial Banks (and ₹5 Lakh for Co-operative Banks). The previous threshold was ₹5 Lakh.
Correct Answer: C. Rupees 15 Lakh. Concept: Threshold for Simplified Settlement. The Rule: The RBI has advised banks to adopt a “Simplified Settlement Procedure” for claims where there is no nominee or Will. The Limit: Under the RBI (Settlement of Claims in respect of Deceased Customers) Directions, 2025, the minimum threshold for simplified settlement (without legal representation) has been raised to Rupees 15 Lakh for Commercial Banks (and ₹5 Lakh for Co-operative Banks). The previous threshold was ₹5 Lakh.
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In the context of “Settlement of Claims for Missing Persons,” a bank can settle a claim before the statutory 7-year waiting period if the claimant produces which specific set of documents?
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer: B. An FIR and a Non-Traceable Report issued by the police. Concept: Missing Person Settlement (Simplified). The Law: Legally, a person is “presumed dead” only if unheard of for 7 years (Section 108, Indian Evidence Act). The Exception: To avoid hardship for small amounts, RBI allows banks to settle claims earlier if the claimant provides: 1. FIR (First Information Report) lodged with the police. 2. Non-Traceable Report issued by the police (stating the person could not be found after investigation). Note: The bank will also take an Indemnity Bond to protect itself in case the missing person returns alive.
Correct Answer: B. An FIR and a Non-Traceable Report issued by the police. Concept: Missing Person Settlement (Simplified). The Law: Legally, a person is “presumed dead” only if unheard of for 7 years (Section 108, Indian Evidence Act). The Exception: To avoid hardship for small amounts, RBI allows banks to settle claims earlier if the claimant provides: 1. FIR (First Information Report) lodged with the police. 2. Non-Traceable Report issued by the police (stating the person could not be found after investigation). Note: The bank will also take an Indemnity Bond to protect itself in case the missing person returns alive.
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Before an account becomes “Unclaimed” (at 10 years), it is first classified as “Inoperative” or “Dormant.” According to RBI guidelines, what is the specific period of non-operation (no customer-induced transaction) after which a Savings or Current account is classified as Inoperative?
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer: B. Over 2 years. Concept: Inoperative Account Trigger. The Rule: A Savings or Current Account constitutes “Inoperative” if there are no Customer-Induced Transactions in the account for a period of over two years. Impact: Once classified as Inoperative, the bank must segregate the account in the system to prevent fraud. Penalties for non-maintenance of minimum balances are not applicable to inoperative accounts. Interest must still be credited.
Correct Answer: B. Over 2 years. Concept: Inoperative Account Trigger. The Rule: A Savings or Current Account constitutes “Inoperative” if there are no Customer-Induced Transactions in the account for a period of over two years. Impact: Once classified as Inoperative, the bank must segregate the account in the system to prevent fraud. Penalties for non-maintenance of minimum balances are not applicable to inoperative accounts. Interest must still be credited.
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According to Section 26 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, a deposit account is legally classified as “Unclaimed” and the funds must be transferred to the Depositor Education and Awareness (DEA) Fund if the account has not been operated for a period of how many years?
Explanation
Correct: D
Correct Answer: D. 10 years. Concept: Unclaimed Deposit Definition. The Timeline: Inoperative/Dormant: If not operated for 2 years. (Funds stay with the bank, but are segregated). Unclaimed: If not operated for 10 years. (Funds move to RBI’s DEA Fund). The Action: Banks must transfer the credit balance (plus accrued interest) to the DEA Fund by the end of the month following the completion of the 10-year period. However, the depositor retains the right to claim the money back.
Correct Answer: D. 10 years. Concept: Unclaimed Deposit Definition. The Timeline: Inoperative/Dormant: If not operated for 2 years. (Funds stay with the bank, but are segregated). Unclaimed: If not operated for 10 years. (Funds move to RBI’s DEA Fund). The Action: Banks must transfer the credit balance (plus accrued interest) to the DEA Fund by the end of the month following the completion of the 10-year period. However, the depositor retains the right to claim the money back.
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Regarding the UDGAM (Unclaimed Deposits – Gateway to Access inforMation) Portal, which of the following actions can a user NOT perform on the portal?
Explanation
Correct: C
Correct Answer: C. File a direct claim and receive the money directly from RBI into their bank account. Concept: UDGAM Architecture. Function: UDGAM is a Search Engine, not a Payment Gateway. 1. You Can: Find out if you have money and where it is (Bank Name + UDRN). 2. You Cannot: Claim it online through the portal. The Process: After finding the record on UDGAM, you must take the UDRN and KYC documents to the respective bank branch. The Bank will pay you (and claim reimbursement from RBI). RBI does not deal with the public directly for refunds.
Correct Answer: C. File a direct claim and receive the money directly from RBI into their bank account. Concept: UDGAM Architecture. Function: UDGAM is a Search Engine, not a Payment Gateway. 1. You Can: Find out if you have money and where it is (Bank Name + UDRN). 2. You Cannot: Claim it online through the portal. The Process: After finding the record on UDGAM, you must take the UDRN and KYC documents to the respective bank branch. The Bank will pay you (and claim reimbursement from RBI). RBI does not deal with the public directly for refunds.
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Regarding the specific nomination rules for Safe Deposit Lockers and Articles in Safe Custody, which of the following is ALLOWED under the 2025 framework?
Explanation
Correct: C
Correct Answer: C. Successive Nomination of up to 4 persons. Concept: Asset-Class Specific Restrictions. The Rule: Deposits: Allow Simultaneous OR Successive. Lockers/Safe Custody: Allow ONLY Successive nominations. Reasoning: Lockers contain physical items that are not easily divisible by the bank. Therefore, the law mandates a “Chain of Priority.” Nominee 1 gets access; if Nominee 1 passes away, then Nominee 2 gets access, and so on. You cannot have simultaneous nominees for a locker because the bank cannot physically split the contents of a locker without breaking the seal and inventorying the items.
Correct Answer: C. Successive Nomination of up to 4 persons. Concept: Asset-Class Specific Restrictions. The Rule: Deposits: Allow Simultaneous OR Successive. Lockers/Safe Custody: Allow ONLY Successive nominations. Reasoning: Lockers contain physical items that are not easily divisible by the bank. Therefore, the law mandates a “Chain of Priority.” Nominee 1 gets access; if Nominee 1 passes away, then Nominee 2 gets access, and so on. You cannot have simultaneous nominees for a locker because the bank cannot physically split the contents of a locker without breaking the seal and inventorying the items.
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As per the Banking Laws (Amendment) Act, 2025, what is the maximum number of nominees a depositor can now appoint for a single deposit account?
Explanation
Correct: D
Correct Answer: D. Four individuals. Concept: Multiple Nominations Limit (2025 Amendment). Structure: Old Rule: Only one nominee was allowed per account (individual capacity). New Rule (Effective Nov 1, 2025): The Act amended Section 45ZA of the Banking Regulation Act to allow a depositor to nominate up to four individuals. Context: This facility allows for either Simultaneous nomination (sharing the money) or Successive nomination (priority list) for deposit accounts. This change was introduced to provide flexibility to depositors and reduce disputes among heirs.
Correct Answer: D. Four individuals. Concept: Multiple Nominations Limit (2025 Amendment). Structure: Old Rule: Only one nominee was allowed per account (individual capacity). New Rule (Effective Nov 1, 2025): The Act amended Section 45ZA of the Banking Regulation Act to allow a depositor to nominate up to four individuals. Context: This facility allows for either Simultaneous nomination (sharing the money) or Successive nomination (priority list) for deposit accounts. This change was introduced to provide flexibility to depositors and reduce disputes among heirs.
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In the context of the “Cyber Swachhta Kendra” (Botnet Cleaning and Malware Analysis Centre), which of the following descriptions is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: Option C is INCORRECT. Concept: Cyber Swachhta Kendra (CSK). Role: It is a remediation and analysis center, not a law enforcement agency. Its goal is to “clean” (Swachhta) the cyber ecosystem. Function: It detects botnets (networks of infected zombie computers), alerts the users via their ISPs, and provides free tools to remove the malware. Powers: It does not have the power to arrest. Arrests and criminal prosecution are the domain of Police or Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) under the Information Technology Act.
Direct Answer: Option C is INCORRECT. Concept: Cyber Swachhta Kendra (CSK). Role: It is a remediation and analysis center, not a law enforcement agency. Its goal is to “clean” (Swachhta) the cyber ecosystem. Function: It detects botnets (networks of infected zombie computers), alerts the users via their ISPs, and provides free tools to remove the malware. Powers: It does not have the power to arrest. Arrests and criminal prosecution are the domain of Police or Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) under the Information Technology Act.
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In the context of Video-based Customer Identification Process (V-CIP) for KYC, which of the following technological checks is MANDATORY to ensure the customer is physically present and not using a recording?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: Liveness Check. Concept: V-CIP (Video KYC). The Mandate: The system must verify that the person on the screen is “live” and not a deepfake or a pre-recorded video. This is done by asking the customer to blink, turn their head, or read a random code (randomization). The customer’s live location (GPS coordinates via geo-tagging) must be captured to ensure they are physically present in India. Verification cannot be done via simple video calls; it must be through a secure, bank-audited application domain.
Direct Answer: Liveness Check. Concept: V-CIP (Video KYC). The Mandate: The system must verify that the person on the screen is “live” and not a deepfake or a pre-recorded video. This is done by asking the customer to blink, turn their head, or read a random code (randomization). The customer’s live location (GPS coordinates via geo-tagging) must be captured to ensure they are physically present in India. Verification cannot be done via simple video calls; it must be through a secure, bank-audited application domain.
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Consider the following statements regarding the “Shared Responsibility Model” in Cloud Computing for banks.
The Cloud Service Provider (CSP) is responsible for the security OF the cloud (physical infrastructure, networking).The Bank is responsible for security IN the cloud (data classification, identity management, encryption).The RBI Master Direction on Outsourcing of IT Services mandates that banks cannot outsource “Core Management Functions” to the cloud provider.
The Cloud Service Provider (CSP) is responsible for the security OF the cloud (physical infrastructure, networking).The Bank is responsible for security IN the cloud (data classification, identity management, encryption).The RBI Master Direction on Outsourcing of IT Services mandates that banks cannot outsource “Core Management Functions” to the cloud provider.
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: All statements are correct. Concept: Cloud Governance in Banking. The Model: Security is shared. The CSP secures the hardware (servers, cables), but the Bank must secure the data on those servers (who logs in, is the data encrypted?). If a bank leaves a database open to the public, that is the Bank’s fault, not the CSP’s. Regulatory: RBI explicitly forbids outsourcing “Core Management Functions” (like policy making, strategic planning, or compliance monitoring) to any third party, including cloud providers. The bank retains ultimate accountability.
Direct Answer: All statements are correct. Concept: Cloud Governance in Banking. The Model: Security is shared. The CSP secures the hardware (servers, cables), but the Bank must secure the data on those servers (who logs in, is the data encrypted?). If a bank leaves a database open to the public, that is the Bank’s fault, not the CSP’s. Regulatory: RBI explicitly forbids outsourcing “Core Management Functions” (like policy making, strategic planning, or compliance monitoring) to any third party, including cloud providers. The bank retains ultimate accountability.
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Which of the following terms best describes the “UPI Circle” feature introduced by the NPCI, and what is the primary operational relationship it establishes between users?
Explanation
Correct: B
Concept Definition: “UPI Circle” is a feature designed by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) to enable Delegated Payments. It allows a “Primary User,” who holds the bank account, to link a “Secondary User,” such as a family member or employee, to their UPI ID. Structural Breakdown: 1. Primary User: This user controls the funding account and sets the spending limits. 2. Secondary User: This user can initiate payments using the Primary’s account. They can do this either independently under “Full Delegation” or with approval under “Partial Delegation.” 3. Capacity: A Primary User can authorize up to 5 Secondary Users. Historical Context: Launched broadly between late 2024 and early 2025, this feature targets financial inclusion for dependents, such as minors or the elderly, who may not have their own bank accounts. It effectively replaces the need for physical “Add-on Cards” in the digital UPI ecosystem.
Concept Definition: “UPI Circle” is a feature designed by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) to enable Delegated Payments. It allows a “Primary User,” who holds the bank account, to link a “Secondary User,” such as a family member or employee, to their UPI ID. Structural Breakdown: 1. Primary User: This user controls the funding account and sets the spending limits. 2. Secondary User: This user can initiate payments using the Primary’s account. They can do this either independently under “Full Delegation” or with approval under “Partial Delegation.” 3. Capacity: A Primary User can authorize up to 5 Secondary Users. Historical Context: Launched broadly between late 2024 and early 2025, this feature targets financial inclusion for dependents, such as minors or the elderly, who may not have their own bank accounts. It effectively replaces the need for physical “Add-on Cards” in the digital UPI ecosystem.
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Consider the following statements regarding the “Wholesale CBDC” (e₹-W) pilots conducted by the RBI as of 2026:
The e₹-W pilot is primarily used for the settlement of secondary market transactions in Government Securities (G-Secs).The “Call Money Market” settlement was added as a use case in the e₹-W pilot.Retail users can access e₹-W for high-value transactions above ₹2 Lakh.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
The e₹-W pilot is primarily used for the settlement of secondary market transactions in Government Securities (G-Secs).The “Call Money Market” settlement was added as a use case in the e₹-W pilot.Retail users can access e₹-W for high-value transactions above ₹2 Lakh.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Statements 1 and 2 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect. Concept Definition: Wholesale CBDC is restricted to inter-bank and institutional settlement. Timeline: Statement 1 (Correct): The pilot launched in November 2022 focused on the settlement of G-Sec Secondary Market transactions. Statement 2 (Correct): In late 2023 and continuing into 2024, the pilot was expanded to include the Call Money Market (Inter-bank borrowing and lending). Statement 3 (False): e₹-W is strictly for “Restricted Access” (Banks and Financial Institutions). Retail users, regardless of transaction size, interact only with e₹-R (Retail).
Direct Answer: Statements 1 and 2 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect. Concept Definition: Wholesale CBDC is restricted to inter-bank and institutional settlement. Timeline: Statement 1 (Correct): The pilot launched in November 2022 focused on the settlement of G-Sec Secondary Market transactions. Statement 2 (Correct): In late 2023 and continuing into 2024, the pilot was expanded to include the Call Money Market (Inter-bank borrowing and lending). Statement 3 (False): e₹-W is strictly for “Restricted Access” (Banks and Financial Institutions). Retail users, regardless of transaction size, interact only with e₹-R (Retail).
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Regarding the “Offline Functionality” of the Retail CBDC (e₹-R) introduced in the 2024-2025 pilots, which of the following statements is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: Option C is incorrect. Concept Definition: Offline CBDC is designed for resilience and inclusion (remote areas), but with strict safety rails. The Limit Rule: To prevent double-spending and fraud in an offline environment (where the ledger isn’t instantly updated), the RBI imposes strict limits. Per Transaction Cap: Typically capped at a low value (e.g., ₹500) during pilots. Cumulative Cap: Total offline spend is capped (e.g., ₹2,000) before the device must go “Online” to sync with the central ledger. Unlimited? Absolutely not. That would be a massive security flaw in the system.
Direct Answer: Option C is incorrect. Concept Definition: Offline CBDC is designed for resilience and inclusion (remote areas), but with strict safety rails. The Limit Rule: To prevent double-spending and fraud in an offline environment (where the ledger isn’t instantly updated), the RBI imposes strict limits. Per Transaction Cap: Typically capped at a low value (e.g., ₹500) during pilots. Cumulative Cap: Total offline spend is capped (e.g., ₹2,000) before the device must go “Online” to sync with the central ledger. Unlimited? Absolutely not. That would be a massive security flaw in the system.
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The Account Aggregator (AA) framework is designed around the principle of being “Data Blind.” What does this specifically mean for the AA entity (NBFC-AA)?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: “Data Blind” means the AA acts as a pipe that transports data but cannot read it. Concept Definition: Account Aggregators (NBFC-AA) serve as “Consent Managers.” Operational Mechanism: 1. Encryption: Data is end-to-end encrypted. It flows from the Source (FIP, e.g., Bank A) through the AA to the Consumer (FIU, e.g., Lender B). 2. The “Blind” Rule: The AA has no visibility into the actual account balance or transaction details inside the encrypted packet. It only sees the metadata (who sent it, who needs it, and the validity of the consent). 3. Storage: AAs are strictly prohibited from storing customer financial data.
Direct Answer: “Data Blind” means the AA acts as a pipe that transports data but cannot read it. Concept Definition: Account Aggregators (NBFC-AA) serve as “Consent Managers.” Operational Mechanism: 1. Encryption: Data is end-to-end encrypted. It flows from the Source (FIP, e.g., Bank A) through the AA to the Consumer (FIU, e.g., Lender B). 2. The “Blind” Rule: The AA has no visibility into the actual account balance or transaction details inside the encrypted packet. It only sees the metadata (who sent it, who needs it, and the validity of the consent). 3. Storage: AAs are strictly prohibited from storing customer financial data.
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In the context of the “Programmability” pilot for Retail CBDC (e₹-R) launched in 2024-2025, which of the following use cases was successfully tested in states like Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Programmability was tested for “Agri-input” subsidies. Concept Definition: Programmability (often called “Smart Money”) allows the issuer to set rules on how the currency can be spent. Context (2025 Pilots): Use Case: The RBI, in collaboration with state governments (e.g., for schemes like Odisha’s Subhadra Yojana or Gujarat’s G-SAFAL), tested “Purpose-Specific” money. Mechanism: Farmers received e₹ subsidies that were digitally “locked” to be spendable only at registered fertilizer depots. They could not withdraw it as cash or spend it on other goods. This ensures 100% end-use monitoring of public funds.
Direct Answer: Programmability was tested for “Agri-input” subsidies. Concept Definition: Programmability (often called “Smart Money”) allows the issuer to set rules on how the currency can be spent. Context (2025 Pilots): Use Case: The RBI, in collaboration with state governments (e.g., for schemes like Odisha’s Subhadra Yojana or Gujarat’s G-SAFAL), tested “Purpose-Specific” money. Mechanism: Farmers received e₹ subsidies that were digitally “locked” to be spendable only at registered fertilizer depots. They could not withdraw it as cash or spend it on other goods. This ensures 100% end-use monitoring of public funds.
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The Account Aggregator (AA) ecosystem connects Financial Information Providers (FIPs) with Financial Information Users (FIUs). As of February 2026, which of the following entities is NOT typically considered a valid FIP in the ecosystem?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: Unregulated entities cannot be FIPs. Concept Definition: FIPs are the “Source” of data. They must be Regulated Entities. Valid FIP List (2025-2026 Context): 1. Banks/NBFCs: The core sources of savings and loan data. 2. GSTN: A critical addition that allows MSMEs to share their GST returns as official data to facilitate “Cash-flow based lending.” 3. Market Intermediaries: Depositories (for Stocks/Mutual Funds), Insurance Repositories, and Pension Funds (NPS). Why D is the answer: Only entities regulated by the RBI, SEBI, IRDAI, or PFRDA can integrate as FIPs to ensure data integrity. An unregulated P2P platform has no legal standing to inject data into this trusted network.
Direct Answer: Unregulated entities cannot be FIPs. Concept Definition: FIPs are the “Source” of data. They must be Regulated Entities. Valid FIP List (2025-2026 Context): 1. Banks/NBFCs: The core sources of savings and loan data. 2. GSTN: A critical addition that allows MSMEs to share their GST returns as official data to facilitate “Cash-flow based lending.” 3. Market Intermediaries: Depositories (for Stocks/Mutual Funds), Insurance Repositories, and Pension Funds (NPS). Why D is the answer: Only entities regulated by the RBI, SEBI, IRDAI, or PFRDA can integrate as FIPs to ensure data integrity. An unregulated P2P platform has no legal standing to inject data into this trusted network.
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Consider the following statements distinguishing CBDC from UPI:
Assertion (A):
In a UPI transaction, the settlement risk exists between the remitter and beneficiary banks, whereas in a CBDC transaction, there is no inter-bank settlement risk.Reason (R):
CBDC involves the transfer of “Central Bank Liability” directly from one wallet to another, whereas UPI is merely a messaging, clearing, and settlement overlay on top of existing commercial bank money.
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Both are true, and the logic is sound. Concept Definition: The distinction between Commercial Bank Money (used in UPI) and Central Bank Money (used in CBDC). The Mechanism (R): UPI: When you pay ₹100, your bank (Bank A) must settle with the receiver’s bank (Bank B). If Bank A collapses before settlement (in a Deferred Net Settlement system), there is a risk. CBDC: You are handing over a digital “Cash Note” (RBI Liability). The movement is instant and final. The Consequence (A): Because CBDC is the movement of the liability itself (not a promise to pay later), it eliminates “Settlement Risk” between banks. It achieves “Finality of Settlement” at the moment of transfer.
Direct Answer: Both are true, and the logic is sound. Concept Definition: The distinction between Commercial Bank Money (used in UPI) and Central Bank Money (used in CBDC). The Mechanism (R): UPI: When you pay ₹100, your bank (Bank A) must settle with the receiver’s bank (Bank B). If Bank A collapses before settlement (in a Deferred Net Settlement system), there is a risk. CBDC: You are handing over a digital “Cash Note” (RBI Liability). The movement is instant and final. The Consequence (A): Because CBDC is the movement of the liability itself (not a promise to pay later), it eliminates “Settlement Risk” between banks. It achieves “Finality of Settlement” at the moment of transfer.
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Scenario: A small business owner, Mr. X, applies for a business loan. The lender asks him to share his GST returns and Bank Statements via an Account Aggregator (AA). Mr. X consents. A month later, he decides he no longer wants the lender to access his daily transaction data. Under the AA framework, what is Mr. X’s right?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Revocation is a fundamental right of the user. Concept Definition: The Consent Artefact in the AA architecture. Rights of the Customer: 1. Granularity: The user can choose what to share and for how long. 2. Revocability: The user has full control. If they revoke consent via their AA app, the data pipe is cut instantly. 3. Consequence: While the lender cannot stop the revocation, the loan agreement might have a clause that says “Revoking data access constitutes a technical default” or triggers a higher interest rate—but the technical act of stopping the data flow is fully within the user’s control.
Direct Answer: Revocation is a fundamental right of the user. Concept Definition: The Consent Artefact in the AA architecture. Rights of the Customer: 1. Granularity: The user can choose what to share and for how long. 2. Revocability: The user has full control. If they revoke consent via their AA app, the data pipe is cut instantly. 3. Consequence: While the lender cannot stop the revocation, the loan agreement might have a clause that says “Revoking data access constitutes a technical default” or triggers a higher interest rate—but the technical act of stopping the data flow is fully within the user’s control.
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In August 2024, the RBI Governor announced the launch of “ULI” to speed up the credit appraisal process. What does the acronym ULI stand for, and which pilot project did it evolve from?
Explanation
Correct: A
Concept Definition: ULI (Unified Lending Interface) is a digital platform designed to reduce the turnaround time for loan approvals. Structural Breakdown: 1. Function: It provides a standardized set of APIs to fetch land records, satellite data (for agricultural loans), and other financial data directly to lenders. 2. Evolution: It is the full-scale rollout of the pilot previously known as the Public Tech Platform for Frictionless Credit (PTPFC). Causal Reasoning: Just as the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) transformed payments by standardizing the interface, ULI aims to transform lending by standardizing access to data, particularly for rural and MSME borrowers who lack formal credit history documents.
Concept Definition: ULI (Unified Lending Interface) is a digital platform designed to reduce the turnaround time for loan approvals. Structural Breakdown: 1. Function: It provides a standardized set of APIs to fetch land records, satellite data (for agricultural loans), and other financial data directly to lenders. 2. Evolution: It is the full-scale rollout of the pilot previously known as the Public Tech Platform for Frictionless Credit (PTPFC). Causal Reasoning: Just as the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) transformed payments by standardizing the interface, ULI aims to transform lending by standardizing access to data, particularly for rural and MSME borrowers who lack formal credit history documents.
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According to the RBI’s “Fair Lending Practice” circular regarding Penal Charges (effective 2024 and valid in 2026), how must a Regulated Entity (RE) treat late payment penalties?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: Penalties must be absolute charges, not interest. Concept Definition: The RBI distinction between Penal Interest (which is banned) and Penal Charges (which are allowed). The Rule: 1. Non-Capitalization: You cannot add the penalty to the principal loan amount and then charge interest on it (No “interest on tax” or compounding of penalties). 2. Transparency: It must be a fixed amount, reasonable, and commensurate with the default, rather than a revenue generation tool. Reasoning: The RBI observed that banks were using “Penal Interest” (e.g., adding 2% over the normal rate) to compound debt, making it impossible for stressed borrowers to recover. The new rule enforces fairness.
Direct Answer: Penalties must be absolute charges, not interest. Concept Definition: The RBI distinction between Penal Interest (which is banned) and Penal Charges (which are allowed). The Rule: 1. Non-Capitalization: You cannot add the penalty to the principal loan amount and then charge interest on it (No “interest on tax” or compounding of penalties). 2. Transparency: It must be a fixed amount, reasonable, and commensurate with the default, rather than a revenue generation tool. Reasoning: The RBI observed that banks were using “Penal Interest” (e.g., adding 2% over the normal rate) to compound debt, making it impossible for stressed borrowers to recover. The new rule enforces fairness.
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Under the RBI’s Digital Lending Guidelines regarding data collection by Digital Lending Apps (DLAs), which of the following mobile permissions is a DLA explicitly permitted to request from a borrower?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: Only one-time Location access is permitted. Concept Definition: Data Minimization in Digital Lending. The “Restricted List” (Explicitly Banned): Digital Lending Apps generally cannot access sensitive personal data like Contacts, Call Logs, or Media/Gallery. This ban was enforced to stop the harassment of borrowers’ friends and family during recovery (predatory recovery practices). The Exception: Location: Access is permitted only once regarding the customer’s location to verify their address or geography for KYC (Know Your Customer) or legal jurisdiction purposes. Continuous tracking is prohibited.
Direct Answer: Only one-time Location access is permitted. Concept Definition: Data Minimization in Digital Lending. The “Restricted List” (Explicitly Banned): Digital Lending Apps generally cannot access sensitive personal data like Contacts, Call Logs, or Media/Gallery. This ban was enforced to stop the harassment of borrowers’ friends and family during recovery (predatory recovery practices). The Exception: Location: Access is permitted only once regarding the customer’s location to verify their address or geography for KYC (Know Your Customer) or legal jurisdiction purposes. Continuous tracking is prohibited.
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Consider the following statements regarding the Co-Lending Model (CLM) between Banks and Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs):
The NBFC acts as the single point of interface for the customer.The Bank must take a minimum of 80% share of the individual loans on its books.The NBFC must retain a minimum of 20% share of the individual loans on its books.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
The NBFC acts as the single point of interface for the customer.The Bank must take a minimum of 80% share of the individual loans on its books.The NBFC must retain a minimum of 20% share of the individual loans on its books.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: All statements are correct. Concept Definition: The Co-Lending Model (CLM) allows banks (which have cheap capital) and NBFCs (which have better reach) to lend together. Structural Breakdown: 1. Risk Sharing (The 80:20 Rule): The Bank takes the bulk of the asset (minimum 80%), and the NBFC is required to keep “skin in the game” (minimum 20%). 2. Interface: The NBFC creates the customer relationship and services the loan. To the customer, it looks like a single loan, but the backend has two lenders. 3. Pricing: The interest rate charged to the borrower is a Blended Rate (a weighted average of the Bank’s rate and the NBFC’s rate).
Direct Answer: All statements are correct. Concept Definition: The Co-Lending Model (CLM) allows banks (which have cheap capital) and NBFCs (which have better reach) to lend together. Structural Breakdown: 1. Risk Sharing (The 80:20 Rule): The Bank takes the bulk of the asset (minimum 80%), and the NBFC is required to keep “skin in the game” (minimum 20%). 2. Interface: The NBFC creates the customer relationship and services the loan. To the customer, it looks like a single loan, but the backend has two lenders. 3. Pricing: The interest rate charged to the borrower is a Blended Rate (a weighted average of the Bank’s rate and the NBFC’s rate).
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Regarding the recognition of Self-Regulatory Organizations for the FinTech Sector (SRO-FT) by the RBI, which of the following statements is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Option B is incorrect. Concept Definition: SRO-FTs (like FACE – Fintech Association for Consumer Empowerment) are industry bodies recognized by the RBI to police their own members. Financial Requirement Correction: The SRO-FT does not need a ₹500 Crore net worth. This figure is typically associated with “umbrella entities” or large payment systems. The SRO needs sufficient net worth and infrastructure to discharge its duties, but there is no such massive capital entry barrier defined in the framework. Other Options: Section 8: Correct. It must be not-for-profit to ensure it serves the industry, not shareholders. Independence: Correct. Independent directors prevent dominant players from hijacking the rules.
Direct Answer: Option B is incorrect. Concept Definition: SRO-FTs (like FACE – Fintech Association for Consumer Empowerment) are industry bodies recognized by the RBI to police their own members. Financial Requirement Correction: The SRO-FT does not need a ₹500 Crore net worth. This figure is typically associated with “umbrella entities” or large payment systems. The SRO needs sufficient net worth and infrastructure to discharge its duties, but there is no such massive capital entry barrier defined in the framework. Other Options: Section 8: Correct. It must be not-for-profit to ensure it serves the industry, not shareholders. Independence: Correct. Independent directors prevent dominant players from hijacking the rules.
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Consider the following statements regarding the “Turnover Method” (Nayak Committee) and “Maximum Permissible Bank Finance” (Tandon Committee):
The Nayak Committee norms are generally applicable for working capital limits up to 50 million rupees (5 Crores).The Tandon Committee Method II calculates MPBF as 75% of (Current Assets minus Current Liabilities).The Nayak Committee assumes a minimum borrower margin of 5% of the annual turnover.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
The Nayak Committee norms are generally applicable for working capital limits up to 50 million rupees (5 Crores).The Tandon Committee Method II calculates MPBF as 75% of (Current Assets minus Current Liabilities).The Nayak Committee assumes a minimum borrower margin of 5% of the annual turnover.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Explanation
Correct: B
Statement 1 is Correct: The Nayak Committee suggested a simplified method for the MSME sector. Under this method, Working Capital is assessed as 25% of the projected Annual Turnover. This is typically used for limits up to ₹5 Crores (though some banks may apply it to higher limits per internal policy). Statement 3 is Correct: Of this 25% requirement, the bank provides 20% of the turnover as a loan, and the borrower must bring in 5% as margin. Statement 2 is Incorrect: The Tandon Committee Method II (the more conservative method) calculates MPBF as: (0.75 * Current Assets) – Current Liabilities. Clarification: It is Method I that calculates it as 0.75 * (Current Assets – Current Liabilities). Method II requires the borrower to finance 25% of the Total Current Assets, not just the gap.
Statement 1 is Correct: The Nayak Committee suggested a simplified method for the MSME sector. Under this method, Working Capital is assessed as 25% of the projected Annual Turnover. This is typically used for limits up to ₹5 Crores (though some banks may apply it to higher limits per internal policy). Statement 3 is Correct: Of this 25% requirement, the bank provides 20% of the turnover as a loan, and the borrower must bring in 5% as margin. Statement 2 is Incorrect: The Tandon Committee Method II (the more conservative method) calculates MPBF as: (0.75 * Current Assets) – Current Liabilities. Clarification: It is Method I that calculates it as 0.75 * (Current Assets – Current Liabilities). Method II requires the borrower to finance 25% of the Total Current Assets, not just the gap.
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Identify the pair of “Charge Type” and “Asset Nature” that is INCORRECTLY matched:
Explanation
Correct: D
Option D is the Incorrect Match. Assignment: The correct charge for Book Debts (Receivables) or Insurance Policies is Assignment, which involves the transfer of rights or benefits to the lender. Lien: A Lien is the right to retain possession of goods or securities belonging to a debtor until the debt is paid. It is typically used for fixed deposits (Banker’s Lien) or goods already in the bank’s possession. It is not the primary mode for charging Book Debts. Hypothecation: A charge on movable property (existing or future) where possession remains with the borrower (e.g., vehicle loans). Pledge: Bailment of goods as security where possession must be transferred to the lender (e.g., gold loans).
Option D is the Incorrect Match. Assignment: The correct charge for Book Debts (Receivables) or Insurance Policies is Assignment, which involves the transfer of rights or benefits to the lender. Lien: A Lien is the right to retain possession of goods or securities belonging to a debtor until the debt is paid. It is typically used for fixed deposits (Banker’s Lien) or goods already in the bank’s possession. It is not the primary mode for charging Book Debts. Hypothecation: A charge on movable property (existing or future) where possession remains with the borrower (e.g., vehicle loans). Pledge: Bailment of goods as security where possession must be transferred to the lender (e.g., gold loans).
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Consider the following statements regarding Fixed vs. Floating Charges:
Assertion (A):
A Floating Charge crystallizes into a Fixed Charge when the company ceases to be a going concern or defaults on the debenture conditions.Reason (R):
A Floating Charge attaches to a specific, identifiable asset from the moment of its creation, preventing the borrower from dealing with it.
Explanation
Correct: C
Assertion (A) is True: A Floating Charge is a charge on a class of assets (like stock or raw materials) which fluctuates in the ordinary course of business. It remains “dormant” until a specific event occurs (like default, liquidation, or appointment of a receiver), at which point it “crystallizes” and becomes a Fixed Charge, attaching to the assets present at that moment. Reason (R) is False: This describes a Fixed Charge. A Floating Charge explicitly allows the borrower to deal with the assets (sell stock, consume raw material) in the ordinary course of business without seeking the lender’s permission. A Fixed Charge attaches to the specific asset immediately and prevents disposal without permission.
Assertion (A) is True: A Floating Charge is a charge on a class of assets (like stock or raw materials) which fluctuates in the ordinary course of business. It remains “dormant” until a specific event occurs (like default, liquidation, or appointment of a receiver), at which point it “crystallizes” and becomes a Fixed Charge, attaching to the assets present at that moment. Reason (R) is False: This describes a Fixed Charge. A Floating Charge explicitly allows the borrower to deal with the assets (sell stock, consume raw material) in the ordinary course of business without seeking the lender’s permission. A Fixed Charge attaches to the specific asset immediately and prevents disposal without permission.
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Scenario: A textile manufacturer needs to purchase a new automated loom (machinery) expected to last 10 years. They also need funds to buy cotton bales (raw material) for the upcoming season. Action: The bank manager suggests a Term Loan for the loom and a Cash Credit limit for the cotton. Why is this structural distinction necessary?
Explanation
Correct: A
Structural Distinction: 1. Term Loan (TL): Used for Capital Expenditure (Capex) like machinery. The asset generates revenue over a long period. Repayment (Installments) comes from the future cash profits (Net Profit + Depreciation) generated by the asset over its economic life. 2. Cash Credit (CC): Used for Working Capital (WC) needs (inventory/receivables). It is a “revolving” credit. The outstanding amount fluctuates. It is not “repaid” in the traditional sense but is “serviced” by the continuous realization of Current Assets (selling stock -> getting cash -> depositing in the CC account).
Structural Distinction: 1. Term Loan (TL): Used for Capital Expenditure (Capex) like machinery. The asset generates revenue over a long period. Repayment (Installments) comes from the future cash profits (Net Profit + Depreciation) generated by the asset over its economic life. 2. Cash Credit (CC): Used for Working Capital (WC) needs (inventory/receivables). It is a “revolving” credit. The outstanding amount fluctuates. It is not “repaid” in the traditional sense but is “serviced” by the continuous realization of Current Assets (selling stock -> getting cash -> depositing in the CC account).
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Scenario: A bank grants a loan against the security of a warehouse full of paddy. The bank puts its own lock and key on the warehouse and appoints a security guard. The key remains with the Bank Manager. Which legal mode of charge has been created?
Explanation
Correct: B
Concept: The crucial differentiator between Hypothecation and Pledge is Possession. Pledge (Indian Contract Act, 1872): Requires the delivery of possession of the goods to the creditor (pledgee). Possession can be actual (handing over a watch) or constructive (handing over the key to a godown, as in this scenario). Since the bank holds the key and controls access, it has “Constructive Possession.” Hypothecation: The goods would remain in the borrower’s possession. The bank would only have a right to seize them upon default. Mortgage: Applies to immovable property (land/buildings).
Concept: The crucial differentiator between Hypothecation and Pledge is Possession. Pledge (Indian Contract Act, 1872): Requires the delivery of possession of the goods to the creditor (pledgee). Possession can be actual (handing over a watch) or constructive (handing over the key to a godown, as in this scenario). Since the bank holds the key and controls access, it has “Constructive Possession.” Hypothecation: The goods would remain in the borrower’s possession. The bank would only have a right to seize them upon default. Mortgage: Applies to immovable property (land/buildings).
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In the context of Term Loan appraisal, what does the Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) primarily indicate, and what is generally considered the minimum acceptable benchmark for most banks?
Explanation
Correct: B
Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) is the most critical ratio for Term Loan appraisal. Formula: (Net Profit + Depreciation + Interest on Term Loan) / (Interest on Term Loan + Principal Installment). Significance: It measures the cash flow available to pay current debt obligations. A ratio of 1.0 means the firm generates just enough cash to pay its debt (which is high risk). Benchmark: Banks generally prefer a DSCR between 1.5 and 2.0. An average DSCR (over the loan tenor) below 1.25 is usually considered risky and may lead to rejection.
Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) is the most critical ratio for Term Loan appraisal. Formula: (Net Profit + Depreciation + Interest on Term Loan) / (Interest on Term Loan + Principal Installment). Significance: It measures the cash flow available to pay current debt obligations. A ratio of 1.0 means the firm generates just enough cash to pay its debt (which is high risk). Benchmark: Banks generally prefer a DSCR between 1.5 and 2.0. An average DSCR (over the loan tenor) below 1.25 is usually considered risky and may lead to rejection.
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Which type of Mortgage is created by the simple delivery of documents of title to immovable property with the intent to create security, and is valid only in notified towns?
Explanation
Correct: C
Equitable Mortgage (Section 58(f) of Transfer of Property Act): Method: It is created by the delivery (deposit) of title deeds to the lender with the intent to create security. Registration: It does not require registration with the Sub-Registrar (unlike a Registered Mortgage), making it cost-effective as it saves on stamp duty. Location: It can only be created in specific towns notified by the State Government (e.g., Metro cities, District Headquarters), although the property itself can be located anywhere in India.
Equitable Mortgage (Section 58(f) of Transfer of Property Act): Method: It is created by the delivery (deposit) of title deeds to the lender with the intent to create security. Registration: It does not require registration with the Sub-Registrar (unlike a Registered Mortgage), making it cost-effective as it saves on stamp duty. Location: It can only be created in specific towns notified by the State Government (e.g., Metro cities, District Headquarters), although the property itself can be located anywhere in India.
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When calculating the Current Ratio for working capital assessment, which of the following is strictly NOT classified as a Current Liability?
Explanation
Correct: D
Concept: Current Liabilities (CL): Obligations payable within one year. This includes Trade Creditors, Short-term provisions, and Term Loan installments falling due in the next year. Why D is the Exception: If Unsecured Loans from friends or family are kept in the business on a long-term basis and are subordinated to the bank (meaning the borrower agrees not to repay them while the bank loan is active), banks classify them as Quasi-Equity (Long Term Source) rather than a Current Liability. This treatment improves the Current Ratio and Net Working Capital.
Concept: Current Liabilities (CL): Obligations payable within one year. This includes Trade Creditors, Short-term provisions, and Term Loan installments falling due in the next year. Why D is the Exception: If Unsecured Loans from friends or family are kept in the business on a long-term basis and are subordinated to the bank (meaning the borrower agrees not to repay them while the bank loan is active), banks classify them as Quasi-Equity (Long Term Source) rather than a Current Liability. This treatment improves the Current Ratio and Net Working Capital.
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Regarding the calculation of Maximum Permissible Bank Finance (MPBF) under the Tandon Committee recommendations:
Method I: The bank lends 75% of the “Working Capital Gap” (Current Assets minus Current Liabilities).Method II: The bank lends 75% of “Total Current Assets” minus Current Liabilities.Method II is more liberal (gives a higher loan amount) than Method I.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Method I: The bank lends 75% of the “Working Capital Gap” (Current Assets minus Current Liabilities).Method II: The bank lends 75% of “Total Current Assets” minus Current Liabilities.Method II is more liberal (gives a higher loan amount) than Method I.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Explanation
Correct: A
Statement 1 (Method I) is Correct: MPBF = 0.75 * (Current Assets – Current Liabilities). Here, the borrower finances 25% of the gap between assets and liabilities. Statement 2 (Method II) is Correct: MPBF = (0.75 * Current Assets) – Current Liabilities. Here, the borrower must finance 25% of the Total Current Assets from long-term sources. Statement 3 is Incorrect: Method II is more conservative (gives a lower loan amount) than Method I because it requires a higher contribution from the borrower. It ensures a Current Ratio of 1.33:1, whereas Method I only ensures a Current Ratio of 1:1.
Statement 1 (Method I) is Correct: MPBF = 0.75 * (Current Assets – Current Liabilities). Here, the borrower finances 25% of the gap between assets and liabilities. Statement 2 (Method II) is Correct: MPBF = (0.75 * Current Assets) – Current Liabilities. Here, the borrower must finance 25% of the Total Current Assets from long-term sources. Statement 3 is Incorrect: Method II is more conservative (gives a lower loan amount) than Method I because it requires a higher contribution from the borrower. It ensures a Current Ratio of 1.33:1, whereas Method I only ensures a Current Ratio of 1:1.
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Identify the INCORRECT statement regarding “Assignment” as a mode of creating a charge:
Explanation
Correct: D
Option D is Incorrect: Assignment deals with Intangible Assets (Actionable Claims) like rights to receive money (Life Insurance maturity, payments from government). Since these are not physical goods, “physical delivery of goods” is impossible. Notice: Giving notice to the debtor (e.g., the Insurance Company or the Government Department) is crucial under Section 130 of the Transfer of Property Act to prevent them from paying the original creditor. Pledge, in contrast, requires the physical or constructive delivery of goods.
Option D is Incorrect: Assignment deals with Intangible Assets (Actionable Claims) like rights to receive money (Life Insurance maturity, payments from government). Since these are not physical goods, “physical delivery of goods” is impossible. Notice: Giving notice to the debtor (e.g., the Insurance Company or the Government Department) is crucial under Section 130 of the Transfer of Property Act to prevent them from paying the original creditor. Pledge, in contrast, requires the physical or constructive delivery of goods.
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Consider the following statements regarding liquidity ratios:
Assertion (A):
Bankers often calculate the “Quick Ratio” (Acid Test Ratio) in addition to the Current Ratio to assess immediate liquidity.Reason (R):
The Current Ratio includes Inventory (Stock), which may not be easily convertible into cash, whereas the Quick Ratio excludes Inventory and Prepaid Expenses.
Explanation
Correct: A
Logic: Current Ratio: Current Assets / Current Liabilities. It assumes all current assets (including slow-moving stock) can pay off liabilities. Reason (R): Inventory is often the least liquid current asset. It must first be sold (converted to receivables) and then collected (converted to cash). Assertion (A): Therefore, to test immediate solvency (ability to pay bills today), bankers use the Quick Ratio: (Current Assets – Inventory – Prepaid Expenses) / Current Liabilities. This provides a stricter “Acid Test” of liquidity.
Logic: Current Ratio: Current Assets / Current Liabilities. It assumes all current assets (including slow-moving stock) can pay off liabilities. Reason (R): Inventory is often the least liquid current asset. It must first be sold (converted to receivables) and then collected (converted to cash). Assertion (A): Therefore, to test immediate solvency (ability to pay bills today), bankers use the Quick Ratio: (Current Assets – Inventory – Prepaid Expenses) / Current Liabilities. This provides a stricter “Acid Test” of liquidity.
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Scenario: A borrower has the following stock position: Total Stock Value: ₹100 Lakhs Sundry Creditors (unpaid stock): ₹20 Lakhs Bank Margin stipulated: 25% Calculate the Drawing Power (DP) available to the borrower.
Explanation
Correct: A
Concept: Drawing Power (DP) is calculated only on the Paid-up value of stock. Bank funds should not be used to finance stock that is already financed by creditors (suppliers). Calculation Step-by-Step: 1. Calculate Paid-Up Stock: Total Stock – Sundry Creditors = Paid-Up Stock. 100 – 20 = ₹80 Lakhs. 2. Deduct Margin: The bank lends against the Paid-Up Stock less the margin. Margin = 25% of 80 = ₹20 Lakhs. 3. Final Drawing Power: DP = Paid-Up Stock – Margin. 80 – 20 = ₹60 Lakhs. (Alternatively: DP = 75% of Paid-Up Stock = 0.75 * 80 = 60)
Concept: Drawing Power (DP) is calculated only on the Paid-up value of stock. Bank funds should not be used to finance stock that is already financed by creditors (suppliers). Calculation Step-by-Step: 1. Calculate Paid-Up Stock: Total Stock – Sundry Creditors = Paid-Up Stock. 100 – 20 = ₹80 Lakhs. 2. Deduct Margin: The bank lends against the Paid-Up Stock less the margin. Margin = 25% of 80 = ₹20 Lakhs. 3. Final Drawing Power: DP = Paid-Up Stock – Margin. 80 – 20 = ₹60 Lakhs. (Alternatively: DP = 75% of Paid-Up Stock = 0.75 * 80 = 60)
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Scenario: A company has a Term Loan from Bank A secured by a First Charge on Plant and Machinery. Later, the company takes a Working Capital loan from Bank B. Bank B wants a charge on the same Plant and Machinery as collateral security. What type of charge can Bank B hold on the Plant and Machinery?
Explanation
Correct: B
Second Charge: Since Bank A already holds the First Charge (priority right to sell the asset and recover dues), Bank B can only hold a Second Charge unless Bank A agrees to share the charge. Implication: In the event of liquidation or sale of the asset to recover dues, Bank A gets paid first. Bank B receives money only if there is a surplus left after fully satisfying Bank A’s dues. Pari-Passu Charge: This would mean Bank A and Bank B share equal rights in proportion to their debt. This requires Bank A’s explicit consent (Ceding of charge), which is not the default position in this scenario.
Second Charge: Since Bank A already holds the First Charge (priority right to sell the asset and recover dues), Bank B can only hold a Second Charge unless Bank A agrees to share the charge. Implication: In the event of liquidation or sale of the asset to recover dues, Bank A gets paid first. Bank B receives money only if there is a surplus left after fully satisfying Bank A’s dues. Pari-Passu Charge: This would mean Bank A and Bank B share equal rights in proportion to their debt. This requires Bank A’s explicit consent (Ceding of charge), which is not the default position in this scenario.
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Which of the following statements most accurately defines the primary objective and scope of the SARFAESI Act, 2002?
Explanation
Correct: B
The SARFAESI Act, 2002, was enacted to allow banks and financial institutions to recover their non-performing assets (NPAs) without the intervention of the Court. Core Mechanism: The Act empowers secured creditors to enforce their security interest, meaning they can take possession, manage, or sell the collateral, if the borrower defaults and the account is classified as an NPA. Structural Requirement: The enforcement process typically begins with a demand notice issued under Section 13(2). Historical Context: Prior to SARFAESI, banks had to file civil suits in Debt Recovery Tribunals under the RDDBFI Act, 1993, which was time-consuming. SARFAESI provided the “Self-Help” remedy to speed up recovery.
The SARFAESI Act, 2002, was enacted to allow banks and financial institutions to recover their non-performing assets (NPAs) without the intervention of the Court. Core Mechanism: The Act empowers secured creditors to enforce their security interest, meaning they can take possession, manage, or sell the collateral, if the borrower defaults and the account is classified as an NPA. Structural Requirement: The enforcement process typically begins with a demand notice issued under Section 13(2). Historical Context: Prior to SARFAESI, banks had to file civil suits in Debt Recovery Tribunals under the RDDBFI Act, 1993, which was time-consuming. SARFAESI provided the “Self-Help” remedy to speed up recovery.
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According to the provisions of the SARFAESI Act, 2002, the measures of the Act do NOT apply if the outstanding amount of debt due to the secured creditor is less than which of the following thresholds?
Explanation
Correct: C
The provisions of the SARFAESI Act do not apply if the amount due is less than Rupees 1.00 Lakh. Statutory Reference: Section 31(h) of the SARFAESI Act states that the Act does not apply to any security interest created in financial assets for an amount not exceeding one lakh rupees. Additional Threshold: Furthermore, Section 31(j) specifies that the Act also does not apply if the remaining debt is less than 20% of the principal amount and interest. Both conditions serve to prevent the invoking of harsh enforcement measures for trivial amounts.
The provisions of the SARFAESI Act do not apply if the amount due is less than Rupees 1.00 Lakh. Statutory Reference: Section 31(h) of the SARFAESI Act states that the Act does not apply to any security interest created in financial assets for an amount not exceeding one lakh rupees. Additional Threshold: Furthermore, Section 31(j) specifies that the Act also does not apply if the remaining debt is less than 20% of the principal amount and interest. Both conditions serve to prevent the invoking of harsh enforcement measures for trivial amounts.
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Section 31 of the SARFAESI Act, 2002 explicitly excludes certain types of properties and transactions from the purview of the Act. Which of the following is NOT covered under the SARFAESI Act?
Explanation
Correct: D
Section 31(i) of the SARFAESI Act explicitly states that the provisions of the Act shall not apply to “any security interest created in agricultural land.” Rationale: This exclusion is intended to protect the livelihoods of farmers and prevent the summary seizure of farming land by financial institutions without judicial oversight. Agricultural land recovery generally falls under the purview of state-specific revenue recovery acts or civil courts. Distinction: While residential and commercial properties are fully covered and can be attached or auctioned under SARFAESI, agricultural land remains a strict exception.
Section 31(i) of the SARFAESI Act explicitly states that the provisions of the Act shall not apply to “any security interest created in agricultural land.” Rationale: This exclusion is intended to protect the livelihoods of farmers and prevent the summary seizure of farming land by financial institutions without judicial oversight. Agricultural land recovery generally falls under the purview of state-specific revenue recovery acts or civil courts. Distinction: While residential and commercial properties are fully covered and can be attached or auctioned under SARFAESI, agricultural land remains a strict exception.
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Identify the INCORRECT statement regarding the Central Registry of Securitisation Asset Reconstruction and Security Interest of India, known as CERSAI.
Explanation
Correct: B
Correction: Registration of security interest with CERSAI is mandatory, not optional. Impact of Non-Registration: Section 26D of the SARFAESI Act specifically provides that no secured creditor shall be entitled to exercise the rights of enforcement of securities under Chapter 3 unless the security interest created in its favor has been registered with the Central Registry. Purpose: CERSAI was established to create a public database of encumbrances to prevent the practice of taking multiple loans from different banks using the same property.
Correction: Registration of security interest with CERSAI is mandatory, not optional. Impact of Non-Registration: Section 26D of the SARFAESI Act specifically provides that no secured creditor shall be entitled to exercise the rights of enforcement of securities under Chapter 3 unless the security interest created in its favor has been registered with the Central Registry. Purpose: CERSAI was established to create a public database of encumbrances to prevent the practice of taking multiple loans from different banks using the same property.
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A borrower is aggrieved by the action of a bank taking possession of his commercial shop under Section 13(4) of the SARFAESI Act. He wishes to file an application against this action. Which forum must he approach and within what timeline?
Explanation
Correct: B
Remedy: Under Section 17 of the SARFAESI Act, any person, including the borrower, aggrieved by any of the measures referred to in Section 13(4) taken by the secured creditor may make an application to the Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT) having jurisdiction. Timeline: This application must be made within 45 days from the date on which such measures had been taken. Exclusion of Civil Court: Section 34 of the SARFAESI Act bars the jurisdiction of Civil Courts to entertain any matter which the DRT or DRAT is empowered to determine. Therefore, the remedy lies specifically with the DRT.
Remedy: Under Section 17 of the SARFAESI Act, any person, including the borrower, aggrieved by any of the measures referred to in Section 13(4) taken by the secured creditor may make an application to the Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT) having jurisdiction. Timeline: This application must be made within 45 days from the date on which such measures had been taken. Exclusion of Civil Court: Section 34 of the SARFAESI Act bars the jurisdiction of Civil Courts to entertain any matter which the DRT or DRAT is empowered to determine. Therefore, the remedy lies specifically with the DRT.
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Scenario: ‘Apex Textiles Ltd’ has defaulted on a loan of Rupees 50 Lakhs. The bank issued a Section 13(2) notice on January 1st. Apex Textiles did not reply. On March 5th, the bank took symbolic possession of the factory. Apex Textiles claims the action is illegal because the bank did not approach the DRT before taking possession. Based on the SARFAESI Act, is the borrower’s claim valid?
Explanation
Correct: B
Analysis of Scenario: The borrower’s claim is invalid. Core Principle: The fundamental power of the SARFAESI Act is exactly what creates the exception to the general rule—it allows secured creditors to enforce security interest without the intervention of the court or tribunal. Timeline Check: The notice was issued on Jan 1st. The 60-day period expired around March 2nd. The bank took possession on March 5th, which is legally valid under Section 13(4). Clarification on DM: The District Magistrate’s assistance under Section 14 is sought only if there is resistance to taking physical possession; it is not a prerequisite for issuing the initial notice.
Analysis of Scenario: The borrower’s claim is invalid. Core Principle: The fundamental power of the SARFAESI Act is exactly what creates the exception to the general rule—it allows secured creditors to enforce security interest without the intervention of the court or tribunal. Timeline Check: The notice was issued on Jan 1st. The 60-day period expired around March 2nd. The bank took possession on March 5th, which is legally valid under Section 13(4). Clarification on DM: The District Magistrate’s assistance under Section 14 is sought only if there is resistance to taking physical possession; it is not a prerequisite for issuing the initial notice.
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Which of the following statements best describes the fundamental shift in the Indian insolvency regime introduced by the IBC, 2016, compared to the earlier SICA regime?
Explanation
Correct: B
Core Concept: The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 marked a paradigm shift from “Debtor-in-Possession”, where promoters kept control while delaying payments, to “Creditor-in-Control.” Mechanism: Upon the admission of a Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) application, the powers of the Board of Directors are suspended and vest in the Interim Resolution Professional (IRP). Objective: This ensures that the assets are protected from value erosion by the defaulting management and that the Committee of Creditors drives the resolution process.
Core Concept: The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 marked a paradigm shift from “Debtor-in-Possession”, where promoters kept control while delaying payments, to “Creditor-in-Control.” Mechanism: Upon the admission of a Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) application, the powers of the Board of Directors are suspended and vest in the Interim Resolution Professional (IRP). Objective: This ensures that the assets are protected from value erosion by the defaulting management and that the Committee of Creditors drives the resolution process.
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Section 29A of the IBC renders certain persons ineligible to be Resolution Applicants. Which of the following is NOT a ground for disqualification under Section 29A?
Explanation
Correct: D
Section 29A Intent: This section prevents “backdoor entry” of defaulting promoters buying back their own assets at a discount. Disqualifications: A, B, and C are valid grounds for disqualification. A wilful defaulter, a convict for specific offences, or a person connected to an NPA account held for over one year cannot bid. The Exception: Merely serving as a director is not a disqualification. Section 29A focuses on malfeasance or connection to default, not general board service.
Section 29A Intent: This section prevents “backdoor entry” of defaulting promoters buying back their own assets at a discount. Disqualifications: A, B, and C are valid grounds for disqualification. A wilful defaulter, a convict for specific offences, or a person connected to an NPA account held for over one year cannot bid. The Exception: Merely serving as a director is not a disqualification. Section 29A focuses on malfeasance or connection to default, not general board service.
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Identify the INCORRECT statement regarding the Liquidation Process as per the 2025 amended framework.
Explanation
Correct: B
Correction: Under the 2025 Amendments, the Committee of Creditors (CoC) is empowered to supervise the liquidation process and can replace the Liquidator with a 66% vote. Shift: Previously, the Liquidator was a quasi-judicial authority independent of the CoC. The amendment shifted this to a “Creditor-Driven Liquidation” model. Section 53: Options C and D are correct. Workmen’s dues and Secured Creditors share the 2nd position. Government dues are 5th, subordinate to Unsecured Financial Creditors.
Correction: Under the 2025 Amendments, the Committee of Creditors (CoC) is empowered to supervise the liquidation process and can replace the Liquidator with a 66% vote. Shift: Previously, the Liquidator was a quasi-judicial authority independent of the CoC. The amendment shifted this to a “Creditor-Driven Liquidation” model. Section 53: Options C and D are correct. Workmen’s dues and Secured Creditors share the 2nd position. Government dues are 5th, subordinate to Unsecured Financial Creditors.
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‘TechNova Solutions’, an MSME, is facing financial stress. The promoters want to resolve the debt but wish to retain management control to preserve business continuity. Which mechanism under IBC is most suitable for them?
Explanation
Correct: B
Suitability: PPIRP (Pre-Pack) is the ideal mechanism for this scenario. Key Feature: Unlike CIRP, which is “Creditor-in-Control”, PPIRP is a “Debtor-in-Possession” model. The existing promoters continue to manage the company while a resolution plan is negotiated with creditors. Eligibility: It is available only for MSMEs like TechNova. Efficiency: It is faster and less disruptive to the business than standard CIRP.
Suitability: PPIRP (Pre-Pack) is the ideal mechanism for this scenario. Key Feature: Unlike CIRP, which is “Creditor-in-Control”, PPIRP is a “Debtor-in-Possession” model. The existing promoters continue to manage the company while a resolution plan is negotiated with creditors. Eligibility: It is available only for MSMEs like TechNova. Efficiency: It is faster and less disruptive to the business than standard CIRP.
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Scenario: ‘Skyline Buildtech’ and ‘Skyline Infra’, two separate companies with the same promoters, are developing a township. Homebuyers have allotted units in both. In February 2026, homebuyers filed a single joint Section 7 petition against both companies. The companies challenged this, arguing they are separate legal entities. Based on the Supreme Court judgment in Satinder Singh Bhasin (Feb 2026), is the joint petition maintainable?
Explanation
Correct: B
Case Reference: This is based on the Supreme Court judgment in Satinder Singh Bhasin vs. Col. Gautam Mullick (Decided Feb 2, 2026). Ruling: The Court held that a single Section 7 petition can be maintained against two or more Corporate Debtors if they are intrinsically linked (e.g., same promoters, same project land, inter-corporate deposits, common marketing). Rationale: The strict adherence to separate legal entities would defeat the purpose of resolution in real estate groups where funds and assets are often commingled.
Case Reference: This is based on the Supreme Court judgment in Satinder Singh Bhasin vs. Col. Gautam Mullick (Decided Feb 2, 2026). Ruling: The Court held that a single Section 7 petition can be maintained against two or more Corporate Debtors if they are intrinsically linked (e.g., same promoters, same project land, inter-corporate deposits, common marketing). Rationale: The strict adherence to separate legal entities would defeat the purpose of resolution in real estate groups where funds and assets are often commingled.
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Identify the pair that correctly matches the Scheme with its eligible entry age and premium payment mode:
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Only pair B is correct. Detailed Analysis of Errors: 1. A (PMJJBY): Entry is 18–50, but it is not a one-time payment. It requires an annual renewal premium (₹436). 2. C (APY): Atal Pension Yojana entry age is 18–40 years, not 60. 3. D (PMJDY): While minors (10+) can open accounts, there is no premium for the OD facility itself.
Direct Answer: Only pair B is correct. Detailed Analysis of Errors: 1. A (PMJJBY): Entry is 18–50, but it is not a one-time payment. It requires an annual renewal premium (₹436). 2. C (APY): Atal Pension Yojana entry age is 18–40 years, not 60. 3. D (PMJDY): While minors (10+) can open accounts, there is no premium for the OD facility itself.
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Consider the following statements:
Assertion (A):
An individual holding multiple savings bank accounts can join PMJJBY through all of them to secure a higher insurance cover (e.g., ₹4 Lakh or ₹6 Lakh).Reason (R):
PMJJBY is linked to the Aadhaar number and the bank account, and the rules strictly restrict coverage to one account per person.
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: Assertion A is false; Reason R is true. Concept Definition: PMJJBY restricts coverage to a single life insurance cover of ₹2 Lakh per individual. Structural Breakdown: 1. Single Policy Rule: Even if a person has multiple bank accounts and premiums are deducted from all of them, the maximum claim payable is limited to ₹2 Lakh. 2. Forfeiture: Premiums paid for duplicate accounts are forfeited. Causal Reasoning: R explains why A is false. The Aadhaar-seeding ensures de-duplication of claims at the backend by the insurance company.
Direct Answer: Assertion A is false; Reason R is true. Concept Definition: PMJJBY restricts coverage to a single life insurance cover of ₹2 Lakh per individual. Structural Breakdown: 1. Single Policy Rule: Even if a person has multiple bank accounts and premiums are deducted from all of them, the maximum claim payable is limited to ₹2 Lakh. 2. Forfeiture: Premiums paid for duplicate accounts are forfeited. Causal Reasoning: R explains why A is false. The Aadhaar-seeding ensures de-duplication of claims at the backend by the insurance company.
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Consider the following statements regarding the claim limits and benefits under various Financial Inclusion schemes as of 2026:
Under PMJJBY, the death benefit payable to the nominee is fixed at ₹2 Lakh.Under PMSBY, the compensation for partial permanent disability (such as loss of one eye) is ₹1 Lakh.Under PMJDY, the “Unconditional Overdraft” limit available without stringent conditions is ₹5,000.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Under PMJJBY, the death benefit payable to the nominee is fixed at ₹2 Lakh.Under PMSBY, the compensation for partial permanent disability (such as loss of one eye) is ₹1 Lakh.Under PMJDY, the “Unconditional Overdraft” limit available without stringent conditions is ₹5,000.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Statements 1 and 2 are correct; Statement 3 is incorrect. Concept Definition: Specific Benefit Limits. Structural Breakdown: 1. PMJJBY (Statement 1 is Correct): The death benefit is a flat ₹2 Lakh (₹2,00,000). 2. PMSBY (Statement 2 is Correct): While total disability/death is ₹2 Lakh, partial permanent disability is covered up to ₹1 Lakh (₹1,00,000). 3. PMJDY (Statement 3 is Incorrect): The total Overdraft limit is ₹10,000, but the unconditional portion (requiring no complex underwriting) is capped at ₹2,000, not ₹5,000. Causal Reasoning: The lower unconditional limit protects banks from non-performing assets (NPAs) while still providing immediate micro-liquidity to the poor.
Direct Answer: Statements 1 and 2 are correct; Statement 3 is incorrect. Concept Definition: Specific Benefit Limits. Structural Breakdown: 1. PMJJBY (Statement 1 is Correct): The death benefit is a flat ₹2 Lakh (₹2,00,000). 2. PMSBY (Statement 2 is Correct): While total disability/death is ₹2 Lakh, partial permanent disability is covered up to ₹1 Lakh (₹1,00,000). 3. PMJDY (Statement 3 is Incorrect): The total Overdraft limit is ₹10,000, but the unconditional portion (requiring no complex underwriting) is capped at ₹2,000, not ₹5,000. Causal Reasoning: The lower unconditional limit protects banks from non-performing assets (NPAs) while still providing immediate micro-liquidity to the poor.
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Scenario: Mr. Raj, an APY subscriber, fails to maintain the required balance in his savings account for the monthly contribution auto-debit. The contribution for April 2026 remains unpaid. What is the consequence of this default?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: He must pay the arrears plus a penalty. Concept Definition: Default Charges in APY. Structural Breakdown: 1. Penalty Structure: Banks collect a penalty for delayed contributions based on the contribution amount: ₹1 per month for contribution up to ₹100. …up to ₹10 per month for contributions above ₹1,001. 2. Status: The account is not closed immediately; it is classified as a “default” account. 3. Dormancy Timeline: After 6 months: Account Frozen. After 12 months: Account Deactivated. After 24 months: Account Closed.
Direct Answer: He must pay the arrears plus a penalty. Concept Definition: Default Charges in APY. Structural Breakdown: 1. Penalty Structure: Banks collect a penalty for delayed contributions based on the contribution amount: ₹1 per month for contribution up to ₹100. …up to ₹10 per month for contributions above ₹1,001. 2. Status: The account is not closed immediately; it is classified as a “default” account. 3. Dormancy Timeline: After 6 months: Account Frozen. After 12 months: Account Deactivated. After 24 months: Account Closed.
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Who is the regulatory authority responsible for the administration and supervision of the Atal Pension Yojana (APY)?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: PFRDA is the regulator. Concept Definition: Regulatory Oversight. Structural Breakdown: 1. Role of PFRDA: It administers the National Pension System (NPS) and APY. It appoints the Point of Presence (PoPs) and aggregators. 2. Architecture: The money collected is invested by Pension Funds appointed by PFRDA as per investment guidelines. 3. Claim Settlement: PFRDA ensures the “Guaranteed Pension” promise is kept by the government by managing the gap funding if necessary.
Direct Answer: PFRDA is the regulator. Concept Definition: Regulatory Oversight. Structural Breakdown: 1. Role of PFRDA: It administers the National Pension System (NPS) and APY. It appoints the Point of Presence (PoPs) and aggregators. 2. Architecture: The money collected is invested by Pension Funds appointed by PFRDA as per investment guidelines. 3. Claim Settlement: PFRDA ensures the “Guaranteed Pension” promise is kept by the government by managing the gap funding if necessary.
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The “Stand-Up India” scheme mandates that loans must be provided for setting up a “Greenfield Enterprise.” In the context of this scheme, what does the term “Greenfield Enterprise” strictly imply?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: It refers to the first-time venture of the beneficiary. Concept Definition: Greenfield vs. Brownfield. Structural Breakdown: 1. Greenfield: A new project built from scratch. Under Stand-Up India, it specifically means the applicant is starting a business for the first time. 2. Sector: Initially limited to Manufacturing, Services, and Trading, it now includes Agri-allied activities (like fisheries, dairy, etc.). 3. Exclusion: It does not cover the expansion or modernization of existing businesses (which would be “Brownfield”).
Direct Answer: It refers to the first-time venture of the beneficiary. Concept Definition: Greenfield vs. Brownfield. Structural Breakdown: 1. Greenfield: A new project built from scratch. Under Stand-Up India, it specifically means the applicant is starting a business for the first time. 2. Sector: Initially limited to Manufacturing, Services, and Trading, it now includes Agri-allied activities (like fisheries, dairy, etc.). 3. Exclusion: It does not cover the expansion or modernization of existing businesses (which would be “Brownfield”).
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Which of the following activities is NOT eligible for financing under the Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY)?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Personal loans are not eligible. Concept Definition: Purpose of MUDRA. Structural Breakdown: 1. Income Generation Only: PMMY is strictly for income-generating activities in the non-corporate, non-farm sector. 2. Inclusions: Manufacturing, Trading, Services, and Activities Allied to Agriculture. 3. Exclusions: Personal loans (consumption), educational loans, and housing loans are excluded because they do not directly create business assets or employment in the MUDRA context.
Direct Answer: Personal loans are not eligible. Concept Definition: Purpose of MUDRA. Structural Breakdown: 1. Income Generation Only: PMMY is strictly for income-generating activities in the non-corporate, non-farm sector. 2. Inclusions: Manufacturing, Trading, Services, and Activities Allied to Agriculture. 3. Exclusions: Personal loans (consumption), educational loans, and housing loans are excluded because they do not directly create business assets or employment in the MUDRA context.
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Consider the following statements regarding the “Margin Money” requirements under the Stand-Up India Scheme:
The scheme envisages a margin money requirement of up to 15% of the project cost.The borrower is required to bring in a minimum of 10% of the project cost as their own contribution.The remaining margin money (gap) can be provided through convergence with other Central or State Government schemes.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
The scheme envisages a margin money requirement of up to 15% of the project cost.The borrower is required to bring in a minimum of 10% of the project cost as their own contribution.The remaining margin money (gap) can be provided through convergence with other Central or State Government schemes.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: All statements (1, 2, and 3) are correct. Concept Definition: Margin Money (Borrower’s Equity). Structural Breakdown: 1. Revised Norms: Originally, the margin was 25%. It was reduced to 15% (Budget 2021) to make it easier for SC/ST and Women entrepreneurs. 2. Own Contribution: The borrower must pay at least 10% from their own pocket. 3. Convergence: If the scheme requires 15% margin and the borrower pays 10%, the remaining 5% can come from state subsidies or other support schemes.
Direct Answer: All statements (1, 2, and 3) are correct. Concept Definition: Margin Money (Borrower’s Equity). Structural Breakdown: 1. Revised Norms: Originally, the margin was 25%. It was reduced to 15% (Budget 2021) to make it easier for SC/ST and Women entrepreneurs. 2. Own Contribution: The borrower must pay at least 10% from their own pocket. 3. Convergence: If the scheme requires 15% margin and the borrower pays 10%, the remaining 5% can come from state subsidies or other support schemes.
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To be eligible for the “Tarun Plus” loan category (loans between ₹10 Lakh and ₹20 Lakh) under MUDRA, a borrower must satisfy a specific condition. Which of the following is that condition?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: Successful repayment of a previous Tarun loan is mandatory. Concept Definition: Graduation Logic. Structural Breakdown: 1. Rationale: The “Tarun Plus” category is a reward for good credit behavior and business growth. It is not open to a fresh borrower directly (who would typically start at Shishu or Kishore). 2. Guarantee: These loans are covered under the Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units (CGFMU).
Direct Answer: Successful repayment of a previous Tarun loan is mandatory. Concept Definition: Graduation Logic. Structural Breakdown: 1. Rationale: The “Tarun Plus” category is a reward for good credit behavior and business growth. It is not open to a fresh borrower directly (who would typically start at Shishu or Kishore). 2. Guarantee: These loans are covered under the Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units (CGFMU).
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Match the Loan Schemes in List I with their correct financial limits in List II.
List I (Scheme)
I. MUDRA Shishu
II. MUDRA Kishore
III. MUDRA Tarun
IV. Stand-Up IndiaList II (Loan Limit)₹50,001 to ₹5 Lakh₹10 Lakh to ₹1 CroreUp to ₹50,000₹5 Lakh to ₹10 LakhSelect the correct matching code:
List I (Scheme)
I. MUDRA Shishu
II. MUDRA Kishore
III. MUDRA Tarun
IV. Stand-Up IndiaList II (Loan Limit)₹50,001 to ₹5 Lakh₹10 Lakh to ₹1 CroreUp to ₹50,000₹5 Lakh to ₹10 LakhSelect the correct matching code:
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Option A is the correct match. Structural Breakdown: 1. I matches 3: Shishu is the entry level (Up to ₹50,000). 2. II matches 1: Kishore is the mid-level (₹50,001 to ₹5 Lakh). 3. III matches 4: Tarun is the established level (₹5 Lakh to ₹10 Lakh). 4. IV matches 2: Stand-Up India caters to larger greenfield projects (₹10 Lakh to ₹1 Crore).
Direct Answer: Option A is the correct match. Structural Breakdown: 1. I matches 3: Shishu is the entry level (Up to ₹50,000). 2. II matches 1: Kishore is the mid-level (₹50,001 to ₹5 Lakh). 3. III matches 4: Tarun is the established level (₹5 Lakh to ₹10 Lakh). 4. IV matches 2: Stand-Up India caters to larger greenfield projects (₹10 Lakh to ₹1 Crore).
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Consider the following statements:
Assertion (A):
Banks cannot insist on collateral security for loans sanctioned under the Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) up to ₹10 Lakh.Reason (R):
All eligible MUDRA loans are covered under the Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units (CGFMU), which reimburses the bank in case of default.
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R explains A. Concept Definition: Collateral-Free Lending. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: RBI guidelines mandate that no collateral is required for MSME loans up to ₹10 Lakh. 2. The Enabler: Banks are comfortable taking this risk because the CGFMU (managed by NCGTC) acts as the silent guarantor. 3. Causal Link: Without the CGFMU guarantee mechanism (R), banks would not be able to offer collateral-free loans (A) to high-risk micro borrowers.
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R explains A. Concept Definition: Collateral-Free Lending. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: RBI guidelines mandate that no collateral is required for MSME loans up to ₹10 Lakh. 2. The Enabler: Banks are comfortable taking this risk because the CGFMU (managed by NCGTC) acts as the silent guarantor. 3. Causal Link: Without the CGFMU guarantee mechanism (R), banks would not be able to offer collateral-free loans (A) to high-risk micro borrowers.
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Scenario: Mr. Sharma (General Category, Male) and Ms. Anjali (General Category, Female) both approach a bank branch to apply for a Stand-Up India loan of ₹25 Lakh to start a new textile business. Neither has any prior business experience. Who is eligible for the loan under this scheme?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: Only Ms. Anjali is eligible. Concept Definition: Beneficiary Targeting. Structural Breakdown: 1. Stand-Up India Mandate: Every bank branch must lend to at least one SC/ST borrower AND at least one Woman borrower. 2. Woman Borrower: Women of all categories (General, OBC, SC, ST) are eligible. 3. Male Borrower: A male borrower is eligible ONLY if he belongs to the SC or ST category. 4. Conclusion: Mr. Sharma (General Male) is excluded. Ms. Anjali (General Female) is included.
Direct Answer: Only Ms. Anjali is eligible. Concept Definition: Beneficiary Targeting. Structural Breakdown: 1. Stand-Up India Mandate: Every bank branch must lend to at least one SC/ST borrower AND at least one Woman borrower. 2. Woman Borrower: Women of all categories (General, OBC, SC, ST) are eligible. 3. Male Borrower: A male borrower is eligible ONLY if he belongs to the SC or ST category. 4. Conclusion: Mr. Sharma (General Male) is excluded. Ms. Anjali (General Female) is included.
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Which of the following agencies acts as the single national-level “Nodal Agency” for the implementation of the Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme (PMEGP)?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: KVIC is the Nodal Agency. Concept Definition: PMEGP Administration. Structural Breakdown: 1. National Level: KVIC (under the Ministry of MSME) is the sole Nodal Agency responsible for policy formulation and fund routing. 2. Implementation: KVIC routes the government subsidy (Margin Money) through designated nodal banks directly to the beneficiary’s account. 3. State Level Execution: While KVIC is the nodal agency, the scheme is implemented on the ground by State KVIC Directorates, State Khadi and Village Industries Boards (KVIBs), District Industries Centres (DICs), and Coir Board.
Direct Answer: KVIC is the Nodal Agency. Concept Definition: PMEGP Administration. Structural Breakdown: 1. National Level: KVIC (under the Ministry of MSME) is the sole Nodal Agency responsible for policy formulation and fund routing. 2. Implementation: KVIC routes the government subsidy (Margin Money) through designated nodal banks directly to the beneficiary’s account. 3. State Level Execution: While KVIC is the nodal agency, the scheme is implemented on the ground by State KVIC Directorates, State Khadi and Village Industries Boards (KVIBs), District Industries Centres (DICs), and Coir Board.
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As per the current PMEGP guidelines (valid in 2026), what are the maximum admissible project costs for setting up a new enterprise in the Manufacturing and Service sectors respectively?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Manufacturing ₹50 Lakh; Service ₹20 Lakh. Concept Definition: Project Cost Ceilings. Structural Breakdown: 1. Manufacturing Sector: The limit was enhanced from ₹25 Lakh to ₹50 Lakh to account for inflation and technology costs. 2. Service/Business Sector: The limit was enhanced from ₹10 Lakh to ₹20 Lakh. 3. Significance: If a project cost exceeds these limits, the remaining amount must be funded by the bank without any government subsidy component. The subsidy is calculated only up to these caps.
Direct Answer: Manufacturing ₹50 Lakh; Service ₹20 Lakh. Concept Definition: Project Cost Ceilings. Structural Breakdown: 1. Manufacturing Sector: The limit was enhanced from ₹25 Lakh to ₹50 Lakh to account for inflation and technology costs. 2. Service/Business Sector: The limit was enhanced from ₹10 Lakh to ₹20 Lakh. 3. Significance: If a project cost exceeds these limits, the remaining amount must be funded by the bank without any government subsidy component. The subsidy is calculated only up to these caps.
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Scenario: Ms. Geeta, an aspiring entrepreneur from a Rural area belonging to the SC category, applies for a PMEGP loan to start a pottery unit. The total project cost is ₹10 Lakh. What is the Rate of Subsidy (Margin Money) she is eligible to receive from the government?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: She is eligible for a 35% subsidy. Concept Definition: Subsidy Calculation Matrix. Structural Breakdown: 1. Beneficiary Category: Special Category (includes SC, ST, OBC, Women, Minorities, Ex-Servicemen, NER). Ms. Geeta falls under Special Category. 2. Location: Rural Area. 3. The Matrix: General Category + Urban Area = 15% Subsidy. General Category + Rural Area = 25% Subsidy. Special Category + Urban Area = 25% Subsidy. Special Category + Rural Area = 35% Subsidy (This is the highest slab).
Direct Answer: She is eligible for a 35% subsidy. Concept Definition: Subsidy Calculation Matrix. Structural Breakdown: 1. Beneficiary Category: Special Category (includes SC, ST, OBC, Women, Minorities, Ex-Servicemen, NER). Ms. Geeta falls under Special Category. 2. Location: Rural Area. 3. The Matrix: General Category + Urban Area = 15% Subsidy. General Category + Rural Area = 25% Subsidy. Special Category + Urban Area = 25% Subsidy. Special Category + Rural Area = 35% Subsidy (This is the highest slab).
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Consider the following statements regarding the “Own Contribution” (Beneficiary’s Share) required under PMEGP:
Beneficiaries under the General Category must contribute 10% of the project cost from their own sources.Beneficiaries under the Special Category (including SC/ST/Women) must contribute only 5% of the project cost.The own contribution must be deposited after the sanction of the loan but before the release of the first installment.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Beneficiaries under the General Category must contribute 10% of the project cost from their own sources.Beneficiaries under the Special Category (including SC/ST/Women) must contribute only 5% of the project cost.The own contribution must be deposited after the sanction of the loan but before the release of the first installment.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Explanation
Correct: D
Direct Answer: All statements are correct. Concept Definition: Promoter’s Contribution (Margin). Structural Breakdown: 1. General Category: Must bear 10% of the project risk. 2. Special Category: Must bear only 5% of the project risk. 3. Process: Banks sanction 90-95% of the project cost. The beneficiary deposits their share (margin) at the bank, which triggers the release of the loan and the subsequent claim for the government subsidy.
Direct Answer: All statements are correct. Concept Definition: Promoter’s Contribution (Margin). Structural Breakdown: 1. General Category: Must bear 10% of the project risk. 2. Special Category: Must bear only 5% of the project risk. 3. Process: Banks sanction 90-95% of the project cost. The beneficiary deposits their share (margin) at the bank, which triggers the release of the loan and the subsequent claim for the government subsidy.
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Under the Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana – National Rural Livelihoods Mission (DAY-NRLM), what is the limit for collateral-free loans provided to Self Help Groups (SHGs) as per the latest RBI Master Circular (2025-26)?
Explanation
Correct: B
Direct Answer: Up to ₹20 Lakh. Concept Definition: Collateral-Free Lending to SHGs. Structural Breakdown: 1. Up to ₹10 Lakh: No collateral and no margin is to be charged. 2. ₹10 Lakh to ₹20 Lakh: No collateral is to be charged. A margin not exceeding 10% may be taken on the loan amount exceeding ₹10 Lakh. 3. Guarantee Cover: The entire loan amount (up to ₹20 Lakh) is eligible for coverage under the Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units (CGFMU).
Direct Answer: Up to ₹20 Lakh. Concept Definition: Collateral-Free Lending to SHGs. Structural Breakdown: 1. Up to ₹10 Lakh: No collateral and no margin is to be charged. 2. ₹10 Lakh to ₹20 Lakh: No collateral is to be charged. A margin not exceeding 10% may be taken on the loan amount exceeding ₹10 Lakh. 3. Guarantee Cover: The entire loan amount (up to ₹20 Lakh) is eligible for coverage under the Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units (CGFMU).
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The DAY-NRLM provides an Interest Subvention Scheme for Women SHGs. Which of the following statements correctly describes the effective interest rate for prompt payees in 2026?
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Effective rate is 4% for prompt repayment on loans up to ₹3 Lakh. Concept Definition: Interest Subvention Scheme (ISS). Structural Breakdown: 1. Base Subvention: Banks lend to Women SHGs at 7% per annum for loans up to ₹3 Lakh. 2. Prompt Repayment Incentive (PRI): If the SHG repays on time, an additional subvention of 3% is provided. 3. Net Rate: 7% (Base) – 3% (Incentive) = 4% effective interest rate for the borrower.
Direct Answer: Effective rate is 4% for prompt repayment on loans up to ₹3 Lakh. Concept Definition: Interest Subvention Scheme (ISS). Structural Breakdown: 1. Base Subvention: Banks lend to Women SHGs at 7% per annum for loans up to ₹3 Lakh. 2. Prompt Repayment Incentive (PRI): If the SHG repays on time, an additional subvention of 3% is provided. 3. Net Rate: 7% (Base) – 3% (Incentive) = 4% effective interest rate for the borrower.
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Consider the following statements regarding the PMEGP Subsidy Lock-in:
Assertion (A):
The Margin Money (Subsidy) released by KVIC is kept in a separate Term Deposit Receipt (TDR) in the name of the beneficiary for a lock-in period of 3 years.Reason (R):
This lock-in period ensures that the unit remains functional and the loan is not merely adjusted against the subsidy immediately, preventing “fly-by-night” operators.
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R explains A. Concept Definition: Subsidy Adjustment Mechanism. Structural Breakdown: 1. Mechanism: The subsidy is not given to the borrower as cash. It is held by the bank in a Term Deposit Receipt (TDR). 2. Interest: No interest is paid on this TDR, and no interest is charged on the loan amount equal to the TDR. 3. Adjustment: Only after successful physical verification of the unit after 3 years, the TDR is liquidated and adjusted against the loan principal.
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R explains A. Concept Definition: Subsidy Adjustment Mechanism. Structural Breakdown: 1. Mechanism: The subsidy is not given to the borrower as cash. It is held by the bank in a Term Deposit Receipt (TDR). 2. Interest: No interest is paid on this TDR, and no interest is charged on the loan amount equal to the TDR. 3. Adjustment: Only after successful physical verification of the unit after 3 years, the TDR is liquidated and adjusted against the loan principal.
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Scenario: Mr. Raj wants to set up a manufacturing unit under PMEGP with a total project cost of ₹15 Lakh. He has completed his education only up to the 5th standard. Is he eligible for the loan under the PMEGP guidelines?
Explanation
Correct: C
Direct Answer: He is not eligible due to the educational constraint. Concept Definition: Educational Eligibility Criteria. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: Educational qualification (Minimum VIII Standard Pass) is mandatory for: Manufacturing Sector projects costing above ₹10 Lakh. Service/Business Sector projects costing above ₹5 Lakh. 2. Mr. Raj’s Case: His project is ₹15 Lakh (Manufacturing), which exceeds the ₹10 Lakh threshold. Since he is only 5th pass (not 8th pass), he is ineligible for this amount. He must reduce the project size to below ₹10 Lakh to be eligible.
Direct Answer: He is not eligible due to the educational constraint. Concept Definition: Educational Eligibility Criteria. Structural Breakdown: 1. The Rule: Educational qualification (Minimum VIII Standard Pass) is mandatory for: Manufacturing Sector projects costing above ₹10 Lakh. Service/Business Sector projects costing above ₹5 Lakh. 2. Mr. Raj’s Case: His project is ₹15 Lakh (Manufacturing), which exceeds the ₹10 Lakh threshold. Since he is only 5th pass (not 8th pass), he is ineligible for this amount. He must reduce the project size to below ₹10 Lakh to be eligible.
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Consider the following statements regarding the Atal Pension Yojana (APY):
Assertion (A):
A 18-year-old joining APY for a ₹5,000 pension will pay a much lower monthly contribution compared to a 35-year-old joining for the same pension amount.Reason (R):
The 18-year-old has a longer “accumulation phase” (42 years) to build the corpus, allowing the compound interest to work effectively, whereas the 35-year-old has a shorter duration (25 years) to reach the same target corpus.
Explanation
Correct: A
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R is the correct explanation. Concept Definition: Time Value of Money in Pension Planning. Structural Breakdown: 1. Mechanism: APY contributions are actuarially calculated. 2. Example: An 18-year-old might pay approx ₹210/month for a ₹5,000 pension, while a 39-year-old might pay over ₹1,300/month for the same benefit. 3. Logic: The longer the investment horizon, the smaller the required monthly outflow to hit the target corpus needed to sustain the pension at age 60.
Direct Answer: Both are true, and R is the correct explanation. Concept Definition: Time Value of Money in Pension Planning. Structural Breakdown: 1. Mechanism: APY contributions are actuarially calculated. 2. Example: An 18-year-old might pay approx ₹210/month for a ₹5,000 pension, while a 39-year-old might pay over ₹1,300/month for the same benefit. 3. Logic: The longer the investment horizon, the smaller the required monthly outflow to hit the target corpus needed to sustain the pension at age 60.
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According to the Union Budget 2026-27, what is the revised Fiscal Deficit target set for the financial year 2026-27, expressed as a percentage of GDP?
Explanation
Correct: B
The Fiscal Deficit target for FY 2026-27 is set at 4.3% of GDP. Fiscal Deficit is the gap between the government’s total expenditure and its total revenue (excluding borrowings), indicating the total borrowing requirement of the government for that year. The government has been following a fiscal consolidation path to bring the deficit below 4.5%. The Revised Estimate (RE) for the previous year (FY 2025-26) was 4.4%. The target of 4.3% for FY27 signals a continued commitment to fiscal discipline while maintaining high capital expenditure. A lower deficit reduces the government’s borrowing from the market, leaving more liquidity available for the private sector (preventing the “Crowding Out” effect).
The Fiscal Deficit target for FY 2026-27 is set at 4.3% of GDP. Fiscal Deficit is the gap between the government’s total expenditure and its total revenue (excluding borrowings), indicating the total borrowing requirement of the government for that year. The government has been following a fiscal consolidation path to bring the deficit below 4.5%. The Revised Estimate (RE) for the previous year (FY 2025-26) was 4.4%. The target of 4.3% for FY27 signals a continued commitment to fiscal discipline while maintaining high capital expenditure. A lower deficit reduces the government’s borrowing from the market, leaving more liquidity available for the private sector (preventing the “Crowding Out” effect).
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The Union Budget 2026-27 announced the formation of a “High-Level Committee on Banking” (HLC-B). What is the specific mandate of this committee as stated in the budget speech?
Explanation
Correct: B
The committee is tasked with a comprehensive review of the banking sector to align it with India’s future growth (“Viksit Bharat”). The “High-Level Committee on Banking” is an expert body proposed to update the regulatory architecture of the financial sector. The Finance Minister noted that the banking sector has reached historic highs in profitability and asset quality. The committee will now look at “Next Gen” reforms, including reviewing the Banking Regulation Act and RBI Act to support digital banking, enhance consumer protection, and ensure the sector can fund the massive investment needs of a developed economy.
The committee is tasked with a comprehensive review of the banking sector to align it with India’s future growth (“Viksit Bharat”). The “High-Level Committee on Banking” is an expert body proposed to update the regulatory architecture of the financial sector. The Finance Minister noted that the banking sector has reached historic highs in profitability and asset quality. The committee will now look at “Next Gen” reforms, including reviewing the Banking Regulation Act and RBI Act to support digital banking, enhance consumer protection, and ensure the sector can fund the massive investment needs of a developed economy.
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To boost the “Municipal Bond” market, the Budget 2026-27 introduced a specific monetary incentive. Which of the following accurately describes this incentive?
Explanation
Correct: B
The government offers a ₹100 Crore incentive for single bond issuances exceeding ₹1,000 Crore. Municipal Bonds (“Munis”) are debt instruments issued by civic bodies (Municipal Corporations) to fund urban infrastructure like water supply, sewage, and roads. Historically, municipal bond issuances in India have been small and sporadic. This high-value threshold (>₹1,000 Cr) is designed to encourage large cities (like Mumbai, Pune, Bengaluru) to tap the market for substantial projects rather than relying solely on state grants. The existing incentive for smaller issuances (up to ₹200 Cr) under the AMRUT scheme continues for smaller towns.
The government offers a ₹100 Crore incentive for single bond issuances exceeding ₹1,000 Crore. Municipal Bonds (“Munis”) are debt instruments issued by civic bodies (Municipal Corporations) to fund urban infrastructure like water supply, sewage, and roads. Historically, municipal bond issuances in India have been small and sporadic. This high-value threshold (>₹1,000 Cr) is designed to encourage large cities (like Mumbai, Pune, Bengaluru) to tap the market for substantial projects rather than relying solely on state grants. The existing incentive for smaller issuances (up to ₹200 Cr) under the AMRUT scheme continues for smaller towns.
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The Budget 2026-27 proposed a significant change to the Foreign Exchange Management (Non-debt Instruments) Rules regarding “Persons Resident Outside India” (PROI). What is the new investment limit for an individual PROI in the equity capital of a listed Indian company?
Explanation
Correct: A
The individual investment limit for a PROI has been increased from 5% to 10%. PROI (Person Resident Outside India) refers to foreign individuals (including NRIs/OCIs) investing in Indian markets. Under the previous Portfolio Investment Scheme (PIS), a single PROI could hold only up to 5% of the paid-up capital of a listed company. To attract more foreign retail and family office capital, this individual cap is raised to 10%. The budget also proposed increasing the aggregate limit (total holding by all PROIs in a company) from the default 10% to 24%, further easing foreign capital inflows.
The individual investment limit for a PROI has been increased from 5% to 10%. PROI (Person Resident Outside India) refers to foreign individuals (including NRIs/OCIs) investing in Indian markets. Under the previous Portfolio Investment Scheme (PIS), a single PROI could hold only up to 5% of the paid-up capital of a listed company. To attract more foreign retail and family office capital, this individual cap is raised to 10%. The budget also proposed increasing the aggregate limit (total holding by all PROIs in a company) from the default 10% to 24%, further easing foreign capital inflows.
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To support the growth of “High-Potential” MSMEs, the Budget 2026-27 announced the creation of a dedicated “SME Growth Fund.” What is the total corpus of this fund?
Explanation
Correct: B
The corpus of the SME Growth Fund is ₹10,000 Crore. This is an equity-based fund designed to help “Champion MSMEs” scale up. Unlike traditional loan schemes (like Mudra), this fund provides equity/risk capital. It operates typically as a “Fund of Funds,” investing through SEBI-registered Venture Capital (VC) funds. It targets MSMEs that have moved beyond the survival stage and are ready for rapid expansion but lack the collateral for huge bank loans or the size for an IPO.
The corpus of the SME Growth Fund is ₹10,000 Crore. This is an equity-based fund designed to help “Champion MSMEs” scale up. Unlike traditional loan schemes (like Mudra), this fund provides equity/risk capital. It operates typically as a “Fund of Funds,” investing through SEBI-registered Venture Capital (VC) funds. It targets MSMEs that have moved beyond the survival stage and are ready for rapid expansion but lack the collateral for huge bank loans or the size for an IPO.
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The Budget 2026-27 highlighted the success of the “Credit Assessment Model” (CAM) for Public Sector Banks (PSBs). This new model primarily relies on which type of data for sanctioning MSME loans?
Explanation
Correct: C
The model uses Digital Footprints (GST, ITR, Bank Statements). This refers to “Cash-Flow Based Lending” rather than “Asset-Based Lending.” It integrates data from the Account Aggregator (AA) framework, GSTN (for sales data), and ITR (for income verification). This allows PSBs to offer “in-principle” sanctions instantly without waiting for physical balance sheets, significantly reducing the Turnaround Time (TAT) for small business loans.
The model uses Digital Footprints (GST, ITR, Bank Statements). This refers to “Cash-Flow Based Lending” rather than “Asset-Based Lending.” It integrates data from the Account Aggregator (AA) framework, GSTN (for sales data), and ITR (for income verification). This allows PSBs to offer “in-principle” sanctions instantly without waiting for physical balance sheets, significantly reducing the Turnaround Time (TAT) for small business loans.
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To deepen the corporate bond market, the Budget 2026-27 proposed the introduction of a “Market Making Framework.” This framework specifically allows access to funds and derivatives on which underlying asset?
Explanation
Correct: A
The framework allows access to funds and derivatives on Corporate Bond Indices. “Market Making” involves designated entities (Market Makers) who provide both buy and sell quotes to ensure liquidity in a market. The secondary market for corporate bonds in India is illiquid (hard to sell bonds quickly). By allowing derivatives (like futures/swaps) on Corporate Bond Indices, the budget enables investors to hedge their risks. This encourages more participants (like mutual funds and insurers) to trade actively, thereby deepening the market and lowering borrowing costs for companies.
The framework allows access to funds and derivatives on Corporate Bond Indices. “Market Making” involves designated entities (Market Makers) who provide both buy and sell quotes to ensure liquidity in a market. The secondary market for corporate bonds in India is illiquid (hard to sell bonds quickly). By allowing derivatives (like futures/swaps) on Corporate Bond Indices, the budget enables investors to hedge their risks. This encourages more participants (like mutual funds and insurers) to trade actively, thereby deepening the market and lowering borrowing costs for companies.
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Under the “Direct Listing Scheme” operationalized by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), which category of Indian companies is currently eligible to list their equity shares exclusively on International Exchanges in GIFT City?
Explanation
Correct: A
Currently, only Unlisted Public Indian Companies are permitted to list directly. The “Direct Listing” framework allows Indian firms to raise foreign capital by listing on exchanges like India INX (GIFT IFSC) without a domestic IPO. Unlisted Public Companies are eligible (Section 23 of Companies Act, 2013 amended). Private Limited Companies (unless they convert to Public), Nidhi Companies, and Section 8 Companies are ineligible. While the government has signaled intent to allow already listed companies to cross-list later, the immediate window is for unlisted public issuers.
Currently, only Unlisted Public Indian Companies are permitted to list directly. The “Direct Listing” framework allows Indian firms to raise foreign capital by listing on exchanges like India INX (GIFT IFSC) without a domestic IPO. Unlisted Public Companies are eligible (Section 23 of Companies Act, 2013 amended). Private Limited Companies (unless they convert to Public), Nidhi Companies, and Section 8 Companies are ineligible. While the government has signaled intent to allow already listed companies to cross-list later, the immediate window is for unlisted public issuers.
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The Budget 2026-27 introduced the concept of “Corporate Mitras.” Who are these “Corporate Mitras” and what is their primary function?
Explanation
Correct: B
“Corporate Mitras” are certified para-professionals assisting with compliance. They are professionals trained by institutes like ICAI, ICSI, and ICMAI. They will specifically operate in Tier-II and Tier-III cities. Small businesses in smaller towns often struggle with the complex “Compliance Burden” (GST filings, MCA filings, etc.). These “Mitras” will provide standardized, affordable services to “formalize” these businesses, making them credit-ready for banks.
“Corporate Mitras” are certified para-professionals assisting with compliance. They are professionals trained by institutes like ICAI, ICSI, and ICMAI. They will specifically operate in Tier-II and Tier-III cities. Small businesses in smaller towns often struggle with the complex “Compliance Burden” (GST filings, MCA filings, etc.). These “Mitras” will provide standardized, affordable services to “formalize” these businesses, making them credit-ready for banks.
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The Finance Minister proposed specific measures to leverage the TReDS platform in Budget
2026. Which of the following is NOT one of those announced measures?
2026. Which of the following is NOT one of those announced measures?
Explanation
Correct: D
Option D is NOT the correct limit. The Budget 2026 proposed reducing the mandatory onboarding threshold for buyers from ₹500 Crore to ₹250 Crore (not ₹50 Crore). The valid announcements include: (A) Central Power Sector companies must settle MSME dues via TReDS; (B) CGTMSE will now cover losses if a buyer defaults, encouraging banks to lend more; and (C) Financiers can now bundle these invoices and sell them as Asset-Backed Securities (ABS) in the secondary market.
Option D is NOT the correct limit. The Budget 2026 proposed reducing the mandatory onboarding threshold for buyers from ₹500 Crore to ₹250 Crore (not ₹50 Crore). The valid announcements include: (A) Central Power Sector companies must settle MSME dues via TReDS; (B) CGTMSE will now cover losses if a buyer defaults, encouraging banks to lend more; and (C) Financiers can now bundle these invoices and sell them as Asset-Backed Securities (ABS) in the secondary market.
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A major structural reform in the Union Budget 2026-27 was the increase in the Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) limit for the Insurance Sector. What is the new FDI cap?
Explanation
Correct: C
The FDI limit in the Insurance sector has been raised to 100%. FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) refers to overseas companies buying stakes in Indian insurers. The limit was raised from 49% to 74% in 2021. The 2026 reform raised it to 100% (Fully open). This enhanced limit is available for companies that invest the entire premium income within India, ensuring the capital supports India’s long-term infrastructure needs (e.g., buying G-Secs or Infra Bonds).
The FDI limit in the Insurance sector has been raised to 100%. FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) refers to overseas companies buying stakes in Indian insurers. The limit was raised from 49% to 74% in 2021. The 2026 reform raised it to 100% (Fully open). This enhanced limit is available for companies that invest the entire premium income within India, ensuring the capital supports India’s long-term infrastructure needs (e.g., buying G-Secs or Infra Bonds).
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To support the agricultural sector, the Union Budget 2026-27 announced an enhancement in the limit for “collateral-free” loans under the Kisan Credit Card (KCC) scheme (Modified Interest Subvention Scheme). What is the new limit?
Explanation
Correct: B
The limit has been enhanced to ₹5 Lakh. Kisan Credit Card (KCC) provides short-term crop loans to farmers at subsidized interest rates. The Interest Subvention (subsidy) was typically applicable up to ₹3 Lakh. To cover rising input costs (fertilizers, seeds), the limit for the Modified Interest Subvention Scheme has been raised to ₹5 Lakh. This means farmers can now access cheap credit (effectively 4% interest if repaid on time) for a larger amount, reducing their dependence on money lenders.
The limit has been enhanced to ₹5 Lakh. Kisan Credit Card (KCC) provides short-term crop loans to farmers at subsidized interest rates. The Interest Subvention (subsidy) was typically applicable up to ₹3 Lakh. To cover rising input costs (fertilizers, seeds), the limit for the Modified Interest Subvention Scheme has been raised to ₹5 Lakh. This means farmers can now access cheap credit (effectively 4% interest if repaid on time) for a larger amount, reducing their dependence on money lenders.
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Scenario: “FinBank Ltd” holds a large portfolio of invoices (receivables) from Power Sector CPSEs on its TReDS platform. To free up capital, it wants to sell these receivables to a Mutual Fund. Under the Budget 2026 reforms, what specific mechanism enables this transaction?
Explanation
Correct: A
The new mechanism is Securitization as ABS. Securitization involves pooling financial assets (like invoices) and selling them as a tradeable security. Previously, financiers on TReDS had to hold the bill until maturity. Now, they can create a “Pass-Through Certificate” (PTC) or ABS backed by these CPSE invoices and sell them in the secondary market. This creates a “Re-discounting” market, massively increasing liquidity for MSME financing.
The new mechanism is Securitization as ABS. Securitization involves pooling financial assets (like invoices) and selling them as a tradeable security. Previously, financiers on TReDS had to hold the bill until maturity. Now, they can create a “Pass-Through Certificate” (PTC) or ABS backed by these CPSE invoices and sell them in the secondary market. This creates a “Re-discounting” market, massively increasing liquidity for MSME financing.
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Which of the following statements regarding the “Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana – Urban
2.0” (PMAY-U
2.0) Interest Subsidy Scheme (ISS) are Correct?
The scheme provides a 4% interest subsidy on the first ₹8 Lakh of the housing loan.The maximum eligible subsidy amount per beneficiary is capped at ₹1.80 Lakh.The Middle Income Group (MIG) category covers households with annual income between ₹12 Lakh and ₹18 Lakh.
2.0” (PMAY-U
2.0) Interest Subsidy Scheme (ISS) are Correct?
The scheme provides a 4% interest subsidy on the first ₹8 Lakh of the housing loan.The maximum eligible subsidy amount per beneficiary is capped at ₹1.80 Lakh.The Middle Income Group (MIG) category covers households with annual income between ₹12 Lakh and ₹18 Lakh.
Explanation
Correct: A
Statement 1 is Correct: PMAY-U 2.0 offers a 4% Interest Subsidy on the initial ₹8 Lakh loan amount. Statement 2 is Correct: The subsidy is calculated as the Net Present Value (NPV) of the interest savings, capped at a maximum of ₹1.80 Lakh. It is released in 5-yearly installments. Statement 3 is Incorrect: Under PMAY-U 2.0, the “Middle Income Group” (MIG) is defined as households with income between ₹6 Lakh and ₹9 Lakh. The previous PMAY 1.0 slabs (which went up to ₹18 Lakh) have been rationalized/discontinued in the new version to focus on the “needy middle class.”
Statement 1 is Correct: PMAY-U 2.0 offers a 4% Interest Subsidy on the initial ₹8 Lakh loan amount. Statement 2 is Correct: The subsidy is calculated as the Net Present Value (NPV) of the interest savings, capped at a maximum of ₹1.80 Lakh. It is released in 5-yearly installments. Statement 3 is Incorrect: Under PMAY-U 2.0, the “Middle Income Group” (MIG) is defined as households with income between ₹6 Lakh and ₹9 Lakh. The previous PMAY 1.0 slabs (which went up to ₹18 Lakh) have been rationalized/discontinued in the new version to focus on the “needy middle class.”
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Under the “PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana” (Rooftop Solar Scheme), the government provides subsidies based on system capacity. Which of the following subsidy slabs is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: D
Option D is INCORRECT. The subsidy is capped at the 3 kW level. For 1 kW, it is ₹30,000. For 2 kW, it is ₹60,000. For 3 kW, it is ₹78,000. For any capacity Above 3 kW, the subsidy remains fixed at ₹78,000. There is no additional subsidy for capacity beyond 3 kW (e.g., a 5 kW system also gets only ₹78,000). This scheme aims to provide free electricity (up to 300 units) to 1 crore households.
Option D is INCORRECT. The subsidy is capped at the 3 kW level. For 1 kW, it is ₹30,000. For 2 kW, it is ₹60,000. For 3 kW, it is ₹78,000. For any capacity Above 3 kW, the subsidy remains fixed at ₹78,000. There is no additional subsidy for capacity beyond 3 kW (e.g., a 5 kW system also gets only ₹78,000). This scheme aims to provide free electricity (up to 300 units) to 1 crore households.
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Regarding the “NPS Vatsalya” scheme introduced to promote financial inclusion for minors, identify the INCORRECT statement.
The account can be opened for any minor citizen of India.The minimum annual contribution required to keep the account active is ₹5,000.Upon attaining 18 years of age, the account seamlessly converts into a regular NPS Tier-1 account.The account is operated by the guardian until the minor becomes a major.
The account can be opened for any minor citizen of India.The minimum annual contribution required to keep the account active is ₹5,000.Upon attaining 18 years of age, the account seamlessly converts into a regular NPS Tier-1 account.The account is operated by the guardian until the minor becomes a major.
Explanation
Correct: B
Statement 2 is INCORRECT. The minimum contribution for NPS Vatsalya is ₹1,000 per annum, NOT ₹5,000. The other statements are correct: it is eligible for any minor (Statement 1), it converts to a standard NPS account at 18 (Statement 3), and the guardian manages it until the child is 18 (Statement 4). The goal is to leverage the power of compounding for retirement planning from childhood.
Statement 2 is INCORRECT. The minimum contribution for NPS Vatsalya is ₹1,000 per annum, NOT ₹5,000. The other statements are correct: it is eligible for any minor (Statement 1), it converts to a standard NPS account at 18 (Statement 3), and the guardian manages it until the child is 18 (Statement 4). The goal is to leverage the power of compounding for retirement planning from childhood.
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To secure the supply chain for EV batteries, the Budget 2026-27 announced specific incentives under the “Critical Mineral Mission.” Which of the following is a key component of this mission?
Explanation
Correct: B
The establishment of “Rare Earth Corridors” is a key component. Critical Minerals (Lithium, Cobalt, Rare Earths) are essential for the green transition. The Budget proposed dedicated corridors in mineral-rich states (Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu) to create an integrated ecosystem for mining, processing, and manufacturing of rare earth magnets. The budget also removed/exempted customs duty on capital goods required for processing these minerals to encourage domestic refining.
The establishment of “Rare Earth Corridors” is a key component. Critical Minerals (Lithium, Cobalt, Rare Earths) are essential for the green transition. The Budget proposed dedicated corridors in mineral-rich states (Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu) to create an integrated ecosystem for mining, processing, and manufacturing of rare earth magnets. The budget also removed/exempted customs duty on capital goods required for processing these minerals to encourage domestic refining.
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Scenario: Mr. Sharma, an urban resident with an annual household income of ₹5 Lakh, wishes to buy his first pucca house. He applies for a loan under PMAY-Urban
2.0. Which category does he fall under, and what is his primary eligibility criterion regarding house ownership?
2.0. Which category does he fall under, and what is his primary eligibility criterion regarding house ownership?
Explanation
Correct: B
He is LIG and must not own any pucca house. Under PMAY classifications, EWS is income up to ₹3 Lakh, LIG is income between ₹3 Lakh and ₹6 Lakh (Mr. Sharma falls here), and MIG is income between ₹6 Lakh and ₹9 Lakh. The core condition for PMAY-Urban (any version) is that the beneficiary family must NOT own a pucca house (an all-weather dwelling unit) anywhere in India in their name.
He is LIG and must not own any pucca house. Under PMAY classifications, EWS is income up to ₹3 Lakh, LIG is income between ₹3 Lakh and ₹6 Lakh (Mr. Sharma falls here), and MIG is income between ₹6 Lakh and ₹9 Lakh. The core condition for PMAY-Urban (any version) is that the beneficiary family must NOT own a pucca house (an all-weather dwelling unit) anywhere in India in their name.
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Consider the following Assertion and Reason regarding Electronic Cheques.
Assertion (A):
An “Electronic Cheque” as defined in Section 6 involves the use of a digital signature (with or without biometrics) and asymmetric crypto system.Reason (R):
A “Truncated Cheque” is legally distinct from an “Electronic Cheque” because the former starts as a physical paper instrument while the latter is born digital.
Explanation
Correct: B
Assertion (A) is True: The definition of “Cheque in the electronic form” (Explanation I-a to Section 6) specifically requires the use of a secure system ensuring the minimum safety standards with the use of digital signature (with or without biometrics) and asymmetric crypto system. Reason (R) is True: There is a legal distinction. A Truncated Cheque is a physical paper cheque that is scanned (truncated) during the clearing cycle. An Electronic Cheque is “born digital”—generated, signed, and transmitted entirely in electronic form from the start. Logic: While both statements are legally correct definitions found in Section 6, the distinction (Reason R) does not explain the technical requirement of crypto systems in Assertion A. They are two parallel concepts defining different types of instruments.
Assertion (A) is True: The definition of “Cheque in the electronic form” (Explanation I-a to Section 6) specifically requires the use of a secure system ensuring the minimum safety standards with the use of digital signature (with or without biometrics) and asymmetric crypto system. Reason (R) is True: There is a legal distinction. A Truncated Cheque is a physical paper cheque that is scanned (truncated) during the clearing cycle. An Electronic Cheque is “born digital”—generated, signed, and transmitted entirely in electronic form from the start. Logic: While both statements are legally correct definitions found in Section 6, the distinction (Reason R) does not explain the technical requirement of crypto systems in Assertion A. They are two parallel concepts defining different types of instruments.
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Which of the following is an example of a “General Crossing”?
Explanation
Correct: B
The distinction lies in Sections 123 and 124 of the NI Act. General Crossing (Sec 123): Requires two parallel transverse lines across the face. It may include words like “and company” or “Not Negotiable,” but it must NOT contain the name of a specific banker. Special Crossing (Sec 124): The essential element is the name of a Banker written across the face of the cheque (with or without parallel lines). Analysis: Options A and C contain bank names (“State Bank of India”, “HDFC Bank”), which automatically makes them Special Crossings. Option B contains only the lines and the permitted words “Not Negotiable” without a bank name, making it the correct example of a General Crossing.
The distinction lies in Sections 123 and 124 of the NI Act. General Crossing (Sec 123): Requires two parallel transverse lines across the face. It may include words like “and company” or “Not Negotiable,” but it must NOT contain the name of a specific banker. Special Crossing (Sec 124): The essential element is the name of a Banker written across the face of the cheque (with or without parallel lines). Analysis: Options A and C contain bank names (“State Bank of India”, “HDFC Bank”), which automatically makes them Special Crossings. Option B contains only the lines and the permitted words “Not Negotiable” without a bank name, making it the correct example of a General Crossing.
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Mr. A endorses a cheque to Mr. B by adding the words “Sans Recourse” to his signature. The cheque is subsequently dishonoured. What is the legal liability of Mr. A in this scenario?
Explanation
Correct: B
This is an application of Section 52, which allows an endorser to exclude their own liability by using the express words “Sans Recourse” (without recourse). By adding this phrase, Mr. A is effectively stating: “I am transferring the property in this cheque to you, but if the drawer fails to pay, you cannot come back to me for recovery.” Mr. B takes the cheque with full knowledge of this limitation. This type of endorsement is valid and legally binding.
This is an application of Section 52, which allows an endorser to exclude their own liability by using the express words “Sans Recourse” (without recourse). By adding this phrase, Mr. A is effectively stating: “I am transferring the property in this cheque to you, but if the drawer fails to pay, you cannot come back to me for recovery.” Mr. B takes the cheque with full knowledge of this limitation. This type of endorsement is valid and legally binding.
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Regarding the territorial jurisdiction for filing a complaint under Section 138 (Dishonour of Cheque), consider the following statements based on Section 142 and recent judgments:
If the cheque is delivered for collection through an account, the complaint must be filed where the branch of the bank where the payee maintains the account is situated.If the cheque is presented otherwise than through an account (over the counter), the complaint must be filed where the branch of the drawer’s bank is situated.Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
If the cheque is delivered for collection through an account, the complaint must be filed where the branch of the bank where the payee maintains the account is situated.If the cheque is presented otherwise than through an account (over the counter), the complaint must be filed where the branch of the drawer’s bank is situated.Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Explanation
Correct: C
The Jurisdiction rules were solidified by the 2015 Amendment to the NI Act, overturning previous confusion. Case 1 (Collection via Account): If the payee deposits the cheque into their own account, the jurisdiction is defined by the location of the Payee’s Bank Branch. (Reaffirmed in Jai Balaji Industries v. M/s HEG Ltd, Nov 2025). Case 2 (Over the Counter): If the payee goes to the drawer’s bank to encash it across the counter, the jurisdiction is the location of the Drawer’s Bank Branch. Both statements accurately reflect the current statute.
The Jurisdiction rules were solidified by the 2015 Amendment to the NI Act, overturning previous confusion. Case 1 (Collection via Account): If the payee deposits the cheque into their own account, the jurisdiction is defined by the location of the Payee’s Bank Branch. (Reaffirmed in Jai Balaji Industries v. M/s HEG Ltd, Nov 2025). Case 2 (Over the Counter): If the payee goes to the drawer’s bank to encash it across the counter, the jurisdiction is the location of the Drawer’s Bank Branch. Both statements accurately reflect the current statute.
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Consider the following regarding the liability of a “Drawee in Case of Need”.
Assertion (A):
The “Drawee in Case of Need” is liable to pay the bill of exchange only after the original drawee has refused to accept or pay the bill.Reason (R):
The name of a “Drawee in Case of Need” is added to a bill of exchange to protect the drawer’s credit or honor in case the original drawee defaults.
Explanation
Correct: A
A “Drawee in Case of Need” (Section 7) is a backup entity named in the bill. The logic (Reason R) is to protect the drawer’s commercial reputation; if the primary drawee dishonours the bill, it is not immediately returned as “unpaid” to the market. Instead, it is presented to the “Case of Need.” Therefore (Assertion A), the liability of this backup drawee only arises upon the default of the original drawee. They cannot be approached first. The reason perfectly explains the procedural hierarchy.
A “Drawee in Case of Need” (Section 7) is a backup entity named in the bill. The logic (Reason R) is to protect the drawer’s commercial reputation; if the primary drawee dishonours the bill, it is not immediately returned as “unpaid” to the market. Instead, it is presented to the “Case of Need.” Therefore (Assertion A), the liability of this backup drawee only arises upon the default of the original drawee. They cannot be approached first. The reason perfectly explains the procedural hierarchy.
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Which of the following specific endorsements converts a “Bearer” instrument into an “Order” instrument?
Endorsement in BlankEndorsement in FullRestrictive EndorsementSelect the correct option:
Endorsement in BlankEndorsement in FullRestrictive EndorsementSelect the correct option:
Explanation
Correct: B
Endorsement in Blank: The endorser signs only their name. This makes the instrument payable to anyone who holds it (Bearer). Endorsement in Full: The endorser signs and adds the direction “Pay to X or Order.” This specific action converts a bearer instrument into an Order instrument. Once endorsed in full, the instrument cannot be negotiated further without the signature of the person named (X). Restrictive Endorsement: This prohibits further negotiation entirely (e.g., “Pay X Only”).
Endorsement in Blank: The endorser signs only their name. This makes the instrument payable to anyone who holds it (Bearer). Endorsement in Full: The endorser signs and adds the direction “Pay to X or Order.” This specific action converts a bearer instrument into an Order instrument. Once endorsed in full, the instrument cannot be negotiated further without the signature of the person named (X). Restrictive Endorsement: This prohibits further negotiation entirely (e.g., “Pay X Only”).
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Scenario: A company issues a cheque signed by its Director, Mr. Sharma. The cheque is dishonoured due to “Insufficient Funds.” The complainant files a case under Section 138 against Mr. Sharma (Director) without making the Company an accused in the complaint. Based on the binding Supreme Court precedent (Aneeta Hada case), is the complaint maintainable against Mr. Sharma?
Explanation
Correct: C
This question tests the application of Section 141 (Offences by Companies). In the landmark judgment Aneeta Hada v. Godfather Travels & Tours (2012), which remains binding in 2026, the Supreme Court ruled that the Company is the Principal Offender. The liability of Directors is “Vicarious” (derivative). One cannot be vicariously liable if the principal offender is not charged. Therefore, arraigning the Company as an accused is a mandatory condition precedent. A complaint against the Director alone is legally defective and not maintainable.
This question tests the application of Section 141 (Offences by Companies). In the landmark judgment Aneeta Hada v. Godfather Travels & Tours (2012), which remains binding in 2026, the Supreme Court ruled that the Company is the Principal Offender. The liability of Directors is “Vicarious” (derivative). One cannot be vicariously liable if the principal offender is not charged. Therefore, arraigning the Company as an accused is a mandatory condition precedent. A complaint against the Director alone is legally defective and not maintainable.
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What is the legal effect of adding the words “Not Negotiable” to a crossing on a cheque under Section 130 of the NI Act?
Explanation
Correct: C
This is a frequent point of confusion. “Not Negotiable” does NOT mean “Not Transferable.” The cheque can still be passed from hand to hand. However, the words strip the cheque of its “Negotiability”—specifically, the “Nemo dat quod non habet” exception. Normally, a Holder in Due Course gets a clean title even if the transferor stole the cheque. But with a “Not Negotiable” crossing, this protection is removed. The transferee gets only the title the transferor had. If the transferor had no title (e.g., a thief), the transferee gets no title.
This is a frequent point of confusion. “Not Negotiable” does NOT mean “Not Transferable.” The cheque can still be passed from hand to hand. However, the words strip the cheque of its “Negotiability”—specifically, the “Nemo dat quod non habet” exception. Normally, a Holder in Due Course gets a clean title even if the transferor stole the cheque. But with a “Not Negotiable” crossing, this protection is removed. The transferee gets only the title the transferor had. If the transferor had no title (e.g., a thief), the transferee gets no title.
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Under Section 85(1), a Paying Banker is discharged from liability if he pays an “Order Cheque” in due course, even if:
Explanation
Correct: B
Section 85(1) provides a crucial shield to the Paying Banker regarding Endorsements. Drawer’s Signature: The banker is expected to know their own customer’s signature. If they pay on a forged drawer’s signature, they are liable (no protection). Payee’s Endorsement: The banker cannot possibly know the signatures of all payees and endorsees in the world. Therefore, the law protects the banker if they pay in good faith on an endorsement that looks regular, even if it turns out to be forged. This is an exception to the general rule that “Forgery conveys no title.”
Section 85(1) provides a crucial shield to the Paying Banker regarding Endorsements. Drawer’s Signature: The banker is expected to know their own customer’s signature. If they pay on a forged drawer’s signature, they are liable (no protection). Payee’s Endorsement: The banker cannot possibly know the signatures of all payees and endorsees in the world. Therefore, the law protects the banker if they pay in good faith on an endorsement that looks regular, even if it turns out to be forged. This is an exception to the general rule that “Forgery conveys no title.”
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Scenario: A cheque is drawn by Mr. X in favor of Mr. Y. A thief steals the cheque, forges Mr. Y’s endorsement, and transfers it to Mr. Z, who takes it for value and in good faith. Mr. Z presents it to the bank. Who is the “Holder in Due Course” in this scenario?
Explanation
Correct: C
This question illustrates the severity of forgery. While a “Not Negotiable” crossing merely limits the title, Forgery (Section 46/general principles) makes the signature a nullity. Since the endorsement of Mr. Y was forged, legally, no negotiation took place. The chain of title was snapped. Even though Mr. Z acted in good faith and paid value, he cannot become a “Holder in Due Course” because he is not even a legal “Holder” (he does not have a valid title). The instrument is void in his hands regarding title.
This question illustrates the severity of forgery. While a “Not Negotiable” crossing merely limits the title, Forgery (Section 46/general principles) makes the signature a nullity. Since the endorsement of Mr. Y was forged, legally, no negotiation took place. The chain of title was snapped. Even though Mr. Z acted in good faith and paid value, he cannot become a “Holder in Due Course” because he is not even a legal “Holder” (he does not have a valid title). The instrument is void in his hands regarding title.
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Consider the following statements regarding Section 89 of the NI Act (Payment of instrument on which alteration is not apparent):
If a material alteration is made efficiently and is not visible to the naked eye (invisible alteration), the paying banker is protected if he pays it in due course.The paying banker is liable to refund the amount even if the alteration was invisible, as the instrument was void.This protection applies to both Promissory Notes and Cheques.Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
If a material alteration is made efficiently and is not visible to the naked eye (invisible alteration), the paying banker is protected if he pays it in due course.The paying banker is liable to refund the amount even if the alteration was invisible, as the instrument was void.This protection applies to both Promissory Notes and Cheques.Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Explanation
Correct: B
Section 89 deals with “invisible” or non-apparent alterations. Statement 1 (Correct): The law protects the payer (banker) against skillful forgeries that cannot be detected with reasonable diligence. If the alteration is not “apparent,” the banker is discharged from liability if they pay according to the “apparent tenor” of the instrument at the time of payment. Statement 2 (Incorrect): Since the banker is protected under Section 89, they are not liable to refund the amount to the true owner or drawer, provided they acted in good faith and without negligence. Statement 3 (Correct): The text of Section 89 explicitly covers “Promissory notes, bills of exchange or cheques,” making the protection applicable across these instruments.
Section 89 deals with “invisible” or non-apparent alterations. Statement 1 (Correct): The law protects the payer (banker) against skillful forgeries that cannot be detected with reasonable diligence. If the alteration is not “apparent,” the banker is discharged from liability if they pay according to the “apparent tenor” of the instrument at the time of payment. Statement 2 (Incorrect): Since the banker is protected under Section 89, they are not liable to refund the amount to the true owner or drawer, provided they acted in good faith and without negligence. Statement 3 (Correct): The text of Section 89 explicitly covers “Promissory notes, bills of exchange or cheques,” making the protection applicable across these instruments.
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Scenario: A branch manager opens a current account for a new customer, Mr. Fraud, accepting only a generic electricity bill as proof of address, without obtaining an officially valid document (OVD) or verifying the identity as per RBI KYC norms. Two days later, Mr. Fraud deposits a stolen crossed cheque of 50 Lakh Rupees into this account. The bank collects the proceeds. It is later found that Mr. Fraud was an imposter. Is the collecting banker protected under Section 131?
Explanation
Correct: C
The protection under Section 131 is strictly conditional on the banker acting “Without Negligence.” The courts and the RBI have established that negligence is not just about the act of collecting the cheque, but extends to the opening of the account. Failure to follow mandatory KYC (Know Your Customer) norms—such as obtaining Officially Valid Documents (OVD) like Aadhaar, Passport, or Voter ID—is considered “Statutory Negligence.” Since the bank failed to verify the customer’s identity properly at the gateway (account opening), they lose the statutory shield of Section 131. Consequently, the bank is liable to the true owner for the wrongful conversion of the funds.
The protection under Section 131 is strictly conditional on the banker acting “Without Negligence.” The courts and the RBI have established that negligence is not just about the act of collecting the cheque, but extends to the opening of the account. Failure to follow mandatory KYC (Know Your Customer) norms—such as obtaining Officially Valid Documents (OVD) like Aadhaar, Passport, or Voter ID—is considered “Statutory Negligence.” Since the bank failed to verify the customer’s identity properly at the gateway (account opening), they lose the statutory shield of Section 131. Consequently, the bank is liable to the true owner for the wrongful conversion of the funds.
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Which of the following statements regarding the “Premature Termination of Term Deposits” in the event of the depositor’s death is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer: B. Banks can charge a penal interest of 1 percent for such premature withdrawal. Concept: Waiver of Penal Charges. The Rule: In the event of a depositor’s death: The Bank CANNOT levy any penal charge for premature withdrawal of a Term Deposit. Policy: Banks must pay the interest applicable for the actual period the deposit ran, without deducting any penalty. This applies even if the original contract had a “No Premature Withdrawal” clause. The rationale is that the withdrawal is due to an unfortunate event (death) and not a commercial decision by the depositor.
Correct Answer: B. Banks can charge a penal interest of 1 percent for such premature withdrawal. Concept: Waiver of Penal Charges. The Rule: In the event of a depositor’s death: The Bank CANNOT levy any penal charge for premature withdrawal of a Term Deposit. Policy: Banks must pay the interest applicable for the actual period the deposit ran, without deducting any penalty. This applies even if the original contract had a “No Premature Withdrawal” clause. The rationale is that the withdrawal is due to an unfortunate event (death) and not a commercial decision by the depositor.
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Consider the following:
Assertion (A):
Payment made by a bank to a Nominee constitutes a full discharge of the bank’s liability, but it does not confer absolute ownership of the funds to the Nominee.Reason (R):
A Nominee receives the funds solely as a Trustee or custodian on behalf of the legal heirs of the deceased depositor.
Explanation
Correct: A
Correct Answer: A. Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. Concept: Nominee as Trustee. Legal Principle: Based on the Supreme Court ruling (Ram Chander Talwar vs. Devender Kumar Talwar). Bank’s View (A): The bank is discharged (freed from liability) once it pays the Nominee. Heir’s View (R): The Nominee is not the “Owner” (unless they are also the sole heir). They hold the money in Trust for the legal heirs. The rightful heirs can claim their share from the Nominee. This distinction prevents the bank from being dragged into succession battles.
Correct Answer: A. Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. Concept: Nominee as Trustee. Legal Principle: Based on the Supreme Court ruling (Ram Chander Talwar vs. Devender Kumar Talwar). Bank’s View (A): The bank is discharged (freed from liability) once it pays the Nominee. Heir’s View (R): The Nominee is not the “Owner” (unless they are also the sole heir). They hold the money in Trust for the legal heirs. The rightful heirs can claim their share from the Nominee. This distinction prevents the bank from being dragged into succession battles.
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Scenario: A customer dies leaving a Savings Account balance of Rupees 4 Lakh. There is no nomination. The deceased has three children. Child A approaches the bank with a “Simple Indemnity Bond” and a “Letter of Disclaimer” from Child B and Child C. The Branch Manager refuses to settle the claim, demanding a Succession Certificate from the Civil Court. Is the Branch Manager’s action correct?
Explanation
Correct: C
Correct Answer: C. No, because the claim is within the simplified settlement threshold. Concept: Application of Simplified Procedure. Analysis: 1. Amount: Rupees 4 Lakh (This is within the standard Rupees 15 Lakh threshold). 2. Documents: Child A provided Indemnity + Disclaimer from other heirs. 3. Verdict: The Bank MUST settle this under the simplified procedure. The RBI has raised the threshold for simplified settlement (without succession certificate) to ₹15 Lakh (for Cooperative Banks it is ₹5 Lakh) in the “Settlement of Claims in respect of Deceased Customers of Banks Directions, 2025”. The previous threshold was ₹5 Lakh.
Correct Answer: C. No, because the claim is within the simplified settlement threshold. Concept: Application of Simplified Procedure. Analysis: 1. Amount: Rupees 4 Lakh (This is within the standard Rupees 15 Lakh threshold). 2. Documents: Child A provided Indemnity + Disclaimer from other heirs. 3. Verdict: The Bank MUST settle this under the simplified procedure. The RBI has raised the threshold for simplified settlement (without succession certificate) to ₹15 Lakh (for Cooperative Banks it is ₹5 Lakh) in the “Settlement of Claims in respect of Deceased Customers of Banks Directions, 2025”. The previous threshold was ₹5 Lakh.
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According to Section 26 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, a deposit account is legally classified as “Unclaimed” and the funds must be transferred to the Depositor Education and Awareness (DEA) Fund if the account has not been operated for a period of how many years?
Explanation
Correct: D
Correct Answer: D. 10 years. Concept: Unclaimed Deposit Definition. The Timeline: Inoperative/Dormant: If not operated for 2 years. (Funds stay with the bank, but are segregated). Unclaimed: If not operated for 10 years. (Funds move to RBI’s DEA Fund). The Action: Banks must transfer the credit balance (plus accrued interest) to the DEA Fund by the end of the month following the completion of the 10-year period. However, the depositor retains the right to claim the money back.
Correct Answer: D. 10 years. Concept: Unclaimed Deposit Definition. The Timeline: Inoperative/Dormant: If not operated for 2 years. (Funds stay with the bank, but are segregated). Unclaimed: If not operated for 10 years. (Funds move to RBI’s DEA Fund). The Action: Banks must transfer the credit balance (plus accrued interest) to the DEA Fund by the end of the month following the completion of the 10-year period. However, the depositor retains the right to claim the money back.
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For an account to remain “Active,” there must be a “Customer Induced Transaction.” Which of the following is considered a valid Customer Induced Transaction under RBI guidelines?
Explanation
Correct: D
Correct Answer: D. Both B and C. Concept: Customer-Induced vs. Bank-Induced Transactions. Rule: To keep an account in Active status, there must be evidence of customer involvement or intent. The transaction may be financial or non-financial, but it must originate from the customer. Customer-induced transactions include submission of Form 15G or 15H, which is an explicit customer action, and auto-renewal of a fixed deposit carried out on the basis of a standing instruction given by the customer at the time of opening the deposit. Bank-induced transactions include credit of interest by the bank or debit of charges and penalties, as these are system-driven and not initiated by the customer. Option analysis: Option A is bank-induced and not valid; Option B is customer-induced; Option C is customer-induced; therefore Option D is the correct answer.
Correct Answer: D. Both B and C. Concept: Customer-Induced vs. Bank-Induced Transactions. Rule: To keep an account in Active status, there must be evidence of customer involvement or intent. The transaction may be financial or non-financial, but it must originate from the customer. Customer-induced transactions include submission of Form 15G or 15H, which is an explicit customer action, and auto-renewal of a fixed deposit carried out on the basis of a standing instruction given by the customer at the time of opening the deposit. Bank-induced transactions include credit of interest by the bank or debit of charges and penalties, as these are system-driven and not initiated by the customer. Option analysis: Option A is bank-induced and not valid; Option B is customer-induced; Option C is customer-induced; therefore Option D is the correct answer.
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According to the Revised Instructions on Inoperative Accounts (effective from 2024), which channels are banks permitted to use for the Re-activation of inoperative accounts to ensure customer convenience?
Video-Customer Identification Process (V-CIP).Authorized Business Correspondents (BCs) at remote locations.Only the “Home Branch” where the account was opened.
Video-Customer Identification Process (V-CIP).Authorized Business Correspondents (BCs) at remote locations.Only the “Home Branch” where the account was opened.
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer: B. 1 and 2 only. Concept: Ease of Re-activation Norms. The Change: To make it easier for people to reclaim forgotten accounts, the RBI mandated: Statement 1 (V-CIP): Banks must offer Video-KYC (V-CIP) so customers do not need to visit a branch physically to reactivate their accounts. Statement 2 (BCs): Banks can use Business Correspondents (agents) to verify identity and activate accounts in rural areas or remote locations. Statement 3 is Incorrect: The requirement to visit the “Home Branch” has been removed. Customers can now activate accounts at any branch of the bank (Core Banking Solution enabled branches).
Correct Answer: B. 1 and 2 only. Concept: Ease of Re-activation Norms. The Change: To make it easier for people to reclaim forgotten accounts, the RBI mandated: Statement 1 (V-CIP): Banks must offer Video-KYC (V-CIP) so customers do not need to visit a branch physically to reactivate their accounts. Statement 2 (BCs): Banks can use Business Correspondents (agents) to verify identity and activate accounts in rural areas or remote locations. Statement 3 is Incorrect: The requirement to visit the “Home Branch” has been removed. Customers can now activate accounts at any branch of the bank (Core Banking Solution enabled branches).
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Which of the following statements regarding the interest payable on Unclaimed Deposits transferred to the DEA Fund is INCORRECT?
Explanation
Correct: B
Correct Answer: B. The interest rate is fixed permanently at 4 percent per annum. Concept: DEA Fund Interest Rates. Correction: The interest rate is NOT fixed. It is determined by the RBI from time to time via notification. Current Rate: The rate has been reduced to 3 percent per annum (Simple Interest) for current claims. Mechanism: When you claim the money in 2026, you get the Principal + Interest. The interest is calculated at the rates applicable during those specific years (e.g., 4% for older years, 3% for recent years). It is not compound interest.
Correct Answer: B. The interest rate is fixed permanently at 4 percent per annum. Concept: DEA Fund Interest Rates. Correction: The interest rate is NOT fixed. It is determined by the RBI from time to time via notification. Current Rate: The rate has been reduced to 3 percent per annum (Simple Interest) for current claims. Mechanism: When you claim the money in 2026, you get the Principal + Interest. The interest is calculated at the rates applicable during those specific years (e.g., 4% for older years, 3% for recent years). It is not compound interest.
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Consider the following:
Assertion (A):
Even after a bank transfers a customer’s money to the RBI DEA Fund, the bank’s liability to pay the customer does not extinguish.Reason (R):
The DEA Fund operates on a “Refund on Demand” basis, where the bank pays the customer first and seeks reimbursement from the RBI later.
Explanation
Correct: A
Correct Answer: A. Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. Concept: Liability and Liquidity. Logic: The Fear: Customers often worry that if money goes to RBI, it is “gone” or “nationalized.” The Reality: The transfer is merely for custody. The contractual liability remains between the Bank and the Customer. The Process (R): If Mr. X walks into the bank 15 years later, the bank must pay him immediately. The bank cannot say “Go to RBI.” Because the bank pays first and claims later from the DEA Fund, the liability technically and practically stays with the bank.
Correct Answer: A. Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. Concept: Liability and Liquidity. Logic: The Fear: Customers often worry that if money goes to RBI, it is “gone” or “nationalized.” The Reality: The transfer is merely for custody. The contractual liability remains between the Bank and the Customer. The Process (R): If Mr. X walks into the bank 15 years later, the bank must pay him immediately. The bank cannot say “Go to RBI.” Because the bank pays first and claims later from the DEA Fund, the liability technically and practically stays with the bank.
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Scenario: A student opened a “Zero Balance” Savings Account for receiving a Government Scholarship in
2023. The scholarship stopped in
2024. The student has not done any transaction since then. It is now 2026 (more than 2 years). The Bank Manager classifies this account as “Inoperative” and stops debiting transactions. Is the Manager’s action consistent with RBI guidelines?
2023. The scholarship stopped in
2024. The student has not done any transaction since then. It is now 2026 (more than 2 years). The Bank Manager classifies this account as “Inoperative” and stops debiting transactions. Is the Manager’s action consistent with RBI guidelines?
Explanation
Correct: C
Correct Answer: C. No, because accounts opened for Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) or Scholarships are exempt… Concept: Segregation of Accounts. The Rule: RBI Guidelines mandate that banks must segregate accounts opened for specific beneficiaries (like Scholarships, DBT, PMJDY) in their Core Banking Solution (CBS). Protection: These accounts should NOT be automatically classified as “Inoperative” solely due to non-operation for 2 years. This ensures that when the next scholarship installment finally arrives, it doesn’t bounce due to account freezing.
Correct Answer: C. No, because accounts opened for Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) or Scholarships are exempt… Concept: Segregation of Accounts. The Rule: RBI Guidelines mandate that banks must segregate accounts opened for specific beneficiaries (like Scholarships, DBT, PMJDY) in their Core Banking Solution (CBS). Protection: These accounts should NOT be automatically classified as “Inoperative” solely due to non-operation for 2 years. This ensures that when the next scholarship installment finally arrives, it doesn’t bounce due to account freezing.
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Which of the following statements is TRUE regarding the fees or costs involved in filing a complaint under the Reserve Bank Integrated Ombudsman Scheme?
Explanation
Correct: C
The Scheme is completely cost-free. To ensure financial inclusion and access to justice, the RBI mandates that no fees can be charged to the customer at any stage of the process—filing, mediation, or appeal. The costs of operating the Ombudsman framework are borne entirely by the RBI and the banking system.
The Scheme is completely cost-free. To ensure financial inclusion and access to justice, the RBI mandates that no fees can be charged to the customer at any stage of the process—filing, mediation, or appeal. The costs of operating the Ombudsman framework are borne entirely by the RBI and the banking system.
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⚡ Quick Revision: Key Facts for SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE
1. UPI Limits: UPI Lite limit is ₹1,000/txn and ₹5,000 wallet balance; Hospital/Education UPI limit is ₹5 Lakh.
2. Mudra Tarun Plus: New category for loans ₹10 Lakh to ₹20 Lakh for existing successful borrowers.
3. PMEGP Limits: Project cost cap is ₹50 Lakh for Manufacturing and ₹20 Lakh for Services.
4. DICGC Coverage: Insurance cover is ₹5 Lakh per depositor per bank; Premium is 12 paise per ₹100.
5. IBC Thresholds: Minimum default to initiate CIRP is ₹1 Crore; Pre-Pack Insolvency is ₹10 Lakh.
6. Digital Lending: Default Loss Guarantee (DLG) is capped at 5% of the portfolio amount.
7. Inoperative Accounts: Classified if no customer-induced transaction occurs for over 2 years.
8. Unclaimed Deposits: Transferred to DEA Fund after 10 years; Interest rate is determined by RBI (currently 3%).
9. SHG Loans: Collateral-free limit under DAY-NRLM is up to ₹20 Lakh.
10. Stand-Up India: Loans between ₹10 Lakh and ₹1 Crore for SC/ST and Women for Greenfield projects.
11. Housing Loans: PSL limit for Metros (Tier 1) is ₹50 Lakh; Tier 2 is ₹45 Lakh.
12. Cheque Truncation: “Continuous Clearing” (Phase 2) requires clearing within T+3 hours.
13. Positive Pay System: Mandatory facility for banks to offer for cheques > ₹50,000.
14. NBFC Ombudsman: Covers NBFCs with asset size of ₹100 Crore and above.
15. Fiscal Deficit: Target for 2026-27 is set at 4.3% of GDP.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions: SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE
What constitutes SBI CBO BANKING KNOWLEDGE?
It includes General Banking, RBI Circulars, Credit Management, Digital Banking, and Government Schemes relevant to the 2026 syllabus.
What is the Re-KYC period for High-Risk customers?
High-Risk customers must undergo Re-KYC once every 2 years.
What is the maximum subsidy under PMEGP for rural areas?
For Special Category beneficiaries in rural areas, the subsidy is 35% of the project cost.
Does the Ombudsman Scheme cover NBFCs?
Yes, NBFCs with assets of ₹100 Crore and above are covered under the RB-IOS 2026.
What is the new limit for Tarun Plus in Mudra Yojana?
The limit is above ₹10 Lakh up to ₹20 Lakh.
What is the compensation for delayed ATM reversal?
₹100 per day of delay beyond T+5 calendar days.
What is the FDI limit in the Insurance sector for 2026?
The FDI limit in the Insurance sector is 100%.
What is the purpose of the ULI platform?
The Unified Lending Interface (ULI) enables frictionless credit by streamlining data flow (land records, etc.) to lenders.
What is the lock-in period for PMEGP subsidy?
The subsidy is kept in a TDR with a lock-in period of 3 years.
Can a minor open an NPS account?
Yes, under the “NPS Vatsalya” scheme, minors can have an account managed by guardians.
What is the “Greenium” in Sovereign Green Bonds?
It is the lower yield (interest rate) the government pays because investors accept lower returns for green assets.
What is the provisioning for Sub-Standard Assets?
15% on the secured portion and 25% on the unsecured portion.
Who is the Nodal Agency for PMEGP?
Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC) is the single national nodal agency.
What is the maximum imprisonment for cheque dishonour?
Up to 2 years under Section 138 of the NI Act.
Is the UDGAM portal for claiming deposits?
No, UDGAM is only for searching; claims must be filed directly with the respective bank.