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    Money in caricature and satire
    Exhibition: “Money in caricature and satire”

    From 20 September, the Money Museum presents a new special exhibition that approaches money from a unique perspective, viewed through the lens of caricature and satire.

    • 20.09.2022 – 29.10.2023
    • Frankfurt am Main
    Exhibition: “Money in caricature and satire”
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    • Overview Bundesbank
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    Bundesbank symposium “Banking supervision in dialogue”
    Bundesbank symposium

    The Deutsche Bundesbank hosts the Bundesbank symposium annually, with the aim of promoting the exchange of information on current topics relating to banking supervision within the banking industry.

    • 05.07.2023
    • 08:30 – 16:30
    • Frankfurt am Main, Germany
    Bundesbank symposium
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  • Statistics
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    SDMX Web Service

    The Bundesbank provides a new procedure for the automated download of statistical data sets. The web service offers an interface for programmatic access.

    SDMX Web Service
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    Time series databases

    The Bundesbank’s up-to-date statistical data in the form of time series (also available to download as a CSV file or SDMX-ML file).

    Time series databases
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      • Overview Banks and other financial corporations
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      • Overview Money and capital markets
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        • Overview Interest rates and yields
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  • Service
    Cashless money transfer
    Bank sort codes search

    Here you will find information on the bank sort code file and on the bank sort code update service. You can also download the bank sort code files.

    Bank sort codes search
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      • Overview Banks and companies
      • Bund Bidding System (BBS)
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    In the press area, you will find press releases, speeches, guest contributions and interviews with Bundesbank Executive Board members as well as further press materials.

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    Studies

    The Bundesbank published various studies and conference proceedings, resulting from the research activities of its employees and guest researchers.

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    University of Applied Sciences in Hachenburg
    Bachelor of Science in Central Banking

    With the dual bachelor's degree in applied computer science, we offer an attractive career in the world of information technology.

    Bachelor of Science in Central Banking
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  1. Homepage
  2. Glossary

Glossary

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Glossary

What will I find in this section?

Technical terms, unfortunately, cannot always be avoided – particularly when it comes to complex topics such as monetary policy. This is why we have compiled a glossary with a wide range of terms, arranged in alphabetical order and each with a short explanation.

52 results
  • Bad bank

    The Financial Market Stabilisation Development Act defines a bad bank as a special-purpose vehicle for cleansing bank balance sheets. Under this legislation, an ailing credit institution can offload financial assets with severe impairment risk to a bad bank, subject to certain requirements and conditions being met. In return, the credit institution receives a debt security from the bad bank for the same amount. The Federal government guarantees this debt security by way of the Financial Market Stabilisation Fund (SoFFin), and the credit institution pays a fee to SoFFin for this guarantee. This transaction allows the credit institution to shield itself against further write-downs and to reduce its regulatory capital requirements. The government-guaranteed debt securities are, moreover, eligible as collateral in the Eurosystem's refinancing operations. From a regulatory perspective, a bad bank is not a credit institution which is subject to capital adequacy standards. In banking circles, the term "bad bank" differs from the legal definition and refers instead to a department within a credit institution which specialises in disposing of assets that are at risk of severe impairment.

    See also

    • Debt security
    • Financial Market Stabilisation Fund (SoFFin)
  • BaFin (Federal Financial Supervisory Authority)

    See

    • Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin)
  • Bail-in

    In a bail-in, an institution's creditors would be among those bearing any losses incurred. For instance, the insolvency of a country may mean that its creditors lose or surrender parts of their claims in accordance with a distribution key to be determined.

    See also

    • Bail-out
    • No bail-out
  • Bail-out

    A bail-out is a measure used to rescue an institution that is facing imminent insolvency by means of debt relief or provision of new third-party loans. Enterprises or government institutions alike can be bailed out.

    See also

    • Bail-in
    • No bail-out
  • Balance of payments

    The balance of payments provides information on all the economic transactions between a given economy and the rest of the world over a certain period of time. The balance of payments comprises a number of sub-accounts: the current account, the capital account, the financial account and net errors and omissions. As the balance of payments is run according to the principle of double-entry bookkeeping, it is always balanced, formally speaking. If a balance of payments is said to be "unbalanced", this is normally a reference to the balance of a certain sub-account, usually the current account.

    See also

    • Capital account
    • Current account
    • Financial account

    Further information

    • Balance of payments
    • Balance of payments Publications
    • Changes in the methodology and classifications of the balance of payments and the international investment position Article from the Monthly Report June 2014
      16.06.2014 | 126 KB, PDF Read out
  • Balance sheet

    A balance sheet is showing and breaking down an enterprise's asset situation and capital structure as at a specified date. In a bank’s balance sheet, loans and receivables are shown as assets, for example, while deposit business is recorded among the liabilities. Special legal provisions govern the preparation of the annual accounts of banks and financial services institutions.

    See also

    • Assets
    • Liabilities
  • Balance sheet channel

    Balance sheet channel is the name given to a theoretical concept describing the effect of a monetary policy stimulus on the balance sheets of non-banks. This theory states, for instance, that an increase in central bank interest rates causes a decline in equity and bond prices, thus diminishing the value of potential loan collateral and curbing the ability of enterprises and households to take out loans. The balance sheet channel describes an aspect of the credit channel more precisely.

    See also

    • Banking channel
    • Credit channel
    • Exchange rate channel
    • Expectations channel
    • Interest rate channel
    • Transmission mechanism
  • Bank (Credit institution)

    A bank is a business enterprise that provides money-related services. Banks grant loans and thereby create deposit money. They fund their operations by accepting money from third parties (deposit business) or issuing debt securities. Other important tasks performed by banks include supplying the economy with cash, clearing and settling cashless payments and providing investment and securities-related services. In Germany, banks are enterprises that are permitted, pursuant to section 1 (1) of the German Banking Act (Kreditwesengesetz, or KWG), to conduct the banking business stated therein.

    See also

    • Debt security
    • Deposit money
    • German Banking Act (Kreditwesengesetz or KWG)
  • Bank debt security

    Bank debt securities are issued by banks as a means of obtaining medium and long-term funding. They can either be one-off or "tap" issues. Mortgage Pfandbriefe issued by mortgage banks are one kind of bank debt security.

    See also

    • Bond
    • Pfandbrief
    • Debt security
  • Bank for International Settlements (BIS)

    Headquartered in Basel, Switzerland, the BIS has the task of promoting cooperation among central banks and facilitating international payment settlements. It is the home of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which works towards the international harmonisation of banking supervisory standards. The Financial Stability Board (FSB), whose secretariat is likewise housed at the BIS, coordinates at the international level the work of national financial authorities and international standard-setting bodies.

    See also

    • Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS)
    • Basel II
    • Basel III
    • Financial Stability Board
  • Bank Lending Survey (BLS)

    The Bank Lending Survey (BLS) is a sample-based survey of commercial banks' lending policies which the Eurosystem has been conducting on a quarterly basis since January 2003 among selected banks. The BLS contains, above all, qualitative questions on developments in credit standards, terms and conditions of loans, and credit demand from enterprises and households.

  • Bank levy

    Since 2015 all EU member states have been obliged to set up so-called resolution financing arrangements, generally in the form of resolution funds managed by the resolution authorities. Resolution funds are financed by bank levies raised in advance. All institutions are obliged to pay a yearly bank levy. The levy mainly consists of a basic contribution, which is based on the bank's size and is also adjusted according to the institution's risk profile.

    See also

    • Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin)
    • Restructuring Fund
    • Restructuring Act
    • Single Resolution Fund (SRF)
  • Bank liquidity

    Banks need sufficient liquidity to stay solvent. From a macroeconomic perspective, banking system liquidity comprises banks' current holdings of central bank money and their cash reserves.

    See also

    • Central bank money
  • Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD)

    The Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD) harmonises the tools used in the recovery and resolution of credit institutions in the EU. The BRRD stipulates that, should a bank fail, its shareholders and creditors should normally be first in line to absorb any risks and losses. Only then should a resolution fund financed by the entire banking industry (Single Resolution Fund, or SRF) step in. This "bail-in" of shareholders and creditors aims to ensure that a key tenet of the market economy – that of being liable for one's own losses – also applies to credit institutions. The rules set forth in the BRRD pertaining to the "liability cascade" are complex; in extreme cases, government institutions can still be financially involved in the recovery or resolution of an institution ("bail-out"). The Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM) is based on BRRD tools and, in turn, the SRM and SRF are among the pillars of the banking union. The SRM augments the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM).

    See also

    • Bail-in
    • Bail-out
    • Banking union
    • Single Resolution Fund (SRF)
    • Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM)
    • Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM)

    More on this topic

    • Monthly Report - June 2014
      16.06.2014
  • Bank sort code

    In Germany, banks are identified by means of an eight-digit bank sort code. The first three digits denote a bank's location, the fourth the bank or banking group itself. Bank sort codes were introduced by the banking industry and the Bundesbank in 1970 to facilitate the automation of cashless payments. In Germany, the completion of the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) project will see the bank sort code being integrated into the IBAN.

    See also

    • BIC (Business Identifier Code)
    • Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA)
  • Banking associations

    Generally speaking, a banking association is a group of different banks that share a set of common interests. Banking associations typically advise and support their members in legal, taxation and business matters, as well as representing political interests and forming joint opinions. In addition, they operate a common deposit insurance scheme and often audit their members’ annual financial statements in accordance with statutory regulations. Owing to the diversity of the German banking system, banks in Germany are arranged into various banking associations. For example, the Federal Association of German People’s Banks and Raiffeisen Banks (BVR) represents the interests of cooperative banks, while the German Savings Banks and Giro Association (DSGV) represents the interests of the savings banks and Landesbanken. The Federal Association of German Banks (BdB) handles the shared interests of the private banks. Together with the Association of German Public Sector Banks (VÖB) and the Association of German Pfandbrief banks (vdp), these banking associations belong to the umbrella organisation known as the German Banking Industry Committee (Die Deutsche Kreditwirtschaft – DK).

    See also

    • Banking system
    • Cooperative bank
    • Deposit protection
    • German Banking Industry Committee
    • Savings bank
  • Banking book

    See

    • Non-trading book
  • Banking channel

    A channel for the transmission of monetary impulses in order to influence the lending behaviour of banks. It is thought that monetary policy constraints cause small banks with low liquidity and capital resources to curb their credit supply particularly strongly, resulting in selective lending and, if the worst comes to the worst, a credit crunch. If interest rates were raised, only borrowers with particularly risky investment projects would ultimately be prepared to pay the higher rate of interest (adverse selection). However, as banks cannot assess the risk of the investment with certainty (due to incomplete information) but fear a high rate of default due to their low capitalisation, they instead prefer not to lend at all.

    See also

    • Balance sheet channel
    • Credit channel
    • Exchange rate channel
    • Expectations channel
    • Interest rate channel
    • Transmission mechanism
  • Banking risks

    Any of a variety of risks to which banks’ business is exposed and which impact on their economic existence. Banks therefore take great pains to mitigate these risks.

    See also

    • Credit default risk
    • Interest rate risk
    • Liquidity risk
    • Market risk
    • Operational risk
  • Banking supervision

    Banking supervision has a public mandate to oversee the individual business operations of banks. Banks need to be supervised because they play a key role in the circulation of money in an economy. Banking supervision particularly aims to ensure the safety of the deposits entrusted to banks. Microprudential supervision of individual banks goes hand in hand with macroprudential supervision, which oversees the financial system as a whole and aims to ensure financial stability. Since June 2021, the ECB has additionally taken over the supervision of systemically important investment firms with bank-like risks and total balance sheet assets of at least €30 billion. In Germany, banking supervision is the responsibility of the Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) in collaboration with the Deutsche Bundesbank.

    See also

    • Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin)
    • Deutsche Bundesbank
    • Financial stability

    Further Information

    • Large investment firms: new licence, new supervisor

      bankingsupervision.europa.eu

  • Banking system

    The banking system comprises the central bank and the commercial banks. Commercial banks operate either as universal or special-purpose banks. Universal banks are common in the German banking system and conduct many different types of banking business such as deposit, credit and securities business. They include commercial banks, savings banks and cooperative banks. Special-purpose banks include mortgage banks, building and loan associations, and credit institutions with special functions, which focus on particular business operations.

  • Banking union

    The banking union is a system of European institutions which, since its inception in November 2014, has comprised a Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) and, since the beginning of 2016, a Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM). It also has the purpose of enhancing harmonisation among national deposit guarantee schemes and, at a later date, of possibly comprising a common European deposit insurance scheme (EDIS). All euro area countries are members of this banking union, which has been implemented in increments since 2014. Other EU countries may also opt in if they wish, though none have done so up to now. The purpose of the banking union is to standardise and improve banking supervision in participating member states, to increase financial stability and to loosen the "doom loop" between financial sector debt and sovereign debt which, in the past, had exacerbated the crisis. To further harmonise the various national deposit guarantee schemes, in April 2014 the recast Deposit Guarantee Scheme Directive was adopted. Implementation in Germany was achieved by means of the Deposit Guarantee Act (Einlagensicherungsgesetz), which came into effect on 3 July 2015. The creation of an EDIS is currently being discussed at EU level.

    See also

    • Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD)
    • European deposit insurance scheme (EDIS)
    • Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM)
    • Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM)

    More on this topic

    • Cooperation in the Single Supervisory Mechanism
    • Annual Report 2013
      13.03.2014 | 2 MB, PDF Read out
    • Monthly Report - June 2014
      16.06.2014
  • Banknotes

    Banknotes are bills with fixed denomination amounts (paper money). They used to be issued by private banks but nowadays, this task is usually reserved for national central banks. In the euro area, euro banknotes are the only legal tender that is acceptable without restriction. Only Eurosystem central banks are allowed to circulate euro banknotes. The euro banknote series comprises the following denominations: €5, €10, €20, €50, €100, €200 and €500. Modern banknotes incorporate numerous special security features which make them very difficult to forge, and improve the detection of counterfeit notes. It is a criminal offence to forge banknotes or circulate counterfeits.

    See also

    • Cash
    • Europa series

    Further information

    • Animation videos
  • Barter economy

    A barter economy is a society without money or a comparable medium that fulfils its functions. Therefore, people have to exchange goods directly. The difficulty is finding someone who is offering exactly what you need and who also needs precisely what you yourself are offering. You must either spend a long time searching for a suitable partner or form chains of exchanges, which requires far more effort than having money as a common medium of exchange. In addition to this, it is hard to determine the exchange value of every good against every other good. As a result, trade is much more difficult or completely impossible.

    See also

    • Functions of money
  • Base money

    See

    • Central bank money
  • Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS)

    The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision develops internationally coordinated regulations for supervising the banking sector. The most important regulatory frameworks are known as Basel II and Basel III. Representatives of central banks and supervisory authorities from different countries are members of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. The committee is located at the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) in Basel.

    See also

    • Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
    • Basel II
    • Basel III
  • Basel II

    A comprehensive framework of rules, developed by the international Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which sets a minimum level of capital needed to conduct banking business requiring a licence. Either a standardised approach may be used to calculate the minimum capital requirement, or banks may optionally do so using their own models, subject to approval by supervisors. The framework also requires banks to hold sufficient capital in order to cover losses from the risks they take. That, in turn, is predicated on a functional risk management framework, which is regularly reviewed and assessed by supervisors. Basel II also defines certain disclosure requirements in order to improve market discipline for banks and enhance transparency.

    See also

    • Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS)
    • Basel III

    Further information

    • Basel framework
  • Basel III

    Basel III is the name given to a comprehensive regulatory framework for the banking sector. Adopted by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision in September 2010, it takes the Basel II rules a step further by requiring banks, amongst other things, to hold a greater quantity and quality of capital than under the Basel II framework, thereby significantly improving banks' resilience to losses they might suffer as a result of credit defaults, for instance. Basel III also defines bank liquidity standards and a minimum leverage ratio as well as a countercyclical capital buffer which supervisors can activate as part of their macroprudential mandate in order to bolster financial stability. The Basel III regime is a key element of a European Union legislative package which is better known as CRD IV/CRR (Capital Requirements Directive IV/Capital Requirements Regulation).

    See also

    • Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS)
    • Basel II
    • Capital Requirements Directive IV/Capital Requirements Regulation (CRD IV/CRR)
    • Countercyclical capital buffer
    • Financial stability
    • Leverage ratio
    • Macroprudential supervision

    For additional, more detailed information, see

    • Basel framework
    • Basel III - Leitfaden zu den neuen Eigenkapital- und Liquiditätsregeln für Banken
      24.08.2011 | 2 MB, PDF Read out
  • Basic rate of interest

    The basic rate of interest pursuant to section 247 of the German Civil Code (Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch) is a reference variable for interest and other payments in relevant legislation (e.g. for calculating default interest). It is reset on 1 January and 1 July each year and lies 88 basis points (0.88%) below its reference variable, the interest rate of the most recent main refinancing operations (MRO) conducted by the European Central Bank at the date on which the basic rate of interest is reset. The basic rate of interest can have a negative value. The Bundesbank publishes the current basic rate of interest in the Federal Gazette (Bundesanzeiger) and on its website.

    See also

    • Main refinancing operation (MRO)
  • Basic rate of interest pursuant to section 247 of the German Civil Code (Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, or BGB)

    The basic rate of interest is a reference variable for interest and other payments in pieces of legislation (e.g. for calculating default interest). It is reset on 1 January and 1 July each year and lies 88 basis points below its reference variable, the interest rate of the main refinancing operations (MRO) conducted by the European Central Bank (ECB). The Bundesbank publishes the current basic rate of interest in the Federal Gazette (Bundesanzeiger).

  • Basket of goods

    A basket of goods is the composition of a group of goods in the context of determining price changes, that is based on the typical expenses of private households for goods and services.
    Each index to measure a price change uses it´s own basket. Since consumption habits change over time, statisticians are constantly updating the baskets of goods. When structuring the basket, they not only have to select representative goods and services, but also determine their weighting in the basket. This weighting scheme is updated every five years. This is based on the fact that every five years, around 60,000 representative households selected keep precise records of their expenditure for goods and services over several months.  

    See also

    • Consumer price index (CPI)
    • Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP)
    • Price level
    • Rate of price increase

    More on this topic

    • Animation videos
  • Bear market

    A persistent decline in security prices quoted on an exchange is also known as a bear market. The opposite is known as a bull market.

  • BIC (Business Identifier Code)

    .

    See

    • Business Identifier Code (BIC)
  • Big banks

    German big banks include the financial and credit institutions Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank, which traditionally operate thoughout the country. UniCredit Bank AG (formerly Bayerische Hypo- und Vereinsbank) joined this group of banks in early 1999.

  • Bill of exchange

    A bill of exchange is a security in which the debtor ("drawee") undertakes to pay a certain amount at a certain point in time on presentation of the bill of exchange. A bill of exchange is not just a payment transaction instrument, but also a means of acquiring credit and security. In modern banking, bills of exchange have declined in importance as against other financial instruments.

    See also

    • Discount business
  • BIS (Bank for International Settlements)

    See

    • Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
  • Bitcoin

    Bitcoin is a type of crypto token: that is to say, a unit of value which is available solely in a digital format and which works on the basis of encryption technology. All transactions and processes that are used to create and transfer Bitcoin are stored in a huge database, known as the blockchain, which is based on distributed ledger technology. Bitcoin is not legal tender, does not exist in cash form and cannot fulfil most monetary functions.

    The concept of Bitcoin was first described in 2008. The aim was to create a currency that is independent of government institutions and commercial banks. These days, it is mainly used for speculation.

    See also

    • Crypto token
    • Blockchain
    • Distributed ledger technology (DLT)
    • Functions of money

    Further information

    • Distributed ledger technologies in payments and securities settlement: potential and risks Article from the Monthly Report September 2017
      18.09.2017 | 154 KB, PDF Read out
  • Blockchain

    Blockchain is a tool used for storing transaction data, which became known in particular in connection with the crypto token Bitcoin. This technology forms the basis for a decentralised database in which all transactions and processes that are used to create and transfer Bitcoin are stored. This allows each miner – ie the participants who verify all the transactions – to retrace the entire history of each Bitcoin and to check each transaction to see whether the transferring entity is authorised to draw on the account. This prevents a participant from issuing the same Bitcoin twice. In addition, the decentralised storage of data on several computers makes it more difficult to manipulate the data. Blockchain works on the basis of distributed ledger technology, which is now also being researched in numerous other economic areas – independently of Bitcoin – and is already being used in some cases.

    See also

    • Bitcoin
    • Crypto token
    • Distributed ledger technology (DLT)
  • BLS (Bank Lending Survey)

    See

    • Bank Lending Survey (BLS)
  • BLZ

    See

    • Bank sort code
  • Bond

    Bonds are securities used for procuring debt financing with fixed rates of interest, maturities and repayment terms. The principal of a bond is broken down into a large number of equally sized “units” to enable a large number of creditors to make small investments in the paper and make it easier to market the bond issue. Issuers – or borrowers – issue bonds to raise debt capital. Bond units are traded in the bond market. By selling their bond units, bondholders can offload their investment without this resulting in debt capital being withdrawn from the issuer. Bonds come in many different forms. A distinction is made between those with fixed and variable coupons, for instance. Other important distinguishing characteristics include maturities, the terms of redemption and the type of issuer. Public bonds are issued by the Federal Government or other levels of government. Debt securities issued by industrial enterprises are sometimes known as industrial bonds.

    See also

    • Bond market
    • Debt security
    • Obligation
  • Bond market

    The bond market is that part of the capital market in which bonds or, to be more specific, bond units are traded. A bond's current price is set by supply and demand. The current market price, the agreed interest rate, the residual term to maturity and other factors are used to determine a bond's current market return, which can be higher or lower than the agreed rate of remuneration. An increase in a bond's price reduces its market return, and vice versa. The bond market hosts many different types of bonds, such as fixed-interest bonds or debt securities whose remuneration is adjusted periodically ("variable-rate bonds"). Given that government bonds are typically thought of as having the lowest risk of default in an economy, their returns are used as a yardstick or "benchmark" for the maturity segment in question.

    See also

    • Bond
    • Capital market
  • Book money

    Book money is the term used to denote deposits at banks which were created through postings in the banks' account books. Although book money is not legal tender, it is widely accepted as a means of payment, notably because book money can be converted into cash. Book money can be used to make payments via cashless payment instruments such as credit transfers, direct debits and bank or credit cards (plastic money). Since cashless payments circulate book money from one bank account to another, this money is sometimes also referred to as giro money (from the Italian word "giro", meaning circulation).

    See also

    • Money supply
    • Payment transactions

    Further information

    • Animation videos
  • Boom

    A persistent rise in stock exchange prices is known as a boom or a bull market. A persistent fall in stock exchange prices is known as a bust or bear market.

    See also

    • Exchange
  • Borrower's note loan

    In a borrower's note loan, a medium to long-term large loan is usually granted in return for a certificate – the borrower's note. Borrower's note loans are used mainly by enterprises and public sector entities to raise funds. Upon redemption, the borrower is entitled to reclaim the borrower’s note. A borrower's note is not a security: instead of being accounted for as a security at fluctuating market prices, it is recognised as a loan.

  • Bretton Woods system

    In the Bretton Woods system – named after a resort in the US state of New Hampshire where the conference was held – 44 states agreed in July 1944 on an international currency system of fixed exchange rates pegged to the reserve currency, the US dollar. The United States agreed to exchange US dollars for gold at a fixed rate of US$35/troy ounce (this increased to US$38 as of December 1971) of gold at any time (guarantee of gold convertibility). The conference also agreed to set up the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. The Federal Republic of Germany joined this system after it was founded in 1949. The Bretton Woods system remained in force until 1973.

    See also

    • Exchange rate regime
  • Broker

    This term refers to brokers in general, especially those working on the stock exchange. Brokers mediate between those demanding and those supplying a good. In return, they receive a broker’s fee, known as the brokerage or (for stock exchange transactions in Germany) courtage. A broker may also transact stock exchange orders on behalf of customers or trade securities. 

  • BRRD (Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive)

    See

    • Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD)
  • Building and loan associations

    Building and loan associations are special-purpose banks that finance private construction projects. They take deposits from households under savings and loan contracts and grant low-interest loans to savers to finance their private building projects once the savings phase is complete.

  • Bull market

    A persistent rise in stock exchange prices, also known as a boom. The opposite is known as a bear market.

    See also

    • Exchange
  • Business cycle policy

    Government measures to smooth over economic fluctuations and to counteract their negative effects. The Act to Promote Economic Stability and Growth (Stabilitätsgesetz) of 1967 provides a catalogue of measures for this, which were employed particularly in the first half of the 1970s. In the wake of the recent financial and economic crisis, too, extensive economic support measures were launched.

  • Business Identifier Code (BIC)

    The BIC is a unique international bank sort code used to clearly identify a specific bank worldwide. It is made up of 8 or 11 characters. Use of the BIC was mandatory for SEPA credit transfers and direct debits until February 2016 within die European Economic Area (EEA). However, for cross-border SEPA payments to Monaco, Saint Pierre, Miquelon, San Marino and Switzerland the BIC in addition to the International Bank Account Number (IBAN) is still mandatory.

    See also

    • European Economic Area (EEA)
    • International Bank Account Number (IBAN)
    • Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA)
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