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Chapter 8 Deposit Function
Chapter 8 Deposit Function
CHAPTER 8
DEPOSIT FUNCTION
Deposits Defined
- Represented by money or representative money entrusted to banks for
safekeeping.
- The keeping of valuables such as jewelry and other important documents.
- Deposits are money borrowed and makes a bank a debtor.
- Deposits are liabilities of the bank, failure on its part to meet the depositors
demand will give the depositor’s right of recourse against the bank.
- Section 58 of the New Central Bank Law of 2000 (7653) which states that the
term “demand deposits” means all those liabilities of the BSP and of other banks
which are denominated in the Philippine currency and are subject to payment in
legal tender upon demand by presentation of checks.
Types of Deposits
1. Demand Deposits – are those which are withdrawn upon the presentation of checks
during banking hours. This type of deposit does not receive interest in modern
times.
2. Time deposits – are those which can be withdrawn after a certain period of time or at
a designated maturity. The depositors place their excess funds as rime deposits for
varied purposes. For this reason, this type of deposits is further subdivided into the
following:
b. Special time deposits- this type is evidenced by a written contract to the effect
that neither all nor part may be withdrawn before the maturity date or at least
upon due notice of at least thirty days.
c. Savings deposit – are evidenced by a passbook and can be withdrawn only upon
due notice of at least thirty days or depending upon the individual bank’s
policy .These deposit may be withdrawn on demand provided the bank is in
position to meet the demand of the depositor.
3. Direct or primary deposits – are those which are made “over the counter” when the
depositor himself brings his money and/or checks and other near cash items to the
bank and hands them to the teller. Sometimes, the depositor may send his
representative to deposit for him. For e-bankers, depositors can deposit through
ATM’s after they have registered personally at the bank.
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4. Derivative deposits – are created from the proceeds of loans. The borrower enters
into an arrangement that the bank places the loan proceeds under a current account
from which he can draw checks eventually. The derivative deposits increase the
volume of money because they represent new money created by the bank out of
proceeds of the loans.
Kinds of Depositors
The deposits may come from either individuals or businesses and from the government
and its instrumentalities and political subdivision. When funds are deposited by individuals
or businesses, these are known as individual deposits or business accounts. If the
government is the depositor, they are termed government deposits.
The bank may also deposit money with other banks on reciprocal basis. These are
classified as interbank deposits. The banks are known as correspondents. Such deposits
provide for the exchange of funds between banks for varied purposes.
The deposits made by these depositors may be either demand or time pin conformity
with the method of withdrawal and according to the reason of the deposit in keeping his
funds in the bank. They may also consist of primary or direct deposits or derived from
proceeds of loans.
Motives of Depositors
1. Safety – the depositors place their excess funds in the bank because they are aware
that modern banks have fireproof and burglarproof safes and vaults to keep money
in.
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depositor. Directly, however, the teller system employed by banks performs the operations
connected with the receipt of deposits and other allied activities.
The bank if relatively small sized, may employ a single teller system where one
teller performs both the receiving of deposits and the paying out of checks and other
instrument exchanged for cash. Each of the tellers assigned to specific jobs shall, therefore,
have their own responsibilities and duties.
Modern banks have acquired many new methods to improve service as well as
mechanized devices to step up the bank’s multifarious activities. Banks employ several
tellers in order to give maximum service benefits to their customers. Also, teller functions
are done through electronic devices such as ATM’s, phones, mobile and the internet.
To a bank, the paying teller has a great amount of responsibility because his
negligence may lead to losses on the bank’s part. However, the teller who performs the first
step in the deposit function is the receiving teller; for it is he who accepts deposits for and
in behalf of the bank.
Receiving Teller
The receiving teller receives and verifies deposit items and deposit slip, gives
proper receipt for the deposit made, distributes the items deposited, and finally
checks and proves the day’s work.
Upon receipt, the teller examines the deposit slip to ascertain, among other things.
He also sees the detailed description of the credit instruments are in order. Then he
segregates the currency into the different denominations in the compartments for
this purpose in the drawer. He examines closely the credit instruments for any
defects and if he finds none, marks them non-negotiable. After the verification, he
places the duplicate of the deposit ticket into the machine to acknowledge receipt of
the deposit indicated passbook.
At the end of the day, the teller sorts out all the items deposited comprising of cash,
checks, and other credit instruments ready for distribution to the proper
departments. As the teller performs the other functions, he fills in the proof sheet
indicating the deposits received and at the end of the day, he merely goes over the
same to see for errors.
In the receipt of the item deposited, the receiving teller exercises due care and
diligence in examining the cash and the credit instruments so that he may be
relieved of the responsibilities attached to his duties. In regard to the currency, the
teller is responsible for:
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a. Errors in counting the money deposited.
b. Presence of mutilated or counterfeit money.
For the credit instrument that the teller receives for deposits, he has to be careful in
order to avoid responsibilities in connection with:
1. Postdated checks – checks which are dated after the date of deposit are known as
post-dated checks. The teller should not receive such checks for deposit as he
cannot be sure whether they shall be honored.
2. Stale checks – are those are dated very much earlier, say about a month, from the
date of deposit.
3. Material alterations – may be on the date, the amount (that is, the amount in words
do not tally with the amount in figures), the payee. The teller must see to it that any
changes made on the face of the instrument are properly initialed by the drawer.
For both currency and credit instruments, the teller is responsible for:
1. Carelessness in adding deposit slips – this refer to proof sheets rather than the
individual deposit slip. It may be that the teller is not very careful in adding so that
the amount of deposits may not tally with the actual currency and credit
instruments.
2. Carelessness in designating the account to be credited – it may happen that there are
several depositors with identical names. The teller must see to it that the right
person is duly credited for the deposit. Careless crediting of proper accounts may
eventually lead to bank embarrassment or even loss. The teller should make it a
point to check the account number.
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a. The date of the check- he makes sure that the check is neither post-dated nor stale. If
post-dated he must not pay, if stale he should likewise not pay but request the
person presenting it to refer the same to the drawer of the check. He also checks the
regularity of the date of the check.
b. Wrong endorsement- the receiving teller must be sure that the endorsement is
correctly effected at the back of the instrument.
c. Material Alteration- this refers to the erasures or change in the date, the payee, or
the amount in words and figures.
d. Forgery- this is the concern of the paying teller as he access to the depositor’s
specimen signature before payment.
e. Crossed check – are of two kinds, either crossed specially or generally. The paying
teller should scrutinize the check to determine the extent of the bank’s commitment
on such checks.
f. Stop-payment order – when a check is lost or for any other reason the owner wishes
to withhold its payment, the drawer requests the bank to stop its payment, the bank
provides a signal to indicate “Stop Payment Order”.
g. Insufficient funds – the paying teller must also determine whether or not the drawer
of the check has sufficient funds to cover the same.
h. Erroneous payment– A paying teller should count the money to be paid at least
twice. For he may overpay or underpay.
i. Supply of cash – a paying teller, through constantly doing the same work, should be
in a position to know how much gets from the cashier to meet requirements.
“There is no such thing as loss. There is only the opportunity to begin again.”
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