Tier I Capital definition

Tier I Capital means owned fund as reduced by investment in shares of other non-banking financial companies and in shares, debentures, bonds, outstanding loans and advances including hire purchase and lease finance made to and deposits with subsidiaries and companies in the same group exceeding, in aggregate, ten per cent of the owned fund;
Tier I Capital means owned fund as reduced by investment in shares of other non-banking financial companies and in shares, debentures, bonds, outstanding loans and advances including hire purchase and lease finance made to and deposits with subsidiaries and companies in the same group exceeding, in aggregate, ten per cent of the owned fund; and perpetual debt instruments issued by a non-deposit taking non-banking financial company in each year to the extent it does not exceed 15 per cent of the aggregate Tier I Capital of such company as on March 31 of the previous accounting year.
Tier I Capital means capital which is treated as issued tier I capital (Eiginfjártháttur A) by the FSA either on a solo or on a consolidated basis.

Examples of Tier I Capital in a sentence

  • The total of Tier II Capital at any point of time, shall not exceed 100 percent of Tier I Capital.

  • DTA shall be treated as an intangible asset and shall be deducted from Tier I Capital.

  • CET1 and Tier I Capital primarily comprises of interest free capital received from the Head Office, balance in statutory reserves, capital reserves and remittable surplus retained for CRAR requirement.

  • The total of Tier II Capital at any point of time, shall not exceed 100 per cent of Tier I Capital.

  • In July 2007, the Bank raised Tier I Capital in the form of equity capital through simultaneous offerings in the form of a follow-on GDR issue, a Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP) and a preferential allotment of equity shares to the promoters of the Bank.


More Definitions of Tier I Capital

Tier I Capital means those components of the equity capital of the Borrower or of any Bank which, in the aggregate, constitute the core or primary capital of the Borrower or Bank, as those components are determined and defined from time to time by the Federal Regulatory Authority having primary jurisdiction over the Borrower or any Bank.
Tier I Capital means regulatory core capital (aufsichtsrechtliches Kernkapital). "Tranche" means a tranche of a particular Series of Notes.
Tier I Capital means capital of the Issuer or any of its Affiliates that was or will be authorized by the Central Bank as Tier I capital of the Regulatory Capital (Patrimônio de Referência), as set forth in Resolution No. 4192.
Tier I Capital means, on a non-consolidated basis, patrimonio di base, being the aggregate amount of the following:
Tier I Capital means owned fund as reduced by investment in shares of other NBFC and in shares, debentures, bonds, outstanding loans and advances including hire purchase and
Tier I Capital means owned fund as reduced by investment in shares
Tier I Capital means the Bank’s Tier I capital, as determined in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards and applicable rules and regulations of the Central Bank, which are based generally on the Basel Accords, being paid-up share capital, issue premium, shareholders’ cash contributions to capital (effectively a pre-payment of capital booked in a foreign currency until such time as it is converted into local currency share capital), legal and statutory reserves (including reserves for unspecified banking risks, but excluding reserves allocated for liquidation of real properties), retained earnings non-cumulative perpetual preferred shares, funds allocated for investment in real properties and financial instruments that (i) are issued andfully paid, (ii) are eligible to cover the Bank’s losses on a going concern basis, (iii) have non-cumulative revenues and (iv) are permanent, subject to early redemption at the Bank’s discretion after five years from their issue date and by the exchange of such instruments for equivalent financial instruments.