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Cheque Bounce refers to the situation wherein, your bank account does not have enough money to pay the cheque that was issued by you.Let us say, you have issued a cheque for Rs. 12,000/- to your friend and he deposits the cheque into his account. On the day, this cheque comes for clearance to your bank account you have only Rs. 5,000/- which means you do not have enough funds to honor the cheque. Hence your cheque would bounce. Which means: No money would be paid for the cheque.Note: Cheque bounce is an offense and the bank and/or the cheque receiver can prosecute you.
A cheque (American and others write Check) is an order (an instruction) by the cheque writer to his/her bank to take money from their account, and to give it to the person (or business) named on the cheque. The cheque writer (drawer) writes the various details including the money amount, date, and a payee (intented recipient/beneficiary of the transfer) on the cheque, and signs it, ordering their bank to pay that person or company the amount of money stated.If the depositor's bank reverses the cheque deposit and advises you cheque out of range you can ask either bank "What do you mean? What's the problem?" Neither banker may really know why the automated cheque reader has rejected the cheque. Odds are - there is a blemish or error in the digital/electronic coding on the cheque that make the cheque invalid, or rather, the instruction to the paying bank becomes void for some reason [whether deliberate by the writer, or otherwise]. Because we are "at the mercy" of the automated cheque reader it is best to ask the writer to replace the faulty cheque than get into a tantrum with any bank staff.Stale cheques are cheques not presented within six months of the date on the cheque. When the holder of the cheque seeks to deposit the stale cheque, the bank will typically decline to accept it. The teller may suggest you ask the cheque writer to issue a new replacement cheque - but they are not obligated to advise you about your options.Regards, Myke
It refers to how you pay for something, weekly , bi-weekly, annually,etc, and also how, by cash, cheque, bank draft.
what do you mean by clearance in banking
My cheque has been returned to me and stated" not signed according to mandate" What does this mean?
Cheque Bounce refers to the situation wherein, your bank account does not have enough money to pay the cheque that was issued by you.Let us say, you have issued a cheque for Rs. 12,000/- to your friend and he deposits the cheque into his account. On the day, this cheque comes for clearance to your bank account you have only Rs. 5,000/- which means you do not have enough funds to honor the cheque. Hence your cheque would bounce. Which means: No money would be paid for the cheque.Note: Cheque bounce is an offense and the bank and/or the cheque receiver can prosecute you.
a bank cheque (UK) (check)(US)
When the bank has not enough funds in the relevant account or the account holder requests that the cheque is bounced (under exceptional circumstances) then the bank will return the cheque to the account holder. The beneficiary of the cheque will have not been paid. This normally incurs a fee from the bank.
Cash or Cheque
Cheque deposited and cleared
cheque head quartres
Cheque book balance means bank balance as per cheque book
CUI means Centralised Unpaid Item and normally relates to a cheque if the sender has cancelled the cheque.
It means that, money will be paid out to the person who is holding (bearer) the check. For ex: If I owe you Rs. 10,000/- and give you a bearer cheque of my bank account with ICICI Bank, all you have to do is, visit your nearest ICICI Bank branch and then submit the cheque for payment. The bank will ask for your identity proof to verify that you are indeed the payee for the cheque and if they are satisfied, they will give you the cash right away. You, the person carrying the cheque will be considered the bearer of the cheque.
A cheque (American and others write Check) is an order (an instruction) by the cheque writer to his/her bank to take money from their account, and to give it to the person (or business) named on the cheque. The cheque writer (drawer) writes the various details including the money amount, date, and a payee (intented recipient/beneficiary of the transfer) on the cheque, and signs it, ordering their bank to pay that person or company the amount of money stated.If the depositor's bank reverses the cheque deposit and advises you cheque out of range you can ask either bank "What do you mean? What's the problem?" Neither banker may really know why the automated cheque reader has rejected the cheque. Odds are - there is a blemish or error in the digital/electronic coding on the cheque that make the cheque invalid, or rather, the instruction to the paying bank becomes void for some reason [whether deliberate by the writer, or otherwise]. Because we are "at the mercy" of the automated cheque reader it is best to ask the writer to replace the faulty cheque than get into a tantrum with any bank staff.Stale cheques are cheques not presented within six months of the date on the cheque. When the holder of the cheque seeks to deposit the stale cheque, the bank will typically decline to accept it. The teller may suggest you ask the cheque writer to issue a new replacement cheque - but they are not obligated to advise you about your options.Regards, Myke
Bouncing Cheque means - a cheque that was submitted/deposited for payment was rejected and no money was paid. A cheque may bounce due to a variety of reasons. Some of them are: a. The signature of the cheque issuer does not match bank records b. There is not enough money in the issuers bank account to pay for the cheque c. There is overwriting in the cheque and is not duly counter-signed d. The amount in numbers and amount in words does not match e. The cheque is very old and expired (more than 90 days old)
It means that you are issuing instructions to your bank to not honor/pay the check that you have already issued to someone.