Determinants of Profitability of Commercial Banks in Nepal
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Abstract
High revenue generation and wholesome growth of the banks are the utmost aim of a
commercial bank which come with careful insight of the prevailing situation and
prognosis of the upcoming hurdles. There are certain core factors that govern these
and this study was conducted with the objective to analyze the bank specific factors
that affect the profitability of commercial banks in Nepal.
Out of prevailing 28 commercial banks, secondary data of six commercial banks from
year 2011/12 to 2017/18 were considered to analyze the factors that affects
profitability and tested the existing relationship between explanatory variables (capital
adequacy, loan to total assets, deposit to total assets) and profitability measurement:
Return on Assets and Return on Equity by using correlation analysis.
The study used descriptive and analytical research approach to analyze factors that
affect profitability and the significance was tested at 5% level of significance. SPSS
and Excel software were used to analyze the data. Multiple regression models were
used to investigate the impact of explanatory variables on bank profitability.
The correlation analysis revealed that return on assets (ROA) had negative correlation
with explanatory variables capital adequacy ratio (CAR), deposit to total assets
(DTAR), Loan to total assets (LTAR) whereas it had positive correlation with ROA.
Among these explanatory variables capital adequacy ratio (CAR) had significant
positive relation with ROE where as DTAR and LTAR showed negative relationship
with ROE.
The empirical result revealed that capital adequacy, loan to total assets, deposit to
total assets had insignificant negative impact on ROA whereas capital adequacy ratio,
loan to total assets had negative impact on ROE whereas Deposit to total assets had
significant positive impact on ROE.
