IMPACT OF CAPITAL STRUCTURE ON THE PROFITABILITY OF COMMERCIAL BANKS IN NEPAL
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Shanker Dev Campus
Abstract
This study investigates the impact of capital structure on the profitability of commercial banks in
Nepal. the primary objective of the study is to assess the impact of capital structure (debt equity
ratio, debt ratio, loan to deposit ratio, size, liquidity ratio and capital ratio) on the profitability of
selected commercial banks in Nepal. and also, examines the existing position of capital structure
and the profitability of commercial banks in Nepal. The main purpose of this study is to analyse
the relationship between capital structure (debt equity ratio, debt ratio, loan to deposit ratio, size,
liquidity ratio, and capital ratio) and the profitability of selected commercial banks in Nepal. The
descriptive and causal research design was employed in this study. This study covers ten years of
data collected from annual reports of sampled organizations. The collecte d data has been
analyzed by using some statistical tools such as mean, standard deviation, correlation analysis,
ANOVA and regression analysis. The collected information and the numerical data have been
analyzed by using the Excel 2016 version to show the data and results clearly.
From the regression analysis,
t he value of the R square of return on assets and return on equity is
0.5318 and 0.5710 respectively which indicates 53.18% and 57.10% of the systematic variation
in return on assets and return on equity can be explained by independent variables such as debt
equity ratio, debt ratio, loan to deposit ratio, liquidity ratio, bank size, and cap ital ratio. The
remaining percentage is due to the effect of other factors.
The analysis suggests that certain financial ratios, particularly the Debt Equity Ratio, Loan to
Deposit Ratio, and Size, have a statistically significant negative impact on ROA. Other variables
in the model do not appear to have a statistically significant effect on ROA. The standard error
shows the deviation between the actual value and the estimated value of dependent variables.
The Debt Equity Ratio, Loan to Deposit Ratio, and Size are statistically significant predictors of
ROE, with negative coefficients indicating that increases in these variables are associated with
decreases in ROE. The Debt Ratio, Liquidity Ratio, and Capital Ratio do not show statistically
significant rel ationships with ROE in this model, suggesting that their effects on ROE may not
be substantial or distinguishable from random variation.
