Determinants of Interest Rate Spread among Commercial Banks in Nepal
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Department of Management
Abstract
In Nepal, there is a widespread perception that interest rate spread is too wide. Banks,
on the other hand, have justified the wide interest rate spread on the basis of some
economic variables that affect the banks. This study was largely a quantitative research
given that the study sought to examine the determinants of the bank interest rates among
commercial banks in Nepal. This study focused on the licensed large commercial banks
according to the CBN which include in Nepal bank, Agrilcture development bank, Nabil
bank, Nepal Bangladesh bank, Standard chartered bank and Himalayan bank limited.
This study used secondary data available from the annual financial reports from year
period between 2015 and 2020. The collected data was organized into SPSS and analyses
using descriptive analysis, correlation analysis, and regression analysis.
This study found out that the model summary of multiple regression model, showed that
all the three predictors (credit risk, operation cost and liquidity risk) explained 83.5
percent variation of interest spread considering the three study independent variables,
there is a probability of predicting interest spread by 62.1% (R squared =0.621).The F
statistic is equal to 63.391 and p value of 0.000<0.05level of significance implying that
the joint contribution of credit risk levels , liquidity and operating cost significantly
predict interest spread. Thus justifying the following estimation model:-
This study revealed that credit risk was positively and significantly associated with
interest spread (r = 0.3661, ρ<0.01) indicating 36.61% positive relationship with interest
spread. The study further found that operation cost was positively and significantly
correlated to interest spread (r = 0.695, ρ<0.01) showing that operation cost has 69.5%
positive relationship with interest spread. Finally, the study found that liquidity risk was
positively correlated with interest spread (r = 0.778, ρ<0.01) an indication of 77.8%
positive relationship with interest spread credit risk had a weak negative effect on
interest rate spread (β = -.001, p = 0.997.
Consistent with some past literature on the factors that influence interest rate spreads,
this study concludes that credit risk had a significant effect on interest spread with each
unit increase in interest spread for each unit increase in credit risk. This study also
concluded that each unit increase in operation cost, there was -0.0215 units decrease in
interest spread. This study concluded that liquidity risk has significant effect on interest spread for each unit increase in liquidity risk, there was up to 0.757 units increase in
interest spread. This study also recommends that the Government, through the Central
Bank of Nepal should be instrumental in developing policies and regulations to guide
commercial banks in setting up of optimal interest rate spreads in order to promote loan
uptake as well as improve performance of these commercial banks.