Capital Adequacy and its Impact on the Profitability of Commercial Banks In Nepal
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Central Departmental of Management
Abstract
The primary functions of commercial banks are raise and utilization of funds.
Commercial banks collect a large amount of deposit from general public. The bank
should hold an adequate capital secure the interest of depositors.The aim of this study
is to quantify the impact and simultaneously, the results is corroborating with the
hypothesis that there is no significant impact of capital adequacy variables on the
profitability of commercial banks in Nepal. Out of prevailing 28 commercial banks,
secondary data of ten commercial banks from 2007 to 2016 were considered to
analyze the factors that affect profitability.
The descriptive statistics shows that, Nepalese commercial banks are earning
satisfactory profit with average variation of return. The average CAR higher than
regulatory requirement of 10%. It the evidence of the compliance of NRB directives
and Basel III requirement. The AAR shows that aggressiveness of bank in lending
funds which ultimately results in better profitability. The G-STIR ratio shows that the
commercial bank are investing in risk free assets, they are risk averter.NPLR shows
low return and high risk in Non-performing loan.
The correlation coefficient shows the positive and negative impact of the dependent
and independent variables. The correlation coefficient between CAR, D-ER and
NPLR which shows that there is negative correlation with ROA. It means higher
capital leads to lower ROA, ROE and Spread. The correlation coefficient between
CAR, D-ER and NPLR is negative related with spread. It shows that higher the CAR,
D-ER, NPLR the lower will be the profit of the commercial banks in Nepal. The
correlation coefficient between G-STIR and AAR is positive.
The regression analysis shows relationship with independent and dependent variables
both. There is significantly negative relationship between ROA, ROE and Spread with
CAR, D-ER, AAR and NPLR. Regression analysis shows positively insignificant
relationship between government securities to total investment at significant level
0.005 with ROA, ROE and Spread.
KEYWORDS: Capital Adequacy, Return on Assets, Spread, Return on Equity.