Abstract:
Banks are depository financial institutions connecting the savers and users of fund. These
mediators are interpolated between the final borrowers and lenders allowing them well
organized allocation of funds in the economy. Entities having excess funds can advance
them for rational return to entrepreneurs and other economic units who need funds to take
the advantage of economically and financially feasible investment ventures. The presence
of financial markets and financial organizations allows such transfer of financial resources.
Thus, both the borrowers and lenders are well off compared to without financial
organizations and intermediaries. It is argued that financial establishments have a
progressive role in funding and investment in a multidimensional practice linking the
difficulty of numerous interconnected and inter-reliant factors of differentiated nature. It is
difficult to assess the contribution of each factor independently. The pivotal purpose of
financial organization with other non-depository institutions is to support in the distribution
of country‘s scarce capital among several alternative investment areas. Thus, the financial
market plays a twin role, providing numerous types of investment fund and disciplining
businesses, which are incompetent and fail to follow profitable income objectives. Thus, it
is observed that financial institutions especially commercial banks if rightly organized and
directed can help expansion of our economy.
In the context of Bangladesh has an option, efforts to be designed at nurturing banking
activities for accelerating the economic wheel of the country. Notwithstanding its
significant merits, it is also not desirable to overlook the problems of the nation‘s crisis
oriented banking structure, which requires appropriate guideline of the banking procedure
in order to safeguard effective use and watching of business funds.
i
The appearances of a non-performing supervisory structure are evident in the banking area
of Bangladesh. Because of the inefficient and corrupt-ridden banking structure, there was
fear that a huge part of the bank credit would turn into classified and defaulted loans. The
prevailing extensive spread of default culture has to increase the costs of financial
intermediation by banks and financial institutions revealed in recent years. The motives for
this default culture on a huge scale are also intensified by politically motivated and
influenced credit provided by public sector loans and given to sponsor-director by private
sector banks and due to the flaw of legal and organizational arrangements for defaulted and
outstanding loan recovery. These aspects badly influence the financial segment and its
setting for successful operation for achieving the desired goals. Therefore, the flow in
credit distributions need to be disciplined to avoid more worsening in the financial and
banking sector for upholding quality of commercial bank advancing by developing the
organizational setting and that is considered as one of the prime apprehension of banking
sector.
Over the previous years, varieties of theories and different analyses have appeared in bank
management arena. These developments viewed that bank management issues to be
determined by extensive range of aspects i.e., profitability, capital adequacy, asset quality
and other related factors. In this thesis studies related to the above mentioned areas have
been thoroughly analyzed and discussed in a sequential manner. The sequence of analysis
suggests that the results are diverse in nature reflecting the models and methodologies used
in different countries and dependent on the financial and regulatory structure of the
countries under study.
ii
In this thesis an attempt has also been made to give an insight into the different types of
banks operating in Bangladesh, their performance with respect to profitability, return on
asset, return on equity, classification of loans and capital adequacy under the different
structural settings and different rules and regulations at domestic and international settings.
An insight into the above mentioned areas of banking system of Bangladesh revealed that
bank profitability, return on equity, return on asset and capital adequacy ratios have wide
variations during the study period. Moreover, it is documented that non-performing loan
has been increasing trend over the years and capital adequacy ratio of different banks are
not uniform. There exists gap between the regulatory requirements and the amount of
capital maintained by banks. Additional dimension has also been observed with the
introduction of Basel in the banking sector of Bangladesh. Diverse results have been
observed for the capital base during the pre-Basel and post Basel era. We are optimistic
that the country‘s banking sector will able to overcome the existing problems in the
banking sector with the introduction of different government rules and regulations and
efficient governance measures in the banking sector.
In the ‗Research Design‘ chapter of the study, at first, strands of literatures on research
philosophies, research designs, research approaches, and research methods were discussed.
Then the researcher specified the chosen research methods, and also provided the rationale
behind such choices. The researcher then focused on the data collection mechanism,
sampling framework and major choices made during the data management process. At the
later segment of this chapter, the ethical dilemmas related to data collection phase were
highlighted. In the conceptual framework segment, the econometric challenges related to
multiple regression analysis were presented. The researcher has also discussed how those
challenges were managed.
iii
The researcher followed positivism as the chosen research philosophy. As per the
positivism philosophy it is believed that there exists only one state of reality at a given
point in time; respondents‘ cognitive biases do not affect the decision-making process; and
researcher can objectively detach him/her from the research process. It was a secondary
data driven study and the researcher did not collect primary data through FGD, survey or
interview. So, the collected data was free from standard survey biases and the research
results were not subject to social scientist‘s interpretation. Deduction was the chosen
research approach. In a deductive approach, tentative null hypotheses are formed and these
are tested using the collected data. Theory formation is not the researcher‘s objective,
rather researchers try to test the empirical validity of a theory in deductive research. The
researcher tested research hypotheses [constructed based on the established theory] in
Bangladeshi context. In case of qualitative research, research inputs and outputs are non
numeric. On the other hand, in case of quantitative research, research inputs and outputs
are numeric. In case of mono-qualitative research, researchers use only one qualitative tool
like interview, FGD etc. In case of multi-qualitative research, researchers use only more
than one qualitative tool. In case of mono-quantitative research, researchers use only one
quantitative tool like descriptive statistics, regression etc. In case of multi-quantitative
research, researchers use only more than one quantitative tool. A number of quantitative
methods were used in this thesis. It was basically a multi-method quantitative business
research.
Research designs are of different types – archival research, case study, focus group
discussion, survey etc. Survey, interview, and focus group discussion etc. are popular ways
to collect primary data. Case study, and archival research etc. are popular ways to collect
secondary data. This research is based on archival research. The data depository used in the
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research is based on an in-house constructed excel template. As already mentioned, the
researcher used secondary data for this research. The data was collected from annual
reports of Bangladesh-based commercial banks. Since annual reports are available in the
public domain there is no need to seek for prior permission. Macro-economic data was
downloaded from Bangladesh bank website.
In a standard survey and interview-based research, generally researchers face a number of
ethical concerns. Participation in the survey and interview needs to be voluntary; there
should not be any discrimination based on gender, income level, and religious belief; and
participation of the survey respondents should remain anonymous. Since it was secondary
data-based research and the data was collected from a publicly available source with no
pre-extraction and post-extraction clauses, the researcher fraught limited number of ethical
challenges while conducting the research.
The researcher employed purposive sampling [also known as judgemental or subjective
sampling] for to select traditional commercial banks. In a purposive sampling, all the
economic unit does not have the equal chance to be selected; so basically, it is a non
probability-based sampling. The research time period spanned from 2011 to 2023. The
constructed panel database had both cross-sectional and time-series variations – these
variations were later exploited while building models.
All the baseline regressions were run under the OLS (ordinary least square) framework.
Before running the regressions, the researcher ensured that the pre-conditions [linearity in
parameter, random sampling, consistency, no full rank issues] were met. The researcher
went through the empirical literatures and then selected the set of independent variables.
That is why, the researcher believes that the omitted variable concern is partially mitigated.
Instrumental variables were used to check out whether ‗reverse causality channel‘ is a valid
v
source of endogeneity into the model or not. Robustness of the estimated effects were
evaluated against measurement issues and heterogeneity concerns. The researcher has used
multiple definitions of independent variables to mitigate proxy variable measurement
issues. Robustness of the estimated effects were also tested by splitting the dataset into two
portions [70% and 30% split-up]. Since the researcher dealt with panel data, there were two
choices before the researcher – either to run a fixed-effects model or a random-effects
model. As per the Hausman test result, the researcher used fixed-effects model [firm-fixed
effects] in case of every specification. Moreover, fixed-effects model is more flexible with
its treatment related to cross-sectional heterogeneity.
In the ‗Empirical Analysis‘ chapter of the thesis, the researcher has at first presented the
baseline regression results to better understand the profitability determinants. The sign and
the magnitude of the regression coefficients were the key area of interest. Commercial
bank‘s profitability was defined through three perspectives – accounting profit (measured
through ROA), economic profit (measured through residual income), and market‘s
perception of profit (measured through CAPE). It was evident that business size, activity
mix, cost management, interest rate, GDP growth rate, asset quality, net interest margin
positively influenced the accounting profitability of commercial banks. It was also evident
that capital adequacy and inflation rate negatively influenced the accounting profitability of
commercial banks. For the first baseline regression equation, most of the regression
coefficients were both economically and statistically significant. It was evident that
business size, activity mix, cost management, interest rate, GDP growth rate, asset quality,
net interest margin positively influenced the economic profitability of commercial banks. It
was also evident that capital adequacy and inflation rate negatively influenced the
economic profitability of commercial banks. For the second baseline regression equation,
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most of the regression coefficients were both economically and statistically significant. It
was evident that business size, activity mix, cost management, interest rate, GDP growth
rate, asset quality, net interest margin positively influenced the market-based profitability
measures of commercial banks. It was also evident that capital adequacy and inflation rate
negatively influenced the market-based profitability of commercial banks. For the third
baseline regression equation, most of the regression coefficients were both economically
and statistically significant.
In the baseline models, fixed effects models [firm-fixed effects] were run. The choice of
firm-fixed effects was inspired by Hausman-test results and the conceptual flexibility
embedded in the model. The estimated effects are robust to model preference as the
regression sign does not flip and level of significance does not change when the researcher
use random effects model. Baseline regression results were extracted based on OLS
[ordinary least square] framework; OLS is a special case of GLS and its applicability is
certainly quite limited. Most of the inbuilt assumptions of OLS are not realistic like linear
in parameter, homoscedasticity etc. Regression errors are normally distributed only under
some very specific circumstances. That is why it was important to test whether the
regression results hold if different estimation techniques are employed. Similar types of
results can be extracted if MLE or GMM estimation techniques are introduced instead of
the OLS framework. The estimated effects are robust to out-of-the-sample contexts as the
regression sign does not flip when the researcher built the model using 70% data and later
tried to predict the remaining 30% data using the estimated model. The researcher did not
observe any signs of cross-sectional heterogeneity in the estimated effects. Based on
commercial bank‘s size [measured by asset value], commercial banks were divided into
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two groups: large-size banks and small-size banks. Profitability determinants in case of
large-sized banks were not different from that of small-sized banks.
The researcher then managed endogeneity concerns revolving the baseline results.
Endogeneity in the baseline regression can stem from – omitted variable bias, reverse
causality channel and measurement error in the independent variable. Omitted variables
become part of the regression error and this error can be correlated with the set of
independent variables – resulting into endogeneity. Similarly, presence of reverse causality
and measurement error in the independent variables would make regression errors strongly
connected with the error – resulting into endogeneity. After reviewing the literature, the
researcher has identified a number of bank-specific and macro-factors that may have
influenced commercial bank‘s profitability. There are at least three aspects of profitability
namely liquidity management, management efficiency, and labor efficiency which were
omitted from the baseline models. It was evident that asset quality and banks‘ performance
is positively related and the regression coefficient is significant in case of all the baseline
regression models, once the omitted variables were introduced into the models. It was also
evident that capital adequacy and banks‘ performance is negatively related and the
regression coefficient is significant in case of all the baseline regression models, once the
omitted variables were introduced in the models. As already mentioned, measurement
errors in the dependent variables cannot lead to endogeneity problem, but it can increase
the variance of the estimators. There are three dependent variables used in the baseline
model namely ROA, economic profit and CAPE. In order to mitigate the inflated variance
concerns, the researcher used alternative measurement for all these three variables. Instead
of using ROA, the researcher used ROE; instead of economic profit, the researcher opted
for scaled residual earnings [scaled by bank-level interest income] and instead of 3-year
viii
moving average based CAPE, the researcher used 5-year moving average based CAPE. It
was evident that asset quality and banks‘ performance is positively related and the
regression coefficient is significant in case of all the baseline regression models, once the
alternative definition of dependent variables were introduced into the models. It was also
evident that capital adequacy and banks‘ performance is negatively related and the
regression coefficient is significant in case of all the baseline regression models, once the
alternative definition of dependent variables were introduced in the models.
Chow tests are usually used to look out for structural change or shift in paradigms in case
of time series data. The researcher has used Chow tests to investigate whether there exists
any structural change in terms of Bangladesh based commercial bank‘s profitability
determinants, profitability-asset quality relationship, and profitability-capital adequacy
relationship. As already mentioned, Chow tests look out for structural changes in time
series data, but similar techniques are applicable in panel dataset as well. It was established
through the Chow test that there exists structural change in the dataset in the pre-Basel and
post-Basel regime. It was evident that profitability parameters, profit-capital adequacy
relationship and profitability-asset quality relationship has changed significantly during the
pre-Basel and post-Basel period.
Basel accord was phase-wise implemented in Bangladesh based financial sector. In order to
better understand the influence of this regulation on bank‘s profitability, the researcher has
used Basel dummy variable. It is evident that from the regression results that on an average
bank profitability is lower during the post-Basel era than the case with pre-Basel era. The
regression parameter associated with Basel dummy is negative and statistically significant.
The sign of the regression coefficient makes total sense since extra equity caution was
naturally supposed to depress profit numbers. It was further evident through interaction
ix
effects that the negative profitability-capital adequacy relationship is stronger during the
post-Basel era than the case with pre-Basel era. Similarly, it was found that the positive
profitability-asset quality relationship is more-stronger during the post-Basel era than the
case with pre-Basel era.
The substantial features and contribution of this research are provided below:
i) Based on the PCA results, it was concluded that 'dimension reduction' would not be an
appropriate approach to understanding the profitability determinants of Bangladesh-based
commercial banks since the first two principal components can together explain only 45%
of the total variation.
ii) The researcher designed three regression models for the profitability of Bangladesh
based commercial banks. The profitability of commercial banks was defined through three
perspectives: accounting profit (measured through ROA), economic profit (measured
through residual income), and the market's perception of profit (measured through CAPE).
It was evident that several bank-specific, macroeconomic, and industry-specific variables
influence commercial banks' profitability.
iii) The regression results showed that factors such as business size, activity mix, cost
management, interest rate, GDP growth rate, asset quality, and net interest margin
positively impacted commercial banks' accounting profitability. Conversely, capital
adequacy and inflation rate were found to negatively affect accounting profitability.
iv) It was documented that factors such as business size, activity mix, cost management,
interest rates, GDP growth rate, asset quality, and net interest margin had a positive impact
on the economic profitability of commercial banks. In addition, capital adequacy and the
inflation rate were found to negatively impact economic profitability.
x
v) Similarly, business size, activity mix, cost management, interest rates, GDP growth rate,
asset quality, and net interest margin were also observed to positively influence market
based profitability measures for commercial banks, while capital adequacy and inflation
rate had a negative effect.
vi) The estimated effects are robust to ‗Omitted variable bias‘, and ‗Reverse causality‘
concerns. It was observed that the estimated effects are robust to model preference as the
regression sign does not flip and the level of significance does not change when the
researcher uses a random effects model. Likewise, similar types of results can be extracted
if MLE or GMM estimation techniques are introduced instead of the OLS framework. The
study documented that the estimated effects are robust to out-of-the-sample contexts [using
a 70%-30% training-testing split]. The researcher did not observe any signs of cross
sectional heterogeneity in the estimated effects.
vii) Chow test results documented a shift in paradigm in the profitability-asset quality and
profitability-capital adequacy relationship when pre-Basel and post-Basel regimes are
compared. It is evident from the regression result that on average banks‘ profitability is
lower during the post-Basel era than the case with the pre-Basel era. It was further evident
through interaction effects that the negative profitability-capital adequacy relationship was
stronger during the post-Basel era than the case with the pre-Basel era. Similarly, it was
found that the positive profitability-asset quality relationship was stronger during the post
Basel era than the case with the pre-Basel era.
Further study can be undertaken in order to better understand the nexus among bank
profitability, asset quality, and capital adequacy with respect to other regulatory shocks like
Basel implementation.