Loan growth and bank risk: empirical evidence from SAARC countries

During the last few decades, the world financial crisis sheds on the bank risk, which creates a direct threat to the existence of banks. This paper investigates the relationship between bank risk and loan growth in the South Asian economies. The study has collected data from BankFocus of 118 commerc...

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Main Authors: Probir Kumar Bhowmik, Niluthpaul Sarker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-05-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021011397
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spelling doaj-5d0bc977a49041e1a0662bb121cfb3c32021-06-03T14:52:15ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402021-05-0175e07036Loan growth and bank risk: empirical evidence from SAARC countriesProbir Kumar Bhowmik0Niluthpaul Sarker1School of Management, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, 430074, China; Department of Accounting and Information Systems, University of Barishal, Barishal, 8200, Bangladesh; Corresponding author.Department of Accounting and Information Systems, Jagannath University, Dhaka, 1100, BangladeshDuring the last few decades, the world financial crisis sheds on the bank risk, which creates a direct threat to the existence of banks. This paper investigates the relationship between bank risk and loan growth in the South Asian economies. The study has collected data from BankFocus of 118 commercial banks from 2011 to 2019. This study explores three hypotheses explaining the relation between (i) Bank Risk and Loan Growth; (ii) Loan growth and Bank Profitability; and (iii) Loan growth and bank solvency. Results show that loan growth can induce bank risk in the South Asian economic region. At the same time, Banks' solvency and profitability are correlated to bank risk with statistical significance. Primarily OLS has been applied, followed by GMM estimation. Non-Performing Loan (NPL) has been used as the proxy of bank risk. Further, to check the robustness of the investigation, we have used ZSCORE as a replacement to NPL. The results derived from regressions can put light on banks' poor performance in the South Asian counties and, simultaneously, may set guidance for policymakers of emerging economies.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021011397Loan growthBank riskNon-performing loansZSCOREPanel data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Probir Kumar Bhowmik
Niluthpaul Sarker
spellingShingle Probir Kumar Bhowmik
Niluthpaul Sarker
Loan growth and bank risk: empirical evidence from SAARC countries
Heliyon
Loan growth
Bank risk
Non-performing loans
ZSCORE
Panel data
author_facet Probir Kumar Bhowmik
Niluthpaul Sarker
author_sort Probir Kumar Bhowmik
title Loan growth and bank risk: empirical evidence from SAARC countries
title_short Loan growth and bank risk: empirical evidence from SAARC countries
title_full Loan growth and bank risk: empirical evidence from SAARC countries
title_fullStr Loan growth and bank risk: empirical evidence from SAARC countries
title_full_unstemmed Loan growth and bank risk: empirical evidence from SAARC countries
title_sort loan growth and bank risk: empirical evidence from saarc countries
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2021-05-01
description During the last few decades, the world financial crisis sheds on the bank risk, which creates a direct threat to the existence of banks. This paper investigates the relationship between bank risk and loan growth in the South Asian economies. The study has collected data from BankFocus of 118 commercial banks from 2011 to 2019. This study explores three hypotheses explaining the relation between (i) Bank Risk and Loan Growth; (ii) Loan growth and Bank Profitability; and (iii) Loan growth and bank solvency. Results show that loan growth can induce bank risk in the South Asian economic region. At the same time, Banks' solvency and profitability are correlated to bank risk with statistical significance. Primarily OLS has been applied, followed by GMM estimation. Non-Performing Loan (NPL) has been used as the proxy of bank risk. Further, to check the robustness of the investigation, we have used ZSCORE as a replacement to NPL. The results derived from regressions can put light on banks' poor performance in the South Asian counties and, simultaneously, may set guidance for policymakers of emerging economies.
topic Loan growth
Bank risk
Non-performing loans
ZSCORE
Panel data
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021011397
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AT niluthpaulsarker loangrowthandbankriskempiricalevidencefromsaarccountries
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