Abstract

The purpose of this investigation is to extend earlier research on the impact of Non- Performing Loans on financial performance. The study confines only nine listed commercial banks in Sri Lanka through the purposive sampling due to the minimize of missing data and links secondary data derived from the annual financial reports of commercial banks using the CSE’s database. The analysed non-performing loans indicator include non-performing loan ratio while financial performance indicator incudes return on assets, return on equity. Regression and Correlation analysis have been employed for the study to investigate the effects of non-performing loans on financial performance. The results of the analysis have revealed that attribute of Non- Performing Loans which is Non-Performing Loan ratio have a negative and significant impact on Financial Performance. The prominent finding of the research utterly reveals that, non-performing loans significantly influences the financial performance of listed commercial banks in Sri Lanka with the negative relationship. Based on the Finding, researcher recommends banks to devise new strategies and implement effective policies relating with management of non-performing loans to improve their financial viability as non-performing loans is one of the significant factors that determine the financial performance which this study concluded. Thus this study will be useful for the management personnel of banks to create the ideas for protect banks from crisis and enhance the performance of banks.

Highlights

  • The banking sector in Sri Lanka continued to expand with improved business operations and risk management practices with the implementation of timely and appropriate regulatory measures and it continued to support economic growth and development through enhanced banking services. (Central bank report, 2017)

  • Non-Performing Loans is the possibility of a borrower defaulting an unpaid loan either partly or in full (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, 2001), this was integrated by Ahmad and Ariff (2007), he extended that NPLs is a percentage of loans that are not repaid within three months (90 days)

  • Correlation analysis will be used to find out the relationship between the independent variable (Non-Performing Loans) and dependent variable (Financial Performance) while linear regression analysis will be performed to investigate the impact of NonPerforming Loans on the Financial Performance for the period of 2012

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Summary

Introduction

The banking sector in Sri Lanka continued to expand with improved business operations and risk management practices with the implementation of timely and appropriate regulatory measures and it continued to support economic growth and development through enhanced banking services. (Central bank report, 2017). The banking sector is considered to be an important means of financing for most infant businesses. NonPerforming Loans ratio (NPLs ratio) is the major indicator of credit risk of commercial banks. It represents how much of banks loans and advances are becoming non-performing which measures the extent of credit default risk that the bank sustained (Gizaw, Kebede and Selvaraj, 2015). Non-Performing Loans is the possibility of a borrower defaulting an unpaid loan either partly or in full (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, 2001), this was integrated by Ahmad and Ariff (2007), he extended that NPLs is a percentage of loans that are not repaid within three months (90 days)

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