Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this study is to analyze and forecast the financial sustainability and resilience of commercial banks of Bangladesh in response to the negative effects of COVID-19 pandemic.Design/methodology/approachEighteen publicly listed commercial banks of Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) have been taken as a sample for this study. To measure the riskiness of banks' credit portfolio, nine industries of DSE have been considered to determine probable loss of revenue arising from the COVID-19 pandemic shock. Moreover, two commonly used multiple-criteria-decision-making (MCDM) tools namely TOPSIS method and HELLWIG method have been used for analyzing the data.FindingsBased on the performance scores under TOPSIS and HELLWIG method, banks are categorized into three groups (six banks each) namely top resilient, moderate resilient and low resilient. It is found that EBL and DBBL are the most resilient banks, and ONEBANK is the worst resilient bank in Bangladesh in managing the COVID-19 pandemic shock.Research limitations/implicationsThis study concludes that banks with low capital adequacy, low liquidity ratio, low performance and higher NPLs are more vulnerable to the shocks caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The management of commercial banks should emphasize on maintaining higher capital base and reducing default loans.Originality/valueResilience of the Bangladeshi banking sector under any adverse economic event has been examined by only using stress testing approach. This study is empirical evidence where both TOPSIS and HELLWIG MCDM methods have been used to make the result conclusive.

Highlights

  • Outbreak of any global pandemic has a serious impact on human health, economy, education, environment and so on

  • This paper has investigated the resilience of publicly listed private commercial banks of Bangladesh in managing the shocks arising from the COVID-19 pandemic

  • TOPSIS and HELLWIG MCDM methods have been used for analyzing data

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Summary

Introduction

Outbreak of any global pandemic has a serious impact on human health, economy, education, environment and so on. The outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic has already affected the global economy adversely (McKibbin and Fernando, 2020). The COVID-19 pandemic can bring recession or depression for an economy, as businesses are not able to run in full capacity due to strict lockdown period and restricted movement, which will result in a. © Ratan Ghosh and Farjana Nur Saima. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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