dc.description.abstract | Amid an economic downturn, the performance of financial institutions tends to
deteriorate due to its procyclicality, worsening the already unfavorable economic
conditions in return. Hence, a deep understanding of the relationship between bank
profitability and the business cycle is essential to develop effective macroprudential
policies for better financial stability. To achieve those, this study aims to identify and
evaluate factors that have a significant impact on the Diversification ratio (Diversification)
and Profitability (Return on Equity – ROE) of financial institutions in Vietnam and the
ASEAN-5 countries (Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines, and Indonesia). It adopts
a sample of 46 commercial banks in the countries mentioned before between 2007 and
2015 to determine whether there is a significant connection between either of the dependent
variables adopted and the following independent variables: Real GDP (RGDP), Real GDP
growth (RGDPG), Inflation (INF), Money market rate (MMR), Stock market to GDP ratio
(MKC), Stock market volatility index (MKV), Industrial production index (IPI), Interest
rate spread (SINT) (macroeconomic variables), and Bank Operating expenses (OE) and
Total assets (TA) (bank-specific variables). A Regression model with Two-step Generalized
Method of Moments (GMM) Estimator is applied to Diversification due to the existence
of lags in the impacts of its explanatory variables, while a “static”, Generalized Least
Squares model is adopted for ROE. This study finds that Diversification is positively
related to RGDP, MMR, MKC, MKV, IPI, OE and TA, while negatively affected by INF,
most of which demonstrate lagged effects. Concerning ROE, this variable is found to move
in the same direction as TA but opposite one with INF and IPI, while other factors including
RGDPG, MMR, MKC, MKV, SINT, and OE show no statistically significant impacts on
ROE. Using this paper, bank financial managers could be aware of how important it is to
set diversifying strategies at appropriate levels to benefit under various economic
circumstances and be flexible in utilizing both available and predictive economic data to
decide on the optimal business policies and regulations for operational efficiency
maximization. | en_US |