Net bank interest margin and interest rate risk among commercial banks in Kenya
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Date
2005Author
Kilongosi, Joseph M
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
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This study set out with the objective of determining the relationship between net bank
interest margin and interest rate risk among registered commercial banks operating in
Kenya as of 31SI march 2004. This study was inspired by among others, Hanweck's (2005)
George Mason University working paper 2005-02 "The Sensitivity Of Bank Net Interest
Margins And Profitability To Credit, Interest-Rate, And Term Structure Shocks Across
Bank Product Specialization". To do this, five regression models were developed using net
interest margin and interest rate risk variables data for the period between the fourth quarter
of2002 to the second quarter of2005.
Net interest margin was measured by average net interest income as a percentage of
average earning assets while interest rate risk indicators used were the volatility of 91-day
monthly treasury yield (VOL_l Y), net short term assets as a percentage of earning assets
(STGAP _RAT), non-maturing deposits as a percentage of earning assets (NM _RAT), with
a dummy variable (ST_DUMMY) introduced to capture marginal effect when VOL_l Y
increased in the quarter. Two interaction terms between the dummy and; STGAP _RAT and
NM_RAT respectively, capture the marginal effect of an increase in these variables when
short-term interest rates rise.
The study found out that interest rate risk contributes 50.4% influence of the total
variations of net bank interest margin of commercial banks in Kenya. With 18.8% variation
in NIM when the risk is measured by the volatility of the 91-day monthly treasury yield,
32.3% when the risk is measured by the net short term assets as a percentage of earning
assets and 33.0% if measured by the non-maturing deposits as a percentage of earning
assets.
This implies that if the Central Bank of Kenya (Amendment) Act, 2002 commonly referred
to as the 'Donde Bill' from which the Minister of Finance has invoked several clauses, and
that which provides that the bank interest rates be pegged on the 91-day Treasury bill fully
comes into force, the bank interest rates will strongly be influenced by the volatility of the
treasury yield and thereby bank NIM. Meaning that in the long run commercial banks in
Kenya will no longer rely on interest generated income as their main source of income, and
that they will have to move from their traditional intermediation role and towards other
innovative ways of raising fee income.
Citation
MBASponsorhip
University of NairobiPublisher
University of Nairobi School of Business, College of Humanities and Social Sciences