Abstract:
Purpose - This paper aims at investigating the impact of bank liquidity on the risk-taking
behavior of the Lebanese commercial banks.
Methodology - To achieve this objective, this study considers the impact of seven
variables, namely, liquidity, size, capital, profitability, loan ratio, efficiency and revenue
diversification by using a panel data of audited financial statement of Lebanese
commercial banks for the period from 2008 to 2015. Three models were tested depending
on the definition of risk and eight hypotheses were investigated using the fixed effect
model.
Findings - Empirical results show that a high level of liquidity tends to increase the bank
total risk but decrease the bank lending risk. Bank's risk is positively affected by the bank
capital, size and loan ratio, but negatively affected by the bank profitability, revenue
diversification and efficiency.
Research limitations - The small sample size with the presence of outliers could have
affected the quality of the study's output.
Practical Implications - The findings of this study have implications for bank regulators
advocating greater liquidity and capital requirement for banks under Basel 111.
Originality - This study has delivered some insights on the determinant factors of the
bank risk-taking behavior in the Lebanese banking system, a topic which is not well
studied in Lebanon.
Description:
MSFRM -- Faculty of Business Administration and Economics, Notre Dame University, Louaize, 2016; "A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of the Master of Science in Financial Risk Management (MS-FRM)"; Includes bibliographical references (leaves 86-103).