Effect of Liquidity on Financial Performance of Non Deposit Taking Financial Institutions in Kenya
Abstract
The study set out to determine how non-banking financial entities in Kenya fare financially in
relation to liquidity. This study will mainly center on a bank that does not take deposits. This study
set out to answer the research question by looking at how liquidity affects financial performance.
Specifically, the study attempted to determine the function that liquidity plays in determining
financial success. An approach known as descriptive research was used for the investigation. By
using the census sampling approach, the sample size was determined to be 32 individuals who
responded to the survey. Information on liquidity and financial performance was derived from
secondary sources. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used in the analyses. Methods like
as correlation and regression were part of inferential statistics, whereas descriptive statistics
included tools such as percentages, averages, and standard deviation. Business size, capital
adequacy, and liquidity were shown to have a significant and strong link with financial
performance. Conversely, non-deposit MFIs' financial performance was significantly and
negatively correlated with non-performing loans. An R-squared value of 0.452 indicates that non performing loans (NPL), bank size, liquidity, and capital adequacy explained 45.2% of the
variation in financial performance (ROA). That leaves 54.8% to be explained by the error term
and other factors that were left out of the study. According to the results of the ANOVA, this
change was statistically significant. Another finding from the multiple regression study found that
non-deposit taking financial institutions' liquidity, capital adequacy, non-performing loans, and
bank size changed significantly. That the shift was substantial provided further evidence of this.
The study's authors concluded that non-deposit accepting microfinance institutions in Kenya are
affected by liquidity, capital adequacy, non-performing loans, and bank size. Corporate
governance, capital structure, CSR, and the effect of devolution are additional aspects that the
research suggests should be investigated further in order to understand how non-deposit taking
MFIs work.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- School of Business [1576]
The following license files are associated with this item: