Author/Authors :
Rahbar, Farhad University of Tehran, tehran, iran , Behzadi Soufiani, Mohsen University of Tehran, tehran, iran
Abstract :
The present study investigates the impact of macroeconomic and bank-specific
variables on non-performing loans (NPLs). To avoid the identification problem, two
models are employed to address this impact. The first one tests the effect of
macroeconomic variables including the growth of oil revenues, inflation, and the
growth of GDP without the oil sector on the growth of NPLs. Data is quarterly over the
period 2004:3 to 2019:3. The transition variable in this setup is the growth of oil
revenues and its threshold is 9 percent, which divides the sample into oil booms and oil
recessions. According to the results, inflation has a significant positive effect on NPLs.
During the oil boom, oil revenues decrease the NPLs. Due to the immense size of the
government and its current and capital expenditures, when oil revenues are lower, the
government forces banks to allocate loans to finance projects with long maturity.
Furthermore, the present study used PSTR to test the impact of bank-specific variables
consisting of interest rate spread, loan loss provision, loan to deposit ratio, and NPLs.
To do so, monthly data of 10 banks is used over 2016:04 to 2020:12. The transition
variable is the interest rate spread at 1 percent, which categorizes the banks into two
groups of good and bad. Good banks collect deposits with a low-interest rate and
allocate high-rate loans with less chance of default. So, interest spread is the most
important prominent determinant of decreasing NPLs, while the loan to deposit ratio is
dependent on the banks belonging to which group. For good banks, the loan to deposit
ratio decreases the NPLs, while for bad banks, it worsens the growth of NPLs.
Keywords :
NPLs , Iran , Oil Revenues , STR , PSTR