Noninterest Income and Performance of Commercial Banking in China

Noninterest income is what most Chinese banks are striving for in recent years because of the vigorous competition among commercial banks due to the increasingly open market and tough regulation from the central bank of China. But the problem is the real effect of noninterest income on profit and ri...

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Main Authors: Limei Sun, Siqin Wu, Zili Zhu, Alec Stephenson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2017-01-01
Series:Scientific Programming
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/4803840
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spelling doaj-5e39ab28b5cb4b20ae133986f41707092021-07-02T08:48:06ZengHindawi LimitedScientific Programming1058-92441875-919X2017-01-01201710.1155/2017/48038404803840Noninterest Income and Performance of Commercial Banking in ChinaLimei Sun0Siqin Wu1Zili Zhu2Alec Stephenson3School of Economics and Management, Harbin Engineering University, Heilongjiang, ChinaSchool of Economics and Management, Harbin Engineering University, Heilongjiang, ChinaData 61, CSIRO, Melbourne, VIC, AustraliaData 61, CSIRO, Melbourne, VIC, AustraliaNoninterest income is what most Chinese banks are striving for in recent years because of the vigorous competition among commercial banks due to the increasingly open market and tough regulation from the central bank of China. But the problem is the real effect of noninterest income on profit and risks. A panel threshold model is used with balanced panel dataset of 16 listed Chinese commercial banks, for the period of 2007 to 2013, to investigate the relationship between noninterest income and performance. The findings show two main conclusions: (1) the existence of two thresholds shows that there is nonlinear relationship; (2) there is a general negative correlation between the noninterest income ratio and performance of commercial banks. Furthermore, when the noninterest income ratio is higher than the two thresholds, the negative correlation decreases. Implications of the paper are that the ratio should be controlled in a range or noninterest income will not positively affect the performance, and a high level of performance can be gained only by raising the ratio to a certain level.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/4803840
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Limei Sun
Siqin Wu
Zili Zhu
Alec Stephenson
spellingShingle Limei Sun
Siqin Wu
Zili Zhu
Alec Stephenson
Noninterest Income and Performance of Commercial Banking in China
Scientific Programming
author_facet Limei Sun
Siqin Wu
Zili Zhu
Alec Stephenson
author_sort Limei Sun
title Noninterest Income and Performance of Commercial Banking in China
title_short Noninterest Income and Performance of Commercial Banking in China
title_full Noninterest Income and Performance of Commercial Banking in China
title_fullStr Noninterest Income and Performance of Commercial Banking in China
title_full_unstemmed Noninterest Income and Performance of Commercial Banking in China
title_sort noninterest income and performance of commercial banking in china
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Scientific Programming
issn 1058-9244
1875-919X
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Noninterest income is what most Chinese banks are striving for in recent years because of the vigorous competition among commercial banks due to the increasingly open market and tough regulation from the central bank of China. But the problem is the real effect of noninterest income on profit and risks. A panel threshold model is used with balanced panel dataset of 16 listed Chinese commercial banks, for the period of 2007 to 2013, to investigate the relationship between noninterest income and performance. The findings show two main conclusions: (1) the existence of two thresholds shows that there is nonlinear relationship; (2) there is a general negative correlation between the noninterest income ratio and performance of commercial banks. Furthermore, when the noninterest income ratio is higher than the two thresholds, the negative correlation decreases. Implications of the paper are that the ratio should be controlled in a range or noninterest income will not positively affect the performance, and a high level of performance can be gained only by raising the ratio to a certain level.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/4803840
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AT siqinwu noninterestincomeandperformanceofcommercialbankinginchina
AT zilizhu noninterestincomeandperformanceofcommercialbankinginchina
AT alecstephenson noninterestincomeandperformanceofcommercialbankinginchina
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