Faez Hlail Srayyih
-
1 publications
-
0 downloads
-
2 views
- 118 Views
-
0 books
-
The relationship between dividend policy and bank size: Evidence from Jordan
Mohammad Fawzi Shubita, Faez Hlail Srayyih
, Sinan Abdullah Harjan
, Dua’a Shubita
, Nahed Habis Alrawashedh
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/bbs.19(4).2024.09
Banks and Bank Systems Volume 19, 2024 Issue #4 pp. 112-123
Views: 482 Downloads: 156 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯThe growing need to comprehend how dividend policy affects bank size, particularly in emerging markets like Jordan, makes this study relevant. Bank size, often measured by total assets, is a key indicator of financial strength and stability. This study aims to examine the relationship between various measures of dividend policy – dividend per share, dividend yield, and dividend per share to earnings per share ratio – and bank size in Jordanian banks, using earnings per share as a control variable.
The study employs ordinary least squares regression analysis to investigate the relationship between these variables over a sample of Jordanian banks. Three regression models were constructed to evaluate the impact of each dividend measure on bank size. The results indicate a significant positive relationship between dividend per share and bank size, and between the dividends per share to earnings per share ratio and bank size. The results show that approximately 43.9% of the variance in bank size is explained by the Dividends per share and Earnings per share, and a significant positive correlation is observed between total assets (bank size) and dividend per share, with a coefficient of 53%. Dividend yield, however, showed no significant impact on bank size.
The results support that Jordanian banks with a sound dividend policy on dividend per share and its continuity with earnings exhibit higher asset growth. In this respect, bank growth appears to be highly dependent on a prudent dividend policy even from an emerging markets perspective. -
Assessing the impact of IFRS 9’s Expected Credit Loss model on capital allocation in Jordanian banks
Mohammad Fawzi Shubita, Faez Hlail Srayyih
, Sinan Abdullah Harjan
, Dua’a Shubita
, Majd Munir Iskandrani
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/bbs.20(2).2025.07
This study investigates the empirical effects of implementing the Expected Credit Loss (ECL) model under IFRS 9 on capital budgeting decisions within the Jordanian banking sector. The analysis is based on a full population of all 13 Jordanian commercial banks listed on the Amman Stock Exchange from 2013 to 2023. Using panel data regression models, the study evaluates changes in three key financial ratios: Capital to Assets (CA), Equity to Assets (EA), and Loans to Assets (LA).
The findings reveal that adopting the ECL model led to a statistically significant increase in CA by 0.3% (p = 0.04), suggesting that banks have strengthened capital buffers in anticipation of higher provisioning requirements. Conversely, the EA ratio declined sharply by 1.1% (p < 0.01), indicating equity reallocation to absorb credit risks. Most notably, the LA ratio fell by 3% (p = 0.006), highlighting a more conservative lending approach post-ECL implementation. Each model exhibited strong explanatory power (R² values between 0.79 and 0.87), supporting the robustness of the results.
These outcomes confirm that IFRS 9 has triggered a structural shift in how Jordanian banks manage capital and credit risk. The study underscores the critical need for adaptable capital strategies in emerging markets, where regulatory changes like IFRS 9 can significantly reshape financial behavior and resource allocation.
-
16 Articles
-
1 Articles
-
1 Articles
-
4 Articles
-
1 Articles