Abstract:
Microfinance play pivotal role in providing financial services to low-income
household and small business that are excluded by traditional banking thus aiding
alleviating poverty. Therefore, this study was inspired by critical facts; firstly,
microfinance banks have performed poorly in the past by reporting losses compared
to their counterpart, commercial banks have continued to be resilient to report
improved financial performance. Secondly, there exists a contradiction in past
studies on the significance of financial risk on the financial performance
Microfinance Banks (MFBs). Further, the research aims at demonstrating and
modeling the effect of credit risk, operational risk and liquidity risk as the financial
risk components on the financial performance of MFBs in Kenya. The general
objective was to assess the effects of financial risk on the financial performance of
MFBs in Kenya. The study's specific objectives were: To analyze the effect of credit
risk on the financial performance of MFBs in Kenya; operational risk on the financial
performance of MFBs in Kenya; liquidity risk on the financial performance of MFBs
in Kenya; and to analyze the moderating effect of firm size on the relationship
between financial risk and the financial performance of MFBs in Kenya. The study
was guided by positivist paradigm approach. Descriptive research design and
explanatory research design were adopted. All 14 MFBs licensed by Central Bank of
Kenya (CBK) at the end of 31st December 2021 formed the study's target population.
The study also obtained quantitative data. The quantitative data were obtained from
the CBK, Bank Supervision Annual Report, and audited financial statements of
MFBs for the period between 2011-2021, which was analyzed through panel data
analysis. Panel regression was used to establish the association between independent
and dependent variables. The following diagnostic test was conducted; To test
normality, Kolmogorov -Smirnov test and Shapiro test were carried out and found
that data was following normal distribution; Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) test
was conducted to test unit root and found that all variables had unit roots and were
non-stationary; Wooldridge test was conducted found that data never violated serial
correlation; Variance inflation Factor (VIF) was carried out and found out no
presence of multicollinearity; Breusch-pagan test and Levene test were carried out
and revealed no evidence of heteroscedasticity; and finally Hausman specification
test was conducted and revealed that fixed effect models were suitable for Return on
Assets (ROA). The finding on results and test of Hypothesis revealed that credit risk
exerted a negative and statistically significant effect financial performance of MFBs
while Operational risk and Liquidity risk had a negative and statistically insignificant
relationship with ROA as measures of the Financial performance of MFBs. The
study therefore recommends that, MFBs should adopt strategies and policies that
ensure vetting and issuance of credit facilities to credit worth customers. The bank
should also develop and implement policies to improve managerial efficiency to
reduce operational cost