In an increasingly volatile financial environment, effective risk monitoring has become a cornerstone of sustainable banking performance. This study investigated the effect of risk monitoring practices on the financial performance of commercial banks in Kenya, focusing on how systematic observation, evaluation, and reporting of risks influence profitability, liquidity, and asset quality. Anchored on the Dynamic Capabilities Theory, the study posited that the ability of banks to continuously monitor and adapt to changing risk conditions enhances competitive advantage and financial resilience. The research adopted a positivist philosophy and employed a descriptive and explanatory research design. The target population consisted of 2,293 senior management employees from 38 commercial banks licensed by the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK). Using stratified random sampling, a sample of 266 respondents was selected. Data were collected through structured questionnaires and supplemented with secondary data from audited bank reports and CBK supervisory publications (2019–2023). The data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Pearson correlation, and multiple regression via SPSS (Version 27). Empirical results revealed a strong and significant positive relationship between risk monitoring and financial performance (r = 0.673, p < 0.05). Regression analysis further indicated that risk monitoring accounted for 75.9% of the variance in financial performance (R² = 0.759), with a regression coefficient of β = 0.411 (p < 0.05). The study established that effective risk monitoring practices—such as regular compliance audits, timely risk reporting, and the use of digital dashboards—enhance operational efficiency, profitability, and shareholder returns. Conversely, banks with weak monitoring mechanisms faced higher non-performing loan ratios and declining return on equity. The study concluded that continuous, technology-driven risk monitoring frameworks are essential for maintaining financial stability and improving institutional performance. The study recommends that commercial banks strengthen real-time monitoring systems, integrate advanced analytics into decision-making, and enhance staff training in risk oversight. Furthermore, the CBK should enforce standardized risk monitoring frameworks to ensure consistency across institutions. The findings contribute valuable insights to risk management literature, emphasizing that proactive monitoring is not only defensive but a strategic enabler of financial sustainability in Kenya’s banking sector
Macharia et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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