Growth hopes up as rates stay low

Original article by David Uren
The Australian – Page: 2 : 8-Nov-17

Financial markets expect the Reserve Bank of Australia to leave official interest rates at 1.5 per cent until the second half of 2018, after it made no change to monetary policy on 7 November. RBA governor Philip Lowe noted that business conditions are improving, particularly the outlook for business investment in non-mining sectors of the economy. He also said growth in wages will remain low in the near-term but an upturn in the labour market will eventually have a flow-on effect, while he has forecast a further decline in the unemployment rate.

CORPORATES
RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA, AMP LIMITED – ASX AMP, NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED – ASX NAB, STANDARD AND POOR’S ASX 200 INDEX

Westpac CEO says political consensus needed to lift business confidence

Original article by James Eyers,James Frost
The Australian Financial Review – Page: Online : 7-Nov-17

Westpac CEO Brian Hartzer has urged Australia’s politicians to find common ground on issues such as energy policy and infrastructure spending, so as to encourage business confidence. He made his remarks while announcing on 6 November that Westpac had recorded an annual profit of $A8.1 billion. Westpac predicts that Australian gross domestic product will grow by just 2.5 per cent in 2018, compared with forecast global growth of 3.5 per cent. Hartzer does not expect any change in interest rates for some time to come.

CORPORATES
WESTPAC BANKING CORPORATION – ASX WBC,AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE TREASURY,RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA,AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY,AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LIMITED – ASX ANZ,NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED – ASX NAB

BoE raises rates for the first time in a decade, but the pound tumbles

Original article by
abc.net au – Page: Online : 3-Nov-17

The British pound has fallen against the US and Australian currencies in response to the Bank of England’s decision to increase its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 0.5 per cent. It was the central bank’s first increase in official interest rates since 2007, and two members of its Monetary Policy Committee voted against a rate rise amid concerns about sluggish growth in wages and the economy.

CORPORATES
BANK OF ENGLAND, UNITED STATES. FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD, EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK

Donald Trump nominates Jerome Powell as Fed chair

Original article by Kate Davidson, Peter Nicholas
BBC.com – Page: Online : 3-Nov-17

US President Donald Trump has nominated Jerome Powell to succeed Janet Yellen as chair of the Federal Reserve. He is widely tipped to maintain the Federal Reserve’s current approach to tightening monetary policy, and financial market experts are generally supportive of the decision to select Powell over the other four candidates for the role, who included Yellen. Powell’s appointment must be confirmed by the Senate.

CORPORATES
UNITED STATES. FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD, UNITED STATES. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT

NAB wields axe despite $6.6bn profit

Original article by Michael Roddan
The Australian – Page: 19 & 23 : 3-Nov-17

National Australia Bank has posted a 2016-17 cash profit of $A6.64bn, which is 2.5 per cent higher than previously. The earnings of its business banking division rose by 6.3 per cent to $A2.8bn in the year to September 2017, while its consumer banking and wealth division reported earnings growth of 4.3 per cent to $A1.6bn. NAB has revealed plans to slash costs by $A1bn by 2020. This will include the loss of 6,000 jobs, which equates to about 18 per cent of its workforce, although NAB also intends to recruit 2,000 people with digital and technology skills as part of its focus on automation.

CORPORATES
NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED – ASX NAB, CLYDESDALE BANK PLC, NIPPON LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED, MACQUARIE GROUP LIMITED – ASX MQG, UBS HOLDINGS PTY LTD, CLSA AUSTRALIA PTY LTD

Westpac in so deep it ‘fixed rate pricing’

Original article by Richard Gluyas
The Australian – Page: 17 & 21 : 1-Nov-17

The Federal Court has heard a series of recorded conversations in which Westpac staff allegedly discussed strategies for manipulating the bank bill swap rate. The taped conversations were part of the Australian Securities & Investments Commission’s evidence against the bank, which has elected to contest the allegations of market manipulation rather than agree to a settlement. Other evidence tendered in court by ASIC included email messages from Westpac staff and the minutes from Australian Financial Markets Association meetings.

CORPORATES
WESTPAC BANKING CORPORATION – ASX WBC, AUSTRALIAN SECURITIES AND INVESTMENTS COMMISSION, FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIAN FINANCIAL MARKETS ASSOCIATION INCORPORATED, NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED – ASX NAB, AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LIMITED – ASX ANZ

Home loans break trillion dollar barrier

Original article by Michael Roddan
The Australian – Page: 21 : 1-Nov-17

The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority has reported that the value of mortgage loans written for owner-occupiers rose by 0.5 per cent in September, to $A1.03bn. Meanwhile, there was 0.3 per cent growth across the mortgage lending sector during the month. Separate data from the Reserve Bank shows that there was 0.5 per cent growth in housing loans in September, while year-on-year growth rose from 6.4 per cent to 6.5 per cent. In contrast, annual growth in business lending was 4.3 per cent.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN PRUDENTIAL REGULATION AUTHORITY, RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA, DIGITAL FINANCE ANALYTICS, BENDIGO AND ADELAIDE BANK LIMITED – ASX BEN, COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA – ASX CBA, SUNCORP GROUP LIMITED – ASX SUN, MACQUARIE GROUP LIMITED – ASX MQG, ME BANK, AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LIMITED – ASX ANZ, NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED – ASX NAB, WESTPAC BANKING CORPORATION – ASX WBC, UBS HOLDINGS PTY LTD

Westpac takes on ASIC alone over rate rigging

Original article by James Frost, Patrick Durkin
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 1 & 6 : 31-Oct-17

Westpac has elected to let the courts decide whether allegations of rigging the bank bill swap rate have any foundation. National Australia Bank and the ANZ, which were also alleged by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission of rigging the BBSW, have agreed to a settlement over the issue. The case against Westpac will begin in the Federal Court on 31 October, with the case likely to run until the end of the year.

CORPORATES
WESTPAC BANKING CORPORATION – ASX WBC, NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED – ASX NAB, AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LIMITED – ASX ANZ, AUSTRALIAN SECURITIES AND INVESTMENTS COMMISSION, FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA, COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA – ASX CBA

Westpac takes BBSW case down to the wire

Original article by Sally Patten, Jonathan Shapiro
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 4 : 30-Oct-17

National Australia Bank has joined the ANZ Bank in reaching a settlement with the Australian Securities & Investments Commission over rate-rigging allegations. The NAB is understood to have agreed to make a total payment of $A50 million, of which $A10 million would be seen as a penalty and $A20 million would go towards ASIC’s legal costs. The remaining $A20 million would be donated to a consumer protection fund. Westpac, the third bank involved in the bank bill swap rate case, is believed to be still considering whether it should challenge ASIC’s allegations in court.

CORPORATES
NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED – ASX NAB, AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LIMITED – ASX ANZ, AUSTRALIAN SECURITIES AND INVESTMENTS COMMISSION, WESTPAC BANKING CORPORATION – ASX WBC, FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

Citi predicts end of credit cards

Original article by Karen Maley
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 1 & 4 : 30-Oct-17

Michael Corbat, the CEO of US bank Citigroup, forecasts that it will not be too long before digital payments and the like replace credit cards. Given that Citigroup is the largest issuer of credit cards in the world, it is important that it is well-positioned to be part of whatever replaces them. Asked whether he supports plans by the Trump administration to scale back some of the laws introduced in the wake of the global financial crisis, Corbat says it is the way the laws are administered that needs to change rather than the laws themselves.

CORPORATES
CITIGROUP INCORPORATED, SALOMON BROTHERS INCORPORATED, TRAVELLERS GROUP INCORPORATED