NAB boosts staff to reduce crime risk

Original article by Joyce Moullakis
The Australian – Page: 17 : 26-Oct-21

National Australia Bank has ramped up the number of employees who are managing financial risk in recent years. The bank employed more than 1,500 people in this area as at 31 August, compared with just 200 in 2018. In addition, NAB has advised that it spent $816.1m on improving its financial crime and fraud controls in the four years to June. CEO Ross McEwan also recently told a parliamentary economics committee that NAB is taking its obligations regarding compliance with anti-money laundering laws seriously.

CORPORATES
NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED – ASX NAB

Answers sought on bank closures

Original article by Patrick Commins
The Australian – Page: 4 : 22-Oct-21

Data from the Reserve Bank of Australia shows that the number of full-service bank branches in regional and remote areas fell by 10 per cent between 2017 and 2020. This equates to about 270 branch closures. The federal government has established a Regional Banking Task Force, which will examine the impact of bank branch closures on regional communities. The taskforce will include politicians and representatives from the banking sector.

CORPORATES
RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA

Economists cast doubt on central bank’s view

Original article by Cecile Lefort
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 27 : 20-Oct-21

The minutes of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s latest monthly board meeting show that it still expects the cash rate to remain on hold until 2024, when inflation is forecast to be sustainably within its target range of 2-3 per cent. However, the consensus of economists is that the central bank will begin tightening monetary policy in mid-2023. Judo Bank’s chief economist Warren Hogan says the first rate rise could potentially be in November 2022, while Su-Lin Ong of RBC Capital Markets expects a rate rise in the December 2023 quarter.

CORPORATES
RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA, JUDO BANK PTY LTD, RBC CAPITAL MARKETS

M&A to smash records

Original article by Kanika Sood, Anthony Macdonald, Yolanda Redrup
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 1 & 20 : 19-Oct-21

Data from Refinitiv shows that $US350bn ($495bn) worth of takeover bids in Australia and New Zealand have been announced so far in 2021. This is three times the long-term average, and Takeovers Panel president Alex Cartel describes it as the hottest mergers and acquisitions environment in decades. Deal-making activity is being driven by factors such as the large amounts of cash on many companies’ balance sheets in the wake of the pandemic and the prospect of interest rates remaining low for some time. Almost $10bn worth of takeover bids involving Australian-listed were announced on 18 October.

CORPORATES
REFINITIV AUSTRALIA PTY LTD, AUSTRALIA. TAKEOVERS PANEL

Westpac takes $1.3b profit hit on write-downs

Original article by James Eyers
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 15 & 20 : 13-Oct-21

Westpac has advised that a $965m writedown associated with its institutional banking division will reduce its profit for the second half of 2020-21 by $1.3bn. Westpac will also make further provision of $172m for customer remediation and potential legal action in the wake of the Hayne royal commission. Westpac’s common equity tier 1 capital ratio will be reduced by 15 basis points as a result of the writedowns. Meanwhile, the Commonwealth Bank has indicated that its own its remedial action plan has been completed, more than three years after entering into an enforceable undertaking with the prudential regulator.

CORPORATES
WESTPAC BANKING CORPORATION – ASX WBC, COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA – ASX CBA

Lockdowns and supply chain squeeze to lead to earnings reset

Original article by Richard Henderson
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 29 : 13-Oct-21

Many Australian-listed companies withheld earnings guidance during the August reporting season, citing factors such as uncertainty arising from the COVID-19 pandemic. Investors will be hoping for greater clarity during the annual general meetings season, but Chris Nicol of Morgan Stanley says they are likely to be disappointed. He cautions that factors such as lockdowns and supply chain problems can be expected to weigh on earnings in the first half of 2021-22.

CORPORATES
MORGAN STANLEY AUSTRALIA LIMITED

CBA tops complaint list for third straight year

Original article by Michael Read
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 6 : 12-Oct-21

Data from the Australian Financial Complaints Authority shows that it received a total of 67,613 complaints from customers of financial services providers in 2020-21. This follows a record 76,874 complaints in the previous financial year. About 25 per cent of all complaints were about the nation’s four major banks, with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia topping the list with 5,815 complaints. A CBA spokesman says the number of complaints it received fell by 11 per cent in 2020-21, while it resolved almost two-thirds of complaints without needing to refer them to the ACFA.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN FINANCIAL COMPLAINTS AUTHORITY, COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA – ASX CBA

Investors pump billions into new companies as listings soar

Original article by Richard Henderson
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 28 : 12-Oct-21

Data from Refinitiv shows that 121 companies have listed on the Australian sharemarket so far in 2021, compared with just 84 new listings in 2020. It is the highest level of listing activity since 2007, when 136 companies debuted on the local bourse. Some $6.7bn has been raised via IPOs during 2021, while the proposed floats of Judo Bank and GQG Partners would boost this by around $2bn. IPO activity was subdued earlier in the year, following the fallout from the ill-fated float of Nuix in late 2020.

CORPORATES
REFINITIV AUSTRALIA PTY LTD, JUDO BANK PTY LTD, GQG PARTNERS INCORPORATED – ASX GQG, NUIX LIMITED – ASX NXL

ING home loan customers are the most satisfied with their bank, followed by Suncorp, Bendigo Bank and BankSA

Original article by Roy Morgan
Market Research Update – Page: Online : 29-Sep-21

New financial data from Roy Morgan shows that ING has maintained its lead at the top of banking customer satisfaction ratings among home loan customers in mid-2021. ING’s satisfaction rating rose 2.6% points year-on-year to 91.3% in August 2021. ING was followed by Suncorp on 90.3% (up 3.9% points on a year ago), Bendigo Bank on 89.1% (up 0.1% points) and BankSA on 87.3% (up 11% points). The latest data covers the six months to August 2021; overall home loan customer satisfaction amongst Australia’s top 12 banks collectively was at 77.9% during this period. This represents a decrease of 0.5% points from a year ago when there was significant financial support being offered to hundreds of thousands of home loan customers in the form of deferred loans. CBA once again has the highest home loan customer satisfaction among the big four banks, with a rating of 78.7%. Average home loan customer satisfaction with the big four banks as a group is 75.9%. These latest banking satisfaction ratings come from the Roy Morgan Single Source survey, derived from in-depth interviews with over 50,000 Australians each year.

CORPORATES
ROY MORGAN LIMITED, ING BANK (AUSTRALIA) LIMITED, SUNCORP BANK, BENDIGO BANK, BANK OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA LIMITED

Aussie BNPL usage the best in the West

Original article by Lachlan Moffet Gray
The Australian – Page: 19 : 17-Sep-21

Sixty per cent of Australians have used a buy now pay later (BNPL) platform, compared to 47 per cent of US or UK respondents. This is according to a survey by card issuing and payment solutions company Marqeta, with a third of survey respondents stating that they had started using BNPL platforms within the last 18 months. Marqeta country manager for Australia and New Zealand Duncan Currie says the high adoption of BNPL in Australia could in part be due to it being the home country of leading BNPL companies Zip and Afterpay.

CORPORATES
MARQETA, ZIP CO LIMITED – ASX Z1P, AFTERPAY LIMITED – ASX APT