National Australia Bank Profit Hit by Losses on Asset Sales -- Update
October 26 2016 - 6:51PM
Dow Jones News
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE, Australia--National Australia Bank Ltd. (NAB.AU)
maintained its dividend even as its annual profit was dented by
hefty losses on asset sales and as costs for pockets of soured
loans creep upward.
The bank, one of Australia's "Big Four" lenders, has been
scaling back its overseas presence to focus on its core lending
operations in Australia and New Zealand, and recently concluded a
deal to sell control of its life insurance business. That, and a
dividend cut earlier this year by a rival, had raised questions
about the sustainability of NAB's dividend.
"We now have the business we want...the core business is really
sound," Chief Executive Andrew Thorburn said Thursday.
Net profit sank to 352 Australian dollars (US$269 million) in
the year through September from A$6.34 billion the year before. The
result included a A$4.22 billion loss booked in the first half of
the year for spinning off and listing its British banking
operations and a flagged A$1.34 billion hit for the sale of most of
its life insurance business. Stripping out exited operations, NAB
said its profit was 5.6% lower for the year.
Still, NAB maintained its dividend for a sixth half-year period
running, which Mr. Thorburn said reflected the outlook for the bank
and its capital position even amid some uncertainty over regulatory
pressures for lenders to lift buffers against risks.
Since taking over in August 2014, Mr. Thorburn has accelerated
the bank's efforts to tighten its focus on its higher returning
core franchises. CYBG PLC (CYBG.LN), a U.K. lender housing
Clydesdale and Yorkshire Bank, was listed in February after most of
the shares were handed out to NAB shareholders. An 80% interest in
its life insurance business was sold to Nippon Life Insurance Co.
for A$2.4 billion.
NAB's cash earnings--a measure followed by analysts that
excludes some one-time costs and gains--rose 4.2% on the year
before to A$6.48 billion, ahead of the A$6.39 billion median of
seven broker forecasts compiled by The Wall Street Journal.
Analysts have question the sustainability of the big banks'
dividend payout levels as headwinds build against revenue growth.
Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. (ANZ.AU) reduced its
interim dividend in May in a bid to return an elevated payout ratio
to its historical range and in the wake of a slump in its
first-half profit, hit by restructuring and impairment charges.
NAB said its revenue on a cash earnings basis rose 2.5% over the
financial year, benefiting from higher lending balances and
stronger markets and treasury income, although expenses were up
2.2%. The bank's net interest margin, a profit measure based on the
difference between the rate at which a bank borrows and lends,
narrowed by 2 basis points on-year to 1.88%.
Competition in the mortgage market remains high as housing
markets in cities such as Sydney and Melbourne remain hot.
Competition has also picked up in other areas of lending, including
the business segment, Mr. Thorburn said.
It comes as Australia's biggest lenders have warned of small
areas of stress in their loan books, much of it tied to the slump
in commodity prices in recent years, and as they face heightened
regulatory scrutiny and demands to increase capital held again the
risk of future crises. Commonwealth Bank of Australia Ltd.
(CBA.AU), which runs on a different financial calendar to its
peers, in August racked up another record annual profit but said
its net interest margin was under pressure and its charge for bad
debts had edged higher.
Mr. Thorburn said the Australian economy remains in "pretty
good" shape. The ratio of impaired assets and loans more than
90-days past due to gross loans and acceptances was 0.85% at the
end of September, up 7 basis points over the last six months, due
mainly to an increased impairment of its exposure to New Zealand's
dairy industry.
The overall charge for bad and doubtful debts rose 7% over the
year to A$800 million, which the bank said mainly reflected a rise
in specific charges on the impairment of a small number of
individual clients in Australia.
The bank said it would pay a final dividend of A$0.99 a share,
for an unchanged full-year payout of A$1.98.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 26, 2016 18:36 ET (22:36 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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