Westpac Banking Corporation (NYSE:WBK), (ASX:WBC):
MEDIA RELEASE
1 NOVEMBER 2021
[All $ numbers are in Australian dollars/cents]
Financial
results snapshot1
KEY POINTS
- Statutory net profit $5,458m, up 138%
- Cash earnings $5,352, up 105%
- Cash EPS 146 cents, up 102%
- NIM 2.04%, down 4bps
- ROE 7.6%, up 372bps
- CET1 capital ratio 12.32%, up 119bps
- Fully franked final dividend 60 cents per share
- Excl. notable items2, cash earnings $6,953m, up 33%
- Excl. notable items2, ROE 9.8%, up 212bps
- Total return to shareholders $5.7bn – $3.5bn off-market
buy-back, $2.2bn dividends
- 2021 impairment benefit of $590m
- Australian mortgage lending up 3% ($14.7bn)
- Australian business lending up 4% in 2H21
- Total customer deposits up 4% ($24.9bn)
- Credit quality sound – stressed exposures to total committed
exposures 1.36%, down 55bps. Australian 90+ day mortgage
delinquencies 1.07%, down 55bps. Impaired exposures down 23% in the
year
1 Full Year 2021 compared to Full Year
2020. Reported on a cash earnings basis unless otherwise stated.
For a reconciliation of cash earnings to reported results, refer to
Section 5, Note 8 of Westpac Group 2021 Full Year Financial
Results. For an explanation of cash earnings, refer to Section
1.3.
2 References to notable items in this
release include (after tax) provisions and costs related to the
AUSTRAC proceedings; provisions for estimated customer refunds and
repayments, associated costs and litigation; the write-down of
assets; and the impact of asset sales and revaluations. Refer to
Westpac Group 2021 Full Year Financial Results for detail.
THE RESULT
Westpac Group CEO, Peter King, said: “2021 has been another
challenging year, with a focus on continuing to support customers
and employees through the pandemic, while implementing our Fix,
Simplify and Perform strategic priorities.
“Cash earnings rose, the balance sheet remains strong, and I am
pleased with the progress we are making to transform Westpac into a
simpler, stronger bank. Credit quality has remained remarkably good
with stressed exposures continuing to decline off last year’s peak,
while mortgage 90+ day delinquencies were also significantly
lower.
“A turnaround in impairment charges and lower notable items were
the main drivers of our improved earnings, while we also restored
growth in mortgages and have begun to see better momentum in our
institutional and business portfolios. While notable items were
lower, they remain elevated as we continue to work on fixing our
issues and simplifying our business,” he said.
“We grew our Australian mortgage portfolio 3 per cent or $14.7
billion over the year, a significantly better performance than
2020. Owner occupied lending increased 9 per cent. Consistent with
increased liquidity in the market, total customer deposits were up
4 per cent, or $24.9 billion.
“Margins were down in a competitive, low-rate environment, and
as we foreshadowed, costs were much higher in FY21. This was mainly
due to an increase in our workforce to improve risk management and
support higher business volumes, including COVID related
assistance, as well as returning more than 1,000 jobs back to
Australia,” Mr King said.
“Our underlying results are not where we want them to be, and we
recognise we have more to do to become the high-performing company
we aspire to be.
“However, we are making progress in changing how the bank is
run, including improving our culture and risk management systems,
streamlining decision-making processes through lines of business,
and streamlining our processes through digitisation,” he said.
FIX. SIMPLIFY. PERFORM.
Mr King said this year Westpac made significant progress on
becoming a simpler, stronger bank.
Fix
“We are one year into our Customer Outcomes and Risk Excellence
(CORE) Program, which comprises more than 300 activities to
strengthen risk governance, accountability and culture across the
organisation,” Mr King said.
“In addition, we have strengthened our financial crime practices
with a rebuild of our processes and systems.
“We are also progressing customer remediation with 2021 seeing
us substantially complete the two largest legacy advice
programs.”
In 2021 Westpac paid or offered more than $1 billion to
approximately 1 million customers as part of customer
remediation.
Simplify
Mr King said Westpac was well progressed in simplifying its
portfolio.
“We have completed the sale of four businesses and announced a
further three asset sales, with these due for completion in
2022.
“We have also made progress on consolidating our international
footprint, closing our offices in Mumbai and Jakarta, and we expect
three more international offices to close by the end of 2022,” he
said.
“We continued our focus on digital this year, launching a new
Westpac mobile banking app to iPhone customers, with 1.7 million
users.
“In mortgages, we have further digitised processes and
introduced more than 70 policy and process improvements, which
contributed to faster approval times. Our digital mortgage
origination platform peaked at 810 applications per week, and we
have started rolling out this platform to mortgage brokers,” Mr
King said.
“We also implemented more than 100 policy and process
improvements in business lending and increased automated credit
decisioning, leading to faster decisions for customers.”
Perform
“Our improved growth in mortgages was concentrated in owner
occupied lending which was up 9 per cent. We saw a significant
change in mix with fixed rate lending making up 52 per cent of new
lending and now comprising 38 per cent of the portfolio.
“In addition, we regained momentum in business lending, with our
Australian business loan book growing four per cent in the Second
Half,” he said.
“We announced our cost reset program this year – targeting an $8
billion cost base by FY24 – and this is underway, led initially by
divestments and simplification of our operations.
“We expect our costs to begin reducing in the year ahead from
our simplification and the completion of key programs in our Fix
priority,” Mr King said.
DIVIDENDS
The Board has determined a final, fully franked dividend of 60
cents per share to be paid on 21 December 2021.
Total dividends for 2021 were 118 cents per share representing a
62 per cent payout of cash earnings excluding notable items.
DIVISIONAL PERFORMANCE
Division
FY21 cash earnings
($m)
% change FY21-FY20
% change 2H21-1H21
Commentary (FY21-FY20)
Consumer
$3,081
12
(6)
Cash earnings were 12% higher than FY20,
mainly from an impairment benefit of $125m compared to a charge of
$1,015m in FY20. Mortgages increased $19.1bn or 5% over the year.
Margins decreased 3bps driven by competitive pricing to attract and
retain customers, portfolio mix effects as customers shifted to
lower fixed rate lending, and a decline in personal lending.
Operating expenses rose off the back of higher risk management and
processing costs.
Business
$1,789
144
(6)
Cash earnings were 144% higher mainly due
to an impairment benefit of $484m compared to an impairment charge
of $1,371m in FY20, along with a $268m turnaround in notable items.
Excluding notable items, net interest income was down $416m from an
11bp decrease in margins and a 5% decrease in lending. While
lending was down, momentum improved through the year. Deposits were
up 4%, or $6.8bn, over the year. Operating expenses rose as
resources increased as part of our Fix priority.
Westpac Institutional
Bank
($670)
Large
Large
Cash earnings were a loss of $670m for
FY21 compared to a profit of $332m in FY20. Notable items were
$991m (net of tax) and related to the write-down of assets, mostly
intangible assets, (including goodwill, capitalised software and
other assets) following an annual impairment test. Excluding this,
cash earnings were $321m, $11m lower than FY20. Net interest margin
declined 9bps to 1.26% with lower interest rates reducing deposit
spreads and earnings on capital. Impairment charges were lower as
asset quality improved. Compared to the first half, net loans
increased 7%, or $4.6bn, mainly from growth in the Retail and
Industrials sectors.
Westpac New Zealand
(NZ$)
$1,013
56
(26)
Cash earnings of $1,013m increased $364m
or 56% compared to FY20, primarily driven by a $404m turnaround in
impairment charges. Net interest income benefitted from a 3bp
increase in margins and lending growth of 5% driven by $5.7bn of
mortgage growth. Deposits increased 7%, or $4.9bn, fully funding
loan growth and lifting the deposit to loan ratio to 82%.
Specialist Businesses
$193
Large
(56)
Cash earnings for FY21 were $193m compared
to a loss of $506m for FY20, mainly due to lower notable items
($382m net of tax) and an impairment benefit of $66m compared to an
impairment charge of $255m in FY20.
OUTLOOK
Mr King said that despite a challenging 2021, he was confident
the Australian economy will rebound over the next 12 months.
“The recent lockdowns in NSW, Victoria and the ACT have been
difficult for many businesses, and while uncertainty in the outlook
remains, I am confident most industries will begin to recover as
Australia’s two biggest states re-open.
“Consumer spending will likely increase significantly as states
re-open and pent-up demand is released, particularly supported by
consumer optimism and sizeable savings.
“We expect the Australian economy to expand by 7.4 per cent in
2022, with credit growth expanding 6.8 per cent. Demand for housing
is likely to remain elevated but home price increases should
moderate to 8 per cent next year,” he said.
Mr King said while there was more work to do, Westpac continued
to make progress on its Fix, Simplify and Perform strategic
priorities.
“Next year we expect to reduce our cost base as we head towards
our $8 billion cost target from completion of programs under our
Fix priority and realise the benefits from divestments.
“We have made considerable progress in improving our mortgage
and business banking performance, driven by streamlining of lending
processes to create a better customer experience. This sets us up
to maintain momentum in the year ahead.
“For our business, loan growth is expected to be sound as the
economy rebounds, although net interest margins will remain under
pressure from low interest rates and competition.
“We are also committed to resolving a number of outstanding
regulatory issues where our actions were not good enough.
“We are making progress in strengthening risk management,
growing our core franchise, and simplifying the bank, which
provides a strong platform to deliver a better service to
customers, as well as returns for shareholders,” Mr King said.
A video interview with Mr King, and Chief Financial Officer,
Michael Rowland, is available on the Westpac Wire website –
www.westpacwire.com.au
View source
version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211101005366/en/
David Lording Head of Media Relations M. +61 419
683 411
Andrew Bowden Head of Investor Relations T. +612
8253 4008 M. +61 438 284 863
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