Banking

ANZ shares near one-year low as home lending competition crimps margins

Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ.AX) on Monday joined rival Westpac (WBC.AX) in flagging lower margins and warned of a first-half hit from “softer” performance in its markets business, sending its shares to a near one-year low.

ANZ did not disclose a profit figure for the quarter and said group net interest margin declined by 8 basis points, but added that rising interest rates in New Zealand would relieve some pressure in the second quarter.

Australian lenders are battling squeezing margins in the face of steep competition in mortgage lending, spurred by record low interest rates in Australia through the COVID-19 pandemic. Westpac warned on its margins last week. read more

ANZ said “softer” revenue in its markets business in October would hit first-half results, even though the unit’s performance in subsequent months was in line with trends seen over fiscal 2021.

While it reversed A$44 million ($31.2 million) in bad debt provisions during the quarter, changes to provide Australian retail and commercial customers lower fee options would reduce annual operating income by about A$140 million, it added.

“Given the uncertain impacts of reduced activity on asset quality going forward, we expect that the bad debt benefit will likely be looked through and investors will focus on the softer than expected revenue print,” Citi analysts said in a note.

ANZ shares sank as much as 5% to A$25.73, its lowest since Feb. 17, 2021, while the broader market (.AXJO) was 0.7% lower.

In the Australian home loan space, ANZ said it had made “solid progress” to improve its systems, with application times for simple loans now in line with other major lenders.

The bank, which has steadily lost Australian home loan market share since 2019, said in October it aims to grow its home loan book in line with its larger peers by the end of the current business year. read more

ANZ also said it would consider expanding its A$1.5 billion buyback, as it reported a common equity tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 11.6% as at Dec. 31.

($1 = 1.4136 Australian dollars)Reporting by Shashwat Awasthi; Editing by Chris Reese and Diane Craft

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

More than 3,200 new Dubai homebuyers emerge within one year

The project kicked off operations in July 2025 and has already witnessed residential real estate…

11 hours ago

PROFX EXPO AFRICA 2026

PROFX MEDIA ANNOUNCES PROFX EXPO AFRICA 2026 IN CAPE  TOWN, UNITING GLOBAL FOREX & FINTECH…

2 days ago

PROFIN EXPO BANGKOK 2026

PROFX MEDIA TO HOST PROFINEXPO BANGKOK 2026, A GLOBAL  GATHERING OF FINTECH, BANKING & INVESTMENT…

2 days ago

Luxury off-plan homes bring AED5 billion May sales

Keturah founder says Dubai shows its global standing with apartment, villa deals above AED 5 million …

1 week ago

FIA President H.E. Mohammed Ben Sulayem meets with President of the Czech Republic, Prime Minister, and government leaders in Prague

Discussions focused on motorsport development, road safety and sustainable mobility Dubai, UAE, 10th June, 2026: …

1 week ago

A Maturity Stage Arrives for Dubai’s Property Market with Sustained Demand and Stable Rentals

The sector is now moving towards disciplined growth, driven by slowing rental rate increases, robust…

1 week ago