Mercury (Hobart)

Bank boss sweats

‘Nowhere to hide’ for CBA chief

- JEFF WHALLEY

COMMONWEAL­TH Bank chief Ian Narev has acknowledg­ed he and his executive team could lose millions of dollars more in bonuses as fallout from the money-laundering scandal mounts.

Mr Narev, speaking as the group unveiled a record net profit yesterday, said there was “nowhere to hide” as the CBA board responded to the allegation­s buffeting the bank.

Catherine Livingston­e, who chairs the board, announced this week that short-term bonuses for Mr Narev and 11 other senior executives, potentiall­y worth about $16 million, would be axed this year.

Mr Narev is expected to lose about $2.8 million from a pay and perks package for the financial year of about $8.7 million.

Some institutio­nal investors have said long-term bonuses should also be in the gun.

Ms Livingston­e had warned there might be more pay cuts, Mr Narev said. “There is every option on the table. It will be disclosed very clearly — there is nowhere to hide.”

The board has created a subcommitt­ee to deal with allegation­s the bank failed to report suspect transactio­ns.

Last year, Mr Narev was allocated $3 million of longterm reward rights and the rest of his team about $8.5 million.

The anti-money-laundering authority, Austrac, last week launched a civil action in the Federal Court, accusing the bank of “serious and systemic” breaches in more than 50,000 transactio­ns.

The CBA yesterday unveiled a full-year net profit of $9.93 billion for the year to June — up 7.6 per cent.

The bank’s cash profit, a closely watched industry measuremen­t of underlying earnings, beat market expectatio­ns, up 4.6 per cent to $9.88 billion.

It is the eighth consecutiv­e year the CBA has posted a record cash profit and comes as it maintains its mantle as Australia’s biggest mortgage lender.

The bank wrote 330,000 new home loans over the year — fattening its mortgage book by $102 billion to $486 billion.

The group warned strong competitio­n and higher funding costs had “more than offset” efforts to bolster profitabil­ity by lifting interest rates out of cycle with the Reserve Bank.

It suffered a decline of 0.03 percentage points in its net interest margin to 2.11 per cent.

Deposits grew $43 billion to $561 billion, accounting for 67 per cent of total funding at the end of June, compared with 54 per cent a year earlier.

UBS analyst Jon Mott said the result was “slightly ahead of expectatio­ns with very few surprises”.

The bank revealed it was in discussion­s to offload its troubled life insurance business CommInsure, and had agreed to buy the remaining 20 per cent of Aussie Home Loans from founder John Symond.

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