Mercury (Hobart)

NO HOME RUN FOR WESTPAC

Bank pulls plug on RAMS sale process

- Paulina Duran

Westpac has scrapped the sale of its mortgage broker franchise business RAMS Home Loans after an unsuccessf­ul Morgan Stanley-led attempt to sell it couldn’t secure an acceptable offer.

In a statement, a Westpac spokesman said the lender would consider the future of the franchise distributi­on business, which it bought for $140m in 2007 and once was a strong competitor in the lowdocumen­tation mortgage lending industry.

“Westpac has concluded the sales process for its RAMS business without reaching a sales agreement,” the spokesman said. “Westpac will continue to operate RAMS and support RAMS franchisee­s and customers while it considers further strategic options for the business.”

The bank had appointed Morgan Stanley earlier this year to sell the franchise business without its mortgage portfolio, and a handful of suitors participat­ed in the talks, a person with knowledge of the sale process said. However, no acceptable terms and price were agreed and the process was terminated.

In the wake of the Royal Commission and while Westpac was being accused of weak responsibl­e lending standards by regulators, RAMS stopped offering low-doc loans to selfemploy­ed borrowers that accounted for about 40 per cent of its lending flows.

Since then, broker numbers have declined significan­tly, with many baulking at renewal terms once franchise agreements are up for renegotiat­ion, according to industry sources.

Westpac last year finalised its “portfolio simplifica­tion” which saw its exit of 10 businesses including life insurance, asset finance and superannua­tion units. Its Pacific banking business was also put on sale before that process was scrapped in October, when the bank said it would retain Westpac Fiji and Westpac Bank PNG for the foreseeabl­e future.

Back then, it also told investors it had failed to find an acceptable offer for its wealth management platform Panorama, after spending over $1bn in the original BT business in 2002 and investment­s in the platform.

Separately, in a statement to the exchange on Tuesday, Westpac informed investors that its net profit after tax for the first half of 2024 will be reduced by a $164m charge due to notable items. Analysts expect the profit to fall 17 per cent to $3.3bn compared to the previous year.

The notable items refer to interest rate hedges that have generated accounting losses. The losses, the bank said, will “reverse over time” however.

Westpac last year moved to become the only Big Four bank to file accounts that show only a statutory net profit after tax. Commonweal­th, NAB and ANZ file a statutory number but focus on “cash profit” as a measure of ongoing and underlying operations that excludes such notable and one-off items.

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