The Gold Coast Bulletin

NAB half-year profit up

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per cent to $394 million. That was mainly due to a new $89 million overlay for potential risks in the bank’s commercial real estate portfolio.

“We do see some signs of apartments and commercial property in some parts of the country where there’s oversupply and therefore pressures on rent,” chief executive Andrew Thorburn said.

Australian Prudential Regulation Authority chief Wayne Byres last week warned that commercial property lending standards had fallen due to fierce competitio­n but Mr Thorburn said NAB was not overly worried.

“We’re just being a little bit more prudent,” he said. “It’s not an indicator that we are highly concerned about that sector.”

An increase in mortgage delinquenc­ies in Victoria and NSW helped push the proportion of loans 90 or more days past due up 0.05 percentage points over the past six months to 0.41 per cent of gross lending.

But Mr Thorburn said the increase came off a very low base and that NAB home loan customers were on average 15 repayments ahead of schedule. “We’re seeing some slight uptick in those markets but nothing of any materialit­y,” he said.

“We have really become more conservati­ve on our risk settings on those markets and, particular­ly in inner city postcodes, we’ve really taken a step back and are on a watching brief.”

Investor home loan lending grew by 8 per cent on the same period a year earlier – well within APRA’s 10 per cent annual limit – and Mr Thorburn said the bank would be able to reduce interest-only lending from 41 per cent of new lending to meet APRA’s recently introduced 30 per cent limit. Net interest margin was flat at 1.82 per cent, still down 0.11 percentage points on the same period a year earlier.

Investors initially welcomed the results, with NAB shares 1.2 per cent higher in early trade before giving up most gains amid a broader selloff in financial stocks.

NAB stock closed down 18¢ at $32.91.

“(The result) is better than expected, but the market’s expectatio­ns were probably too low,” Citi analyst Craig Williams said in a note.

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