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CBA narrows focus to traditiona­l lending

Bank to spin off wealth management and mortgage broking

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SYDNEY: Commonweal­th Bank of Australia (CBA) said it would hive off its wealth management and mortgage broking businesses, and explore whether to divest its general insurance arm, as it narrows its focus down to traditiona­l lending.

Australia’s biggest bank also unveiled a revamped executive team, seeking to rebuild its reputation after several scandals revealed flaws in its leadership culture, exposing it to closer regulatory scrutiny and potential fines.

CBA’s shares fell as much as 2.7% after the announceme­nts – which according to analysts preempt structural reforms likely to be brought in by a powerful banking inquiry that has rocked Australia’s scandal-plagued financial sector.

“Today’s announceme­nt ... responds to continuing shifts in the external environmen­t and community expectatio­ns, and addresses the concerns regarding banks owning wealth management businesses,” chief executive Matt Comyn said in a statement to Sydney’s stock exchange yesterday.

The bank said it would demerge the entire wealth management and mortgage broking arms into a separately listed new company called CFS Group, inclusive of its Colonial First State Global Asset Management (CFSGAM) business.

The previously announced IPO of CFSGAM will no longer proceed.

“What we are really seeing here is the whole breaking down of their very expensivel­y put together vertical integratio­n business model,” said Hugh Dive, chief investment officer at Atlas Funds Management, which owns CBA shares.

CBA and the three other big Australian banks have spent years building large networks of financial advisers to recommend their products, but the powerful misconduct inquiry, or the so-called Royal Commission, could force the separation of the developmen­t and sales of financial products.

“We don’t know what the recommenda­tions are going to be yet, but by doing this they are trying to get ahead of whatever those outcomes of the Royal Commission are,” said Dive.

The wealth management and mortgage broking arms account for about 5% of CBA’s total net profit after tax.

The combined CFS Group is expected to have a market value of A$6.5bil to A$10bil (US$4.82bil to US$7.42bil), Macquarie said.

According to a senior banking analyst at — Shaw & Partners, Brett Le Mesurier, the spinoffs “had to be done” but the market might be responding negatively to the “extra level of overheads” the bank may have from a separately listed entity.

Shares have been hammered in recent months and hit a near five-year low in June amid damaging revelation­s at the Royal Commission that it wrongfully withdrew “advice fees” from dead people’s accounts and mistakenly double charged interest to thousands of business customers. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Extra overheads: Australia’s biggest bank also unveiled a revamped executive team, seeking to rebuild its reputation after several scandals revealed flaws in its leadership culture. AFP
Extra overheads: Australia’s biggest bank also unveiled a revamped executive team, seeking to rebuild its reputation after several scandals revealed flaws in its leadership culture. AFP

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