The New Zealand Herald

Bank profits slip in first quarter

Drop in net interest income a big driver, according to KPMG

- Liam Dann

Net profits fell for New Zealand banks in the first quarter of the year, new research from KPMG shows.

The fall of 2.85 per cent to $1.2 billion for the sector in the March quarter represents a reversal of the growth in the previous quarter but resumes a trend across most of 2016.

The overall dip in profits was “a recognitio­n of the competitio­n in the market, the slightly uncertain geopolitic­al times and a reflection on the NZ economy as a whole: resilient, going well, but not booming,” said John Kensington, KPMG’s head of banking and finance.

Of the major banks BNZ and Westpac reported reductions of 13.45 per cent ($30m) and 16.48 per cent ($48m) respective­ly.

BNZ’s reduction was driven in large part by a fall in non-interest income of $53m, due to a decrease in net gains on financial instrument­s.

Westpac’s performanc­e was attributab­le to a significan­t increase in impaired asset expenses, while net interest income also fell.

Kiwibank had the largest percentage fall in net profit with a 37.14 per cent ($13m) drop.

Meanwhile New Zealand’s largest bank ANZ stood out with a $63 million increase in net profit. This was driven by an increase in non-interest income with increases in funds management and insurance income.

Broadly across the sector a reduction of net interest income — down 3.01 per cent — was a big driver of the profit decline. Fundraisin­g costs actually fell during the quarter, as did interest expenditur­e.

Funding costs — how much banks are paying to borrow money — fell across the board for all the banks.

ASB, BNZ and ANZ led the pack with funding cost decreases of 15 basis points (bps), 12 bps and 9 bps respective­ly. This was due to a combinatio­n of an all time low OCR rate and stabilisat­ion of offshore lending markets.

However this fall in funding costs failed to offset the overall decrease in interest income.

“We’ve seen the industry continue to focus on quality lending, which has led to a decrease in total provisioni­ng levels. This indicates the banks are generally confident in the quality of their loan books at the moment,” says Kensington.

KPMG concludes that the performanc­e of the sector was solid — through a quarter marked by significan­t regulatory changes and global turmoil.

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