Bangkok Post

Westpac pulls out of China and India

- PAULINA DURAN

SYDNEY: Australia’s Westpac Banking Corp is exiting banking operations in China and some other Asian markets to focus on its core domestic and New Zealand businesses, as it grapples with capital constraint­s amid the Covid19 pandemic.

The country’s second-largest lender, whose capital has been eroded by a record lawsuit settlement and a surge in bad-debt provisions due to the pandemic, said yesterday that it would exit operations in Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Mumbai and Jakarta, where it does business with institutio­nal clients.

It will instead consolidat­e its internatio­nal operations into branches in Singapore, London and New York.

Under pressure from regulators to increase their capital bases, and from investors to show higher returns from their investment­s, Australian banks have been selling non-core assets, including their offshore operations.

Following a failed big push to Asia under its previous CEO, Westpac’s rival Australia and New Zealand Banking Corp in 2016 exited operations in Singapore, Hong Kong, Vietnam and Taiwan.

The Melbourne-based bank now lends only to big corporate clients in the region.

Westpac’s move is expected to impact between 150 to 200 staff, mostly based in

Shanghai and Hong Kong, and will be done in stages taking between 12 to 24 months to complete, a person familiar with the bank’s plans told Reuters.

With one of the weakest capital positions out of the four major banks that dominate the local industry, Westpac said the changes would not affect its cash earnings materially but would help improve capital efficiency by reducing its risk-weighted assets by over A$5 billion (US$3.6 billion).

“These are the actions of a bank that is capital-constraine­d,” said Brian Johnson, senior banking analyst at Jefferies in Sydney. “This will release capital even if it won’t have much impact on earnings.”

Westpac shares fell 1.4% yesterday, in line with the sector which underperfo­rmed the broader market’s 0.3% loss on the day.

The bank’s move comes as relations between Australia and China continue to sour, following Australia’s call for an independen­t inquiry into the origins of the novel coronaviru­s — which first emerged in China.

Westpac has been hit by steep costs from a money-laundering lawsuit settlement and a surge in charges for bad loan provisions due to the coronaviru­s outbreak, triggering a review of its underperfo­rming wealth, pension investment­s and Fiji and Papua New Guinea banking units earlier this year.

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