Weekend Herald

Growth plan for regional banking hubs

- Tamsyn Parker

A regional banking hub trial involving six major banks is to extend until the end of next year and add another four hubs.

The trial was launched in November 2020 after an outcry from small towns which had been left with no banking services following branch closures.

The initial hubs opened in Martinboro­ugh, O¯punake, Stoke and Twizel — towns with fewer than 2000 people.

Four new hubs are to be opened by midway through next year in Whangamata¯, O¯po¯tiki, Tu¯rangi and Waimate. The towns have more than 3000 people and are at least half an hour’s drive from an existing bank branch.

The new hubs will have a Smart ATM and full cash change services, a full-time dedicated concierge, an employee from each bank available on site for a few hours on separate weekdays, a private meeting room and private areas for phone and internet banking.

“The past 12 months have been a difficult time to run a trial, with major changes in customer behaviour accelerate­d by the Covid-19 pandemic and regular changes in alert levels,” said Roger Beaumont, chief executive of the Bankers’ Associatio­n.

“We intend to run the next phase until the end of 2023, to give these dynamic changes time to pan out.”

Participat­ing banks are ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Kiwibank, TSB and Westpac.

The banks have also renewed a promise not to close any more regional branches until the end of 2023.

This excludes branches in the main centres of Auckland, Tauranga, Hamilton, Wellington, Christchur­ch and Dunedin. It also does not cover TSB’s network in Taranaki.

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