The RBA helpfully published the latest major bank net interest margins (NIMs) in its Statement of Monetary Policy, which, I should note, I have only glanced at reluctantly (more on this later).
What stands out is that ANZ has the widest margin between the cost of its funding and the price of its products. This is not news in and of itself – it has been the case for several years.
So what will ANZ do when it makes its now controversial independent interest rate decision on the second Friday of the month? On the two previous occasions it unilaterally jacked up rates (in February and April), and ANZ only increased them by six basis points. Following the April increase, its standard variable rate loan was actually on par with CBA’s, but higher than NAB’s.
We know ANZ’s overall NIMs are much wider than Commonwealth Bank’s (see the chart below), although this probably reflects more corporate lending and relatively greater offshore banking exposures. Thus the wider NIM also compensates it for taking on higher risk.
ANZ has copped flak for its attempts to decouple from the RBA, and by waiting until this Friday it will likely be the last bank not to pass on the full 50-basis-point cut. There is a subtle margin play here. By not announcing its rate decisions until the second Friday of the month, and then delaying, typically, the actual change in its rates another week (i.e., the change does not normally take effect for another seven days), ANZ can benefit from lower short-term funding costs while waiting as long as possible to reduce its product prices. That is, it can lock in wider margins for longer.
If I were ANZ I would want to win back some PR points after the beatings I have copped following the February and April announcements. So I would pass on more than any other major bank, probably around 41 to 43 basis points if I had to pick a number. A 42-basis-point pass-through would give me a one basis point lower SVR loan than CBA, which enables me to argue that I am the second cheapest major.
Because it has passed on more of the RBA’s cut than any other major, this should, in principle, be positive for the brand. And it will be the last bank to report doing so. The beauty for ANZ is that it can then chisel back a few basis points of margin if it needs to over the coming months based on its independent pricing model. Assuming unchanged RBA rates, I would make these variations so small as to not warrant material media attention (i.e., a basis point or two here and there). But, collectively, they mean a great deal to ANZ’s bottom line.
This article first appeared on Property Observer.
Christopher Joye is a leading financial economist and a director of Yellow Brick Road Funds Management and Rismark. The author may have an economic interest in any of the items discussed in this article. These are the author’s personal views and do not represent the opinions of any other individual or institution. This material is not intended to provide, and should not be relied upon for, investment advice or recommendations.
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