Of course,if you’re not a shareholder,it sucks when those profits seem to come at your expense in the form of higher mortgage rates while deposits seem to grow at a suspiciously slower rate. Higher mortgage rates mostly reflect the return of interest rates to more historically normal levels. But the competition watchdoghasnoticed some red flags on deposit rates,and it is probing the banks this year through an inquiry.
The big banks broadly deem that there’s enough competition,though that’s unsurprising given it’s in their interests to maintain or grow their current standing.
But it’s true that there have been signs of more intense competition,some winding back of banks’ margins and a few new kids on the block.
Neobanks including Judo and Tyro have caused some disruption,alongside regional banks,but the biggest feather-ruffler recently has been Macquarie Bank.
Macquarie’s share of the home loan market sits at only about 6 per cent – this compares with about 26 per cent and 22 per cent for CBA and Westpac,respectively. But it has penetrated a market dominated by the big four in a startlingly speedy way. So,what’s the one weird trick Macquarie used to grow its market share that the other banks hate it for?
First,it pays to have rich parents. Macquarie Bank’s parent,Macquarie Group,is a financial services group with a formidable global presence and deep pockets.
Macquarie has spent up big on technology,building new services from the ground up to attract customers and focusing on simple,easily approved loans rather than complex ones that require more work to get over the line.
But Macquarie’s growth in the home loan market has begun to wane,and its standout success shows that without significant financial heft,it’s pretty hard even to begin measuring up to the big four.
In the majors’ defence,some metrics of their profitabilityhave gradually softened. Their return on equity – a measure of their annual profits as a percentage of shareholders’ money – has drifted from about15 per cent in 2015 to10.6 per cent in 2022. Meanwhile,their net interest margins – the difference between their funding costs and what they charge for loans – have come down from the glory days of 2.8 per cent during the early 2000sto about 2 per cent last year.
They’re still making billions,but for CBA,for instance,that’s on a balance sheet of about $1 trillion. The banks aren’t necessarily more profitable than they were back in the day.
Some people argue that banks’ relatively high profits can be justified because banking is a risky business. Being a big,profitable bank can shield them from trouble during economic downturns,but that doesn’t always save a business from trouble. Historically,when major bankshave found themselves in a sticky spot,the government has tended to help them out of it – mostly because if a big bank fails,there’s alot on the line for the country to lose.
This year,the major banks noted intense competition for home loans,calling their own pricing behaviour – including ultra-low fixed rates and cashbacks – “irrational”. By most accounts,that was a temporary flurry in competition,and the banks say they’ve toned down their efforts to court borrowers. The narrative now is that competition for people’s deposits will intensify.
That doesn’t mean we should take our eyes off their size and growth ambitions,though.
ANZ is fighting back against the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s decision to block the bank’s proposed deal with a non-major bank:Suncorp. The ACCC ruled that a merger between ANZ and Suncorp’s banking division would substantially lessen competition in the banking sector by removing an important competitor against the big four banks.
ANZ boss Shayne Elliott’s argument is that,as the smallest of the big four,the bank would become more effective as a competitor against CBA and Westpac,which have 26 per cent and 23 per cent market share,respectively. He says ANZ’s market share is closer to that of Bendigo Bank than CBA,and that if ANZ absorbed Suncorp’s banking division,the combined business would have 15 per cent market share,an improvement on its current 13 per cent.
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There’s some merit to ANZ’s argument,but it’s important to tread carefully when it comes to allowing further consolidation in a sector that is among the least competitive and one of the biggest in the Australian economy. ANZ and Suncorp’s merger,in and of itself,may not dramatically alter the competitive landscape,but the precedent it sets for big banks to continue taking over smaller ones very much could.
We’ve opted for bigger,safer banks in Australia by allowing the big four to merge with smaller players. While the big banks may no longer be at their peak profitability,we need to keep the banking arena open to new competitors and remember that bigger is not always better.
Ross Gittins is on leave.
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