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CBA gains 9% from NZ assets: ASB profit up, Sovereign down

Published: Wed 15 Aug 2012 12:27 PM
CBA gains 9% from NZ assets as ASB lifts cash profit but Sovereign declines
Aug. 15 (BusinessDesk) - ASB Bank, the lender owned by Commonwealth Bank of Australia, had a 15 percent gain in cash profit, while associated insurer Sovereign had a 40 percent decline, giving Australia’s biggest bank an overall 9 percent gain in earnings from New Zealand.
CBA’s cash net profit from New Zealand rose to $638 million in the year ended June 30, from $588 million a year earlier, the Sydney-based bank said in a statement to the ASX. Total operating income climbed 4.8 percent to $1.8 billion.
Auckland-based ASB’s cash profit rose to $580 million in the latest year, from $504 million, which its parent said was driven by an improved net interest margin and lower loan impairment expense.
Sovereign’s cash profit dropped to $52 million from $86 million, as insurance income rose 7 percent to $274 million. The drop in profit was attributed to “unfavourable actuarial policy liability valuations, including a decrease in New Zealand government bond rates,” CBA said.
Cash net profit is adjusted for fair value movements, one-time items and allocated costs for parent CBA.
At ASB, net interest income rose 10 percent to $1.2 billion, reflecting customers switching to higher-margin floating rate loans from fixed, with the proportion on floating rates rising to 63 percent as at June 30, from 59 percent a year earlier. Home loans outstanding were unchanged at $37 billion.
Other banking income fell 12 percent to $323 million, including lower trading income, transaction and lending fees.
Customer deposits climbed 4 percent to $37 billion, which the lender said reflected customer demand for low-risk investments. Business loans rose 4 percent to $15 billion.
Operating expenses rose 1 percent to $743 million while impairments for bad loans fell 35 percent to $47 million.
Total assets in New Zealand rose to $65.6 billion, of which $63.4 billion is in ASB Bank. That’s up from $65.4 billion as at June 30 last year. Total liabilities were little changed at $60.2 billion.
Based on ASB’s separately released results, its net interest margin widened to 2.16 percent from 2.01 percent.
CBA’s net income rose 11 percent to a record A$7.09 billion, just below the A$7.15 billion forecast in a Bloomberg survey of 10 analysts, helped by a drop in loan impairments and increased lending.
Shares of CBA traded at A$55.54 on the ASX yesterday and have climbed 13 percent this year. The stock is rated a ‘hold’ based on the consensus of 19 recommendations compiled by Reuters, with a price target of about A$52.08.
(BusinessDesk)

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