Lisa Owen interviews David Shearer and Kirk Hope
Lisa Owen interviews Labour MP David Shearer &
Bankers Association CEO Kirk Hope Labour says banks
aren’t giving Kiwis a fair deal on credit cards, leaving
the poorest New Zealanders to struggle with debt. “Why is it that credit cards are still 17% and 18%
when the banks’ lending has come from 8.5% right down to
3%? That margin has shrunk for the banks, but it hasn’t
shrunk for the customers,” says David Shearer. Bankers Association says because credit cards are
unsecured, rates need to be higher and cheaper credit cards
are available. Some farmers are “pretty
desperate” and getting pressure from banks, says Shearer,
but Kirk Hope says banks will support farmers as they did
kiwifruit growers during PSA. Shearer: Australian
banks’ profits “in New Zealand are in excess of what
they are doing in Australia” and “it’s about time we
took a really close look at what’s happening here in New
Zealand” Hope: Profitable banks are important, for
example supporting farmers in these tough times, and their
return on equity is only average amongst New Zealand’s top
50 businesses. “If you don’t have profitable
banks, you have unprofitable, and I think Greece, Cyprus,
the UK, the US have experienced those types of situations,
and it’s very far from where we’re from and where we
want to be.” Hope downplays Standard & Poor’s
credit rating downgrade, saying Moody’s has maintained its
ratings and NZ banks are “incredibly low-risk in
comparison to their peers”
Lisa Owen: It’s no secret that
most banks in New Zealand are owned by big Australian
companies, but are they ripping us off, and how worried
should we be about Friday’s credit ratings downgrade?
Labour’s consumer affairs point man, David Shearer, has
been picking a fight with banks in recent days, accusing
them of making excessive profits. He joins me now in the
studio, along with the Bankers’ Association chief
executive Kirk Hope. Good morning to both of
you.
David Shearer: Good morning.
Kirk
Hope: Good morning.
If I could come to you
first, Mr Shearer, our banks got huge kudos for their
behaviour during the global financial crisis and they’re
regarded as some of the best in the world, so how are they
rorting us?
Shearer: Well, look, first of
all, I agree, we are lucky in having good solid banks that
saw us through the financial crisis, no doubt about that.
And I don’t have a problem with companies making profits,
but we’ve gone from $3.6 billion after tax in 2013 to $4.4
billion – a 20% increase. That’s a massive increase.
That’s about $1000 per man, woman and child in New
Zealand. And the rates of profit that the banks are taking
in New Zealand are in excess of what they are doing in
Australia. And my point is, look, fine, it’s great we’ve
got these financial institutions that are there and
underpinning our— basically our financial system, but they
should be fair on our consumers, and are our consumers
getting a good deal when their profits are going up at an
extraordinary rate year on year. And I think we need to take
a good look at it.
Mr Hope, fair point,
isn’t it? Record profits in 2013 and 2014 – you’re on
record for— you’re heading towards a record profit for
the year. How are you not ripping us
off?
Hope: Well, I think as you’ve both
acknowledged, actually profitable banks are strong banks,
and what strong banks can do is continue to support the
economy in a downturn. Say, for example, the types of things
that are happening at the moment in the dairy industry –
banks have strong balance sheets because they’re
profitable and they’re able to support farmers, for
example, if they start to encounter tough times. So I think
the answer is, if you don’t have profitable banks, you
have unprofitable, and I think Greece, Cyprus, the UK, the
US have experienced those types of situations, and it’s
very far from where we’re from and where we want to
be.
But, Mr
Shearer—
Shearer: I don’t actually—
Look, I agree we need strong banks. I think citing the
example of Greece and saying if we don’t have banks that
make excessive profits, then we’re going to end up like
Greece. I don’t buy that as an argument. What I do believe
is that obviously banks should make a profit. If they
don’t make a profit, they’re going to be broke, but they
don’t have to make an increase in profit year on year on
year. And so, what, on Thursday— Wednesday or Thursday
this week, the ASB made a new record profit. The parent—
Remember that these banks – 86% of the banking in New
Zealand is done by four big banks that are owned in
Australia. The parent of ASB, the Commonwealth Bank, made
the biggest banking profit in Australian banking history. So
they’re doing the same thing in Australia, which is why at
the moment we’re looking some inquiries into the banking
in Australia, and I think it’s about time we took a really
close look at what’s happening here in New Zealand as
well.
So, Mr Shearer there saying you don’t
have to make more profit, more profit, more profit each
year?
Hope: I mean, I think you need to put
what— you need to define what excessive profit is. We’ve
done some analysis, or, actually, Massey University did some
analysis on our behalf, which put the banks’ return on
equity within the context of New Zealand’s top 50 listed
companies, and bank returns fell firmly in the middle of the
pack for those companies, so—
But why do you
need to make more money here off your New Zealand customers
than you’re making in Australia?
Hope:
Well, I guess, again, what you’re talking about is a
percentage increase, and I think what you need to recognise
is— well, I suppose there’s another component to this.
New Zealand banks are actually carrying more capital than
their Australian counterparts as well, so that’s money
which is reinvested into New Zealand.
Shearer: But I
think that your point is right. I mean, they are actually
making proportionally more money in New Zealand than they
are in Australia, so it’s 1.6% over assets here and it’s
about 1.24 in Australia, which means that, actually,
they’re really cranking up the profits here in New
Zealand. And, remember, they are Australian-owned banks, so
a proportion of that profit flows back across the Tasman
into Australia.
So, Mr Hope, is there room for
you to cut us some slack here – cut your customers some
slack?
Hope: Actually, one of the other
reasons why New Zealand banks are more profitable is because
their cost-to-income ratio is lower than their Australian
counterparts. So the New Zealand subsidiaries have invested
in different types of technology to reduce those
cost-to-income ratios, so that’s another reason why
they’re more profitable.
But it’s still
costing customers in the end, isn’t it, if we’re adding
to bigger profits here? Still costing
customers.
Hope: I suppose the other answer
to that is all of the KiwiSaver funds are exposed to the
Australian bank profits, right, so as KiwiSavers, you’re
able to access those profits as part of your KiwiSaver
growth.
Shearer: But I think the point is the banks make
three-quarters of their money through the difference in
interest rates between what they lend out as mortgages and
what they give out as term deposits. The costs, as Kirk
says, is right, but that’s only 25%. So our costs are
lower, so that helps, but our interest – the interest rate
difference between what we lend out and what we give out in
term deposits is greater in New Zealand than it is in
Australia. In fact, it’s greater than most other countries
around the world.
Hope: I disagree with that, actually.
Our margin – the margins in New Zealand are some of the
lowest in the world. The reason that we’re more
profitable, as I said, is because we have a lower
cost-income ratio.
What lending are you
specifically talking about there?
Hope: So
we’re talking about across the banks’ entire lending
base.
Okay. Well, aren’t you at risk, Mr
Shearer, of just looking like a whinging lefty who doesn’t
like a successful business? Isn’t that the
risk?
Shearer: No, look, I’m the Consumer
Affairs Spokesperson, and quite frankly, I look at the
amount of money that the banks are taking out in profit, and
as I say, they’re Australian banks, and they’re 87% of
our market here in New Zealand, and I think that’s it’s
right that you point the finger and say, ‘Look, we want to
get the best value that we can for our consumers in New
Zealand,’ and if the banks aren’t doing that, then
it’s right that we point the finger. Now, in Australia
right now, there’s a senate enquiry into credit cards. Why
is it that credit cards are still 17% and 18% when the
banks’ lending has come from 8.5% right down to 3%? That
margin has shrunk for the banks, but it hasn’t shrunk for
the customers out there.
Mr Hope, why are
people still paying big interest on credit cards when money
is so much cheaper?
Hope: Well, I think
there’s a couple of points just to answer some of those
questions. I think, actually, we’ve got a highly
competitive banking market here which enables customers to
access interest rates much more cheaply than they have ever
before, and on that front, I mean, if you take the credit
card example, so more than 50% of people pay their credit
card off in full every month – only between 1% and 3% pay
the minimum – so actually…
But that leaves
you with 40-something percent of people who aren’t paying
that debt off in full, and I bet you that those are some of
your poorer customers.
Shearer: That’s
exactly the case, and it’s $4 billion of money that is on
credit cards. It’s a large amount of money that is... And
it’s mind-boggling, really, when you think about the
population of New Zealand and how much is owed on our credit
cards, and as you say, it’s the people who are struggling
that tend to pile more money on to their credit cards and
pay 17.5% interest.
Hope: Actually, one of the challenges
has been that so in the past, if you issued a credit card to
someone, you wouldn’t know whether someone else had issued
a credit card to them, so you couldn’t tell whether a
customer had three or four credit cards, so they might be
making repayments. Now, what’s happened subsequent to the
recognition of this is there’s a new comprehensive credit
reporting process which enables banks to be able to assess
where they have a customer or a credit card customer that is
not a customer of their full banking account, so what they
are able to then do is say, ‘Ok, well, you’ve got five
credit cards now. We can see that you’ve got five credit
cards – before we couldn’t – so we’re not going to
issue you with another credit card,’ which I think is
beneficial for particularly those…
So
you’re trying to be more responsible in who you give the
credit cards to. But what about the interest rates? It still
comes back to that same question. Why are people still
paying 19%, 20% on their credit card when there’s been a
drop in the price of interest?
Hope: Again,
credit cards are unsecured lending, so they naturally have a
higher rate. They used to be attached to… You used to
bundle them up with mortgages – that no longer happens.
But there are also a broader range of credit card products
which mean that people who can’t afford to pay 17% or 20%,
they can access those products. You know, these might have
less rewards with them – products with less
rewards…
And higher fees too – in some
cases higher fees?
Shearer: And that’s
another thing – I mean, New Zealand is one of the few
places who charges those sorts of fees on our credit cards.
In most other credit card places in the world, many of those
fees have actually disappeared.
In the time
we’ve got left, I want to talk about the farmers.
There’s lots of farmers under pressure at the moment, and
from government ministers down, they’re saying that they
want the banks to cut them some slack, so what are your
banks doing?
Hope: I think, as I said
before, what being profitable means is that the banks can
help support farmers through what is effectively going to be
a fairly long part of a commodity cycle. Nevertheless,
it’s a commodity cycle – I think banks are taking a
long-term view about this. In an example of that where
they’ve done this previously is with kiwi-fruit farmers in
the PSA, where they experienced the PSA issues, so I think
what banks were able to do is support that group of farmers
through that – it was pretty much a crisis – and enabled
them to get through it, and they’re now profitable again.
I mean, they’re announcing record
profits.
What are you hearing, Mr
Shearer?
Shearer: What I’m hearing, and
I’m talking to some Northland farmers this week, and
certainly Federated Farmers is running a questionnaire on
banks and what’s happening, that the banks are calling
these farmers in and saying we need to have a bit of a chat,
because many of them are dairy conversions; they were
encouraged by banking, agriculture advisors to go out and
take more debt on, and now they’re sitting there
thinking… I mean, they’re pretty desperate, and the
banks are saying, ‘We’re going to have to take a look at
the value of your farmland and check out how it’s
working.’ Now, yes, there’s a lot of rhetoric out there
saying, ‘We’re getting alongside farmers,’ and I
really really do hope that’s the case, but I can guarantee
that when profits start to bite, they start to go down –
and they will start to go down, because the Australian banks
now have been asked to put more capital aside by their
downturn in their ratings – then there will be pressure on
banks to go along and look at those unprofitable farms and
put more pressure on those farmers.
Kirk, just
before we go, I want to ask you about this – Bill English
has said that house prices could drop and we see that
Standard & Poors have dropped banks’ standalone credit
ratings a notch, so is that something to be worried
about?
Hope: Well, no, I think that
Moody’s, for example, have retained their credit rating
for the major banks. I think S & P, what they did recognise
was that, yes, housing was a risk, but the New Zealand
economy and New Zealand banks were incredibly low-risk in
comparison to their peers in the rest of the world. I just
want to—
Shearer: But just come back over, because I
think Standard & Poor’s, they brought it down because the
housing market was rocketing along, and that’s the same
thing here as it is in Australia. I mean, the housing market
is getting seriously out of control, and they’re asking
the banks to put more capital aside. It’s exactly what
the— the Murray inquiry in Australia did exactly the same
thing.
Okay, before you go, Mr Shearer, in 10
seconds, do you want an inquiry into the banking
sector?
Shearer: I don’t believe right now
that we need to bring in the big guns, but what we do need
to be saying to our banks is, ‘Look, we’re watching you.
We want to see a fair go and particularly a fair go for
farmers that you encouraged to take on more credit and now
going to be facing the gun.’
All right,
we’ll leave it there.
Transcript provided
by Able. www.able.co.nz
ENDS