Sharechat Logo

ANZ warns farmers RBNZ intervention may mean higher borrowing costs

Friday 3rd May 2019

Text too small?

ANZ Bank has warned its farming customers they face higher borrowing costs almost immediately due to Reserve Bank intervention, even though wholesale interest rates have been falling sharply for more than a year.

In a letter sent to those and other business customers last month, Mark Hiddleston, ANZ’s commercial and agri division managing director, says the Reserve Bank told ANZ in February that it would have to have to increase the amount of capital it holds against agricultural loans by June 30.

“This increase is because we currently hold less capital for our agri loans than other banks and the RBNZ believes the quality of our loan book is not sufficiently better than the others to justify that lower amount,” Hiddleston’s letter says.

ANZ Bank is New Zealand’s largest. Its results earlier this week showed its share of the $62.5 billion agricultural lending market stood at 28.5 percent in February.

ANZ has been gradually reducing its agricultural exposure and its market share has dropped from 39.1 percent in September 2010.

“As you would appreciate, the cost of capital, whilst not the only driver, is a material input cost of doing business,” Hiddleston says.

“Like most businesses, significant increases in material input costs generally lead to an increase in prices for customers,” his letter says.

In the wholesale market, the two-year swap rate has dropped about 30 percent from 2.31 percent in April last year to 1.62 percent currently.

“In the immediate future, we intend to await the outcome of the May official cash rate determination from the RBNZ before we decide what movement, if any, there will be to interest rates on our agri loans,” it says.

“A reduction in the OCR could assist in the near term in absorbing capital costs that would potentially otherwise need to be passed onto our agri customers. We’ll let you know if this first development impacts you.”

The OCR decision and monetary policy statement will be delivered on May 8. While some economists are expecting an OCR cut, ANZ’s own chief economist, Sharon Zollner, expects the central bank to hold off until August.

Hiddleston told BusinessDesk that, unlike ANZ's mortgage book, most of its agricultural borrowers opt for floating rates. If the OCR is cut, ANZ would be able to hold the rate it charges farmers on floating rates, rather than following the OCR down, and recover its costs that way. The bank's funding costs would also go down.

ANZ had been debating internally about how to inform its customers about the situation. "I can't sit in front of my team and my customers and not raise the awareness," Hiddleston says.

On top of that, both the RBNZ and the Financial Markets Authority, which conducted a conduct inquiry into the banks last year, have been urging the banks to be more transparent with their customers, he says.

While the regulators may be urging banks to be more transparent, it is notable that the Reserve Bank has made no public mention of its order to ANZ to increase the capital backing of its agricultural lending.

In May last year, the Reserve Bank revealed the results of a benchmarking exercise it set the four major banks, ANZ, ASB Bank, Bank of New Zealand and Westpac, asking them to report on how much capital they would need to support a hypothetical portfolio of loans to 20 dairy farms.

Each of these banks uses its own internal models for calculating its risk-weighted capital requirement to meet regulatory minimums.

The other smaller banks in New Zealand – the big four account for about 88 percent of New Zealand’s banking system – are forced to use standardised models which means they have to hold more capital proportionately and are therefore competitively disadvantaged.

While the central bank didn’t name which bank produced which outcome in the dairy portfolio test, it found an extraordinary 40 percentage-point difference between the highest and lowest average risk-weights among the big four.

“The provisions results show significant variation in model outcomes, even for the same level of underlying risk,” the Reserve Bank said at the time.

It was this huge disparity that was one of the factors that fuelled the higher capital proposals the central bank is currently consulting on – the consultation period is set to close on May 17.

The proposals include a near doubling of the minimum tier 1 capital, or equity, each of the big four banks has to hold from 8.5 percent to 16 percent. The benefit they get from using their internal models will also be reduced to 90 percent of the results the standardised models produce.

Currently, banks on average have about 12 percent of risk-weighted tier 1 capital.

The Reserve Bank is proposing a five-year phase-in period for the change. ANZ's letter is the first public indication that any of the banks have been forced to increase capital earlier, even under the existing rules.

In February, the Reserve Bank released information showing that ANZ currently has to hold just over half the capital that government-owned Kiwibank is forced to hold to back every $100 of mortgage lending.

Nevertheless, the Reserve Bank has approved the models ANZ has been using from 2008. So while ANZ may have been extracting maximum benefit, it is clear that it has not flouted the rules.

Hiddleston says the impacts from the central bank’s capital proposals “are likely to be significant on those customers borrowing money who are involved in the property, commercial and agri sectors” and suggests those customers should start planning for that.

“We think it is prudent to help you plan to reduce your debt as much as you can, restructure you facility limits or pay down where you may have credit funds elsewhere,” his letter advises.

“You should also think carefully about your borrowing requirements in the near future, including factoring in potential increases in borrowing costs.”

(BusinessDesk)



  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

SML - Synlait Milk Limited - Trading Halt of Securities
AIA - Auckland Airport announces board chair changes
AIA - Auckland Airport announces board chair changes
CEN - Tauhara commissioning progress update
FPH initiates voluntary limited recall
March 28th Morning Report
KFL Celebrates 20 Years of Excellence in Investment Mgmt.
SVR - Savor FY24 Earnings Guidance & Change in Banking Partner
NZK - NZ King Salmon Investments Limited FY24 Results
March 27th Morning Report