Friday, February 06, 2009

Banks get cranky over Government rate reduction pass on demands

Australian banks are set for another showdown with the Rudd Government over future interest rate cuts, with NAB boss Cameron Clyne making clear this morning he was "relatively unlikely" to pass on the full amount of the next rate cut.
NAB economist Alan Oster is forecasting another 75 basis rate cut next month with another 50 basis points in the second half this year.
Clyne made clear his customers won't be getting that amount.
Other banks contacted this morning confided they agreed with Clyne, underlining the politics of the move earlier this week to pass on the full level of the 100 basis point cut on official interest rates.
The rate cut came on the day of the Government’s $42 billion handout and the day after CBA told the market it was growing income quickly thanks to better profit margins, so in the scheme of things it would not have looked good for the big banks to have played hard ball this week.
Next time it will be different.
Each bank has a different funding book depending on the level of deposits and the like, but NAB’s costs have gone up from 65 basis points over cash rates from July 2007 to January this year to 99 basis today and it is looking at that increasing to 99 basis points in the near future.
The reason being term funding costs are higher because while cash rates have fallen and the swap rate spread has also fallen, Government bond rates have not fallen as quickly, so as the banks replace short term paper with long term paper the funding costs increase.
That at least is how the big banks see the world.

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Westpac is the first bank that passes on full interest rate cut

Westpac is the first bank that has passed on the Reserve Bank of Australia's 100 basis point interest rate cut to its customers.Westpac's new standard variable rate is 5.91 per cent, effective Monday February 9.
The bank says it will also reduce its 55-day credit card rate by 100 basis points.
The nation's other big banks are yet to announce reductions in home loan rates after the Reserve Bank of AUstralia's announcement at 2.30pm (AEDT).

Monday, February 02, 2009

British mortgage rate cut awaits CIty Investors

Britain awaits yet another cut in interest rates to record low levels.
But it may not be enough to boost the London stock market as recession weighs on the economy, traders said.
The FTSE 100 index of leading shares closed on Friday at 4,149.64 points, up 2.39 per cent or 97.17 points from a week earlier.
The Bank of England (BoE) is widely expected to slash British borrowing costs by a further 50 basis points to an official cash rate of just 1 per cent at a meeting on Thursday.
Now at 1.5 per cent, interest rates are at the lowest level since the British central bank was formed in 1694.
This week, a statement from Barclays bank stressing it did not need a government bailout following speculation to the contrary sent its share price and those of its peers rocketing.
Some of the gains last week were lost as the weekend approached due to "poor earnings and bleak labour and housing market data from the US, heightening fears of a deeper global recession", said City Index market strategist Nick Serff.
"This ended a four-day surge for the major indexes, their best performance in two months," he said.
Another notable British corporate announcement this week came from Anglo-Dutch energy giant Royal Dutch Shell, which said it had made a net loss of $US2.81 billion ($A4.3 billion) in the final quarter of 2008 on plunging oil prices.
The loss compared with a net profit of $US8.47 billion ($A13 billion) during the fourth quarter of 2007, when crude prices were far higher, Europe's largest oil company said.