Select a page

Banking News

Culture fix behind APRA A$150b capital requirement

Culture fix behind APRA A$150b capital requirement

(12 July 2019 - Australia) The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has requested ANZ, NAB and Westpac each set aside A$500 million in additional capital buffers until ongoing culture, governance and misconduct risks are resolved.

The aggregate A$1.5 billion total will be applied through increased risk weighted assets (RWA) from Q4 2019. APRA ordered 36 banks, insurers and superannuation licensees in June 2018 to undergo rigorous self-assessments after ordering CBA to set aside A$1 billion in regulatory capital after failings. The additional capital requirements will not be lifted until each group completes planned remediation, improves risk management and achieves all self-assessment goals including the need to strengthen non-financial risk management, ensure accountabilities are clear, cascaded and enforced, address long-standing weaknesses and enhance risk culture.
 
The main findings of APRA’s review of self-assessments were non-financial risk management requires improvement, accountabilities are not always clear, cascaded and effectively enforced, acknowledged weaknesses are well-known and some have been longstanding and risk culture is not well understood and therefore may not be reinforcing the desired behaviours. APRA believes the Big Four continue to misidentify risk citing the examples of CBA’s breaching anti-money laundering laws and incurring a A$700 million fine, the largest civil penalty in Australian corporate history. It is expected that rising capital adequacy requirements will crimp dividend growth as customer remediation costs blow out to A$8 billion following findings from the 2018 Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Financial Services Industry.
 
The majors have already allocated over A$5 billion in customer remediation since 2017 while APRA had earlier announced that the Big Four would have to increase capital adequacy by three basis points of RWA by 1 January 2024, which is less than the expected five percentage point increase and over a longer timeframe. The prudential regulator announced that it expects the new requirements to strengthen the loss-absorbing capacity of the major banks by a total A$50 billion with a slight bump in funding costs of under five basis points. NAB and Westpac confirmed that the additional A$500 million of operational risk capital equates to an impact of 16 basis points on their Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio (CET1). For ANZ it equated to a CET1 impact of 18 basis points. 
 
“Australia’s major banks are well-capitalised and financially sound but improvements in the management of non-financial risks are needed. This will require a real focus on the root causes of the issues that have been identified, including complexity, unclear accountabilities, weak incentives and cultures that have been too accepting of long-standing gaps” stated APRA Chair Wayne Byres. “The major banks play a vital role in the stability of the entire financial system, and APRA expects them to hold themselves to the highest standards of risk governance. Their self-assessments reveal that they have fallen short in a number of areas, and APRA is therefore raising their regulatory capital requirements until weaknesses have been fully remediated.”

NAB claims that A$170 million has been repaid to customers from in the 2018/19 financial year and aged small-business complaints have halved since Q4 2018. Westpac stated that it has made 20 percent progress on the actions it identified in its culture, governance and accountability self-assessment while ANZ did not provide a progress update on its “self-assessment roadmap”. The increased operational risk capital requirement is effective from 30 September 2019.

“NAB will report on the 26 actions identified in the bank’s self-assessment on culture, accountability and governance in November 2019. The assessment sets out a clear program of reform to strengthen non-financial risk management and material progress has been made so far. The board customer committee is now in place and has approved a new customer outcomes framework to define the principles and standards in the design, pricing and structure of all NAB products” said NAB CEO Philip Chronican.

Comment on this article

 

Your comments will not be published. Required fields are marked *

 

Please enter the word you see in the image below:


Subscribe

Subscribe to our mailing list

Sign up now to keep up-to-date with the latest
market news and insights in B2B banking.

* indicates required

For more information please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Statements.