ASB has reported a 11 percent fall in its half-year profit, as it was hit by slower lending, reduced margins and higher costs.
Key numbers for the six months ended December 2023 compared with a year ago:
- Net profit $749m vs $840m
- Cash profit $707m vs $803m (excludes one-offs)
- Total income $1.70b vs $1.83b
- Net interest income $1.47b vs $1.55b
- Provisions $10m vs $49m
- Net interest margin 2.21% vs 2.47%
The bank's run of ever increasing and record profits has come to an end as borrowing demand fell, and it paid higher interest rates for deposits which squeezed its margins.
Chief executive Vittoria Shortt said the result was a reflection of the broad economy.
"Bank profitability is inextricably linked to the New Zealand economy and the environment in which we are operating, and the interest rate cycle has been a big influencing factor on the results we've posted."
She said the interest rate cycle - going from record lows to multi-year highs - had hit the bank's funding costs, including higher offshore funding costs.
Overall lending fell 1 percent to $108 billion, with housing demand affected by tougher competition, and subdued agricultural and business demand.
Its net interest income, the difference between what the bank pays for its funds and what it lends at, fell 7 percent to $1.4b, while its net interest margin fell 26 basis points, which hit overall income.
However, despite tougher economic conditions the amount set aside for bad and doubtful debts fell to $10m from $49m last year.
Shortt said the bank's spending on fraud and scam protection systems and cyber security has increased and would reach $100m this year.