7:50 am today

ANZ boss says New Zealand can't afford to own banks

7:50 am today
ANZ bank.

Photo: RNZ / Marika Khabazi

The head of ANZ says the big banks can't afford to be New Zealand owned and have to make profits to keep their overseas shareholders happy.

The Commerce Commission released its final personal banking report on Tuesday and said there was little competition in the sector which was dominated by four Australia owned banks making high profits.

ANZ New Zealand chief executive Antonia Watson told Morning Report it was true bank profits in New Zealand were higher than many places overseas.

She said they needed to provide reasonable a return to shareholders so they would continue to invest in New Zealand.

ANZ chief executive Antonia Watson.

ANZ New Zealand chief executive Antonia Watson. Photo: Photosport

"We need to attract that foreign investment.

"I'd love to be Kiwi owned right, we can't afford to be Kiwi owned. We don't have $50b to put the major banks into Kiwi ownership."

Watson disagreed that there wasn't competition between banks, pointing to recent drops in interest rates charged on homeloans.

"There is absolutely competition, but can we improve competition? Sure."

The Commission's recommendations were "solid" and Watson said she supported them.

The report also said banks had been too slow in developing open banking.

Watson said a lack of regulation was holding things back with open banking.

While other countries, including Australia, were further ahead in that space it was because their consumer data rights and regulators had been established years ago, she said.

"We've been working really hard on open banking... one of the things we've been asking for is regulation. We need that consumer data right that makes it really really clear where the liability sits when we are giving other people our customer's data and we'd like an accreditation agency that makes it easier for the fintechs to deal with us."

ASB, BNZ and Westpac declined interviews. Kiwibank also declined, but said it was ready to challenge the big banks.

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