When you’re doing well, a little generosity is appreciated – except if it is too little, which is what consumer advocates and MPs are saying about ANZ’s surprise announcement that it will be trimming interest rates on its credit cards as of February 28.
And make no mistake, ANZ is doing very well indeed.
Last month it announced that profits for the most recent quarter had hit $2 billion, an increase of 31 per cent on the same period last year. More than that, ANZ Banking Group chief Shayne Elliott is upbeat about the burden of bad debts on his outfit’s books and recently scaled back estimates of that red-ink liability.
So given the ANZ’s strong profit result, they can afford to give users of its credit cards a break, right?
Absolutely, says CHOICE’s Tom Godfrey, who doesn’t see the reductions as anything but a very small bone indeed.
Those reductions should have been much larger, Mr Godfrey said, casting the cuts as a case of too little and too late.
“It’s an attempt by ANZ to try and take the heat off themselves and the other banks to show they’re responding to community concerns,” he said, adding that “the big four banks are just not competitive”.
Mr Godfrey noted that the best interest rates – those offered by the credit unions – are under 10 per cent, and he wondered where ANZ’s rival banks found the gall to charge “toxic interest rates” of “around 18 or 19 per cent or higher”. The best credit card rates available in Australia can be as low as 8.9 per cent.
More than 500,000 existing ANZ Low Rate accounts will benefit from the new rates, with the bank estimating that a typical consumer stands to save about $150 a year.
MPs take the credit
The government has praised the bank for the move, with Liberal MP Scott Buchholz saying ANZ has shown “commercial courage” in lowering its rates.
Malcolm Turnbull also claimed credit. Despite his government’s reluctance to conduct a Royal Commission into the banking sector, he said the newly-formed economics committee, before which the bank CEOs appear, had now provided real results.
“I am bringing the banks regularly before the house economics committee and they are being held to account for their actions and you are seeing real results,” Mr Turnbull said on Sunday.
Neither Mr Godfrey’s criticism nor South Australian Senator Nick Xenophon’s faint praise for the move ruffled the head of ANZ’s retail and commercial unit, Fred Ohlsson, who crowed that the reductions mean customers will have “the best rate available from any of the major banks or any of the regional banks owned by the majors”.
ANZ estimates that a typical consumer stands to save about $150 a year under the new rates.
And that’s the whole point, according to Senator Xenophon, who scoffed that ANZ customers have good reason to be even more miserly with their gratitude than the bank has been with its rate cuts.
“The gap between the official cash rate and credit card rates has never been higher,” he said.
“We really need to look at some form of either greater market competition, or the banks need to really explain themselves in gouging consumers in this way,” said Senator Xenophon, who has been a strong backer of Labor leader Bill Shorten’s call for a royal commission into the banking industry.
Mr Buchholz cited the grilling late last year of bank executives who were dragged before a parliamentary inquiry as a prime factor motivating Sunday’s announcement.
“We will have the banks appearing in the next fortnight in Canberra, along with the Australian Banking Association, where I will continue to take a similar line of questioning with those banks that haven’t taken the commercial choice to shift their interest rates yet.”