ANZ New Zealand, the local unit of the Australian bank, reported an 11 percent decline in cash profit as growth in net interest income was offset by a charge against software.
Cash profit, the preferred earnings measure for banks which strips out non-core items, fell to $751 million in the six months ended March 31, from $841 million a year earlier.
Net interest income rose 5 percent to $1.49 billion but was offset by a 21 percent decline in other operating income to $402 million, which resulted in an overall 2 percent decline in operating income to about $1.9 billion.
This result reflects a challenging period for banking and we have taken the opportunity to move decisively and adapt to the changing environment by building a simpler, better capitalised and more balanced bank.
ANZ is New Zealand's biggest lender, with more than $100 billion deployed across the economy. Its parent, Australian & New Zealand Banking Group, today posted a 24 percent decline in first-half cash profit to A$2.78 billion. The result included A$717 million of charges such as restructuring costs, an accounting change for software capitalisation and an impairment against AmBank.