Title: Commonwealth Bank of Australia ACN 123 123 124
1Michael Cameron Group Executive, Retail Banking
Services
Mark Jones Regional General Manager, South
Western Australia
Fred Pollock Executive General Manager, Group
Sales Service
Geoff Austin Executive General Manager, Lending
Products
Michael Cant Executive General Manager, Trans.
Deposit Products
Vittoria Shortt General Manager, Strategy
Development
David Grafton Executive General Manager, Credit
Risk
Commonwealth Bank of Australia ACN 123 123
124 Retail Banking Services Update
28 September 2006
2Disclaimer
- The material that follows is a presentation of
general background information about the Banks
activities current at the date of the
presentation, 28 September 2006. It is
information given in summary form and does not
purport to be complete. It is not intended to be
relied upon as advice to investors or potential
investors and does not take into account the
investment objectives, financial situation or
needs of any particular investor. These should be
considered, with or without professional advice
when deciding if an investment is appropriate.
3Today
- Strategy
- Michael Cameron
- Sales and Service
- Mark Jones and Fred Pollock
- Products
- Geoff Austin and Michael Cant
- Panel Questions
- Including Vittoria Shortt and David Grafton
4Notes
545 of Australians have a relationship with us
6Notes
7Huge scale of interactions
Branches
ATMs
EFTPOS
NetBank
Australia Post
Call Centre
Brokers
1,007 sites
3,173 terminals
130,000 machines
1.2m active customers
3,730 agencies
7.5m passwords
6,200 brokers
8Notes
9Today
- Results
- Strategy and Priorities
- Structure
- Progress
- Collaboration
10Notes
11Well positioned to grow
Income vs. same period last year (m)
Costs vs. same period last year (m)
1,200
7.5
6.1
11.5
0.6
1,100
1,000
900
800
2,000
Dec 04
Dec 05
Jun 06
Jun 05
Jun 05
Jun 06
Dec 04
Dec 05
Profit After Tax vs. same period last year (m)
Cost-to-Income half yearly
1,000
46.5
46.0
10.2
15.8
900
44.2
800
43.0
700
42.00
Dec 04
Jun 06
Jun 05
Dec 05
Jun 05
Jun 06
Dec 04
Dec 05
All figures reflect Retail Product costs and
income only
12Notes
13To be Australias finest financial services
organisation through excelling in customer
service
Retail Bank Strategy
- Invest in the capabilities of our frontline
people to improve customer experience - Offer competitive and value-for-money products
- Leverage our natural advantage of convenience
- Build a culture of service and
- operational excellence
14Notes
15Delivering Service
BRANCH NETWORK David Marshall
LENDING PRODUCTS Geoff Austin
PRODUCTS
SALES
DIRECT CHANNELS Vacant
GROUP FUNCTIONS
TRANSACTION DEPOSIT PRODUCTS Michael Cant
GROUP SALES SERVICE Fred Pollock
COMMUNICATIONS Stephanie Barry
RETAIL OPERATIONS Peter Abbott
MARKETING Mark Buckman
STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENT Vittoria Shortt
CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Gary Thursby
PEOPLE Robyn Worthington
CREDIT RISK MANAGEMENT David Grafton
TECHNOLOGY Dave Curran
SUPPORT
16Notes
17Clear Priorities
- People engagement
- Customer satisfaction
- Product competitiveness
- Service efficiency
18Notes
19Frontline people now more passionate
Gallup Workplace Survey
(max) 5.00
Lost Time Injury Frequency Rate
4.20
4.20
4.14
4.15
20
18
4.10
16
4.05
4.00
14
4.00
12
3.95
10
3.90
8
3.85
Jul 05
Oct 05
Jan 06
Apr 06
Jul 06
2004
2005
2006
Internal Customer Service strongly agree
Absenteeism
47
50
44
5.0
37
36
40
4.5
31
30
4.0
23
3.5
20
3.0
10
2.5
0
2.0
Jul 05
Oct 05
Jan 06
Apr 06
Jul 06
Mar 05
Jun 05
Sep 05
Dec 05
Mar 06
Jun 06
20Notes
21Happier Customers
Customer Complaints
- 52 reduction in number of complaints since July
2005
5000
4000
3000
2000
1000
0
Jul 05
Oct
Jan 06
Apr
Jul
Aug
Sep
Nov
Dec
Feb
Mar
May
Jun
22Notes
23Happier Customers
- Trend matches major banks since July 2005
-
- 4.3 increase in July 2006, second highest
improvement among majors
Satisfaction Surveys
100
AC Nielsen
Roy Morgan
90
80
70
60
50
Sep 05
Jan 06
Apr
Jul
Jun
May
Mar
Feb
Dec
Nov
Oct
Nielsen Media Research Percentage of
customers very or quite satisfied with their
MFI Roy Morgan Research Percentage of
customers very or fairly satisfied with their MFI
24Notes
25Were listening
- Products
- NetBank saver
- Yellow card
- Removal of NetBank fees
- New streamline accounts
- Travel Plus
- NetBank saver fast start (youth)
- Business online saver
- Know Your Money
26Notes
27Were listening
- Service
- 550 additional frontline people
- 65 branches open on Saturdays
- Extended operating hours
- New branches
- Shorter queue times
- New Customer Service Measurement program
- Auto coin counting machines
28Notes
29Positive momentum
- Credit growth
- Total credit growth steady at 1.2 (monthly)
since 01/2006 - Housing credit growth for June at a two year high
of 1.4 - Credit quality
- Arrears stable or decreasing
- Quality improving for new personal loans
CBA Credit Growth
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.0
Credit Growth
0.8
0.6
0.4
Total Credit
Housing Credit
0.2
0
Jan 06
Apr
Jul
Jun
May
Mar
Feb
Dec
CBA Arrears Probability of Default
4.0
110
3.5
100
3.0
90
2.5
80
Delinquency (30 days)
Probability of default index
2.0
70
1.5
60
1.0
50
0.5
40
Jan 06
Apr
Jul
Jun
May
Mar
Feb
Dec 05
Aug
Personal Loans
Home Loans
Credit Cards
PL probability of default (RHS)
30Other Key Information
Notes
31Collaboration were all talking
- Sales Service
- Reinvigoration of Cohen Brown
- Insurance specialists in branches
- Business Bankers in branches
- People
- Standardised approach to leadership,
- talent management, safety and learning
- Trust and Team Spirit
- Operational Efficiency
- CommWay bank-wide approach
- Co-ordinated purchasing
- Systems stability
32Notes
33Key Messages
- Business indicators support positive momentum
going forward - Positive people measures will result in a
continuing uplift in engagement - Greater understanding of customers will increase
our ability to satisfy their needs - Service metrics will translate into improved
customer satisfaction - Aligning processes around the customer experience
will drive operational excellence
34Notes
35Mark JonesRegional General ManagerSouth
Western Australia
36Notes
37Sales and Service
- Customer Service
- Integration of Channels
- Branch Actions
- Empowerment
38Notes
39Customer Service - taking it seriously
- Were asking the customer
- Independently measuring queue times and customer
experience - Results linked to performance
- Being there when the customer needs us
- Staff recruitment and induction programs re-built
to focus on core sales and service competencies
40Notes
41Integration of channels - convenience
- Convenient access supports channel choice
- CommSee single view of customers
- One Team Referral
- Increased focus on in-branch general insurance
- sales, with 25 increase from August 2005 to
August 2006 - Alignment of KPIs to encourage channel integration
42Notes
43Branch actions look and feel
- 388 branches refurbished over the last three
years - Three branches in new markets opened in the last
nine months - Rolling out open-plan branch designs in suitable
locations - Rolling out auto coin
- counting technology
- New corporate wardrobe introduced February 2006
44Notes
45Empowerment trial local ownership
- Trial commenced on Sunshine Coast in March 2006
with positive trends in sales and service
outcomes - Connecting with local communities
- Business ownership mindset and culture emerging
- Greater flexibility around
- Local area marketing
- Staffing
- Campaigns
- Opening hours
- Uncapped bonus scheme for branch managers
- aligned to profit and customer experience
targets - Business Bankers in branches
46Notes
47Key messages
More relevant and regular measurement linked to
rewards
Improving our look and feel
3. Branch actions
Local ownership
4. Empowerment
48Notes
49Fred PollockExecutive General ManagerGroup
Sales and Service
50Notes
51Sales and Service
- Objective
- How will we go about it?
- What can we learn from Group?
- What are our critical success factors?
52Notes
53Our objective
To support the Banks vision by creating a world
standard sales and service culture
54Notes
55How will we support execution?
- Significant investment
- State-based support model
- Partnership with Cohen Brown
- Consistent and group-wide focus
56Notes
57What drove the change at ASB?
.harnessing the power of an integrated network
putting the right specialist in front of the
customer at the right time
extended to support units for internal
customers
One Team
Service Advantage
Creation of a sales service engine
Breakthrough Service
One Team
Breakthrough Service
Cohen Brown SUCCESS
Cohen Brown SUCCESS
Concurrent
Time
1994
58Notes
59ASB
Superior Customer Satisfaction and Significant
Asset Growth
80
60
Customer Satisfaction Assets bn
40
ANZ takeover of NBNZ
20
Dec 97
Jun 99
Jun 00
Jun 01
Jun 02
Jun 03
Jun 04
Jun 05
ASB Assets
Source Auckland Business School
60Notes
61Sovereign Insurance
The positive impact of service culture
35
Sovereign
31
27
Breakthrough Service Performance launched In
Support Areas
Average inforce new market share
23
Next two largest
19
15
Mar-04
Sep-04
Mar-05
Sep-05
Mar-06
62Notes
63What are the critical success factors?
- Passionate leadership from the top down.
- Line driven training and mastery of the process.
- Rewards and recognition linked directly to sales
and service outcomes. - Smart use of technology.
- Clear expectations and effective follow up.
64Notes
65Geoff AustinExecutive General ManagerLending
Products
66Notes
67Lending Products
- Home Loan book in good shape.
- Significant improvement in personal loans new
business quality. - Some credit card market share appears value
destroying.
68Notes
69Revenue and Profit Focus
Home Lending
- Revenue and profit growth more important than
balance growth - Avoid chasing unprofitable balance share growth
- e.g. 0 card balance transfers
- Effective margin management
11.4
11.4
16.4
16.4
Consumer Finance
3.5
11.2
Personal Loans and Credit Cards. DEET (student
loan) balances added back for comparative
purposes
70Notes
71Home Loan Book well positioned to withstand
stress
- LVR Profile
- Strong LVR profile
- Majority of loans lt60 LVR
- Mortgage insurance in place for most loans gt80
LVR
80
LVR on original security value
60
LVR at current market value
40
20
0 - 60
60.1 - 75
75.1 - 80
80.1 - 90
90.1
- Mortgage Portfolio Stress Testing
- Testing on conditions similar to 80s/90s UK
recession shows losses lt 3 months Home Loan
revenue - Additional insured losses of 175m covered by LMI
in most extreme scenario shown
Potential Loss m
Australian Owner Occupied and Investment
Housing only, excludes Lines of Credit. Number
of loans as at 30 June 06 and market value as at
31 Mar 06. Market value marked against the APM
or Residex database
72Other Key Information
Notes
- Underwriting Low Doc criteria
- All Low-Doc loans must have manual decisioning
(through specialist credit cell) - Credit cell does reasonableness test on declared
income vs. stated occupation and on asset
holdings relative to income declared - All Low Docs require external valuations
- Applicant must have been self employed for at
least two years - Must be able to service loan according to Income
Serviceability test - Refinancing customers must provide satisfactory
evidence of repayment over last 6 months (aimed
at avoiding problem debts being recycled through
industry) - Credit Bureau checks are conducted on all Low Doc
facilities regardless of LVR - No Credit Underwriting Standard exceptions apply
to Low Doc loans
73Low Doc Loans Prudently Managed
CBA Low Doc Loans by month as a percentage of
total mortgage approvals
- Low Doc pricing changes have seen new business
mix settle at 3 - 4 of new approvals - Low Doc specific credit criteria in place to
ensure risks are minimised - Extra LMI protection ensures risk profile remains
low
4.0
4.0
3.8
3.0
2.0
0.7
1.0
Jul 05
Jun 06
Jan 06
LVR for Low-Doc Loans
0
60
80
100
LMI at customer cost
Low Doc not available
Pooled LMI coverage arranged by CBA
74Notes
75Home Loan Initiatives focus on risk
- Valuation fraud risk is an increasing industry
issue. - Systems and decision rules introduced to manage a
significant expense. - Decision rules upgraded for new fraud
environment. - Recent review of LMI arrangements confirmed
continuation of external insurer rather than
partial / full captive. - New APRA capital requirements inhibit acceptable
risk-adjusted return on capital-intensive
business. - LMI investment underway to deliver B2B solution.
- Delivers efficiencies and improved operational
controls.
76Notes
77Personal Loans New Business Quality Improved
- A number of initiatives taken
- Significant improvements in the expected
Probability of Default (PD) - This translates into lower arrears levels for
more recently approved loans
Higher Risk
120
100
Indexed Acquisition Quality (PD risk )
80
60
Lower Risk
40
Aug05
Jan 06
Aug 06
May 06
Month on Book 3
2.50
Month on Book 2
2.00
1.50
Indexed Arrears Rate
1.00
0.50
Jun 04
Oct 04
Feb 05
Jun 05
Oct 05
Feb 06
Jun 06
78Notes
79Why we dont offer zero percent balance transfers
Monthly Cash Flow per Card
- 0 offers appear value destroying with roll-over
to low-rate card margins - On marginal cost basis, customer break-even for
genuine customers between 12-24 months (est.) - Significant risks of obtaining transient,
expensive balances
40
110
90
30
20
50
10
10
0
-10
-10
-50
-20
-30
-90
2
4
6
8
Month
10
12
14
16
Funding Cost
Fraud
Bad Debt
Interest Income
Fee Income
Cumulative (RHS)
Balance Transfer 0 for 6 Months then 50
retained at 10.99 Spend 750 per month with
95 repaid each following month Cumulative
costs at month 16 - ignores operating costs of
card establishment/maintenance
80Notes
81Key messages
- 1. Home Loan book in good shape
Well positioned to withstand stressed conditions
Bad and doubtful debt profile expected to improve
over time
2. Significant improvement in personal loans new
business quality
Focus on profit and risk-adjusted returns is also
good risk management
3. Some credit card market share appears value
destroying
82Notes
83Michael CantExecutive General ManagerTransaction
and Deposit Products
84Notes
85Transaction and Deposit Products
- Competitive position and strategy
- Managing the back book
- Update on recent product initiatives
86Key Information
Notes
87Well placed in a competitive market
- No. 1 Branch Footprint
- No. 1 ATM Network
- Large retail customer base
- Award winning product set
- Most to gain in a rising interest rate
environment - Solid recent financial performance
- Number one share of industry growth
Convenience
3500
3173
2500
2282
1500
1007
817
500
Branches
Branded ATMs
Market Share Balance vs. Balance Growth
Market Share - Balance v Balance Growth
35
30
NAB
25
CBA
WBC
20
Share of Balance Growth
15
ANZ
10
STG
5
0
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Share of Balance
88Notes
89Key elements of deposits strategy
- Customer segmentation
- Understand customer preferences and
propensity - Targeted offerings by segment
- Distribution
- Leveraging convenience
- Outbound retention contact
- Product and pricing
- Competitive products
- Differentiated pricing strategies
- Sales Service roll-out will
- underpin success
90Notes
91Effectively managing back book substitution
- Modest substitution to date
- 1.8 NetBank Saver
- 3.5 Streamline
- Significant number of passive customers
- Product eligibility criteria
- Use of targeted offerings by segment
- Overall deposits margin is holding up
Deposit Revenue M
2700
6
2650
2600
2550
2500
2450
2400
2004/05
2005/06
Product Mix
100
NetBank Saver
80
Term Deposits
60
Transactions
40
All other
20
2004/05
2005/06
92Notes
93Understanding of customer is key
High
- Smart analytics
- Predictive models
- Event based triggers
- Targeted retention
- and upsell activity
Create awareness
Proactiveupsell
Retentionfocus
At Risk of External Attrition
Facilitate transfers
Passive
High
Low
At Risk of Internal Migration
94Notes
95NetBank Saver growth with modest substitution
- Significant improvement in deposit balances
growth - 63 funds from external sources
- Only 1.8 of existing customer balances have
switched into NetBank Saver (at June 06) - Cost of internal churn for 2006 approximately
15m (2bp) - Accompanied by an increase in Streamline balances
RBS Deposit Balances (B)
7.6 growth
78
74
70
66
62
Jul 04
Oct
Jan 05
Apr
Jul
Oct
Jan 06
Apr
NetBank Saver
All other
96Notes
97New Streamline another success
- 7 increase in new accounts per month vs. last
year - 55 of accounts are from external sources
- Fee revenue for many customers not impacted by
all you can eat fee structure
Number New Transaction Accounts
Average 7 increase
60,000
40,000
20,000
May
June
July
August
05
06
98Notes
99Key messages
- 1. We have improved our competitive position
Leading to good growth in balances and revenue
2. Management of the back book remains a key
Smart customer analytics and segmentation will
help in managing the volume / margins trade off
Margins are holding up
3. Substitution has been modest
100Notes
101(No Transcript)
102Michael Cameron Group Executive, Retail Banking
Services
Mark Jones Regional General Manager, South
Western Australia
Fred Pollock Executive General Manager, Group
Sales Service
Geoff Austin Executive General Manager, Lending
Products
Michael Cant Executive General Manager, Trans.
Deposit Products
Vittoria Shortt General Manager, Strategy
Development
David Grafton Executive General Manager, Credit
Risk
Commonwealth Bank of Australia ACN 123 123
124 Retail Banking Services Update
28 September 2006