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Home News

ANZ loses advisers, cuts staff pay

The major bank posted a disappointing financial result this week as the company transforms its business in the wake of the royal commission.

by Staff Writer
November 1, 2018
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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ANZ saw its profit slide by 5 per cent over the year to 30 September.

As of 1 October, aligned dealer groups Millenium3, RI Advice, Financial Services Partners and Elders Financial Planning are now legally owned by IOOF. ANZ’s aligned adviser numbers fell from 756 in 2017 to 661 this year.

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ANZ’s retained wealth business includes ANZ financial planning, ANZ Share Investing, the distribution of general insurance products and lenders mortgage insurance (LMI).

ANZ Financial Planning recorded a 1 per cent fall in FUA over the year to 20 September, from $10.8 billion to $10.4 billion. General in-force premiums remained flat at $173 million over the year.

Shocking revelations of misconduct by the royal commission have seen 200 staff fired from the company, ANZ chief executive Shayne Elliott confirmed. He also explained that remuneration has been slashed significantly.

“While there was much to be pleased about this year, we accept the significant community concern as a result of our failures highlighted by the royal commission has impacted our standing in the community,” Mr Elliott said.

“This was a factor in the decision to reduce variable remuneration paid to staff this year across the bank by $124 million. We are also undertaking the urgent work required to fix the failures that have been highlighted by the commission and further increased our focus on conduct issues.”

Meanwhile, ANZ has reduced its full-time staff numbers by 5,151 over the last 12 months, from 43,011 in September 2017 to 37,860 today.

Mr Elliott said that while the group does not have a target to reduce its FTE numbers, staff cuts would be a natural result of simplifying the bank.

“The outcome of our strategy of doing less things means less branches, fewer products to service and less need for contact centre and operational staff,” he said.

“It is an outcome rather than a target.

“There will be more. We have been really transparent with our staff about why we are changing and the need to change. While it is early days, we do keep in touch with former staff and most of them haven’t struggled to find alternative employment.”

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Comments 6

  1. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    You have to love a good royal commission in Australia. Thousands of workers lose their jobs due to the corruption from those at the top and those at the top carry on getting well paid.

    Reply
  2. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    The CEO should have been the first one sacked! not sweeping things under the carpet as usual and blaming everyone else

    Reply
  3. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    A fish rots from the head. Little point is sacking the Indians whilst the chiefs remain with their snouts in the trough.

    Reply
  4. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    With such a big change I wonder how the FPA will survive? After all, they received a third of income from product related firms last year, a third from the FPA conference and the remainder from members fees. So if the big banks are leaving advice and selling out, and they’re are less advisers around who have there advice fees paid for them by these large institutions, and last but not least Sam Henderson won’t be hosting the FPA conference this year….. I suspect they are on very very rocky ground. Very Rocky ground.

    Perhaps finally this decoupling of product and advice may lead to better outcomes for advisers.

    Reply
    • Anonymous says:
      7 years ago

      It’s not that big a change really. Most of the advisers are just being move from one vertically integrated product company (ANZ) to another vertically integrated product company (IOOF). A similar concept is proposed for most of CBA and NAB’s advisers.

      There is no significant decoupling of product and advice. That will only happen if advisers choose to leave licensees owned by product companies, or if legislation forces them to.

      Reply
  5. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    ANZ sacks 5,000, NAB sacks 6,000 – tell me again, why the fuck would anyone want a job in this industry.

    I am getting out

    Reply

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