The Commonwealth Bank could be set to buy up to 40% of John Symond’s Aussie Home Loans, in a sign that banks are now looking for bargains as the financial sector continues to wobble.
The Commonwealth Bank could be set to buy up to 40% of John Symond’s Aussie Home Loans, in a sign that banks are now looking for bargains as the financial sector continues to wobble.
According to newspaper reports today, CBA is in discussions with Aussie to take a stake of between 30% to 40% in the company at a price that would value it at around $200 million.
Aussie was a pioneer in non-bank mortgage lending, building up a strong position in the sector and turning Symond into one of Australia’s most high profile entrepreneurs.
But Aussie was this year caught in the credit squeeze that swept the non-bank mortgage sector, leaving it struggling to obtain the wholesale funding it needed to grow its mortgage book.
Symond announced last week that he was stepping back from Aussie’s day-to-day operations and moving into the executive chairman’s role to allow him to better drive the firm’s strategic direction.
Meanwhile, listed mortgage broker Mortgage Choice has posted a slight fall in net profit for 2007-08, from $19.6 million to $19.3 million.
Mortgage Choice chief executive Paul Lahiff has described the result as “solid” given the pressure the sector has been under as a result of the credit crunch and several banks withdrawing products from the broker channel.
The company’s loan book grew by 12.2% during the period, and stood at $33.27 billion at 30 June 2008.
“The fact that it outpaced [banking] system growth of 10.1% in such a difficult market was a pleasing outcome.”
The company is confident that the economics fundamentals underpinning the housing sector are strong and Lahifff says any reduction in official interest rates should improve the outlook.
Related stories: