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ISSUE 9.01 January 2012
Consolidation now the ‘elephant in the room’
Steve Weston
Aggregation
groups are operating on thin margins and further industry consolidation may be inevitable Consolidation of mortgage aggregators is expected to continue apace in 2012, forcing the industry to assess the future viability of aggregation models. As credit demand remains depressed and loan volumes weaken, Advantedge general manager of broker platforms Steve Weston has said aggregators will be feeling the pinch.
“Certainly all brokers know that times have become more challenging, and maybe it’s a little bit like the elephant in the room that we need to be talking about how the aggregators are travelling,” he said. Key to the viability of these groups is the commission split they receive in tandem with brokers. Weston said many may now be suffering the results of drastic commission reductions following the GFC. “If you simply look at the aggregation businesses where they’re relying on a commission split, if you had 30% of your income effectively cut from 2008 when all the pre-2008 loans were
paid over a five-year period, that means your future profits are determined on loans with lower commissions,” Weston said. This will mean a 30% reduction in profits, with aggregators having less room to reduce margins by the same amount as brokers, who had a hard time absorbing the hit. “Unless you were running an extremely profitable business at that time, the only way to remain viable is to find additional revenue streams – and that’s why crossselling will become just as important to aggregators as it is to brokers,” he said. While cutting costs may seem the easy answer to producing viable margins, Weston said aggregators are no longer in a position to do this. “Most aggregators have been running their businesses extremely efficiently – on the smell of an oily rag – so it isn’t easy to go and find any additional material costs to remove,” Weston said. With brokers demanding higher levels of service from aggregators, Weston said the businesses that would succeed would be the ones to invest more in their brokers, not less. “Aggregators need to be investing more into their businesses and investing in brokers. It’s not an easy position being an aggregator at the moment,” he said. For analysis on expected industry consolidation, see Analysis on page 16
Mandatory disagreement Mortgage players at odds over ACCC membership review Page 2
Commission clarity Brokers welcome moves to simplify commission structures Page 4
Seeking scale New market realities drive big broker mergers Page 6
Inside this issue The coalface 18 Brokers report from the frontline Viewpoint 20 How to defy the Europe gloom News feature 22 2012’s ‘best in the business’ Insight 24 Defining EDR mission creep Market talk 26 Escaping to the country People 28 An indigenous literacy odyssey Caught on camera 29 A round with Australian Financial