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ISSUE 8.04 March 2011
Hockey exclusive Shadow Treasurer laments ‘inevitable’ exit fee ban Page 2
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Turnarounds show no improvement in 10 years Huw Bough
Banks prep premium service sweeteners Competition heats up for high volume broker business
Australia’s biggest banking institutions are in the midst of developing and rolling out a raft of service initiatives for premium, high volume brokers, and may soon make many of these available to a wider slice of the mortgage and finance broking market. An investigation by Australian Broker has revealed the extent of a range of new, service-driven projects currently underway at the nation’s four biggest banks. They include a market-wide effort to enable in-office loan contract printing capabilities, providing top brokers with more intimate access
to credit teams, credit information and their mortgage documents, developing yet-to-be launched online broker portals, providing the ability for brokers to order property valuations upfront, and even giving access to static customer bank details online. Designed to provide the top echelon of brokers with faster turnaround times, detailed credit information, as well as other client service extras, the initiatives are partnering top brokers more closely with banks, ensuring high conversion rates, and improving the banks’ bottom lines. Last year, the Commonwealth Bank rolled out loan contract printing capabilities to its top ‘Diamond’ broker segment, and began a wider implementation
with 200 ‘quality A’ brokers. However, ANZ and St. George have now revealed they have also added the service. ANZ has been piloting document printing with a select group of brokers for six months, while St. George added the capability to its ‘Flame’ segment service suite in January. NAB has also confirmed that it has now placed contract printing within its “consideration set”. Westpac general manager of broker distribution, Huw Bough, has revealed the bank is on the cusp of launching new services for Page 14 cont. Analysis of top-segment service initiatives, as well as interviews with major bank elite brokers, will be published in our next issue.
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Equity in question
Planner, broker equity release credentials under dispute Page 8
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Inside this issue Special report 20-21 The exit fee ban fallout Viewpoint 22 The industry on turnarounds Opinion 23 Why the industry needs to sell itself Analysis 24 Which brokers will survive regulation? Market talk 28 The upcoming housing stock shock Toolkit 30 Getting it right next financial year People 32 Ray Hair: A man with a new plan