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NAB's Profits Rise As Bad Debts Decline
Vanessa Doctor
10 August 2010
National Australia Bank has posted a 22 per cent rise in fiscal third quarter earnings, helped by a decline in charges for bad debts. NAB expects to grow at a faster pace in the coming months, as the demand for loans from Australian businesses is likely to expand by 6.5 per cent by 2011, it said in a statement. The bank is presently embroiled in a takeover issue involving asset management firm AXA Asia Pacific Holdings. NAB had offered to acquire AXA for A$13.3 billion but was blocked by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission early this year. It has sinced relaunched its bid with certain conditions to appease the ACCC's concerns.
According to unaudited figures for the three months to 30 June 2010, the bank achieved cash earnings of A$1.1 billion ($1 billion), compared to A$900 million in the previous quarter. This was mostly due to a decline in bad debt charges, from A$1.06 billion in the third fiscal quarter last year to A$510 million for the same quarter this year, allowing the bank to rate its net interest margin as "stable".