(Reuters) -Australia’s Westpac Banking (NYSE:) Corp reported a 3% fall in annual revenue on Monday as a result of rising prices and intense competitors within the mortgage market, whereas it elevated its buyback program by A$1 billion.
The financial institution’s client section was the worst performing, contributing probably the most to the lender’s revenue decline, reflecting competitors within the mortgage market.
Westpac mentioned in a press release it expects strong demand for housing and enterprise credit score in 2025, because the nation’s central financial institution appears to shift to an easing stance subsequent 12 months.
Excessive rates of interest in Australia have elevated the lender’s publicity to unhealthy debt as clients grappling with cost-of-living pressures wrestle to repay loans on time.
Australia’s third largest lender by market worth reported web revenue attributable of A$6.99 billion ($4.61 billion) for the 12 months ended Sept. 30, in contrast with A$7.20 billion reported final 12 months and an LSEG estimate of A$6.50 billion.
It declared the next closing dividend of 76 Australian cents per share, as in comparison with 72 Australian cents a 12 months earlier.
($1 = 1.5147 Australian {dollars})