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Australian lender Westpac flags Iran war risks as first-half profit misses estimates

By Thomson Reuters May 4, 2026 | 5:20 PM

May 5 (Reuters) – Westpac Banking Corp reported lower-than-expected first-half profit on Tuesday and warned that Middle East conflict was pressuring customers through higher energy prices.

Australia’s second-largest mortgage lender reported a ​first-half net profit attributable of A$3.41 billion ($2.44 billion), missing the ‌Visible Alpha consensus of A$3.47 billion, hurt by higher credit impairment charges and weaker Treasury income.

The bank recorded a credit impairment charge of A$443 million, up from A$250 million a year ago, citing a more cautious economic outlook, new portfolio ‌overlays ​and an increase in newly impaired loans.

Chief ⁠Executive Anthony Miller said the ⁠bank remained well positioned to deal with the impact of the Middle East conflict, but while stress levels had declined, the bank had taken a “prudent approach” to increase its provisions.

“The war in ​the Middle East is presenting challenges for some customers and the economic impact of the conflict will continue through the year,” the ⁠bank said.

“The disruption to energy supply chains ⁠has driven a rise in prices and we’re seeing ​this flow through to businesses and households.”

Despite that, the bank’s overall credit ​quality remained stable: the share of stressed loans fell to ‌1.16% of total exposures, down 20 basis points (bps) from last year, while delayed mortgage payments for over 90 days fell 19 bps to 0.64%.

Australian housing loans, excluding Westpac’s RAMS portfolio, grew 7% during the ⁠first-half, while business lending grew a sharp 16%, driven by the property, infrastructure and industrial sectors.

Westpac’s net interest margin, a key measure of profitability, slipped ⁠three basis points to ‌1.89% from 1.92% a year earlier, hurt by ⁠lending competition, higher credit impairment charges and lower ​Treasury income.

Its ‌common equity tier 1 (CET1) ratio, a key measure ​of spare ⁠cash, stood at 12.42% at the end of the first-half, compared with 12.24% a year earlier.

The lender declared an interim dividend of 77 Australian cents per share, higher than the 76 Australian cents declared a year earlier.

($1 = 1.3951 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Shivangi Lahiri & Rajasik Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Tasim Zahid)