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Commission opens market study into personal banking services

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Tāmaki Makaurau – The Commerce Commission has opened a market study into personal banking services which will examine how well competition is working and consider options for enhancing competition for the long-term benefit of Kiwi consumers.

Commerce Commission chair John Small says New Zealanders should be able to be confident that they are getting great value, clear choices, and innovative offerings in their banking services.

“This sector is hugely important to New Zealanders and the broader economy. We know there is public interest in seeing how competition is delivering for consumers in accounts, lending, and deposit-related products and services and whether people can switch providers easily,” he says.

“We also know that pretty much every household in New Zealand has a bank account and debit card, nearly 60 percent have a credit card and the residential mortgage market accounts for $346 billion in overall lending.”

Dr Small says the study will assess whether there are barriers or behaviours that are preventing competition from driving providers to offer the quality and services consumers should expect.

“This competition study will be a first for New Zealand – providing a deep and focused analysis of how consumers’ diverse needs for personal banking services are being met.”

Dr Small says the 14 month timeframe is necessary for a comprehensive and robust study of the breadth of personal banking services that Kiwis use, and to allow for consultation with the public.

Potential areas of focus for the study are current accounts, deposit accounts, and overdraft account services, personal loans, and mortgage and credit card lending. There will be less of a focus on financial services such as KiwiSaver, wealth management, insurance and foreign exchange.

Dr Small says the proposed terms of reference for the commission’s study have been drafted flexibly to allow consideration of further products and services as appropriate, such as broad, cross-portfolio assessments of banks’ financial performance.

While the study is firmly focused on the process of competition, it will also consider some outcomes of that process, including bank profits. Dr Small says there are plenty of profit indicators already available and that, in this part of the study, the commission will focus on assessing them and potential interpretations of them. 

Stakeholders and interested parties, including bank customers, will be invited to share information to help inform the study, following the release of a preliminary paper by August. The paper will set out the areas the study will consider, including the structure of the industry and the nature of competition in personal banking, the conditions of market entry and expansion, consumer behaviours and preferences, and other areas that might be explored.

The commission must prepare a draft report and release it to the public for consultation. It must allow a reasonable time for comments on the draft report and must have regard to any comments received, before finalising its final report for the study.

The final report must include the commission’s findings and may include recommendations. Any recommendations are non-binding but the government must respond within a reasonable time.  

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