Banks need to do more to gain shareholders’ custom

funds-management/australian-share-market/

17 April 2015
| By Nicholas |
image
image
expand image

Australia's Big Four banks are struggling to convert their 1.5 million shareholders into clients, with just over 40 per cent of investors in each institution also being a customer, on average, according to new research.

Results from the latest Roy Morgan Single Source survey found on average just 41.1 per cent of each bank's shareholders were also clients, prompting Roy Morgan industry communications director, Norman Morris, to suggest they need to do more to incentivise investors to bank with them.

Morris said the data showed there has been a "disconnect between investment and banking decisions, with shareholders obviously chasing the best deal for their personal banking and the best investment regardless of where they bank".

The survey found the Commonwealth Bank of Australia had the highest proportion of investors as clients (49.1 per cent), while less than two in every five investors also banking with Westpac (39.6 per cent), ANZ (37.1 per cent) and NAB (34.4).

"It is likely that the banks will need to offer some incentive or special deal to induce shareholders to bank with them, but it appears from this analysis that past attempts have had limited success," Morris said.

"The potential to increase business from shareholders is considerable. Over 450,000 CBA shareholders are not customers of the CBA; while the NAB has a potential of over 400,000. For the ANZ and Westpac the figure is over 300,000. Given that these shareholders are likely to have a favourable opinion of their bank from an investment perspective, the next step is to convert them into customers. Finding the right inducement and making shareholders aware of it is now the challenge."

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

So we are now underwriting criminal scams?...

2 months ago

Glad to see the back of you Steve. You made financial more expensive, not more affordable as you claim, and presided ...

2 months ago

Completely agree Peter. The definition of 'significant change is circumstances relevant to the scope of the advice' is s...

4 months 1 week ago

A Sydney financial adviser has been permanently banned from providing any financial services, with the regulator deriding his “lack of integrity, trustworthiness and prof...

3 weeks 1 day ago

Minister for Financial Services, Stephen Jones, has provided further information about the second tranche of the Delivering Better Financial Outcomes (DBFO) reforms....

2 weeks ago

One licensee has lost 27 advisers in the past week, now sitting at zero, according to the latest Wealth Data figures....

3 weeks 1 day ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS