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APRA releases quarterly authorised deposit-taking institution statistics for June 2023

The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has released the Quarterly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution (ADI) Performance and the Quarterly ADI Property Exposure publications for the quarter ending 30 June 2023.

The banking industry remained well capitalised, with profitability contributing to increases in the total capital ratio. Liquidity and funding levels remained well above minimum requirements. Asset quality deteriorated marginally but remained stronger than historic averages.   

Housing credit growth moderated over the year to June. The share of new loans with high loan-to-valuation ratios and high debt-to-income ratios continued to decline. 

Additionally, APRA has released the second edition of its ADI Centralised Publication (ADICP). This contains entity-level capital and liquidity data to enhance the transparency of the ADI industry and provide relief for smaller ADIs from disclosure obligations. 

“Series in this publication may be impacted by data reporting issues. APRA is working with data providers to resolve the issues as soon as possible.”

Key statistics for ADIs1 for the June 2023 quarter were:    

 

June 2022

June 2023

Year on Year Change

Net profit after tax (year-end)

$38.1 billion

$41.8 billion

+9.8%

Total assets

$5,996.6 billion

$6,118.1 billion

+2.0%

Total capital base

$388.5 billion

$432.4 billion

+11.3%

Total risk-weighted assets

$2,304.3 billion

$2,198.0 billion

-4.6%

Total capital ratio

16.9%

19.7%

+2.8 percentage points

Liquidity coverage ratio

133.0%

134.0%

+1.0 percentage points

Minimum liquidity holdings ratio

17.3%

17.1%

-0.2 percentage points

Net stable funding ratio

124.1%

120.3%

-3.7 percentage points

Key statistics for ADIs conducting residential mortgage lending for the quarter were:2

 

June 2022

June 2023

Year on Year Change

Residential mortgages – credit outstanding

$2,076.1 billion

$2,170.1 billion

4.5%

of which: Owner-occupied

$1,364.8 billion

$1,445.2 billion

5.9%

of which: Investment

$630.5 billion

$650.3 billion

3.1%

Residential mortgages – credit outstanding

June 2022 (share of total)

June 2023 (share of total)

Year on Year Change

Owner-occupied

66.9%

67.5%

+0.6 percentage points

Investment

30.9%

30.4%

-0.5 percentage points

Interest-only

11.1%

11.1%

stable

LVR ≥ 90 per cent

3.6%

3.1%

-0.5 percentage points

 

June 2022 quarter

June 2023 quarter

Change

New residential mortgage loans funded

$159.6 billion

$151.0 billion

-5.4%

New residential mortgage loans funded during the quarter

June 2022 (share of total)

June 2023 (share of total)

Change

Owner-occupied

67.1%

66.4%

-0.7 percentage points

Investment

30.9%

31.6%

0.7 percentage points

Interest-only

20.0%

18.7%

-1.4 percentage points

LVR ≥ 90 per cent

6.4%

5.2%

-1.2 percentage points

Debt-to-income ≥ 6x

22.1%

6.1%

-16.0 percentage points

Key commercial property statistics for ADIs for the June 2023 quarter were:

 

June 2022

June 2023

Year on Year Change

Total commercial property limits

$413.6 billion

$435.3 billion

5.2%

Total commercial property actual exposures

$357.3 billion

$375.3 billion

5.0%

The Quarterly ADI Performance publication contains information on ADIs’ financial performance, financial position, capital adequacy, asset quality, liquidity and key financial performance ratios. 

The Quarterly ADI Property Exposures publication contains data on commercial and residential property exposures, including detail on risk indicators, serviceability characteristics and non-performing loans.

Copies of the June 2023 publications are available at: Quarterly authorised deposit-taking institution statistics


Footnotes:

1 Excluding ADIs that are not banks, building societies or credit unions. 

2 See Explanatory Notes of QPEX for details of share calculations.

Statistics

The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) is the prudential regulator of the financial services industry. It oversees banks, mutuals, general insurance and reinsurance companies, life insurance, private health insurers, friendly societies, and most members of the superannuation industry. APRA currently supervises institutions holding around $9 trillion in assets for Australian depositors, policyholders and superannuation fund members.