MELBOURNE: The National Australia Bank Limited (NAB) shares rose to a seven year high after the lender posted a 6 per cent increase in first quarter profit amid increased mortgage demand and higher markets income.
National Australia shares rose 1.3 per cent to a seven year high of A$36.97. The stock gained 10 per cent this year, the most among the nation’s four largest lenders, and higher than the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 Index’s 7.4 per cent advance.
The Melbourne based lender said in a regulatory that undaunted cash profit, which excludes onetime items, climbed to A$1.65 billion ($1.28 billion) in the three months ended December 31 from A$1.55 billion reported a year earlier. Undaunted net income was A$1.8 billion, up from A$1.4 billion.
Andrew Thorburn, chief executive officer is speeding up his bank’s exit from low-returning assets and shifting the focus to Australia and New Zealand, countries where mortgage demand is rising. He has flagged plans to exit the bank’s struggling UK unit following the partial sale of its US business in an initial public offering.
Simon Burge, who oversees about $390 million including National Australia shares as chief investment officer of Sydney-based Above the Index Asset Management Private Company, said that Thorburn is rapidly progressing in tidying up the low returning assets and at the same time ensuring growth in main businesses such as Australian mortgages.