Westpac carve out considerations underway as MS hired for auto leases
How do you split a $15 billion odd auto leasing and finance book - and which bit of it do you decide to sell?
How do you split a $15 billion odd auto leasing and finance book - and which bits do you decide to sell?
That's the question Westpac Banking Group and its new adviser Morgan Stanley are believed to be grappling with, as the bank gets cracking on preparations to sell a $5 billion chunk of loans in an effort to free up capital.
While sources stress the deliberations are in the consideration stage - and Westpac has made no decision to push ahead with a sale - financial institutions group bankers and tyrekickers are preparing for the auction to launch later this year once funders, bankers, tyrekickers and the like have moved on from ANZ Banking Group's time-intensive wealth carve out.
Westpac is believed to be reviewing about a $5 billion auto leasing book, which is housed within a larger auto and equipment finance book.
Sources said the larger loanbook was worth about $15 billion, and included close to $5 billion in loans picked up from the Lloyds acquisition two years ago and the old St George auto book, worth another $10 billion.
The auto finance loans are all part of Westpac's business bank, which had $154 billion in loans outstanding as at March 31. Last year's financial report made little mention of the portfolio, other than to say there had been some growth and provisions in the book had also increased.
Westpac is expected to have a decision on whether or not to push ahead with an auction in coming months. However, its decision to recruit Morgan Stanley's investment bankers to help with the review, as Street Talk revealed on Tuesday, has market watchers expecting a deal of some description.
It comes as Westpac looks for ways to free up capital and meet the prudential regulator's capital targets well ahead of the January 2020 deadline.
Westpac had a tier one capital ratio of 10 per cent as at March 31, its most recent half-yearly reporting date, while APRA wants to see the banks get to at least 10.5 per cent.
Elsewhere, Goldman Sachs has been active in the recruitment market hiring five new executive directors for its Australian investment banking team.
The bank has picked up UBS media banker Adrian Lee to work for Zac Fletcher in investment banking services, as well as UBS financial institutions group banker Andrew Buchanan and the Swiss bank's Joe Hunt to join Goldman's capital products group.
The Wall Street giant also picked up Guillaume Lehinque from Gresham Partners for its consumer/retail banking team, while Standard Chartered's Hugh Stephenson joined the bank's real estate unit, as Street Talk first reported on Tuesday.
All five bankers were hired as executive directors.