Banks Earn Billions Thanks To Higher Interest Rates
ANZ, NAB and Westpac all reported higher interest income in FY23
ANZ, NAB and Westpac all reported higher interest income in FY23
Westpac, ANZ and National Australia Bank have reported their full-year results over the past fortnight, delivering billions in profits and splashing out boosted dividends to their shareholders.
Following 13 interest rate rises from the Reserve Bank since May 2022, all three of the big four banks reported a lift in their net interest income, which is the difference between the interest income they earned on loans less the interest they paid on customers’ savings deposits.
Rising interest rates mean the banks can charge more interest on existing and new loans. But they also have to pay higher interest on their wholesale funding to fund new loans, plus they have to pay a higher interest rate to customers with savings accounts. So, the Reserve Bank’s 13 rate rises did not go wholly and directly to the banks’ bottom lines.
In fact, all three banks reported that their business and institutional divisions produced the best results in FY23 – not their home loan divisions. But this is cold comfort to the millions of Australians whose home loan repayments have gone up exponentially over the past two years.
Here is a review of each bank’s full-year results for the 12 months ending 30 September.
Westpac reported a 7% increase in net interest income to $18,317 million and a 26% increase in statutory net profit after tax (NPAT) to $7,195 million. The bank declared a final fully franked dividend of 72 cents per share, bringing its full-year dividend to 142 cents per share, up 14% on FY22. Westpac also announced a $1.5 billion share buyback.
NAB reported a 13.2% increase in net interest income to $16,807 million and a 7.6% boost to NPAT at $7.414 million. The bank announced a fully franked final dividend of 84 cents per share, which brought its full-year dividend to 167 cents per share, up 11% on FY22.
ANZ reported net interest income of $16,581 million, up 11%, and statutory NPAT of $7,098 million, down 0.3%. The bank declared a final dividend of 94 cents per share, comprising 81 cents with 65% franking and a one-off unfranked dividend of 13 cents. This brought its full-year dividend to 175 cents per share, up 20% on FY22.
The Commonwealth Bank reports on a different cycle to the three smaller players within Australia’s ‘big four’.
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The lunar flyby would be the deepest humans have traveled in space in decades.
It’s go time for the highest-stakes mission at NASA in more than 50 years.
On April 1, the agency is set to launch four astronauts around the moon, the deepest human spaceflight since the final Apollo lunar landing in 1972.
The launch window for Artemis II , as the mission is called, opens at 6:24 p.m. ET.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration teams have been preparing the vehicles to depart from Florida’s Kennedy Space Center on the planned roughly 10-day trip. Crew members have trained for years for this moment.
Reid Wiseman, the NASA astronaut serving as mission commander, said he doesn’t fear taking the voyage. A widower, he does worry at times about what he is putting his daughters through.
“I could have a very comfortable life for them,” Wiseman said in an interview last September.
“But I’m also a human, and I see the spirit in their eyes that is burning in my soul too. And so we’ve just got to never stop going.”
Wiseman’s crewmates on Artemis II are NASA’s Victor Glover and Christina Koch, as well as Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen.

What are the goals for Artemis II?
The biggest one: Safely fly the crew on vehicles that have never carried astronauts before.
The towering Space Launch System rocket has the job of lofting a vehicle called Orion into space and on its way to the moon.
Orion is designed to carry the crew around the moon and back. Myriad systems on the ship—life support, communications, navigation—will be tested with the astronauts on board.
SLS and Orion don’t have much flight experience. The vehicles last flew in 2022, when the agency completed its uncrewed Artemis I mission .
How is the mission expected to unfold?
Artemis II will begin when SLS takes off from a launchpad in Florida with Orion stacked on top of it.
The so-called upper stage of SLS will later separate from the main part of the rocket with Orion attached, and use its engine to set up the latter vehicle for a push to the moon.
After Orion separates from the upper stage, it will conduct what is called a translunar injection—the engine firing that commits Orion to soaring out to the moon. It will fly to the moon over the course of a few days and travel around its far side.
Orion will face a tough return home after speeding through space. As it hits Earth’s atmosphere, Orion will be flying at 25,000 miles an hour and face temperatures of 5,000 degrees as it slows down. The capsule is designed to land under parachutes in the Pacific Ocean, not far from San Diego.

Is it possible Artemis II will be delayed?
Yes.
For safety reasons, the agency won’t launch if certain tough weather conditions roll through the Cape Canaveral, Fla., area. Delays caused by technical problems are possible, too. NASA has other dates identified for the mission if it doesn’t begin April 1.
Who are the astronauts flying on Artemis II?
The crew will be led by Wiseman, a retired Navy pilot who completed military deployments before joining NASA’s astronaut corps. He traveled to the International Space Station in 2014.
Two other astronauts will represent NASA during the mission: Glover, an experienced Navy pilot, and Koch, who began her career as an electrical engineer for the agency and once spent a year at a research station in the South Pole. Both have traveled to the space station before.
Hansen is a military pilot who joined Canada’s astronaut corps in 2009. He will be making his first trip to space.
Koch’s participation in Artemis II will mark the first time a woman has flown beyond orbits near Earth. Glover and Hansen will be the first African-American and non-American astronauts, respectively, to do the same.
What will the astronauts do during the flight?
The astronauts will evaluate how Orion flies, practice emergency procedures and capture images of the far side of the moon for scientific and exploration purposes (they may become the first humans to see parts of the far side of the lunar surface). Health-tracking projects of the astronauts are designed to inform future missions.
Those efforts will play out in Orion’s crew module, which has about two minivans worth of living area.
On board, the astronauts will spend about 30 minutes a day exercising, using a device that allows them to do dead lifts, rowing and more. Sleep will come in eight-hour stretches in hammocks.
There is a custom-made warmer for meals, with beef brisket and veggie quiche on the menu.
Each astronaut is permitted two flavored beverages a day, including coffee. The crew will hold one hourlong shared meal each day.
The Universal Waste Management System—that’s the toilet—uses air flow to pull fluid and solid waste away into containers.
What happens after Artemis II?
Assuming it goes well, NASA will march on to Artemis III, scheduled for next year. During that operation, NASA plans to launch Orion with crew members on board and have the ship practice docking with lunar-lander vehicles that Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin have been developing. The rendezvous operations will occur relatively close to Earth.
NASA hopes that its contractors and the agency itself are ready to attempt one or more lunar landing missions in 2028. Many current and former spaceflight officials are skeptical that timeline is feasible.
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