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ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Annual Report9 November 2020ANZFinancials

Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited ABN 11 005 357 522
ANZ Centre Melbourne, Level 9A, 833 Collins Street, Docklands VIC 3008


9 November 2020


Market Announcements Office

ASX Limited

Level 4

20 Bridge Street

SYDNEY NSW 2000






ANZ 2020 Annual Report


Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited (ANZ) today released its 2020 Annual

Report.

It has been approved for distribution by ANZ’s Board of Directors.


Yours faithfully





Simon Pordage

Company Secretary

Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited

2020 ANNUAL REPORT

Growing business
during a crisis

Overview 1

2020 performance snapshot 1

Our 2020 reporting suite 2

What matters most 3

Chair

man’s message 4

CEO’s message 6

C

OVID-19 – protecting our customers,

employees and the community

8

How we create value 10

About our business 10

Our vision and strategy

11

How we create value

12

Our operating environment 14

Becoming a fairer and more responsible bank 16

Our customers 18

Our divisions 25

Our people 28

Our community 32

Our approach to climate change 34

Governance 38

Risk management

49

Performance overview 54

Remuneration report 74

Directors’ report 109

Financial report 111

Shareholder information 234

Glossary 243

CUSTOMER STORY ADAPTING

CONTENTS

Photo credit: Simon Schluter, The Age

An ANZ customer for more than 50 years, fellahamilton has been

in the business of Australian women’s fashion since the early 1970s.

Today, the company is managed by David Hamilton (son of the

eponymous founder) and his wife, Sharon Hamilton, CEO.

When the COVID-19 pandemic first hit Australia in March,

times were challenging.

Within the first few weeks of lockdowns,

they had to let go of employees at their

Moorabbin factory and retail stores

nationally were shut.

However, shortly after, a doctor friend of

Sharon’s asked her to make a scrub set, as

there was a limited supply of Personal

Protective Equipment (PPE).

Sharon recalls the moment demand for

their washable, hospital-grade PPE started

snowballing and a new direction for the

business appeared in ‘fellahealthwear’.

“I’m a pharmacist by profession, with many

friends in the medical industry. After the

first request, I received another, and another,

and now we’re making and distributing

thousands of scrubs and gowns to GPs,

dentists and hospitals. We’ve hired back

all of our staff and have never been busier,”

says Sharon.

David credits the move into making PPE

to his wife’s optimistic nature and tendency

to ‘think outside the box’.

“Changing direction wasn’t easy,” says David.

“It needed us to have intestinal fortitude and

complete dedication to what we thought

was the right move for our business.”

“The road ahead is going to be tough.

While we’re doing well at the moment, we

are uncertain about what the future holds,

so we need to remain adaptable and agile

in response to what may come next from

the pandemic.”

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

~1. 8 m
customer accounts

remediated

5

$139.5m

in community

investment

4

132.7c

Cash earnings

per share

1

33.4%

of women

in leadership

6

$3.8b

Cash profit

1

6.2%

Cash return

on equity

1

11. 3 %

Common equity

Tier 1 Capital

3

60c

Dividend for

2020 per share

$9.08b

funded and facilitated

in sustainable solutions

since 2019

$20. 04

Net tangible

assets per share

2

>61,000

people have been

reached through our

financial wellbeing

programs, MoneyMinded

and Saver Plus

7

2020 performance snapshot

1. On a cash profit (continuing operations) basis. Excludes non-core items included in statutory profit and discontinued operations included in cash profit. It is provided to assist readers in

understanding the result of the ongoing business activities of the Group. For further information on adjustments between statutory and cash profit refer to page 56. 2. Equals shareholders’

equity less preference share capital, goodwill, software and other intangible assets divided by the number of ordinary shares. 3. APRA Level 2. 4. Figure includes forgone revenue of

$105 million, being the cost of providing low or fee free accounts to a range of customers such as government benefit recipients, not-for-profit organisations and students. 5. Refers to

Australian customer accounts in the last 12 months. 6. Measures representation at the Senior Manager, Executive and Senior Executive levels. Includes all employees regardless of leave

status but not contractors (who are included in Full Time Equivalents (FTE)). 7. Includes individuals who have participated in more than one program or product (for example, people who

have participated in MoneyMinded as part of Saver Plus are counted twice as they are included in both the MoneyMinded and Saver Plus totals).

1

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Our 2020 reporting suite
1. Group: Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited (the Company) and the entities it controlled at the year end and from time to time during the financial year (together, the Group).

2. ESG content includes the following sections: 2020 performance snapshot, What matters most, COVID-19 – protecting our customers, employees and the community, Becoming a fairer and

more responsible bank, Our customers, Our people, Our community, Our approach to climate change and ESG metrics on page 72. 3. The 2020 Annual Review is comprised of pages 1 to 72

and 241 to 242 of this Annual Report and a Remuneration Overview.

Integrated reporting

This report includes information on our financial and non-financial

performance, providing readers with a holistic view of the Australia

and New Zealand Banking Group Limited’s

1

performance. In

preparing pages 1 to 72, we have again drawn on aspects of the

International Integrated Reporting Framework to describe how

our business model, strategy, governance and risk management

processes help us manage risks and opportunities in our operating

environment and deliver value for our stakeholders. We outline our

response to external social and environmental challenges, including

how we are supporting our stakeholders through the COVID-19

pandemic, continuing to implement recommendations from the

Royal Commission and strengthening our approach to climate

change and human rights.

Annual Report structure

The required elements of the Directors Report, including the

Operating and Financial Review (OFR) as required by ASIC

Regulatory Guide 247, are covered on pages 1 to 70. Commentary

on our performance overview contained on pages 54 to 71

references information reported in the Financial Report

pages 111 to 233.

The Remuneration Report pages 74 to 108 and the Financial Report

pages 111 to 233 have been audited by KPMG. KPMG also provides

limited assurance over Environment, Social and Governance (ESG)

content

2

within this Annual Report. A copy of KPMG’s limited

assurance report is contained in the ANZ 2020 ESG Supplement.

This report covers all ANZ operations worldwide over which, unless

otherwise stated, we have control for the financial year commencing

on 1 October 2019 and ending 30 September 2020. Monetary

amounts in this document are reported in Australian dollars,

unless otherwise stated.

Additional information

We produce a suite of reports to meet the needs and requirements

of a wide range of stakeholders, including shareholders, customers,

employees, regulators, non-government organisations and

the community. In 2021 we intend to review our disclosures to

ensure they are meeting the evolving needs of our stakeholders.

Specifically, we will consider whether there are additional

reporting frameworks or metrics we could use to enhance our

disclosures. In this respect we are closely watching work underway

by key sustainability disclosure bodies to develop a coherent and

comprehensive corporate reporting system in which existing

sustainability standards and frameworks complement financial

accounting principles.

Our 2020 Corporate Governance Statement discloses how we have

complied with the ASX Corporate Governance Council’s ‘Corporate

Governance Principles and Recommendations – 3rd edition’ and is

available at anz.com/corporategovernance.

Our ESG Supplement complements this Annual Report, providing

stakeholders with more detailed ESG disclosures, including:

performance against our ESG targets and approach to our priority

areas of fair and responsible banking, financial wellbeing,

environmental sustainability and housing. In response to stakeholder

feedback, for the first time, we are releasing our ESG Supplement

at the same time as this Annual Report.

The following documents are available at

anz.com/shareholder/centre:

•News Release

•Consolidated Financial Report, Dividend Announcement

& Appendix 4E

•Results Presentation and Investor Discussion Pack

•Annual Review

3

•The Company Financial Report

•Principal Risks and Uncertainties Disclosure

•APS 330 Pillar III Disclosure

•Climat

e-related Financial Disclosures

We are continually seeking to improve our reporting suite and

welcome feedback on this report. Please address any questions,

comments or suggestions to investor.relations@anz.com.

2020 ANNUAL REVIEW

anz.com/annualreport

2020 ESG SUPPLEMENT

anz.com/cs

2020 CLIMATE-RELATED

FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES

anz.com/shareholder/centre

2020 CORPORATE

GOVERNANCE STATEMENT

anz.com/corporategovernance

2

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

These insights were presented to the executive Ethics and
Responsible Business Committee and the Board Ethics, Environment,

Social and Governance Committee and helped to inform the

development of our ESG targets, as well as our continued response

to COVID-19, including our customer Statement of Intent

(see page 8).

Our material ESG issues are ‘mapped’ to the bank’s material risks

on pages 52-53.

What matters most

Through our annual materiality assessment we engage with internal and external stakeholders

to inform our identification of ESG risks and opportunities. We seek to identify those issues that

have the most potential to impact our ability to operate successfully and create value for

our shareholders and other stakeholders.

WE ASKED EXTERNAL STAKEHOLDERS:

What is one action ANZ could take to enhance

its reputation as a fair and ethical organisation?

THEY SAID:

— 1 Support customers through times of hardship

— 2 Continue to resolve issues raised in the

Royal Commission

— 3 Link executive remuneration and performance

metrics to broader ESG considerations

— 4 Lead on sustainable finance

We use the assessment to inform our strategy, ESG targets and

external reporting.

In 2019 our materiality assessment was focused on issues arising

from the Royal Commission. This year we returned to a broader

focus, with an emphasis on the ‘social’ aspects of ESG, and

specifically our support for customers, employees and the

community in response to COVID-19.

The bank’s response was well regarded by external stakeholders,

with several commenting how the banking sector has responded to

the pandemic has helped to improve community trust lost during

the Royal Commission. They did note, however, that despite the

positive steps taken since the Royal Commission, trust should

remain a key focus and its recovery is fragile.

Both external and internal stakeholder groups identified fairness

and ethical conduct, financial wellbeing and customer experience

as priorities. Some external stakeholders also highlighted the

importance of continuing to act on climate change, while internal

stakeholders emphasised the importance of fraud and data security.

FAIRNESS AND ETHICAL CONDUCT: a strong

corporate culture, known for ethics, values, fairness and

transparency. Simple and understandable products

and communications (i.e. product disclosure, including

bank fees and charges) and appropriate hardship/

collections policies.

FINANCIAL WELLBEING: promoting and enabling

access to safe and affordable products and services,

particularly lower-income and vulnerable customers.

Work with cross-sector partners to help customers,

employees and the broader community meet current

financial commitments and needs, and improve their

financial resilience.

CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE: delivering value and

improved customer experience through appropriate

financial products and services for all customers, small

business and retail.

CLIMATE CHANGE: managing the business risks and

opportunities associated with climate change. Includes

the role we play in supporting our customers to

transition to a low carbon economy.

FRAUD AND DATA SECURITY: policies and processes in

place to prevent fraud and protect customer data and

privacy. Includes customer access to personal data.

Supplementary disclosures

The full list of our material ESG issues, as well as the key

steps in the materiality assessment process, is discussed

in our 2020 ESG Supplement available at anz.com/cs.

Detailed information on other ways in which we have

engaged with stakeholders is also included in the 2020

ESG Supplement.

3

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Chairman’s message
COVID-19 has had a profound impact on all our lives.

Whether it is the devastating loss of lives, the crippling

of some businesses and impact on livelihoods, limitations

placed on social activities and the way we are working –

2020 will be remembered for generations.

David Gonski, AC

ANZ has of course not been spared from

the effects of the pandemic. Our full-year

statutory profit of $3.6 billion was down

40% – levels not seen since the height of

the Global Financial Crisis.

Looking through the immediate impact

of COVID-19, the fundamental drivers of

our business continued to perform well.

We are fortunate the actions taken by

our management team over many years

to simplify and improve our operations

have the bank well positioned to support

our customers as well as supporting

economic recovery.

Despite the challenges facing the broader

economy, the Board was pleased to declare

a final dividend of 35 cents. This is on top of

the interim dividend announced in August,

taking the total payout to 60 cents per share.

Given the uncertain environment, we put

aside $2.7 billion for possible future credit

losses. This takes ANZ’s total credit provision

reserves to $5.9 billion.

We also continued to simplify the

business through the year. On 31 January,

we completed the previously announced

sale of our OnePath Pensions and

Investments business to IOOF Holdings

Limited and in September we completed

the sale of UDC Finance in New Zealand

to Shinsei Bank Limited.

During the most recent quarter, we

announced the sale of 1,300 offsite

Australian ATMs to Armaguard. While

we will continue to operate our 900

ATMs at our branches around Australia,

this was another step in achieving our

overall goal to be simpler, more

efficient and better managed.

Supporting customers

For ANZ, 2020 will ultimately be defined

by how we stepped up to support our

customers and the community through

this devastating global pandemic.

Almost overnight businesses that were

once thriving enterprises were restricted

from operating, families lost their main

source of income and millions faced

economic uncertainty, and our thoughts

are with those who have been directly

impacted.

I’m proud of the way our bank, under the

leadership of our Chief Executive Shayne

Elliott, has risen to support our customers

and I can assure shareholders ANZ will

continue to play a crucial role in the

economic recovery of Australia and

New Zealand.

4

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Already we have provided loan payment
deferrals for more than 142,000 home loans

and business loans in Australia and New

Zealand. This approach has provided

customers with the time they need to

recover while also protecting the interests

of shareholders.

While it’s an impossible task to provide

an accurate outlook for the future, I remain

optimistic about our prospects given

the positive way governments in our

key markets, particularly in Australia and

New Zealand, have responded to the

challenges of COVID-19.

Fortunately, we already are seeing the early

signs of recovery, particularly in those parts

of our business less impacted by COVID-19.

In Western Australia, for instance, our card

data shows spending on ‘dining & takeaway’

was up around 18% on the previous year.

Clearly there are still more challenges ahead

but these early signs provide us with a level

of confidence about the actions taken so far.

Executive remuneration

We know how we reward our most senior

people is important for many shareholders.

The Chair of our Human Resources

Committee, Ilana Atlas, AO, has provided

more detail in the Remuneration Report.

However, I can guarantee shareholders the

Board spent a great deal of time evaluating

the performance of the management team

and deciding how to reward them

appropriately.

The Board was pleased with the

performance this year and was particularly

impressed with the way the bank responded

to the challenges presented by COVID-19.

However, given the impact the pandemic

has had on our shareholders, customers

and the broader community, the Board

exercised its discretion by applying a 50%

reduction to the variable remuneration

for our executive team, including our

Chief Executive.

The Board also determined there would be

no fixed remuneration increases for any of

its Disclosed Executives, including the Chief

Executive Officer, for the coming year.

Board succession

As you may know, my time at ANZ came to

an end at the finalisation of this year’s result

on 28 October. At that date I had been a

director for more than 11 years, originally

serving between 2002 and 2007, and then

returning as Chair in 2014.

Serving as ANZ’s Chairman will always be a

highlight of my corporate career. Reflecting

on my time here, I am most proud to have

played a role in choosing Shayne Elliott to

be our Chief Executive and to work with

him to establish his talented leadership

team. I know I am leaving ANZ in good

shape under this strong leadership and

I will be keenly monitoring ANZ’s progress.

I am also delighted Paul O’Sullivan has

succeeded me as Chairman. Paul is an

outstanding company director who has

already made a strong contribution to the

Board. He has my absolute confidence.

Finally, I would like to thank shareholders

for their support over the years and

acknowledge the efforts of our 39,000

people who have been working hard for

our customers, shareholders and the

broader community.

David Gonski, AC Chairman

Message from Paul O’Sullivan

I am honoured to succeed David Gonski as the new

Chairman of ANZ. The bank has a proud 185-year history

and I look forward to contributing to its continued success.

While there will be much to consider in the coming year as economies recover

from the COVID-19 pandemic, my focus as Chairman will be to continue the work

we have been doing over many years to improve our operations and simplify the

bank, particularly through digital and technological innovation.

The Board will also pay close attention to our business growth strategy in the

constantly changing landscape in which we operate. Looking at how we will

ensure success and improved financial performance in the long-term will be

of critical importance.

Finally, I’d like to take this opportunity to acknowledge the enormous contribution

David has made and thank him on behalf of all shareholders for his hard work and

leadership over the last seven years as Chair.

David steered the Board through some challenging times and helped build an

organisation with a strong focus on governance, accountability, improved culture

and enhanced customer outcomes.

His efforts to strengthen and champion the

bank’s work in the area of Environment, Social

and Governance (ESG), especially with respect

to social and economic inclusion and climate

change, is a legacy of which he should be

very proud.

Paul D O’Sullivan

5

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Our thoughts are with those who have
suffered from these events. We need

only look at some of the country towns

impacted by bushfires or the empty city

streets to know these crises have struck

at the heart of our community.

We want our customers to know we will

continue to do all we can to support them

through the tough times. Fortunately we

have never been in better shape to support

all our stakeholders through what will be

one of history’s periods of great volatility.

While the Chairman’s message has provided

an overview of our financial performance,

I would reiterate we were pleased with

how the business performed in difficult

trading conditions.

As a bank, we entered 2020 in robust

condition. We have a strong balance sheet

with record levels of capital and liquidity.

The work done over several years to simplify

the bank means we now focus only on the

things that matter, our people are more

engaged than ever and we are able to quickly

adapt to the challenges the future holds.

While COVID-19 has impacted many parts of

our business, we have not sat idle. Times of

crisis are when the best companies build for

the future in a prudent and disciplined

manner. We invested record levels to build

a better bank for our customers and staff,

while continuing to closely manage costs.

In Australia, we achieved strong growth

in our targeted home loan segments with

above system growth in the owner-occupier

market, driven particularly by the refinancing

market. Deposits remained strong as

customers took a sensible approach to

managing their household balance sheet.

We also saw an accelerated shift away from

the use of cash due to the pandemic and

we introduced new processes to help

customers move to online banking.

We could never have forecast 2020, a year that started with

devastating bushfires in Australia and was followed by waves

of a terrible, global pandemic that continues to spread. We

still cannot predict its course but we do remain confident

we can deal with its impacts.

CEO’s message

Shayne Elliott

6

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

The work done over many years to simplify
and refocus the Institutional business

proved beneficial in a market defined by

high levels of liquidity, low interest rates and

geopolitical tensions. Increased volatility led

to strong activity in Global Markets which

again performed well and demonstrated

the benefits of a diversified business. As

Australia’s leading international bank, we

remain well positioned to assist domestic

companies doing business in Asia as the

global economy improves.

COVID-19 appears contained in New Zealand

and we remain well positioned to benefit

from its subsequent economic recovery.

While it was a tough revenue environment,

given low interest rates and a focus on

reducing or simplifying fees, we have

maintained market leadership in our

targeted segments: home loans, deposits

and KiwiSaver.

Given the critical role data, insights and

automation will play over the coming years,

particularly as we respond to the challenges

of COVID-19 and the daily uncertainty that

brings, we also made changes to the

executive team with the addition of Emma

Gray to the new role of Group Executive

Data and Automation. This will be a critical

role in the continued digital transformation

of ANZ.

One of the most pleasing aspects of 2020

has been how our people have responded

to the challenge. We were able to successfully

move 95 per cent of our non-branch

employees to working productively from

home where they were able to support our

customers at a time of significant stress.

Employee engagement is at record levels.

I’ve been amazed at their dedication and

I’m proud to call them my colleagues.

Climate change

This year we have released an updated

Climate Change Statement that outlines our

approach and strengthened commitments

in support of a global transition to net zero

carbon emissions.

We understand the impact – positive and

negative – our financing has on climate

change. We have been working hard on

making a meaningful difference while

supporting long-standing customers who

are making the transition to a low carbon

future. Over the last five years, we have

reduced our lending to thermal coal mining

by almost 70 per cent and increased our

direct lending to renewables by 63 per cent.

Our 2020 Climate Change Statement

focuses on three main areas.

First, we will help our customers by

encouraging them to identify climate risks

and opportunities, create transition plans

and report publicly on their progress.

Second, we will support the transition of

industries to a low carbon future so they

can help grow the economy. A key element

for ANZ is we will no longer directly finance

new assets across the thermal coal value

chain and will exit all directly financed

coal-fired power stations and thermal

coal mines by 2030.

Thirdly, we will reduce our own impact

by managing and reducing emissions

from our operations. We will do this by

accelerating our emission reductions by

sourcing 100 per cent of the electricity

needed for our business operations from

renewables by 2025.

Vale Will Bailey

I would also like to acknowledge

the passing of our former Chief

Executive Officer Will Bailey

in August this year.

Having started as a teller in the

Oakleigh branch of the old ES&A

bank in 1950, Will served as CEO

between 1984 and 1992. He was a

mentor to many future ANZ leaders

and made a significant contribution

in building the ANZ we all

know today.

One of Will’s major legacies was

modernising the bank, introducing

automation and computerisation –

and some technology still in

use today. In fact, ANZ opened

Australia’s first ‘electronic branch’

in 1985 under his stewardship. On

behalf of everyone at ANZ, I’d like to

pass on our condolences to his wife

Dorothy and his family and friends.

Finally, I would like to acknowledge

again the terrific work of our 39,000 people

across the world. From our service centres

in Bangalore and Manila through to our

contact centres in Australia and branches in

New Zealand, they have all done a great job

for customers in very difficult circumstances

despite competing priorities over this long,

arduous period.

Shayne Elliott, Chief Executive Officer

Times of crisis are when the best companies build for

the future in a prudent and disciplined manner.

7

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

COVID-19 – protecting our customers,
people and community

While our decisions in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic have had a short-term financial

impact – on earnings, profitability and shareholder value – our focus is on the long-term.

A healthy and sustainable community is in everyone’s best interests.

Throughout the pandemic we have sought to balance the needs of all stakeholders. Our approach has been guided by four key principles:

Protect what

matters

Adapt to

the changing

environment

Engage with

stakeholders

Prepare for

the future

Our people

From early March we moved employees to work-at-home

arrangements, split teams and introduced greater distance

between those employees performing essential functions in

the office. By late April approximately 95% of our non-branch

employees had adapted to working from home.

Any employee concerned about their safety while working

from home (for example, due to domestic and family violence),

could elect to work in the office.

We also introduced 10 days’ of paid coronavirus-related special

leave, and provided a one-off payment to junior and mid-level

employees as a contribution towards working from home

work expenses.

To protect our people still working in, or returning to the office, we

have put in place multiple controls to minimise the risk of exposure

to COVID-19 in the workplace, including thermal screening; physical

distancing markers; enhanced cleaning protocols; and robust

incident notification, response and management processes.

These principles informed our ‘Statement of Intent’ (available on anz.com), which outlines support for customers impacted financially

by the pandemic and our commitment to work with them on a solution that is respectful, fair and appropriate.

Our customers

In March we announced our initial support package for retail

and business customers, offering the option of deferring loan

repayments for a period of six months on a range of products,

including home, personal and business loans.

We received over 137,000 applications for

hardship assistance in Australia alone.

In July we updated our support package for customers continuing

to experience financial difficulty due to COVID-19. Additional

assistance options (depending on the customer’s circumstances)

included loan restructuring (for example, an interest only period)

or an extension of the deferral period until 31 March 2021.

Customers with loan repayment deferrals have been proactively

contacted by phone, SMS and/or email/letter to ensure they

understand the impacts of their loan relief and identify if they

need further support.

Across Australia and New Zealand we have over 1.5 million home loans.

Of our

~

1 million home loans in Australia,

~

95,000 have received deferrals on their loan

repayments since March 2020, with

~

74,000 deferred loans active at 30 September.

Of our

~

529,000 home loans in New Zealand,

~

24,000 have received deferrals on their

loan repayments since March 2020, with

~

16,000 deferred loans active at 30 September.

Of our

~

236,000 business loans in Australia,

~

23,000 have received deferrals on their

loan repayments since March 2020, with

~

20,000 deferred loans active at 30 September.

8

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

To support the wellbeing of our people we are providing coaching
and digital resources through our employee intranet and new

‘HealthyMe’ app. Our Employee Assistance Program also remains

available to our people and their immediate family members.

Finally, we are providing enhanced support for employees displaced

from their roles due to redundancy. This has included putting in

place a program for impacted employees, which provides them

with unlimited coaching and workshops to help them find new

careers and support their financial and emotional wellbeing.

Our community

We have worked closely with our community partners throughout

the pandemic – from adapting the way we deliver our financial

literacy programs to our senior executives engaging weekly with

NGOs, consumer advocates and financial counsellors to ensure we

are acting responsibly and responsively to real world conditions.

In Australia, we donated $1.5m to the Brotherhood of St Laurence,

The Smith Family and the Financial Counselling Foundation – for

education, employment, aged care and financial counselling

programs targeted at disadvantaged people affected by COVID-19.

We donated a total of NZ$2 million to Women’s Refuge, Age

Concern New Zealand, the NZ Salvation Army, Red Cross and

other local charities in the Pacific to support those most affected

by the crisis.

We also directed $8.4 million of unclaimed remediation monies

to our key community partners to, among other things, help

expand their programs online. COVID-19 has highlighted the need

for diverse and sustainable ways to deliver services to vulnerable

families. One of our partners, The Smith Family, will use the funds

to further digitise their programs so they can continue to support

the education of around 58,000 students online.

When children moved to remote learning, many of the families

supported by The Smith Family through their Learning for Life

program struggled to help their children with schoolwork. This

was due to a range of factors including some having low education

levels themselves, limited technical confidence and skills, or having

English as a second language. In addition, digital inclusion issues

such as a lack of devices and internet access further affected some

students. The educational support and learning programs The Smith

Family provides, with our help, is now needed more than ever, as

children and young people from disadvantaged backgrounds are

at higher risk of falling behind due to the pandemic.

Improving the lives of vulnerable Australians

during COVID-19

We have worked together with the Brotherhood of St Laurence

(BSL) to adapt shared community programs so participants

can continue receiving support during COVID-19.

In response to the pandemic, we transitioned Saver Plus, a

matched savings and financial education program developed

by ANZ and BSL, to digital delivery. This enabled over 2,000

participants to remain on the program by completing financial

education online instead of attending in person workshops.

Between March and September 2020, we provided over

$520,000 towards laptops and tablets, enabling digital

access for over 1,100 families and individuals to support

remote schooling and learning.

We were also one of the employers that continued to

provide employment opportunities for refugees and asylum

seekers through BSL’s Given the Chance work placement

program. “This has been very much appreciated by BSL, and

for the participants it has provided security and stability in a

time when many areas of their lives are out of control”, BSL’s

Executive Director Conny Lenneberg says.

Supporting women in a time of crisis

Established in the 1970s, Women’s Refuge is New Zealand’s

largest nation-wide organisation supporting women and

children experiencing domestic and family violence.

During the COVID-19 lockdowns many women have

needed help to get through the crisis, with the pandemic

exacerbating family violence in some households.

In March 2020, we donated NZ$500,000 to the Women’s

Refuge, a community organisation that ANZ New Zealand

has had a long-standing relationship with.

Dr Ang Jury, CEO of Women’s Refuge commented on the

impact the crisis was having, saying, “we’ve been overwhelmed

with need in recent weeks. Unfortunately for some, there is

not a safe place to self-isolate for long periods of time.”

The funds from ANZ have meant that women and children

can be provided with food, healthcare, communications

services and importantly, safe lodging in motels.

“We are incredibly grateful for this donation from ANZ and

these funds will help ease the financial pressure our refuges

are facing during this time. We are also pleased to be able to

direct a portion of the donation to future care and support

for women and children,” said Dr Jury.

Since 2017, ANZ has made it easier for women referred by

Women’s Refuge to set up their own bank account, even

though they may not have ID or a permanent address.

ANZ NZ CEO Antonia Watson said: “It’s important to look out

for the most vulnerable in our communities during this time,

to not lose sight of their needs, and make sure the people

and organisations who support them are well resourced

and supported.”

"We are incredibly grateful for the generosity

and ongoing support of ANZ, who enable us

to continue helping children and families in

need, not just through this challenging time

but into the future as well.”

Dr Lisa O’Brien, Chief Executive Officer, The Smith Family

9

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

About our business
We provide banking and financial products and services to over 8.5 million retail and business

customers, and operate across 33 markets.

Our purpose and values

Our expertise, products and services make us a bank. Our people, purpose, values and culture make us ANZ.

Our purpose is to help shape a world in which people and communities thrive. That is why we strive

to create a balanced, sustainable society in which everyone can take part and build a better life.

Our values are the foundation of how we work – living our values every day enables us to deliver on our strategy and purpose, strengthen

stakeholder relationships and earn the community’s trust. All employees and contractors must comply with our Code of Conduct, which

sets the expected standards of professional behaviour and guides us in applying our values.

Bringing our purpose to life

We are helping to respond to complex societal issues central to our

customers and our business strategy. In particular, we are focusing

our efforts on:

FINANCIAL WELLBEING – improving the financial wellbeing of our

customers, employees and the community by helping them make

the most of their money throughout their lives;

ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY – supporting household,

business and financial practices that improve environmental

sustainability; and

HOUSING – improving the availability of suitable and affordable

housing options for all Australians and New Zealanders.

We are contributing to these challenges by: developing innovative

and responsible financial products and services; working with our

customers; harnessing the skills of our people; and supporting the

communities in which we live and work.

Fundamental to our approach is a commitment to fair and

responsible banking – keeping pace with the expectations of our

customers, employees and the community, behaving fairly and

responsibly and maintaining high standards of conduct.

Throughout this report we illustrate how we have embedded purpose

into our business strategy, including through our Environment,

Social and Governance (ESG) targets and performance objectives.

Supporting sustainable development

We are committed to the United Nations Sustainable

Development Goals (SDGs) and believe that business has

an important role to play in their achievement. Our ESG

targets support 11 of the 17 SDGs.

In 2019 we became a founding signatory to the UN

Principles for Responsible Banking. Under the Principles we

are required to set at least two targets that address our most

significant (potential) positive and negative impacts, aligned

with the SDGs and the Paris Climate Agreement. Further

information on our progress towards implementing the

Principles, including targets we have set, is in our 2020

ESG Supplement available at anz.com/cs.

I NTEGRITY C OLLABORATION A CCOUNTABILITY R ESPECT E XCELLENCE

Our values are:

10

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Our vision
Our vision is to build a bank of which

we can all be proud – whether you are

a customer, a shareholder or an

employee – known for:

•deliv

ering value from innovative and

convenient banking services that help

customers get ahead in life – improving

their financial wellbeing

•building the best and most div

erse

team of people, regardless of where

they ultimately work

•showing leadership on important issues,

and doing the right thing, even when it

comes at a cost

•deliv

ering consistently strong financial

results for our shareholders, with a

balance between growth and return,

short-and long-term results

Our vision and strategy

Our vision and strategy describe what we seek to achieve and how we will achieve it.

Our strategy

Our strategy is to help improve the financial wellbeing of our

customers, having the right people who listen, learn and adapt;

putting the best tools and insights into their hands and; focusing

on those few things that really add value to customers, and doing

them right the first time.

In particular, we want to help customers:

•sa

ve for, buy and own a liveable home

•star

t or buy and grow their business and adopt sustainable business practices

•mo

ve capital and goods around the region and adopt sustainable business practices.

In doing so, we seek to improve the financial wellbeing of our customers, people and

communities by helping them make the most of their money throughout their lives;

supporting household, business and financial practices that improve environmental

sustainability; and improving the availability of suitable and affordable housing options

for all Australians and New Zealanders.

Improving the financial

wellbeing of customers...

...with flexible and resilient digital

infrastructure that supports great

customer experience at lower cost

...with people

who listen,

learn and adapt

...with the

best tools

and insights

...looking to

save for,

buy and

own a

home

...looking

to start,

buy and

grow a

business

...looking to

move capital

and goods

around the

region

Strategic ImperativesStrategy

Creating value for

our stakeholders


Create a simpler,

better capitalised,

better balanced bank

Build a superior

experience for our

people and customers

in order to compete in

the digital age

Focus our efforts

where we can carve out

a winning position

Drive a purpose

and values-led

transformation of

the bank


Decent returns

for shareholders

Great experience

for customers

Engaged, adaptable

and capable employees

Improved financial

wellbeing, housing

and environmental

sustainability outcomes

for customers and

communities

11

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

FINANCE
Access to capital through customer

deposits, debt and equity investors and

wholesale markets enables us to run our

operations and execute our strategy.

RISK MANAGEMENT

Reducing the risk of doing business

for our customers and the bank, with

systems and processes that are less

complex, less prone to error and

more secure.

TECHNOLOGY AND DATA CAPABILITIES

Flexible, digital-ready infrastructure to provide great

customer experience, agility, scale and control.

COMMUNITY AND RELATIONSHIPS

Strong stakeholder relationships are

essential to our brand and reputation.

CUSTOMERS

Trusted relationships with

over 8.5 million retail, business

and Institutional customers.

PEOPLE

Employees and contractors with

the key competencies and right

behaviours to deliver our strategy.

!

Technological

changes

Globalisation

Demographic

changes

Social and

economic impacts

of COVID-19

pandemic

Limited

credit growth

Increasing

importance

of ESG

Regulatory

oversight and

stakeholder

scrutiny

OUR VALUE

DRIVERS

¢

$

The risks and opportunities in

our operating environment impact

our ability to create value.

OUR OPERATING

ENVIRONMENT

How we

create value

By transforming our

business – embedding a

purpose and values-led

culture and simplifying our

products and services – we aim

to create long-term value for

all of our stakeholders.

Our value creation model

outlines how we create value

for our key stakeholders through

our business activities, and

identifies the inputs – or value

drivers – that we rely on to

enable us to deliver that

value and meet our

strategic objectives.

12

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Operating across 33 markets,
we provide banking and financial

products and services to individual

and business customers.

Through our business activities

we deliver the following outputs:


we provide transaction banking services


we hold deposits for our customers


we lend money to our retail, business

and institutional customers


we help customers mitigate

and manage financial risks


we support customers with

trade and capital flows


we provide wealth management

products


we provide advisory services


we invest in our people to build

a diverse and inclusive workforce


we collaborate with partners to build

capacity and improve financial wellbeing


we pay taxes in the countries within

which we operate


we pay dividends to our shareholders

1. On a cash profit (continuing operations) basis. Excludes non-core

items included in statutory profit and discontinued operations

included in cash profit. It is provided to assist readers in understanding

the result of the ongoing business activities of the Group. For further

information on adjustments between statutory and cash profit refer to

page 56. 2. Equals shareholders’ equity less preference share capital,

goodwill, software and other intangible assets divided by the

number of ordinary shares. 3. Figure includes forgone revenue

of $105 million, being the cost of providing low or fee-free accounts

to a range of customers such as government benefit recipients,

not-for-profit organisations and students. 4. Total taxes borne by

the Group, includes unrecovered GST/ VAT, employee related taxes

and other taxes. Inclusive of discontinued operations. 5. Includes

individuals who have participated in more than one program

or product (for example, people who have participated in

MoneyMinded as part of Saver Plus are counted twice as they

are included in both the MoneyMinded and Saver Plus totals).

OUR BUSINESS ACTIVITIES

Build a resilient, adaptable and inclusive workforce

with a strong sense of purpose and ethics

86% employee engagement (up from 77% in 2019)

Employed 919 people from under-represented groups

(since 2016)

$4.9 billion in employee salaries and benefits

Increasing the skills and capabilities of our people

providing almost 970,000 hours of training

EMPLOYEE VALUE

Connect with, and invest in, the communities

in which we operate to support growth,

deliver services and develop opportunity

Invested $139.5 million in the community

3

$2.3 billion in taxes paid to government

4

> 61,000 people have been reached through our financial

wellbeing programs MoneyMinded and Saver Plus

5

COMMUNITY VALUE

Improve the financial wellbeing of our customers

Provide funding for lending, helping customers

to own homes and start and grow businesses

and assist businesses to transact, trade and

invest across our region

Great customer experience through flexible

and resilient digital infrastructure

19,839 FTE supporting our retail and commercial

customers, providing $353 billion in home lending and

$91billion in business lending (Australia and New Zealand)

5,291 FTE supporting our Institutional customers, providing

$158 billion in lending

Custodians of $552 billion of customer deposits across the business

CUSTOMER VALUE

Deliver decent returns enabling shareholders

to meet goals

132.7 cents earnings per share

1

6.2% cash return on equity

1

60 cents dividend per share for 2020 with an interim

dividend of 25 cents and a final dividend of 35 cents,

both fully franked

$20.04 net tangible assets per share

2

SHAREHOLDER VALUE

13

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Our operating environment
The COVID-19 pandemic has fundamentally changed the external environment in which we

operate, and we are adapting in response. A summary of the key external risks currently affecting

our business and our response to them is outlined below.

RISKSOPPORTUNITIES

Social and economic impacts of COVID-19

•Many customers are financially impacted by the

pandemic, and need to adapt to a new environment

•Responding to customer circumstances,

by providing financial support and information

•Working cooperatively with government on

policies to see our customers through the

COVID-19 pandemic and into a period of growth

Limited credit growth

•An economic contraction, lower business confidence and

higher unemployment is limiting credit growth, and many

customer loans have been deferred

•Maintaining our focus on core banking services

to improve customer outcomes, together with

efficient allocation of capital and resources

Regulatory oversight and stakeholder scrutiny

•Challenges arising from regulatory expectations and

higher community standards and expectations

•Rebuilding trust by ‘doing what we say’

•Working cooperatively with regulators,

government and NGOs

•Supporting our customers, employees and

the community through the COVID-19 pandemic

and ensuing recovery period

Technological changes

•Increased competition from digitally enabled competitors

•Increased cyber attacks and attempted fraud

•Changed employment proposition due to stay-at-home

restrictions

•Faster deployment of new and improved digital

services, products and processes will help meet

customer needs for safe and secure banking

•Providing staff with appropriate technology, tools

and equipment to work productively from home

during the pandemic and its aftermath

Demographic changes

•Demand for new home lending and some other

bank products may diminish, particularly as population

growth stalls as a result of the pandemic

•Growing need for more affordable and accessible

housing in the market

•Delivering attractive housing products and

services to grow market share

•Partnering with business, government and

NGOs to provide innovative and practical models

for the development of affordable housing

Increasing importance of ESG

•Failure to meet our ESG commitments and related social

expectations could lead to customer and community

impacts and reduced shareholder value impacts

•Strengthening our ESG standards, policies,

processes, products and services and disclosures

•Growth of sustainable finance products and services

Globalisation

•The COVID-19 pandemic and changing geopolitical

environment has hurt global prosperity and cooperation,

threatening flows of trade, investment and people. This

may challenge supply chains and productivity across

our geographies

•Continued strength of traditional exports, development

of new markets and economic recovery provides

business opportunities in Australia and the region

14

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Banking through times
of change

Image: Andrew Smith

Now in 2020, we continue to adapt the

ways in which we deliver products and

services to our customers.

With the majority of non-branch staff

working remotely from home for much

of the year, we had to implement digital

solutions for almost every aspect

of customer engagement – from

accepting electronic signatures on

bank documents, to holding virtual

customer meetings and events via

phone or video calls.

Over the years, despite the challenges

in our operating environment, serving

customers and providing essential

banking services has been our priority.

ANZ STORY

ADAPTING

Much about the world has changed since

ANZ started out as the Bank of Australasia in 1835.

In the 1800s and early 1900s, customers used only

their ‘home’ branch, with tellers recording account

details in a ledger book using a quill and inkwell.

By the 1920s, Burroughs ledger machines

– akin to typewriters or early adding

machines – were used for calculations,

replacing mental arithmetic.

Then, in around the 1960s, passbook

accounts were designed with ‘black light’

signature panels giving customers the

freedom to bank outside of their

home branch.

Fast forward to 2020, and we have more

than three million customers using our

mobile banking app to check account

balances, view transactions, and send

and receive money.

The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated

the shift to digital banking, with more of

our customers looking to digital solutions

– be it online or via their mobile phones –

to enable them to do their banking from

the safety of their home.

Changing the way we do things to meet the

needs of our customers isn’t new for ANZ.

More than 100 years ago, the Spanish Flu

pandemic also led to the closure of state

borders, placing restrictions on banking

services.

Staff in ANZ’s Tweed Heads branch in NSW

came up with an innovative way to ensure

money and cheques were still able to

flow, using a cigar box and some rope to

transport the contents across the river to

the Queensland border at Coolangatta.

15

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

We continue to act in response to the ‘spirit and letter’ of the Royal Commission into Misconduct
in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry (the Royal Commission).

Last year we developed an integrated response (‘roadmap’)

to act on:

•the lessons we identified from our misconduct and failures

to meet community standards and expectations; and

•the themes raised in our 2018 APRA Self-Assessment report

across culture, governance and accountability.

While there has been significant focus this year on the impacts

of COVID-19, we recognise the importance of delivering on our

roadmap. Work on the roadmap has continued to deliver better

outcomes for our customers, our people and other stakeholders.

We remain committed to learn from our failures and build a bank

that is worthy of the trust and respect of our customers and the

community.

Integrated response to the Royal Commission

and the APRA Self-Assessment

Our Royal Commission and Self-Assessment Oversight Group

monitors the progress with our roadmap. The Oversight Group is

co-chaired by our Deputy CEO and Chief Risk Officer and provides

regular updates on our progress to the Executive Committee and

the Board.

Our roadmap has five focus areas: Culture; Governance and

Accountability; Management of Operational Risk; Remediation;

and Simplification. Executive Committee members have

‘ownership’ of each focus area.

Delivering on our roadmap will give us confidence that the

lessons of the Royal Commission and the themes raised in

our Self-Assessment report have been acted on.

Royal Commission

We made 16 commitments as part of our response to the Royal

Commission, to improve the treatment of retail customers, small

businesses and farmers in Australia.

•W

e have completed 11 commitments to date. We have taken

action on distressed agricultural loans; remuneration of front

line staff; the Retail Banking Remuneration Review (Sedgwick)

recommendations; culture and governance; and reporting on

remediation of existing failures.

•O

f the remaining five commitments, four are dependent on

the finalisation of related legislation, and one is ongoing as we

continue to assess our culture and respond where changes

are required.

•We provide public updates on our progress to implement

the Royal Commission recommendations to the House of

Representatives Standing Committee on Economics. Our most

recent update as at 21 August 2020 is available on anz.com.

Many of the recommendations in the Royal Commission’s

final report require legislative change. We continue to engage

constructively with government, regulators and industry as

they respond to these.

APRA Self-Assessment

Our roadmap is a multi-year program with defined success measures

and targets in place for each of the five focus areas. These are

regularly reviewed and updated to ensure they remain relevant.

Governance and Accountability – The Board has committed to

maintain effective oversight of management’s implementation of

the roadmap and receives quarterly updates.

•Our Banking Executive Accountability Regime (BEAR) outputs

have assisted to clarify and strengthen accountability. BEAR

implementation is aligned with our three lines of defence and

embedded within our governance, control and risk management

arrangements.

•W

e introduced a strengthened Accountability and Consequence

Framework in June 2019, with expanded public disclosure of

senior management consequences. The first annual effectiveness

review of the Framework was completed in February 2020, with

enhancements implemented.

Culture – We are working towards our aspirational culture and

creating an environment where employees are motivated and

'speak up', when they see something wrong. Our Board and the

executive Enterprise Culture Steering Group provide oversight.

•We promote a strong ‘speak up’ culture. Our most recent

internal employee engagement survey showed an uplift of

5% (from 69% to 74%) in response to the question ‘I can raise

issues and concerns in ANZ without fear of reprisals or negative

consequences’.

•We changed how we financially reward, recognise and manage

the performance of our people to reduce the risk of outcomes

that are not in our customers' best interests, and to support

collaboration, team performance and encourage long-term

thinking. Variable remuneration is now a smaller part of

take-home pay.

Becoming a fairer and more responsible bank

16

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Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

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information

•We are building leadership capability to have regular and better
quality performance and coaching conversations, focusing on

outcomes and behaviours.

•We care about our customers. Our Royal Commission

commitments improve the treatment of retail customers,

small businesses and farmers in Australia.

•Our Disput

e Resolution Principles aim to help us be more

accountable and transparent. We reviewed and updated our

principles in November 2019. The principles apply to our people

and our representatives when managing individual retail and

small business customer complaints, disputes and litigation in

Australia. The principles are available on anz.com.



T

he dedicated Indigenous telephone service we established

in May 2019 has answered 6,641calls since inception, with

an average speed to answer of 62 seconds as at

30 September 2020.



W

e committed to the Australian Financial Complaints

Authority’s (AFCA) ‘look back’ under its new limits, and to

fully cooperate with AFCA as it resolves disputes. We

established a dedicated team responsible for investigating

legacy complaints, which could be lodged with AFCA until

30 June 2020. 179 legacy complaints were lodged, of which

134 have been closed. The remaining 45 cases are at various

stages of the AFCA process and we remain committed to

resolving these where possible.

Management of Operational Risk – We continue to invest in

a simplified operating environment, improved strength of systems

and processes, improved control effectiveness, and improved

risk capability.

Remediation – Our customer remediation program continues.

An update on our progress is included on page 21 of this report.

Simplification – We have taken strategic action to simplify our

business, products and processes. For example, we completed

the sale of our New Zealand asset finance business, UDC Finance,

in September 2020; and we completed the sale of our Pensions and

Investments business to IOOF Holdings Limited on 31 January 2020.

Strengthening our approach to human rights

We recognise our business activities can have human

rights impacts. To manage these impacts we embed our

expectations across our business activities and relationships

via group-wide policies, training programs, and customer

and supplier screening tools and policies.

This year we commenced a review to strengthen our human

rights policies and processes, aligning our approach more

closely with the UN Guiding Principles on Business and

Human Rights. This has included a review of our minimum

standards for business customer grievance mechanisms and

community engagement, which we expect to complete in

2021. Our approach is being informed by a working group

of external stakeholders, including NGOs, academics, trade

unions, customers, industry associations and human

rights consultants.

1


Modern slavery

We are preparing our first statement in response to the

Australian Modern Slavery Act.

Modern slavery is serious exploitation of people which

undermines or deprives them of their freedom including

forced labour, deceptive recruiting and child labour.

The Australian legislation requires us to identify, assess and

manage risks in our business operations and supply chain.

We have identified three key areas in which to improve

our practices:

•building a

wareness of modern slavery through

training and education;

•policy and process improvements; and

•enhancing our due diligence.

Further detail on our approach to human rights is in

our 2020 ESG Supplement available at anz.com/cs.

1. Their involvement does not infer endorsement of the outcomes of this review or other work carried out by ANZ.

17

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

2–4A.M.
2–3A.M.

PM

PEAK

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PM

2–4A.M.

2–3A.M.

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Our customers

Supporting our customers through the Australian bushfires and COVID-19 pandemic has been

our primary focus this year, but we have not lost sight of our longer-term priorities – to help

improve the financial wellbeing of our customers and to increase access to more affordable

and sustainable homes.

We are seeking to ensure our products are suited to our customers’

needs and meeting expectations. We are implementing digital

banking solutions designed to improve financial wellbeing, and

protecting customers from those seeking to take criminal advantage

of the shift to digital banking. We are listening to customers and

managing complaints, taking steps to remediate when necessary

and learning from our mistakes. And we are supporting innovative

housing delivery models across the private, public and not-for-profit

sectors to increase the availability and affordability of homes

in Australia and New Zealand.

Supporting customers during difficult times

Financial relief packages were implemented quickly to support

customers affected by the bushfires that devastated parts of

Australia over the summer months. This included the ability to

suspend loan and credit card repayments, temporary interest rate

relief, and early access to term deposit funds without incurring fees.

Specialised ATMs were deployed to impacted centres, and hardship

support was provided through referrals and funding to community

counselling services. Proactive contact was made with small

business customers in affected areas and through our insurance

partner QBE, prioritisation was given to claims, including emergency

payments and temporary accommodation costs.

See page 8 for information on how we are supporting our

customers during the COVID-19 pandemic. For discussion on the

specific supports available to customers experiencing vulnerability

see our 2020 ESG Supplement available at anz.com/cs.

Product suitability

We are helping our customers better understand how to get more

value from their products – such as by showing them how to adjust

their use of a particular product, or identifying when there may be

an alternative product better suited to their needs. Our Product

Suitability team develops and manages a number of customer

contact programs to support improved customer outcomes and

enhance customers’ financial wellbeing. Program results are

reported quarterly to the Board.

Improving customer experience through

digital innovation

We need to ensure our customers can rely on us to provide them

with secure remote access to banking products and services.

Digital platforms such as mobile and internet banking make it

possible for customers to serve themselves, anywhere, anytime and

we are adapting the way we operate to respond to our customers'

changing banking habits.

The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the shift to digital banking,

with mobile phone banking our fastest growing channel. We have

provided additional education and support for customers using

digital channels for the first time this year, with 300 extra staff

retrained and deployed to assist.

In Australia, the ANZ App

is helping 3.2 million

customers stay on top of

their day-to-day banking.

Peak usage on the ANZ App is

between 4–6pm, and even during

our quietest time between 2–4am,

we see an average of 51,000 logins

51,000 LOGINS

Peak usage for internet banking

is between 1–2pm, and during our

quietest time between 2–3am, we

serve almost 10,000 customers.

Over the last 12 months we have rolled out several new self-service features to the

ANZ App, including the ability to open new accounts, activate a card, set or change

a card PIN and temporarily block and unblock a card to protect an account from

theft and fraud. To date, more than 22,000 new accounts have been opened, 760,000

debit and credit cards have been activated, 807,700 card pins have been set or

changed, and 45,300 temporarily block and unblock card requests have been

processed through the ANZ App.

The ANZ App won

Money Magazine’s

Mobile Banking App

of the Year 2020

10,000 CUSTOMERS

18

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Performance

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Remuneration

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We are implementing digital solutions designed to make banking
easier and improve the financial wellbeing of our customers.

In Australia, we launched the ‘set a savings goal’ feature in the ANZ

App to help customers better manage their money and develop

savings habits. Customers receive personalised in-app notifications,

encouraging them to set a goal, stay on track and celebrate

milestones along the way. One in 10 active App users has set a goal

this year. There are now more than 240,800 active or achieved goals

in the App, with 24% of these saving for a house, followed by a

holiday (17%).

In New Zealand, we introduced several new self-service features to

ANZ goMoney and internet banking, including fixed-rate rollovers.

Customers with an existing fixed-term home loan or flexi home

loan, who want to fix their rate, can now request a personalised rate

for their loan facility and term (based on current market rates)

without needing to call us or visit a branch. One third of all home

loan fixed-rate requests are now completed digitally.

We also implemented customer alerts to mobile phones, letting

customers know when they receive a deposit or have a low balance,

assisting them to manage their finances.

Protecting our customers in a digital world

We have seen a significant increase in malicious emails

seeking to take advantage of our customers, with

cyber criminals capitalising on more internet traffic

during the COVID-19 pandemic. Malicious email

tactics include those that claim to have links to maps

of virus outbreaks and related information, tricking people into

downloading malicious software.

The threat landscape is changing at a rapid pace, and we have

responded in kind, moving to leverage automation, machine

learning and advanced analytics. We invest heavily in our cyber

security capability, and remain in a strong position to keep our

systems, data and customers safe from the increasing pace, scale

and sophistication of cyber attacks.

Our threat intelligence and 24/7 Security Operations Centre analyses

millions of data events every day to help keep customers, employees

and the bank safe online. As malicious campaigns are identified, we

implement targeted, automated capability to block them.

During a 30 day period near the start of the pandemic we blocked

around 550,000 COVID-19-themed emails, and during July 2020 we

blocked over 12 million malicious emails alone, an increase of more

than 8 million emails compared to October 2019.

In the context of the changing threat landscape, ANZ did report a

major security event to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and the

Australian Prudential Regulation Authority in the financial year 2020,

as a result of a distributed denial of service

2

attack in New Zealand.

While this attack was similar to what was experienced by other

organisations, we were able to proactively detect the activity and

mitigate the risks through preventative security controls, resulting in

minimal disruption to our operations and customer services, and no

impact to customer data.

INCREASING THE VALUE CUSTOMERS RECEIVE FROM OUR PRODUCTS

HIGHLIGHT

Our Concession Account Suitability program contacts customers in receipt of eligible Centrelink or Veterans’ Affairs benefits with

an offer to move to a low-cost basic bank account. To date we have contacted more than 335,000 customers (210,000 this year) with

more than 14,600 taking up the offer to move to a basic account. From 19 March to 22 July the program was paused as we shifted

our focus to supporting customers impacted by COVID-19.

Our Persistent Credit Card Debt program identifies and contacts credit card customers who are carrying persistent debt

1

on their

card to help them pay their debt faster. Customers are offered financial education, and the opportunity to close their card and repay

the remaining debt at a lower interest rate. To date, we have contacted 18,195 customers with 1,450 customers taking up the offer.

This program was also paused while we focused on supporting customers impacted by COVID-19.

1. Where for at least the last 12 months a credit card has over 80% of the credit utilised and the customer has been paying 2–3% of the outstanding balance on average each month.

2. A distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack is an attempt to make an online service unavailable by overwhelming it with traffic.

MAKING SMALL BUSINESS LENDING EASIER

HIGHLIGHT

This year we launched ANZ Online Business Lending. The

platform provides conditional approval for up to $200,000 in

unsecured lending in as little as 20 minutes and access to

funds within four days. Customers using ANZ Online

Business Lending have access to fixed-and variable-term

loans as well as overdraft facilities.

As the economy recovers from the impacts of COVID-19,

helping small businesses to access capital in a fast and

convenient way is critical.

According to Mark Hand, ANZ’s Group Executive, Australia

Retail and Commercial Banking, “While the current

economic crisis will be devastating for some businesses,

there has also been a great deal of resilience and some will

be able to come out the other side even stronger. We’re also

starting to see new businesses being created to meet

emerging customer needs.

“This sophisticated new technology is deeply integrated

with ANZ’s existing platforms to provide our customers with

a quick, simple and secure lending experience so they can

spend more time running and growing their business.”

19

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Measuring customer experience
One of the ways we measure the experience of our customers is

through our strategic Net Promoter Score (NPS). NPS enables us to

gauge whether we are meeting customer needs and expectations

and how we are performing relative to peers. It is measured by

asking customers how likely they are to recommend ANZ (on a 0–10

scale) and is calculated by subtracting the percentage of detractors

(those who give a score of 0–6) from the percentage of promoters

(those who give a 9 or 10).

While our performance relative to peers improved for our Australian

Retail customers, we failed to improve relative to peers for our

Australian Commercial and New Zealand Retail and Commercial

customers. Our Institutional ranking remains at number one in both

Australia and New Zealand.

Managing customer complaints

Internal Dispute Resolution (IDR) plays a vital role in protecting

customers. Fair and robust IDR assists with recognising and fixing

problems that arise, both at an individual customer level and across

the business. It allows us to ‘hear’ where changes need to be made

and serves to inform us when we are not meeting customer or

community expectations.

In 2019 we commenced a program to review and improve our IDR

policies, systems and practices, with program updates provided to

the Board and ASIC. Capability and quality improvement initiatives

support our objectives of fair, consistent and well communicated

complaint outcomes to our customers.

A foundational element of the IDR program was the establishment

of a Customer Resolution portfolio in early 2020, which is dedicated

to working with our customers when they have a problem:

•senior executive leadership and complaint management

expertise has been introduced to drive IDR uplift, along with

supporting governance, data, analytics and transformation

capabilities.

•the por

tfolio has been focused on improving the way we handle

our customers' complaints in order to solve complaints earlier and

improve the overall complaint resolution timeframes. Additional

complaint handling staff have been also recruited to support

timely complaint resolution.

•w

e appointed a Vulnerable Customer Lead to continue the

development of the Divisional vulnerable customer strategy and

provide an important link as we support our customers during

the COVID-19 pandemic and other life changing events.

SCAM ASSIST

CHALLENGE

1. Roy Morgan Single Source, Australian population aged 14+, Main Financial Institution, six-month rolling average to September 2020. Ranking based on the four major Australian banks.

2. DBM Business Atlas. Base: Commercial Banking (<$100 million annual turnover) Main Financial Institution customers. Six-month average to September 2020. Ranking based on the four major

Australian banks. 3. Peter Lee Associates, 2020 Large Corporate and Institutional Relationship Banking surveys, Australia. 4. Retail Market Monitor, Camorra Research, six-month rolling average

to September 2020. Ranking based on the five major New Zealand banks. 5. Business Finance Monitor, TNS Kantar Research. Base: Commercial ($3 million – $150 million annual turnover) and

Agricultural (>$500,000 annual turnover) customers. Four-quarter rolling average to Q3 2020. 6. Peter Lee Associates, Large Corporate and Institutional Relationship Banking surveys, New

Zealand 2020, ranked against the Top 4 competitors.

During the COVID-19 pandemic we have seen an increase

in customers falling victim to scams, particularly remote

access and investment scams. Digital fraud attempts have

also increased.

In addition, we have seen a number of customers trying to

supplement lost earnings through investments purported

to be high-yield options, such as crypto-currencies.

In 2020, our Australian Scam Assist team investigated

over 5,000 individual scams impacting our Australian Retail

and Commercial customers and recovered approximately

$25 million on behalf of some of those impacted.

As an industry, we face significant challenges in helping

our customers not fall victim to scams. We work with law

enforcement agencies, collaborating on a number of

operations to identify and disrupt Australian based actors,

particularly via the Fintel Alliance. Efforts to break-up criminal

syndicates are focused on three key actions: customer and

employee education; improved detection capabilities; and

ongoing support of law enforcement disruption activities.

Retail: ranked 4th

4


(no change from 2019)

Commercial and agricultural:

ranked 5th

5


(no change from 2019)

Institutional: ranked 1st

6


(no change from 2019)

Retail: ranked 3rd

1


(up from 4th at end of 2019)

Commercial: ranked 4th

2


(down from equal 3rd at end of 2019)

Institutional: ranked 1st

3


(no change from 2019)

NET PROMOTER SCORE

AUSTRALIA

NEW ZEALAND

20

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

7. In certain instances:
• we make a payment to one of our community partners in lieu of a payment to a customer account. As at 30 September 2020 payments were made to ~238k accounts totalling $744k

• we pay the customer via cheque. As at 30 September 2020 cheques had been issued for ~521k accounts totalling ~$59m. A portion of the cheques remain unpresented

• we offer certain customers access to payment via a payment portal. As at 30 September 2020 offers to access payment via payment portal have been issued for ~10k accounts totalling ~$379k



w

e transfer payments through a process for unclaimed monies (includes payments for de-registered companies). As at 30 September 2020 payments transferred via this process have been

made for ~2k accounts totalling ~$1m.

8. The matter is considered complete when all customer payments have been processed. In some cases, remediation teams may continue to close out non-customer payments,

documentation and governance requirements beyond this point.

Customer remediation

We are delivering on our commitment to fair, responsible and

efficient customer remediation.

In an effort to fix our past mistakes as quickly as possible, we have

increased remediation staffing levels significantly since 2018. Across

the Group there are now over 1,200 staff working on customer

remediation, with approximately half in dedicated remediation teams.

Our Australian Responsible Banking team is resolving identified

fee or interest discrepancies with over 5.2 million Retail and

Commercial customer accounts. Since April 2018, we have

refunded approximately $223 million across approximately

2.9 million customer accounts

7

.

Our pace of remediation has been steadily increasing and over

the last 12 months we have remediated approximately 1.8 million

customer accounts, compared to approximately 1.1 million over

the 18 months to September 2019.

8

In Australia, we have an education program to share ‘lessons learnt’

and to highlight to staff the impacts on customers when we fail to

get it right. The program is aimed at raising awareness and fostering

a culture where employees are clear on the role they play in

delivering quality customer outcomes and safeguarding our

customers’ interests.

The Group’s customer remediation activities are regularly reviewed

by the Board. Directors are provided an overview of the status of

remediation matters; regulator engagement; repayments and

provisioning; and reviews underway to identify new matters.

More than 500 of these

7, 0 0 0 customers chose to

open an everyday account.

Over 10 0 of our passbook customers

set up a recurring transfer to move

their pension income into their

everyday account.

Improving our IDR practices

We are continually trying to find ways in which we can

encourage feedback in order to provide better experiences

and fair outcomes for customers. Some of the improvements

we are working on include:

•development of a new and improved complaints recording

and management system

•establishment of a Systemic Issues Management function

with a focus on using complaint data and advanced

techniques such as machine learning and artificial intelligence

to identify issues early

•continued investment in the capability of our people and the

efficiency of our processes to help customers resolve their

complaints as quickly as possible.

Further information on customer complaint management

is in our 2020 ESG Supplement available at anz.com/cs.

Assisting potentially vulnerable customers

to access their money

At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic around 7,000 of our

customers only held a passbook account at ANZ. These

accounts do not have the option of an ATM card or access to

internet or phone banking. Customers with these accounts

are typically over 70 years old with their pension income paid

into this account.

We recognised that our customers may have had difficulty

accessing their money in the event of a temporary branch

closure, or if they wanted to self-isolate. Our bankers were

able to reach over 5,000 of these customers to check in on

them considering their specific vulnerability during the

COVID-19 pandemic. We also sent letters with information

on everyday accounts with a Visa debit card that can be

used for online/phone shopping, and ATM/store withdrawals.

It also includes access to internet banking and no monthly

account service fees.

We developed a new process enabling customers to open

an everyday account from their home entirely over the

phone. We also implemented a technology change to

enable passbook customers to establish a recurring transfer

by phone to automatically transfer regular income, such

as pension payments, from their passbook account

to their new everyday account.

21

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Improving the availability of suitable and affordable housing
Housing-related lending is a key activity of

the bank. We lend to home owners and

investors, and for property development

and infrastructure. We believe we can play a

role in helping improve the availability and

affordability of housing, including support

for innovative housing delivery models across

the private, public and not-for-profit sectors.

At the end of 2018 we committed to fund

and facilitate $1 billion of investment

by 2023 to deliver around 3,200 more

affordable, secure and sustainable homes

to buy and rent in Australia. We have

exceeded this target.

1

In addition to the $1.02 billion of investment in

Australia, we have also funded and facilitated

around NZ$1.35 billion to support the delivery

of social and sustainable housing across

New Zealand.

We have continued to build our housing

supply pipeline through direct engagement

with our clients (new and existing),

supporting innovative models to finance

new supply.

This year we have:

•jointly arranged two additional bond

issuances for the Commonwealth’s

National Housing Finance and Investment

Corporation (NHFIC), including the largest

social bond for housing in Australia

($562 million)

•arranged bonds for Kāinga Ora (Housing

New Zealand Corporation) to support the

delivery of more social and sustainable

housing (jointly NZ$1 billion; solely

NZ$300 million)

•supported the first Assemble Model,

designed to bridge the gap between

renting and owning a home to market

2

•invested in the development of a

Specialist Disability Accommodation

(SDA) pipeline

•helped build the case f

or institutional

investment in long-term rental housing

through the backing of a range of

‘build-to-hold’ projects.

We have committed to increase our

target to fund and facilitate $10 billion

of investment by 2030 to deliver more

affordable, accessible and sustainable

homes to buy and rent in Australia

and New Zealand.

1. Due to the lag between financing and commencement of development, number of homes will be audited and disclosed once projects have been delivered. 2. The Assemble Model is a

new ‘build-to-rent-to-own’ hybrid model that bridges the gap between renting and owning a home. It offers residents a five-year lease with the option to purchase their home at the end of

the lease. The purchase price is fixed from the start of the lease, giving residents a set goal to save towards and mitigating the risk of being priced out of the market during the rental period.

DELIVERING ACCESSIBLE HOUSING OPTIONS TO MARKET

HOUSING

As part of the roll-out of the National

Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) in

Australia the government has contributed

funding to Specialist Disability

Accommodation (SDA) to encourage

investment in the development of new

high-quality housing for eligible people.

Our Corporate and Institutional Health

team is developing its expertise and

capacity to ensure our ability to support

this much needed housing supply to

market. The benefits to help deliver better

connection and opportunity for people

in SDA are key drivers of our interest in

investing in this emerging asset class.

Over the course of this year, ANZ has

provided credit approved commitments

in excess of $100 million to the SDA sector

and closed its first transactions, partnering

with our clients to deliver SDA housing

and to aid them to grow a pipeline of

new homes across the country.

We have also worked with our existing

property clients to facilitate the inclusion

of SDA as a pre-sale element in their

property developments. This has allowed

them to partner with developer, Summer

Housing, to include disability housing in

mixed developments, providing residents

with access to services and supports.

Our support is broader than debt capital,

with the Summer Foundation receiving

a 2019/20 ANZ Community Grant to

support the roll-out of their Tenancy

Matching service.

“I am thrilled to be assisting people to

navigate their own housing journey,

courtesy of the ANZ Community

Foundation, which funded a Summer

Foundation project to deliver housing

workshops in Tasmania for people with

disability and their families,” said Liz Ellis,

Summer Foundation convenor.

The workshops helped participants to

identify where they wanted to live and

to consider their specific housing needs

and preferences. They also provided

guidance on the different housing

models available – including SDA

(through the NDIS) and affordable housing.

Summer Housing project

22

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

In the last 12 months,
we have lent over

NZ$18b, helping

more than 55,000

customers in New

Zealand buy a home.

In the last 12 months,

we have lent over

$60b, helping

more than 170,000

customers in Australia

buy a home.

LINKS TO 2020 GROUP PERFORMANCE FRAMEWORK

Despite the serious challenges faced by the banking sector and community this year, our actions over previous years to simplify

and strengthen the bank provided us with the capacity to support our customers at a time of need and strengthen our long-term

relationships. While the focus has been on assisting customers in need, there has also been opportunity to build new customer

relationships and enable more digital services that have been especially valued in a restricted COVID-19 environment. Institutional

performance in key customer satisfaction/relationship strength surveys continued to be a highlight, and a new online payments

experience has been processing ~1 million payments daily and providing digital self-service for Institutional customers.

See section 4.5.3 of the Remuneration report for more details.

INVESTING IN SOCIAL AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING IN NEW ZEALAND

HOUSING

Following the wellbeing bonds we arranged for Housing New Zealand Corporation in 2019, this year we jointly led NZ$1 billion

of bond issuances and a sole placement of NZ$300 million for Kāinga Ora – Homes and Communities, to deliver an additional 8,000

new public housing and transitional housing places. All new homes will be built to 6 Homestar, meaning they will far exceed

Building Code (NZ) standards for warmth, dryness and health.

As part of Kāinga Ora’s ongoing build program, already more than 3,000 public housing homes have been built with this rating

around New Zealand. Not only are these new homes warm and dry, they also contribute to improved financial wellbeing of tenants,

with energy savings estimated to be NZ$570 per household every year.

Kāinga Ora brings together the KiwiBuild Unit, Housing New Zealand and its development subsidiary HLC, and is designed to enable

a more cohesive approach to delivering the government’s priorities for housing and urban development in New Zealand.

23

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

CUSTOMER STORY
OvOeriwW

General Manager, Richard Seymour recalls

the moment he first realised they were in

for tough times.

“I have a really vivid memory of when the

pin was pulled on the Melbourne Grand

Prix in March and I knew we were in for a

world of change.”

An ANZ customer for almost two decades,

Richard found himself drawing on his

strong relationship with the bank,

developing a roadmap to guide the

business through the pandemic.

“With the help of ANZ and our business

advisor, we put together a vision which saw

us quickly pivot to engaging directly with

customers through an online platform. In a

matter of months, we’ve been able to grow

what was around 5% of direct sales to

customers, to around 35%.”

Mount Zero’s customers have always valued

its sense of brand, the foundation of which,

according to Richard, is its proud heritage

as a family business that values

sustainability and supports ‘local’.

“This has really resonated with our

customers during the pandemic, as they’ve

been able to reach out to a business

directly that was already quite tangible to

them, and not just a paper wrapper on a

product on a supermarket shelf. They know

who we are, where we are from and what

we stand for, and they’ve supported us for

these reasons.”

“As horrible as the outlook is for many small

businesses due to the pandemic, it has

presented an opportunity to drive change

and come out stronger on the other side, and

for that, we’re really grateful,” says Richard.

Opportunities arise in

challenging times

Mount Zero Olives is a small,

family-owned and operated

business in the Grampians in

regional Victoria, producing

and processing certified

organic olives, olive oil

and table fruit.

They also partner with

local growers to produce a

range of pulses and grains.

Supplying predominantly

to restaurants throughout

Australia, the business

has been hit hard by the

COVID-19 pandemic.

24

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Our divisions
Australia Retail and Commercial

Operating environment

Between drought, bushfires and COVID-19 it

has been a tough year for the economy and

many of our customers.

Unprecedented levels of fiscal stimulus

have so far sheltered Australia from the

worst economic impacts and some areas of

the economy are seeing opportunity, such

as online retail, home exercise equipment

and pet supplies.

Retail customers are accelerating their

shift to online and mobile banking, limiting

branch visits and moving away from cash,

credit cards and personal loans. Instead

they’ve been saving more, reducing debt

and refinancing their mortgages.

Although Australia is yet to return to normal

activity, businesses are increasingly adapting

to the new environment. Many of our

commercial customers have proactively

managed costs, been conservative with

capital, and innovated during this crisis.

While we face headwinds from the

economic contraction, lower business

confidence and higher unemployment, we

are focused on supporting our customers,

adapting to the changing environment,

and preparing for a more digital future.

Strategy and focus

Our goal is to be a simpler, more efficient,

well-managed business, that is the bank

of choice for Australian home owners and

business owners. Our priorities are to

continue to fix our past mistakes, grow

strategically and sustainably, reshape our

business for a post-COVID world and

prepare for a digitally-enabled and highly

automated future. We are investing in the

business through the economic cycle while

continuing to reduce costs to a more

sustainable level.

Fixing past mistakes and returning money

owed to customers quickly remains an

important focus. Since April 2018 we have

remediated approximately 2.9 million

customer accounts and issued refunds

of approximately $223 million.

We further simplified the business,

including by introducing a more targeted

approach in the Financial Advice business

to focus on affluent and high net worth

clients, and announced the sale of 1,300

offsite ATMs to Armaguard.

Across our branch network, we invested

heavily to open digital branches providing

customers with new self-service options,

including smart (deposit taking) ATMs and

business cash deposit machines. We also

restored momentum in the home loan

book growing it by ~$10 billion in the

year to $275 billion.

We launched our new Online Business

Lending platform providing small businesses

with conditional approval for up to $200,000

in unsecured lending in as little as 20 minutes,

and access to funds within four days.

Performance highlights

Our response to the shifting environment

has had a very real short-term financial

impact – on revenue, profitability and returns.

Cash profit declined by 27% in 2020

compared to the prior year. Through

continued discipline, costs remain

well managed, flat year on year.

Mortgage sales volumes are back to 2017

levels, and Retail and Commercial deposits

are up by $12.7 billion and $13.9 billion

respectively. With lower levels of demand

for credit, commercial lending was flat.

In response to the pandemic we have

provided assistance to our retail and

commercial customers, including deferrals

on home loans, personal loans, credit cards,

business loans and asset finance as well as

temporary overdraft increases. Around

95,000 home loans and 23,000 business

loans received repayment deferrals. We also

increased the size of our hardship team and,

diverted branch staff to support the 65%

increase in customer calls for support.

We contributed to communities through

our bushfire financial relief package for

customers, donated more than $1 million

to support customers and communities

impacted by the fires, and extended our

special paid leave for employees who

volunteer in emergency services.

We received a number of awards, including

Money Magazine’s Mobile Banking App of

the Year, ANZ Canstar’s Small Business Bank

of the Year Award for the third consecutive

year and Agribusiness Bank of the Year

Award. ANZ Private Bank won a number

of awards, notably ranking #1 in four

categories in Euromoney’s peer-voted

Private Banking and Wealth Management

2020 Survey, including Best Overall.

"This year has been an extremely tough time

for our customers. We know not every business

will survive but we also know there is opportunity

for others. We will be working closely with

our customers – no matter their situation –

to understand their need and to find solutions

that will help them succeed in the future."


Mark Hand, Gr

oup Executive Australia

Retail and Commercial Banking

25

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Institutional
Operating conditions

The external environment was challenging

in 2020, particularly in the second half as

COVID-19 impacted the global economy

and supply chains. The pandemic led to

sharply lower levels of activity in every

geography and many sectors, and introduced

significant uncertainty about the future for

our Institutional customers. These immediate

challenges were also conflated with disruptive

structural change and geopolitical issues.

At the same time, these disruptions resulted

in strong activity in our markets and lending

businesses, which responded swiftly to market

volatility and unprecedented demand for

liquidity. With a presence in 33 markets

globally, our diverse business was prepared

to support our customers and staff in our

home markets and internationally.

The pandemic has increased competition, and

record low interest rates continue to narrow

margins and place pressure on revenue.

Slower global demand and competition

led to lower trade finance volumes and

revenues. In the face of these conditions,

Institutional continues to sharpen its focus

on the right customers in priority sectors

and further invest in digital, data and

automation to strengthen the business.

Strategy and focus

In 2016, Institutional laid out a strategy to

build the best bank for clients moving goods

and capital across the region. Our aim was to

be simpler for our customers and employees,

resilient through the cycle and increase return

on equity. We became more targeted and

focused on customers who would benefit

from regional growth, had a link to our home

markets, valued our network and were in

industries where ANZ had strong expertise.

Four years on, this strategy is well

progressed. We have reshaped the business,

diversified our revenue streams with greater

emphasis on lower capital-intensive products,

consistently reduced operating costs, and

strengthened our culture, while clearly

establishing our position as the leading

relationship bank in the region.

In the early days of the pandemic we were

able to move quickly to support our key

customers, and in the 6 months to end-

March provided $16 billion

1

in additional

lending globally. We maintained a

disciplined approach to pricing for risk

and capital management, and undertook

rigorous stress testing to manage credit risk.

Lending volumes declined in the second

half as global capital market conditions

improved, enabling customers to access

debt and equity markets and repay bank

debt. Credit Risk Weighted Assets ended

the year broadly flat.

Through the pandemic, our digital channels

came to the fore, and payment volumes

increased 9.4% year on year. We supported

hundreds of customers working from home

by providing secure remote access via web

and mobile, and helped reduce customer

net losses from fraud by 62%.

We were recognised for supporting our

customers, and we maintained our leading

market positions across key geographies

(#1 in Australia and New Zealand

2

, #5 in

Asia

3

for market penetration). This included

#1 for overall relationship quality in Asia

3


and #1 for Net Promoter Score in

Australia and New Zealand

2

.

Performance highlights

Institutional continued to deliver the benefits

of a simpler, more disciplined and resilient

business in 2020, delivering 1% cash profit

growth compared to the prior year despite

tougher economic conditions. Net loans and

advances declined 4% after peaking in the

middle of the year, while customer deposits

grew 3%.

The results demonstrated the value

of customer, product and geographic

diversification within the business. In a

low interest rate environment, Transaction

Banking and Corporate Finance revenue

declined in 2020, down 15% and 1%

respectively. Markets revenue increased by

49%, as customers sought to manage their

financial risks amidst heightened volatility

in Global Markets.

Geographically, lower profit in Australia was

offset in Asia Pacific, Europe & America and

New Zealand, mainly due to higher markets

revenue as customers managed foreign

exchange, interest rate, credit and

commodity price risks.

The Division’s focus on productivity

contributed to another year of cost reduction,

with lower full time equivalent staff, property

efficiencies and reduced discretionary spend.

Credit charges increased with tougher

economic conditions and lower forecast

economic growth, however, the credit

quality of the book remains strong.

Through 2020, ANZ Institutional helped

arrange the largest social bond by an

Australian issuer for the National Housing

Finance and Investment Corporation, as well

as $72 billion in funding for the Australian

Government’s COVID-19 support package.

1. Institutional Gross Loans and Advances excluding FX and Markets 2. Peter Lee Associates 2020 Large Corporate and Institutional Relationship Banking surveys, Australia & New Zealand.

3. Greenwich Associates 2019 Asian Large Corporate Banking study

“In Institutional, our global network positioned us

well to move quickly to respond to the pandemic

and support our valued, long-term customers.

We also mobilised our digital channels to manage

a sharp rise in transaction volumes, while working

closely with our customers to keep them cyber-safe.”

Mark Whelan,

Group Executive Institutional

26

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Operating conditions
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic New

Zealand’s economy remained in an enviable

position relative to many others.

The housing market responded to record

low home loan rates, while being shielded

from the economic slowdown by the

mortgage payment deferral scheme and

the government’s wage subsidy scheme.

Surveyed business activity indicators

have increased since February 2020, now at

similar levels to pre-pandemic, brightening

the outlook for near-term growth.

However, uncertainty, rising unemployment

and winding down of income support

measures will cause some discomfort,

and the impact of the closed border will

play a role in the economy for some time.

Helpfully, and providing some offset,

New Zealand’s export prices are holding

up, indicated by ongoing resilience in

export prices relative to other commodities

and strong operational models in our

core industries.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has

taken a medium-term outlook with a

current focus on quantitative easing.

They confirmed increased capital

requirements, originally due to start taking

effect from July 2020, have been delayed

by at least one year.

Business focus

We remain committed to delivering great

customer experiences and outcomes.

ANZ New Zealand implemented key

government-led initiatives in response to

COVID-19 and a major program of reduced

fees, charges and interest rates.

New Zealand

1. Adjusting for the sale of UDC

“ As New Zealand’s largest bank, we’ve been in a unique

position to assist thousands of businesses and many more

individuals through what has been a tough year for many.

Despite a challenging year, I’m proud that we’ve been able

to continue to support our customers, our communities

and our people.”

Antonia Watson, Chief Executive Officer New Zealand

ANZ led the waiving of Merchant Service

Fees on existing customers’ contactless

debit capability for a limited time and

permanently reduced them after the

COVID-19 lockdown.

Since the pandemic we have provided

financial help to around 43,000 personal,

home and business loan customers through

repayment deferrals, restructures or

adjustments, covering lending of around

NZ$27 billion.

Data and digital initiatives included the

launch of our electronic verification and

use of data to identify customers who

may be experiencing hardship.

We continued refining our physical

presence to fewer, improved branches

and reduced hours for selected regional

branches, enabling an efficient and

simplified operating model. ANZ New

Zealand is part of an industry-led trial

for banking hubs in regional areas.

We completed the sale of UDC Finance

Limited to Shinsei Bank in line with our

simplification strategy.

We announced the Bonus Bonds Business

would close to new investment and that

we intend to start winding up the scheme

by the end of October 2020.

In the environmental space, ANZ provided

public submissions to government, completed

New Zealand’s first sustainability-linked loan

and arranged the country’s first inflation-

linked sustainability bond.

We aided farmers’ decision-making through

proprietary digital tools including our dairy

and red meat dashboards and a geospatial

tool that analyses weather, soil and

contour data.

Performance highlights

Despite difficult conditions, we maintained

a leading position in core banking products

with ~31% share of mortgages and ~33%

share of households deposits (August 2020)

and ~22% share of KiwiSaver (June 2020).

Net loan and advances were flat for the year,

underlying

1

net loans and advances grew

by 3%, driven by home lending growth of

6%, and the housing market has remained

reasonably resilient.

Customer deposits grew 9% aided by

inflows from the government’s wage subsidy

scheme and increased system liquidity

following quantitative easing measures

from the RBNZ.

Revenue was impacted by interest-margin

pressure from record low interest rates,

simplifying and reducing fees, and a range of

fee waivers initiated to support customers.

Higher credit impairment charges had a

material impact on our results with a

substantial increase in collective provisions,

recognising the possible impacts of future

economic and operating conditions.

Despite a trying year, our staff continued

to play a role in their communities. Many

helped to plant more than 25,000 trees

across New Zealand as part of our

partnership with Sustainable Coastlines,

and volunteered over 6,000 hours.

Our payroll giving scheme allocated over

NZ $650,000 to 60 charities, and staff

donating to the ANZ New Zealand Staff

Foundation grew from 24.5% to 25.9%.

ANZ donated a total of NZ$2m to Women’s

Refuge, Age Concern New Zealand and the

Salvation Army’s foodbank network to

support people through COVID-19, and

NZ$1m to grassroots cricket and netball

clubs and initiatives nation wide.

27

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

LIFE BEYOND THE BRANCH
EMPLOYEE STORY

1. Requests for COVID-19 assistance received between 1 March 2020 and 31 May 2020.

Our people

Much of our focus this

year has been on mobilising

resources to support the

changing needs of our

customers and business

during the COVID-19

pandemic.

The ‘Beyond the Branch’ program was launched earlier this year and assists

branch employees to move to business areas requiring additional resources

to meet increased customer demand as a result of COVID-19.

Many branch employees have moved

into the Collections and Hardship team

as part of the program. We have also

set up ‘hubs’ in Western Australia, with

Queensland and New South Wales soon

to follow, so as to ‘tap into’ the capability

of branch staff outside of Victoria.

Solarah Jupp has recently moved

from a branch into the Collections

and Hardship team.

“I originally applied for 'Beyond the

Branch' as I believed the roles suited

my skillset and I was really looking for

a new challenge. Going through this

experience has meant the world to me

– it has broadened my career horizons

far beyond what I could have thought

possible in branch. I feel excited for the

future and I’m looking forward to the

next challenge.”

As at 30 September, 197 'Beyond the

Branch' roles have been filled, with roles

available in every state in Australia.

We benefit from transferring our

branch employees’ customer focus

and experience to the areas of greatest

customer need – including our Customer

Contact Centre, Customer Service

Operations and Customer Resolution

– and employees benefit from the

opportunity to diversify their skillset

and broaden their career.

The program involves:

•identifying the in-demand roles

that are a match for branch

employees;

•distr

ibuting these roles across

Australia, rather than having them

based in our Melbourne head office;

•actively promoting and providing

visibility of the opportunities; and

•soliciting the suppor

t of senior

branch staff to advocate for the

program and actively support

people moving into these roles.

While we have continued to develop the

culture, capabilities and behaviours needed

to deliver our strategy, our top priority has

been to protect our people, keeping them

safe and well. As discussed on pages 8–9,

our Group-wide COVID-19 response plan

includes supports for vulnerable employees,

employees working from home and those

on the frontline supporting our customers.

Mobilising our resources

to meet demand

During March we began to experience a

dramatic increase in calls to our dedicated

hardship team in Australia. We received

around four years worth of hardship

applications in the space of only three

months as almost 94,000

1

customers

impacted by COVID-19 sought assistance.

In response, we developed COVID-19 ‘Talent

Mobility Principles’, the purpose of which

was to ensure we had ‘the right people, in

the right locations, at the right time’, to

meet customer and community needs

during the pandemic.

A campaign was run across Australia,

New Zealand and India to help employees

self-identify their skills and desire to move

into critical areas of the business, such as

our Customer Contact Centre. Over 1,000

hours of customised virtual training was

delivered to over 700 staff across our

Customer Service Operations team and

branches to assist them to move temporarily

to in-demand roles. We have also recruited

approximately 185 new hardship consultants

and provided over 23,000 hours of training

to our Customer Connect (Hardship) team

to ensure ongoing support for our customers

on a COVID-19 assistance package.

28

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Culture
The success of our strategy is dependent

on embedding a culture focused on

delivering great customer outcomes,

making things simpler and always learning.

This work is underpinned by our purpose

and values.

We are taking steps to improve our culture

and are enhancing how we track and

measure our progress. Our Enterprise

Culture Steering Group (ECSG), chaired by

the CEO and whose membership includes

other members of the Executive Committee,

plays a critical role in guiding our efforts

by helping us to understand our cultural

strengths and development areas.

This year the ECSG has considered the

way our organisational culture has changed

during COVID-19, including the opportunities

and risks created by the pandemic – for

example, cross-team collaboration and a

focus on execution were identified as

strengths that have enabled us to deliver

positive customer outcomes.

Culture assessments

Our Internal Audit group has continued

to conduct culture reviews throughout the

year, supporting businesses and functions

to understand their culture and impact

on ANZ’s aspirational and risk culture.

Assessments are undertaken through a

combination of quantitative and qualitative

analysis, including surveys, focus groups

and interviews. Since 2016, we have

conducted nearly 2,000 focus groups and

interviews and more than 25,000 employees

have participated in culture surveys.

Once complete, a report on cultural

themes, including underlying issues and

related impacts, is provided to the business.

The business must then develop an action

plan to mitigate any identified cultural

challenges. The plan is monitored and

the effectiveness of the actions in shifting

towards the desired culture is reviewed

before it is ‘closed’.

Internal Audit completed 18 culture reviews

in 2020, 11 of which were re-assessments.

Actions undertaken to address cultural

challenges have generally been effective,

particularly where leaders have taken

ownership of outcomes. There are

some reoccurring themes with respect

to challenges, and we are seeking to

tackle these through initiatives focused

on leadership engagement and change

programs; networking sessions to improve

collaboration and role clarity across functions;

and career development opportunities

such as secondments and ‘job shadowing’.

Accountability and

Consequence Framework

In 2020, we continued to strengthen

and embed the Accountability and

Consequence Framework (A&CF). The

Consequence Review Group (CRG), which

is chaired by the CEO, supports the Board

in monitoring the implementation and

ongoing effectiveness of ANZ’s A&CF, being

cognisant of its impact on the culture of

ANZ. The CRG reviews material events,

accountability and the application of

suitable consequences where appropriate.

See section 6 of the Remuneration

report for more details.

Changes to remuneration

As part of the Group’s Reimagining Reward

program effective 1 October 2019, we made

adjustments to the remuneration mix for

staff, which included replacing individual

variable remuneration for around 80% of

employees with variable remuneration

based on the overall performance of the

Group. These changes respond to many of

the concerns about ‘bonus culture’ raised in

the final report of the Royal Commission,

and form part of the wide-ranging reforms

for 2020 regarding how we reward, recognise

and manage the performance of employees.

We are implementing the recommendations

from Stephen Sedgwick’s ‘Retail Banking

Remuneration Review’, which is focused

on strengthening the alignment of retail

bank incentives, sales practices and good

customer outcomes. Recommendations

ANZ is delivering independently are now

100% complete and were implemented

ahead of the October 2020 deadline. We

will continue to work with industry to

progress the remaining recommendations.

Management provides regular updates to

the Board Human Resources Committee

on progress.

In April, our engagement

result increased to 86%

(up from the 77% in 2019),

with increases across all

areas of the bank. This is a

testament to the resilience

of our people and their

ability to adapt to the

new pressures

and challenges

presented by

COVID-19.

94% of employees said

ANZ is supporting them

during the pandemic, and

95% said senior leaders

have been

communicating

effectively.

In response to COVID-19

we launched the ‘Team

Health Check’, a new

team wellbeing survey,

and we continue to run

regular pulse surveys to

measure engagement

– results have remained

relatively stable

since April.

Employee engagement

up 9

points

29

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

LINKS TO 2020 GROUP PERFORMANCE FRAMEWORK
In a challenging year, significant capacity and attention was focused on managing through COVID-19 and the Australian bushfires,

however, strong progress was still made on key priorities including embedding our new reward framework, building strategic and

leadership capabilities, and strengthening governance, accountability and culture. Highlights include a nine point increase in our

employee engagement score, reflecting our strong support for employees and clear senior leader communication during the

pandemic, as well as the enablement of significant increases in our remote working capacity.

See section 4.5.3 of the Remuneration report for more details.

Building workforce capability

To help our leaders support their teams

through COVID-19, we provided additional

guidance aligned to two of our desired

leadership behaviours (referred to as our

‘New Ways of Leading’), ‘Creating Shared

Clarity’ and ‘Empowering People’. We want

our people leaders to display these behaviours

in order to inspire and engage their teams,

helping them to deliver on the bank’s

strategic imperatives. When we surveyed

our people in July, we saw an increase in

leaders modelling all of these behaviours.

We introduced a ‘Leading Through Change’

program for our 7,500 people leaders in

July, to help them lead with confidence and

optimism during this period of ongoing and

accelerated change. On completion, leaders

are provided with new tools to support

themselves and their teams to improve

focus, adapt faster and be more productive.

We have also introduced a simpler and

more flexible approach to performance

management. This includes giving

employees the ability to create and document

meaningful performance and growth

objectives in our new People+ system.

We are continuing to develop priority

capabilities aligned with our strategy and

aimed at ‘future-proofing’ our workforce

– data and engineering are two key

capabilities on which we are focused.

We have recruited more than 500 software

and systems engineers over the course of

the year. The COVID-19 pandemic has had

little effect on supply of this capability in

the market and critical engineering talent

remains scarce. In response, we are

investing in innovative recruitment

strategies and have a dedicated team

working on talent marketing, proactive

sourcing, and continuous improvement

of the recruitment approach.

We have continued to invest in the

capabilities of our people through the

provision of training and development

programs. Almost 970,000 hours of learning

were delivered in 2020, including over

530,000 hours of compliance training. Our

Way of Learning (OWL), our digital social

learning platform, enabled employees to

access learning materials relevant to their

current roles and future career aspirations

while working from home. The ability to

access digital content anywhere, anytime

and on any device led to a 29% increase in

self-directed content access across the bank.

Diversity and inclusion

We want our workforce to reflect the

communities we serve and believe that

leveraging the diversity of our people will

drive innovation, making us a better bank

for our customers.

As we come to the end of our current suite

of public diversity and inclusion targets,

we have been reflecting on our progress

and challenges.

Our Women in Leadership objective focuses

our effort on the categories with the lowest

levels of female representation, being our

Senior Executive, Executive and Senior

Manager populations of the bank. This work

is the key to closing our gender pay gap.

Both our Key Management Personnel

and Group Executive Committee are now

gender balanced. The representation of

Women in Leadership

1

increased this year

to 33.4 % (up from 32.5% as at September

2019), falling short of our target of

34.1% by the end of 2020. Our progress

is monitored monthly by the CEO and

the Group Execution and Performance

Committee, and will remain a focus.

Over the last four years we have launched

our Spectrum Program – a tailored program

to support autistic individuals into the

workforce – and our Return to Work

Program for people who have taken a career

break. We have welcomed new employee

networks including Cultural Diversity &

Inclusion, Faith and Mental Health &

Wellbeing and been recognised as a leading

employer for LGBTIQ+ inclusion, inclusion of

people with disability and women. We are

developing our second ‘Stretch’ Reconciliation

Action Plan (RAP), reflecting and building on

the lessons learnt from our previous RAPs.

We have promoted the participation of

people from under-represented groups

in our workforce, including Aboriginal

and Torres Strait Islander peoples, people

with disability and refugees. Challenging

conditions, including most recently the

COVID-19 pandemic, have impacted our

goal of recruiting >1000 people from

under-represented groups. We recruited

185 people from under-represented groups

in 2020, bringing the total recruited since

2016 to 919.

We are currently finalising our new

Diversity and Inclusion strategy and it will

inform our approach and commitments

for 2021 and beyond.

Our new Diversity and Inclusion Policy

is available at anz.com/corporate

governance.

1. Measures representation at the Senior Manager, Executive and Senior Executive levels. Includes all employees regardless of leave status but not contractors (who are included in FTE).

Be

curious

Create

shared

clarity

Empower

people

Connect

with empathy

Grow people

selflessly

OUR NEW WAYS OF LEADING

30

Entvnitr

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

The program will be delivered to female
small business owners in rural areas across

Fiji, Kiribati, Solomon Islands, Tonga,

and Vanuatu.

Deputy Team Leader for Inclusive Growth

at the UNDP Pacific Office in Fiji, Patrick

Tuimalealiifano, said the partnership is

more than just balancing a budget.

“A big part of our work is on helping women

in low income households to have financial

security and control over their future and

the future of their families.

“Building financial literacy and business

acumen translates into confidence and over

time we start seeing these women emerge

as community leaders, entrepreneurs

and successful businesswomen.

The MoneyMinded program is helping

Pacific people create a positive vision for

their future,” he said.

ANZ Regional Executive Pacific, Tessa Price,

said the partnership with UNDP enables

ANZ MoneyMinded to reach deeper into

rural communities and target different

groups of people, particularly women.

“We’ve already done a lot of work with

a number of different groups, including

seasonal workers who receive MoneyMinded

training before they travel to Australia and

New Zealand. This partnership with the

UNDP means we will be reaching straight

to the heart of rural communities and

to women who are at the heart of the

household,” she said.

Building financial wellbeing

in the Pacific

COMMUNITY STORY

FINANCIAL WELLBEING

According to participants

surveyed in the 2019

MoneyMinded Impact

Report, almost 50% of

people in Fiji and Kiribati

frequently run short of

money for food and other

regular expenses.

To help improve this

situation ANZ has partnered

with the United Nations

Development Programme

(UNDP) to deliver its

adult financial education

programs, MoneyMinded

and Business Basics.

31

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Financial wellbeing
Helping improve the financial wellbeing of our customers is core to our strategy.

We have in particular demonstrated a long-term commitment to helping disadvantaged

people build money management skills and savings capabilities through our financial

inclusion programs.

Being in control of personal and household finances generates improved long-term

financial health and wellbeing, community connectedness and social participation.

More broadly, it also contributes to the social and economic development of communities.

Our financial inclusion programs

Saver Plus was developed by ANZ and the Brotherhood of St Laurence in 2003,

and is co-funded by ANZ and the Australian Government.

Program participants open an ANZ savings account, set a savings goal and save

towards it regularly over 10 months while also attending MoneyMinded financial

education sessions. On reaching their goal, savings are matched by ANZ dollar for

dollar, up to $500, which must be spent on education.

Since 2003, Saver Plus has helped more than 47,770 lower-income Australians save

over $24 million to support their own and their children’s educational needs, with

ANZ providing over $19 million in matched funds.

MoneyMinded supports adults with low levels of financial literacy and those on

lower incomes across 15 markets, including Australia and New Zealand. It is delivered

by community partner organisations in Australia and New Zealand, and a mix of

community organisations and ANZ employees in Asia and the Pacific.

MoneyBusiness has been operating since 2005 and is designed to build the money

management skills and confidence of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. Since

inception, it has reached over 82,520 participants and has been delivered in over

320 communities through either Australian Government-funded service providers

or ANZ’s partners.

“I am in control of my life and my money for the first time

since having children. Thank you to Saver Plus for being

a part of that positive journey in getting my life and

happiness back!”

Saver Plus participant

Our community

Strong relationships with our stakeholders and the broader community is one of our key value

drivers. We are supporting the communities in which we live and work to recover from the

bushfires that devastated parts of Australia earlier this year, and through the COVID-19 pandemic.

1. Figure includes forgone revenue of $105 million, being the cost of providing low or fee free accounts to a range of customers such as government benefit recipients, not-for-profit

organisations and students.

We are investing in the

community through our

financial literacy programs,

as well as through local

partnerships with the

not-for-profit sector,

sponsorship, grants, and

staff volunteering and

workplace giving.

In 2020:

20.5% of our employees

volunteered over

66,000 hours to

community organisations,

we matched employee

donations, collectively

contributing almost

$3.9 million to

charitable organisations

in Australia, New Zealand

and Fiji

investing a total

$139.5 million in

the community

1

32

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

LINKS TO 2020 GROUP PERFORMANCE FRAMEWORK
We have continued to regain community trust following the Royal Commission, and while we know this year has been difficult for many

people, we have had the opportunity prove the value we provide to the community. Our focus on our purpose and values, combined

with strong governance and leadership, has enabled us to help support the community. While across the industry community sentiment

scores have fluctuated during the year, in the RepTrak survey ANZ led for the majority of 2020 and was ranked second based on July to

September results. We achieved an A- rating in the 2019 CDP climate change assessment, the leading score for Australian banks.

See section 4.5.3 of the Remuneration report for more details.

Supporting Australia’s rural

and regional communities

Since 2003, we have been helping build

vibrant and sustainable rural communities

through our Seeds of Renewal financial grants

program, administered by the Foundation

for Rural and Regional Renewal (FRRR).

The program has provided more than

$5 million to help over 800 community

groups. In 2020 we again donated $250,000

to enable local community programs that

support the ongoing prosperity of

regional Australia.

Bushfire relief – helping

communities rebuild

In January 2020, we donated $1 million to

support our customers and the communities

affected by bushfires, including $300,000 to

volunteer fire services across New South

Wales, Victoria and South Australia.

We also matched a further $100,000 of

employee donations to volunteer fire services,

and allocated $500,000 to support local

community services as well as home loan

customers who lost their homes to bushfires

and suffered ongoing financial hardship.

Our $50 billion sustainable finance target

now includes $1 billion specifically for

funding and facilitating initiatives that

support customers and communities

impacted by disasters. Capital may be

allocated for weather related events (such

as bushfires, floods and cyclones) or to

build resilience against non-weather

related disasters such as pandemics.

Workplace giving

Our workplace giving program enables

employees in Australia to make contributions

to around 30 charity partners – many of

which operate in areas aligned to our

priority areas of financial wellbeing,

environmental sustainability and housing –

through regular pre-tax payroll deductions.

Donations are ‘double matched’ – for every

dollar donated by an employee (up to

$5,000 per employee in a tax year) through

the program, ANZ donates two dollars.

Our employees in New Zealand and Fiji

can also donate through payroll to their

respective staff foundations (charitable

trusts that provide small grants) and

ANZ double matches donations.

Volunteering

Our Volunteer Leave Policy, which applies

to permanent, regular and fixed-term

employees provides for at least one day

of paid volunteer leave each year.

This year we also made available extended

special paid leave for employees who

volunteer in emergency services to ensure

they were financially supported while they

served their community during the

bushfire season.

Contribution to public policy

We seek to contribute constructively to

public policy formation and understand

the perspectives of our community’s

elected representatives, policymakers

and regulators. We contribute to policy

formation on business, economic, social

and environmental issues affecting our

customers and shareholders.

We are also a member of a number of

industry associations that contribute to

public policy debate and formation.

In 2020, our key membership

payments included:

Australian Banking Association

$3,258, 203

Business Council of Australia

$93,500

New Zealand Bankers’ Association

NZ $309,079

Business New Zealand

NZ $40,250

We understand that our stakeholders are

interested in the position we take on issues

such as data security, privacy and climate

change, and our membership of industry

associations that develop policies and

undertake advocacy on these issues.

This year, in response to stakeholder

feedback, we reviewed the alignment of

ANZ’s policy position on climate change

with those of our industry associations.

The outcomes of this review will be

on anz.com/shareholder.

We have also committed to review our

memberships of industry associations at

least every three years. The results of any

such review, including any material changes

to our position, will be publicly disclosed.

Community organisation receives funding boost with Seeds of Renewal grant

In 2020, ANZ announced a grant of $15,000 to a NSW community organisation, ‘North Coast Community College’ for an Indigenous

land management employment pathway project. The money contributed to strengthening economic participation and employment

related activities for Aboriginal communities through the establishment of a training program run as a social enterprise.

33

OveriwiwrOHHo cratluPf

We support the Paris Agreement’s goal of transitioning to net zero emissions by 2050 and
are committed to playing our part.

Our approach to climate change

Engaging with 100 of our largest emitting business customers on their transition plans

We have engaged with 83 of our largest

emitting business customers to support

them to establish, and where appropriate,

strengthen existing low carbon transition

plans. This engagement will inform the

development of a model that can be

applied across our customer base.

Within each industry our customers

have different starting points. Through

customer discussions and reviews of

public disclosures we are developing a

better understanding of our customers’

preparation for, and management of, their

climate-related risks and opportunities.

Insights we have gained from customer

conversations include:

Energy: our engagement in this sector

has initially focused on customers with

thermal coal operations; however, we are

broadening this to include our largest oil

and gas producing customers. While the

impacts of COVID-19 have affected

short-term demand, some customers are

continuing to see strong demand for

high-quality, low-cost Australian thermal

coal for use in high efficiency, lower

emissions (HELE) plants across Asia; their

strategy is focused on developing high

quality thermal coal assets and they are

committed to improving their external

disclosures.

Other customers have undertaken

scenario analysis (aligned with

recommendations of the Financial Stability

Board Taskforce on Climate-related Financial

Disclosures (TCFD)), revealing that some

of their commodities will not perform

well under a low carbon transition; in

response, they are limiting expenditure

on thermal coal (with most capital directed

to maintenance rather than expansion),

or seeking to divest those assets. Some

companies are starting to set firmer targets

to work with their suppliers and customers

to seek to reduce the emissions associated

with the use of their mining commodities,

ie ‘Scope 3’ emissions.

Transport: a key customer in the airline

sector has committed to carbon neutral

growth from 2020 and halving 2005

emissions from international flights

by 2050. This aligns with the goals of the

international aviation sector.

Buildings: a number of customers have

established and are now implementing

net zero by 2030 carbon targets that will be

achieved largely through improved energy

efficiency and onsite solar installations.

IN SUPPORTING THE 2050 GOAL, OUR APPROACH IS TO:

Support transitioning

industries to help grow

the economy

Help our customers by

encouraging them to

identify climate risks and

opportunities, create

transition plans and report

publicly on their progress

Reduce our own impact

by managing and reducing

emissions from our own

operations

We understand the impact – positive and

negative – our financing has on climate

change. Through our lending decisions, we

support companies and projects that

contribute to reducing emissions and that

are resilient to a changing climate. We are

confident we can do this in parallel with

supporting strong economic growth.

Through our disclosures, we seek to provide

investors and other stakeholders with

information enabling them to assess the

adequacy of our approach to climate

change and our ability to manage the

associated risks and opportunities.

This year we released an updated Climate

Change Statement (available on anz.com/cs)

that outlines our approach and strengthened

commitments in support of a global transition

to net zero emissions. We are focused on

lowering emissions in key sectors, in a way

that carefully considers the potential for

community impacts and how we can

mitigate these.

34

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Our progress on the TCFD
OUR PROGRESS TO DATEFOCUS AREAS – 2021/22BEYOND 2020 VISION

GOVERNANCE

• Board Risk Committee oversees management of climate-related risks

• Board Ethics, Environment, Social and Governance Committee

approves climate-related objectives, goals and targets


Ethics and R

esponsible Business Committee (executive management)

oversees our approach to environment, social and governance (ESG)

and reviews climate-related risks and opportunities


Align with regulatory guidance on

climate-related risk governance,

including stress testing of selected

portfolios


An enhanced

risk management

framework that

anticipates potential

climate-related impacts,

and associated

regulatory requirements

STRATEGY

• Climate Change Statement (available on anz.com) reaffirms

support for the Paris Agreement goals and transition to a net

zero carbon economy



M

anaging the net zero carbon transition focuses on an orderly and just

transition that gives careful consideration to the impacts on communities


P

articipated in a United Nations Environment Program Finance

Industry (UNEP FI) working group on TCFD scenario analysis that

issued recommendations and methods to assess portfolio

transition and physical risks



L

ow carbon products and services within our Institutional business

focused on climate-related opportunities



Analysis of flood-r

elated risks for our home loan portfolio

in a major regional location of Australia

• Test-pilot of socio-economic indicators showing financial resilience

of home loan customers with respect to flood risk

• Extending analysis of flood-related

risks to incorporate bushfire and other

risks relating to retail customers


Include climate risk reference in

lending guidance documents for

relevant industry sectors, used

by our front line bankers


ANZ business strategy

more closely aligned

to a resilient and

sustainable economy

that supports the

Paris Agreement

and UN Sustainable

Development Goals

RISK MANAGEMENT

• Climate change risk added to Group and Institutional

Risk Appetite Statements


Climat

e change identified as a Principal Risk and Uncertainty in

our UK Disclosure and Transparency Rules (DTR) Submission


Guidelines and training provided to over 1,000 of our Institutional

bankers on customers’ transition plan discussions


Enhanced financial analysis and str

onger credit approval terms

applied to agricultural property purchases in regions of low average

rainfall or measured variability



Ne

w agribusiness customers assessed for financial resilience and

understanding of rainfall and climate trends in their area, and water

budgets considered if irrigating


Supporting 100 of our largest emitting

customers to develop and disclose

their transition plans


Customer engagement to identify

customer or sector-specific transition

or physical risks, focused on corporate

and Institutional customers



D

evelop an enhanced climate risk

management framework that strengthens

our governance and anticipates

potential climate-related impacts and

associated regulatory requirements


Further integrate

assessment of climate-

related risks into our

Group Risk management

framework


Standard discussions

with business customers

include climate-related

risks and opportunities


Assessment of customer

transition plans part of

standard lending decisions

and portfolio analysis

METRICS AND TARGETS

• Support 100 of our largest emitting customers to establish or

strengthen low carbon transition plans by 2021, with metrics

developed to track progress


New metrics to enable our progress to be tracked in reducing

‘financed emissions’, beginning with two key sectors: commercial

property and power generation. Metrics are tailored to each sector

(eg. carbon emissions per square metre of net lettable space for

commercial property) and disclosed every 12 months


$50 billion target to fund and facilitate sustainable solutions by 2025



T

arget to procure 100% renewable electricity for ANZ’s operations

by 2025


Ongoing emissions r

eduction targets for ANZ energy use aligned

with the Paris Agreement goals

• Complete transition plan engagement

with high emitting customers and

consider how to integrate into

customer assessments



S

et targets to reduce metrics for

‘financed emissions’ for key sectors

towards a net zero goal by 2050



C

onsider expanding new metrics for

measuring impact of our progress on

environmental sustainability to other

key sectors



C

ontinue to evolve our

reporting with leading

practices to measure the

alignment of our lending

with the Paris

Agreement goals


Reduce ANZ’s

operational emissions

in line with the

decarbonisation

trajectory of the Paris

Agreement goals

This is the fourth year we have reported using the TCFD. For detailed information see ‘ANZ 2020 Climate-related Financial Disclosures’

on anz.com/annualreport

35

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

We are supporting household, business and financial practices that improve environmental
sustainability. One way we do this is through encouraging and supporting 100 of our largest

emitting customers to establish, and where appropriate, strengthen existing low carbon

transition plans, by 2021.

Supporting Wesfarmers to transition

to net zero emissions

CUSTOMER STORY

ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY

“For us, transitioning to achieve net zero

emissions from our business is about doing

what’s right and good for the environment,

and we want to step up and contribute

in a responsible way. It’s also what our

customers believe in and want from us,

and so from that perspective it also

makes good business sense.”

To achieve its goals, Naomi says Wesfarmers

is pulling on numerous levers to significantly

reduce its emissions.

“We’re investing heavily in energy

efficiencies in our retail businesses through

new technology, solar panels and LED

lighting. And in our industrial business

we’re investing catalyst technologies

to reduce emissions intensity.”

Wesfarmers has banked with ANZ since the

1980s and we are supporting the company

in its transition journey.

“We value the role ANZ plays as a key

banking partner – especially with respect

to the open and constructive dialogue we

have with them on our transition agenda,”

says Naomi.

Headquartered in

Western Australia and

with around 107, 000

employees, Wesfarmers

Limited is one of Australia’s

largest listed companies,

with diversified operations

spanning across almost

30 retail and industrial

businesses.

Better known for its consumer brands such

as Bunnings, Kmart and Officeworks, it also

has interests in fertilisers, chemicals and in

the energy sector.

In September this year, it announced an

accelerated agenda to set and achieve net

zero emissions for its retail operations by

2030, and its industrial businesses by 2050.

This is on top of existing 2025 emissions

reduction targets.

Naomi Flutter, an Executive General

Manager at Wesfarmers said its climate

action was driven by a commitment to

contributing positively to the global goal

of achieving net zero emissions by 2050.

36

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overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

According to Hamish Reid, Director of
Sustainability and Brand at Synlait, “we

need to act now and we need to be bold.

It’s both a matter of mitigating climate-

related risks and at the same time, seizing

opportunities to reimagine all aspects

of our business and value chain.”

Synlait is implementing a range of initiatives

to reduce emissions and deliver long-term

financial benefits.

Targets relating to climate, welfare, water

and waste have been set – including an

off-farm² 50% reduction in GHG emissions

per kg of product by 2028, and an on-farm

35% reduction in GHG emissions per kg of

milk solids by 2028.

Within its on-farm certification program,

Lead With Pride™, educational resources

and milk price incentives are being offered

to its farmer suppliers to implement best

practice GHG mitigation techniques. It

has also recently opted for an energy and

emissions efficient electrode boiler, rather

than the traditional coal-fired boiler, to

run its fresh milk and cream facility in

Canterbury, NZ.

Synlait has been an ANZ customer since

2000, when the company’s founders bought

their first few Canterbury dairy farms, before

then expanding into processing in 2008. In

2019, ANZ arranged and funded a NZ$50 million

sustainability linked loan which has supported

Synlait’s sustainability agenda.

“ANZ enabled us to enter into an ESG linked

loan, sending two strong signals to our

stakeholders. First, that leading banks today

recognise that sustainability performance

results in lower risk, and second, that

sustainability performance can lead to

financial benefits. Having a diversity of

like-minded partners accompanying us

in our transition is critical for us to achieve

our goals,” says Hamish.

Another customer ANZ is assisting with

its transition towards a low carbon future

is Silver Fern Farms Limited.

Since 2018, the grass-fed red meat

processing and exporting company has

reduced its GHG emissions by 8%, and

reduced its fossil fuel usage by 12% since

2017. It is targeting a 30% reduction on

2005 levels of the GHG emissions intensity

of its operations per tonne of product

before 2030.

“We’ve taken a number of steps to embed

sustainability within our company, from

being the first red meat processor to certify

our carbon footprint in New Zealand, to

having strong Board involvement in our

sustainability agenda, to incorporating

sustainability and climate reporting into

our parent co-operative’s external

disclosures,” says Justin Courtney, Head

of Communications and Sustainability

from Silver Fern Farms.

Silver Fern Farms uses a ‘whole of farm’

system approach to reduce carbon in the

supply chain as a way to enhance the

natural, biodiverse farming environments

in New Zealand.

“In addition to our own initiatives, such

as sourcing animals from farms rich in

biodiversity and sourcing electricity from

100% renewable sources, we’re proactively

working with suppliers to better understand

their carbon footprints and where the

opportunities lie to reduce and optimise

carbon absorption on their farms,” says Justin.

The engagement with our largest emitting

customers on their transition plans is a top

priority for ANZ, as we seek to support them

to manage the climate-related risks and

opportunities. Synlait and Silver Fern Farms

are just two out of the 100 customers we

are engaging with on their transition plans.

1. www.mpi.govt.nz/protection-and-response/environment-and-natural-resources/emissions-trading-scheme/agriculture-and-greenhouse-gases/ 2. On-farm: Synlait’s farmer suppliers

(scope 3). Off-farm: Synlait’s own manufacturing processes (scope 1 and 2) and non-farm scope 3 emissions.

CUSTOMER STORY

ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY

Greenhouse Gas Emissions

(GHG) from the food

and fibre sector, (and its

associated waste) account

for around half of New

Zealand’s total emissions.¹

Synlait Milk Limited is

working hard to reduce

emissions in line with its

commitment to the Paris

Agreement goals.

New Zealand’s agribusinesses leading

the way on transition planning

37

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

SHAREHOLDERS
BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Board reserved powers and delegation of authority

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER



GROUP EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE


Governance

Digital Business

and Technology

Committee

Ethics, Environment,

Social and Governance

Committee

Human

Resources

Committee

Audit

Committee

Nomination and

Board Operations

Committee

Risk

Committee

Corporate Governance Framework

ANZZs strong governance framework provides a solid structure for eOective and responsible

decision-making within the organisation.

Board of Directors

The Board is responsible for the oversight of ANZ and its sound and

prudent management, with specific duties as set out in its charter

available at anz.com/corporategovernance.

There are six principal Board Committees – the Audit Committee,

the Ethics, Environment, Social and Governance Committee, the Risk

Committee, the Human Resources Committee, the Digital Business

and Technology Committee and the Nomination and Board

Operations Committee.

Each Committee has its own charter setting out its roles and

responsibilities. At management level, the Group Executive

Committee comprises ANZ’s most senior executives. There is a

delegations of authority framework that clearly outlines those

matters delegated to the CEO and other members of senior

management.

For further detail on ANZ’s governance framework see our

2020 Corporate Governance Statement available at

anz.com/corporategovernance.

Full biography details can be found on our website at

anz.com/directors and on pages 44–48 of this report.

38

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overview

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report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Chairman, Independent Non-Executive Director
PAUL O'SULLIVAN

Independent Non-Executive DirectorIndependent Non-Executive Director

Chief Executive Officer, Executive Director

SHAYNE ELLIOTT

Independent Non-Executive DirectorIndependent Non-Executive Director

Independent Non-Executive DirectorIndependent Non-Executive Director

JOHN MACFARLANE

JANE HALTON, AO PSM

ILANA ATLAS, AO PAULA DWYER

GRAEME LIEBELT

RT HON SIR JOHN KEY, GNZM AC

39

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Directors’ meetings
The number of Board, and Board Committee, meetings held during the year and each Directors’ attendance at those meetings are set out below:

Board

Risk

Committee

Audit

Committee

Human

Resources

Committee

Ethics,

Environment,

Social and

Governance

Committee

Digital Business

and Technology

Committee

Special

Committee

of the Board

1

Nominations

and Board

Operations

Shares

Committee

1

ABABABABABABABABAB

PAUL O'SULLIVAN

111155555511

ILANA ATLAS, AO

14148866551111

PAULA DWYER

141477886611

SHAYNE ELLIOTT

141422

DAVID GONSKI, AC

2

141477886655661133

JANE HALTON, AO PSM

141466556611

RT HON SIR JOHN KEY, GNZM AC

141477556511

GRAEME LIEBELT

141477886611

JOHN MACFARLANE

141477886611

Column A Indicates the number of meetings the Director was eligible to attend as a member. Column B Indicates the number of meetings attended. The Chairman became an ex-officio

member of the Risk, Audit, Human Resources, Ethics, Environment, Social and Governance, Digital Business and Technology and Nomination and Board Operations Committees on 28 October

2020, upon David Gonski's retirement. With respect to Committee meetings, the table above records attendance of Committee members. Any Director is entitled to attend these meetings

and from time to time Directors attend meetings of Committees of which they are not a member. 1. The meetings of the Special Committee of the Board and Shares Committee as referred

to in the table above include those conducted by written resolution. 2. David Gonski retired as Chairman and as a Non-Executive Director on 28 October 2020.

40

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information

Executive Committee
Below from left to right

1


Emma Gray

Group Executive Data and Automation

Joined the Executive Committee on 1 May 2020

2


Maile Carnegie

Group Executive Digital and Australia Transformation

Joined the Executive Committee on 27 June 2016.

3


Farhan Faruqui

Group Executive International

Joined the Executive Committee on 1 February 2016.

4


Gerard Florian

Group Executive Technology

Joined the Executive Committee on 30 January 2017.

5


Alexis George

Deputy Chief Executive Officer and

Group Executive Wealth Australia

Joined the Executive Committee on 1 December 2016.

6


Kathryn van der Merwe

Group Executive Talent and Culture

Joined the Executive Committee on 1 May 2017.

7


Kevin Corbally

Group Chief Risk Officer

Joined the Executive Committee on 19 March 2018.

8


Mark Whelan

Group Executive Institutional

Joined the Executive Committee* on 20 October 2014.

9


Antonia Watson

Chief Executive Officer New Zealand

Joined the Executive Committee on 17 June 2019.

10


Shayne Elliott

Chief Executive Officer

(appointed CEO on 1 January 2016).

Joined the Executive Committee* on 1 June 2009.

11


Michelle Jablko

Chief Financial Officer

Joined the Executive Committee on 18 July 2016.

12


Mark Hand

Group Executive Australia Retail

and Commercial Banking

Joined the Executive Committee on 15 May 2018.

*previously known as Management Board.

Full biography details can be found on our website at anz.com/exco.

41

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

CRISIS MANAGEMENT
The Board and its Committees engage in key strategic, governance and oversight activities

each year. The list below is not a comprehensive list of all the matters but is illustrative to

provide stakeholders with an insight into some of the key matters considered by the

Board during the year.

Board areas of focus

Over the year, Australia and the world has faced many crises,

and the Board and its Committees have played an active role

in providing oversight of the impact of and ANZ’s response

to, them, including the bushfires in Australia and the

COVID-19 pandemic.

In relation to the Australian bushfires, this included reviewing ANZ’s

customer relief response, the impact to our customers, staff and the

economy generally, ANZ’s public commitments and contributions,

and ANZ’s next steps to support ongoing resilience for communities

affected by this and future disasters. In addition to this, the Board

attended a bushfire marketplace where ANZ hosted at its Melbourne

Head Office small business customers and their peers who had

been impacted by the devastating bushfires in Victoria where

customers sold their goods and services.

In relation to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Board adopted a

multi-faceted approach utilising the range of its Committees as

well as discussions at the Board itself. At the onset of the pandemic,

Directors received a weekly informal briefing as to developments,

supplemented with more detailed discussions at Board and

Committee meetings.

Key topics of those discussions included:

•the measur

es put in place to support our customers, customer

take up of those measures, ANZ’s delivery of those measures and

ongoing communications with impacted customers;

•the impac

t of the pandemic on the economy (domestic and

international, looking at both the immediate and longer-term

impacts of the pandemic), on various industries, and ANZ’s risk

approach to them, including risk appetite settings;

•discussions r

egarding the impact of the pandemic on the

financial performance and position of the Group, including in

relation to capital requirements and the payment of dividends

to shareholders;

•the impac

t of the pandemic on ANZ’s people, and the different

geographic responses undertaken in the jurisdictions ANZ

operates in, the steps ANZ was taking to protect and support its

people and to prepare and equip them for operating remotely,

including looking at the potential cultural impacts this may have.

The Board also had numerous discussions in relation to geopolitical

matters and their potential impact on ANZ’s operations.

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The Board and its Committees
also continued overseeing the

important work being carried out

by Management to implement the

lessons learnt from the Royal

Commission, progress against ANZ’s

self-assessment roadmap, as well

as ANZ’s approach to improving

organisational and risk culture.

In addition, the Board continued its

oversight of customer remediation,

highlighting the importance to the Group

of redressing customers when things go

wrong and providing oversight of

prevention and detection activities.

The Board and its Committees also had

detailed and regular updates in relation

to interactions with regulators around the

world, including ASIC, APRA, AUSTRAC,

AFCA, RBNZ, FMA and MAS. Directors also

met with key regulators during the course

of the year with the purpose of maintaining

constructive and two-way dialogue.

The Board and its Committees also had

numerous meetings in relation to

developing ANZ’s Compliance Strategy,

its approach to the management of

non-financial risks, risk appetite settings

and the triennial independent review

of ANZ’s approach to compliance with

APRA Prudential Standard CPS 220 “Risk

Management”.

The Board and its Committees also

discussed key environmental and social

risk matters, including ANZ’s approach to

climate change, reviewing and approving

ANZ’s Climate Change Statement, reviewing

ANZ’s industry association alignment with

climate policy and changes to Modern

Slavery and Human Rights laws.

In addition to the informal briefings

around the COVID-19 pandemic,

meetings with regulators and attending

the bushfire marketplace outlined

above, the Directors continued their

approach to meeting with customers,

staff and investors, both in person

and virtually.

This included having a virtual session with

all of ANZ’s Country Heads to discuss topical

matters impacting their businesses.

A subset of Directors played an active role

in attending meetings with Management

throughout the year to actively engage and

challenge their approach to stress testing

the portfolio against severe but plausible

events to inform risk appetite setting and

capital planning processes.

Prior to the pandemic, the Board had

established regular meetings in diverse

geographic areas with a view to maximising

interactions with customers, staff and other

stakeholders. It is envisaged that this will

continue when the environment allows it.

During the financial year, the Board held

physical meetings in Melbourne, Sydney

and Brisbane.

The Board and its Committees

continued to focus on longer-term

strategic matters. Directors participated

in an annual Board strategy session

utilising internal and external experts to

challenge and provide different points

of view to assist the Board and

Management in setting the strategic

direction of the Group.

The Board received regular updates on the

implementation of the Group’s strategy

from the Chief Executive Officer, and

corresponding updates from Risk and

Internal Audit in relation to their

assessments of the risks associated with

Management’s approach to implementing

the strategy.

The Board also received numerous updates

in relation to the strategic approach to

digitally transform its Australian Retail

and Commercial business.

Finally, the Board carried out succession

planning in respect of the Chairman,

with the Board appointing Paul O’Sullivan

to succeed David Gonski, following his

retirement on 28 October 2020.

RISK, REGULATION AND REPUTATION

ENGAGEMENT

STRATEGY AND THE FUTURE

43

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

As at the date of this report, the Board
comprises seven Non-Executive Directors and

one Executive Director, the Chief Executive

Officer. David Gonski was Chairman and a

Non-Executive Director from 2014 until his

retirement in October 2020. The names of

the current Directors, together with details

of their qualifications, experience and

special responsibilities are set out below.

Audit Committee

Ethics, Environment, Social and

Governance Committee

Risk Committee

Human Resources Committee

Digital Business and Technology Committee

Nomination and Board Operations Committee

Paul O’Sullivan

CHAIR

MEMBER

POSITION

Chairman, Independent Non-Executive Director

QUALIFICATIONS

BA (Mod) Economics, Advanced Management Program of Harvard

RESPONSIBILITIES

Chairman since October 2020 and a Non-Executive Director since

November 2019.

Paul is an ex-officio member of all Board Committees and Chair of

the Ethics, Environment, Social and Governance Committee and

the Nomination and Board Operations Committee.

CAREER

Paul has experience in the telecommunications and oil

and gas sectors, both in Australia and overseas. He has held senior

executive roles with Singapore Telecommunications (Singtel) and

was previously the CEO of Optus. He has also held management

roles with the Colonial Group and the Royal Dutch Shell Group in

Canada, the Middle East, Australia and United Kingdom.

RELEVANT OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS

Chairman: Singtel Optus Pty Limited (from 2014, Director from

2004) and Western Sydney Airport Corporation (from 2017).

Director: Coca-Cola Amatil (from 2017), Telkomsel Indonesia

(from 2010) and St Vincent’s Health Australia (from 2019).

RELEVANT FORMER DIRECTORSHIPS HELD IN LAST

THREE YEARS INCLUDE

Former Director: Healthscope Limited (2016–2019) and

National Disability Insurance Agency (2017–2020).

Age

|

60 yearsResidence

|

Sydney, Australia

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overview

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report

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Directors’ qualifications, experience

and special responsibilities

Shayne Elliott
POSITION

Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director

QUALIFICATIONS

BCom

RESPONSIBILITIES

Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director since

1 January 2016.

CAREER

Shayne has over 30 years’ experience in banking in Australia and

overseas, in all aspects of the industry. Shayne joined ANZ as CEO

Institutional in June 2009, and was appointed Chief Financial

Officer in 2012.

Prior to joining ANZ, Shayne held senior executive roles at EFG

Hermes, the largest investment bank in the Middle East, which

included Chief Operating Officer. He started his career with Citibank

New Zealand and worked with Citibank/Citigroup for 20 years,

holding various senior positions across the UK, USA, Egypt, Australia

and Hong Kong.

Shayne is a Director of the Financial Markets Foundation for Children

and a member of the Australian Banking Association, the Business

Council of Australia and the Australian Customs Advisory Board.

RELEVANT OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS

Director: ANZ Bank New Zealand Limited (from 2009) and

the Financial Markets Foundation for Children (from 2016).

Member: Business Council of Australia (from 2016), the Australian

Banking Association (from 2016, Chairman 2017-2019) and the

Australian Customs Advisory Board (from 2020).

Age

|

56 yearsResidence

|

Melbourne, Australia

Ilana Atlas, AO

CHAIR

MEMBER

POSITION

Independent Non-Executive Director

QUALIFICATIONS

BJuris (Hons), LLB (Hons), LLM

RESPONSIBILITIES

Non-Executive Director since September 2014. Ilana is Chair of

the Human Resources Committee and is a member of the Audit

Committee, Ethics, Environment, Social and Governance

Committee and the Nomination and Board Operations

Committee.

CAREER

Ilana brings a strong financial services background and legal

experience to the Board. Ilana was a partner at law firm Mallesons

Stephen Jaques (now King & Wood Mallesons), where in addition

to her practice in corporate law, she held a number of management

roles in the firm including Executive Partner, People and Information,

and Managing Partner. She also worked at Westpac for 10 years,

where her roles included Group Secretary and General Counsel

and Group Executive, People, where she was responsible for human

resources, corporate affairs and sustainability. Ilana has a strong

commitment to the community, in particular the arts and education.

RELEVANT OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS

Chairman: Coca-Cola Amatil Limited (from 2017, Director from

2011) and Jawun (from 2017, Director from 2014).

Director: Paul Ramsay Foundation (from 2017).

Member: Panel of Adara Partners (from 2015).

RELEVANT FORMER DIRECTORSHIPS HELD IN LAST

THREE YEARS INCLUDE

Former Director: OneMarket Limited (2018-2019), Westfield

Corporation Limited (2014–2018), Human Rights Law Centre Ltd

(2012–2017) and Treasury Corporation of New South Wales

(2013–2017).

Former Fellow: Senate of the University of Sydney (2015–2019).

Age

|

66 yearsResidence

|

Sydney, Australia

45

OveriwiwrOHHo cratluPf

Paula Dwyer
CHAIR

MEMBER

POSITION

Independent Non-Executive Director

QUALIFICATIONS

BCom, FCA, SF Fin, FAICD

RESPONSIBILITIES

Non-Executive Director since April 2012. Paula is Chair of

the Audit Committee and is a member of the Risk Committee,

Human Resources Committee and Nomination and Board

Operations Committee.

CAREER

Paula has extensive experience in financial markets, corporate

finance, risk management and investments, having held senior

executive roles at Calibre Asset Management, Ord Minnett (now

J P Morgan) and at Price Waterhouse (now PricewaterhouseCoopers).

Her career as a company director spans financial services,

investment, insurance, healthcare, gambling and entertainment,

fast moving consumer goods, property and construction and

retailing sectors. Paula has a strong interest in education and

medical research, having served as a member of the Geelong

Grammar School Council and the Business and Economics

Faculty at the University of Melbourne and as Deputy Chairman

of Baker IDI.

RELEVANT OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS

Chairman: Tabcorp Holdings Limited (from 2011, Director from

2005), Kin Group Advisory Board (from 2014) and Allianz Australia

Limited (from 2020, Director from 2019).

Director: Lion Pty Ltd (from 2012).

Member: Kirin International Advisory Board (from 2012) and

Australian Government Takeovers Panel (from 2017).

RELEVANT FORMER DIRECTORSHIPS HELD IN LAST

THREE YEARS INCLUDE

Former Chairman: Healthscope Limited (2014-2019).

Age

|

60 yearsResidence

|

Melbourne, Australia

Jane Halton, AO PSM

CHAIR

MEMBER

POSITION

Independent Non-Executive Director

QUALIFICATIONS

BA (Hons) Psychology, FIPAA, Hon. FAAHMS, Hon. FACHSE,

Hon. DLitt, FAIM , FAICD

RESPONSIBILITIES

Non-Executive Director since October 2016. Jane is Chair of the

Digital Business and Technology Committee and is

a member

of the Human Resources Committee, Ethics, Environment,

Social and Governance Committee and Nomination and

Board Operations Committee.

CAREER

Jane’s 33 year career in the public service includes the positions of

Secretary of the Australian Department of Finance, Secretary of the

Australian Department of Health, Secretary for the Department of

Health and Ageing, and Executive Co-ordinator (Deputy Secretary)

of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. She brings to

the Board extensive experience in finance, insurance, risk management,

information technology, human resources, health and ageing and

public policy. She also has significant international experience.

Jane has contributed extensively to community health through local

and international organisations including the World Health Organisation

and National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Council.

RELEVANT OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS

Chairman: Vault Systems (from 2017), Coalition for Epidemic

Preparedness Innovations (Norway) (from 2018, Member from

2016) and Council on the Ageing Australia (from 2017).

Director: Clayton Utz (from 2017) and Crown Resorts Limited

(from 2018).

Member: Executive Board of the Institute of Health Metrics and

Evaluation at the University of Washington (from 2007) and National

COVID-19 Commission Advisory Board (from 2020).

Adjunct Professor: University of Sydney and University of Canberra.

Council Member: Australian Strategic Policy Institute (from 2016).

Age

|

60 yearsResidence

|

Canberra, Australia

Directors’ qualifications, experience and special responsibilities continued

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RT Hon Sir John Key,
GNZM AC

MEMBER

POSITION

Independent Non-Executive Director

QUALIFICATIONS

BCom, DCom (Honoris Causa)

RESPONSIBILITIES

Non-Executive Director since February 2018. Sir John is a

member of the Ethics, Environment, Social and Governance

Committee, Risk Committee, Digital Business and Technology

Committee and Nomination and Board Operations Committee.

CAREER

Sir John was Prime Minister of New Zealand from 2008 to 2016,

having commenced his political career in 2002. Sir John had a long

career in international finance, primarily for Bankers Trust in New

Zealand and Merrill Lynch in Singapore, London and Sydney. He was

previously a member of the Foreign Exchange Committee of the

Federal Reserve Bank of New York (from 1999 to 2001).

Sir John was made a Knight Grand Companion of the New Zealand

Order of Merit in the 2017 Queen’s Birthday Honours. In 2017 Sir

John became a Companion of the Order of Australia for advancing

the Australia-New Zealand bilateral relationship.

RELEVANT OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS

Chairman: ANZ Bank New Zealand Limited (from 2018,

Director from 2017).

Director: Palo Alto Networks (from 2019).

RELEVANT FORMER DIRECTORSHIPS HELD IN LAST

THREE YEARS INCLUDE

Former Chairman: The International Democratic Union

(2014–2018).

Former Director: Air New Zealand Limited (2017-2020).

Age

|

59 yearsResidence

|

Auckland, New Zealand

Graeme Liebelt

CHAIR

MEMBER

POSITION

Independent Non-Executive Director

QUALIFICATIONS

BEc (Hons), FAICD, FTSE, FIML

RESPONSIBILITIES

Non-Executive Director since July 2013. Graeme is Chair of the

Risk Committee and is a member of the Audit Committee, Human

Resources Committee and Nomination and Board Operations

Committee.

CAREER

Graeme brings to the Board his experience of a 23-year executive

career with Orica Limited (including a period as Chief Executive

Officer), a global mining services company with operations in more

than 50 countries. He has extensive international experience and a

strong record of achievement as a senior executive, including in

strategy development and implementation. Graeme is committed

to global trade and cooperation, as well as community education.

RELEVANT OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS

Chairman: Amcor Limited (from 2013, Director from 2012)

Director: Australian Foundation Investment Company Limited

(from 2012) and Carey Baptist Grammar School (from 2012).

RELEVANT FORMER DIRECTORSHIPS HELD IN LAST

THREE YEARS INCLUDE

Former Chairman: DuluxGroup Limited (2018–2019, Director

from 2016).

Age

|

66 yearsResidence

|

Melbourne, Australia

47

OveriwiwrOHHo cratluPf

John Macfarlane
MEMBER

POSITION

Independent Non-Executive Director

QUALIFICATIONS

BCom, MCom (Hons)

RESPONSIBILITIES

Non-Executive Director since May 2014. John is a member

of the Audit Committee, Risk Committee, Digital Business

and Technology Committee and Nomination and Board

Operations Committee.

CAREER

John is one of Australia’s most experienced international bankers

having previously served as Executive Chairman of Deutsche Bank

Australia and New Zealand, and CEO of Deutsche Bank Australia.

John has also worked in the USA, Japan and PNG, and brings to

the Board a depth of banking experience in ANZ’s key markets in

Australia, New Zealand and the Asia Pacific. He is committed to

community health, and is a Director of the Aikenhead Centre

of Medical Discovery Limited (from 2016).

RELEVANT OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS

Director: Colmac Group Pty Ltd (from 2014), AGInvest Holdings

Limited (MyFarm Limited) (from 2014, Chairman 2014–2016),

Balmoral Pastoral Investments (from 2017) and L1 Long Short

Fund (from 2018).

RELEVANT FORMER DIRECTORSHIPS HELD IN LAST

THREE YEARS INCLUDE

Former Director: St Vincent’s Institute of Medical Research

(2008–2019) and Craigs Investment Partners Limited (2013-2020).

Age

|

60 yearsResidence

|

Melbourne, Australia

Ken Adams

POSITION QUALIFICATIONS

Group General Counsel BA, LLB, LLM

Ken joined ANZ as Group General Counsel in August 2019, having

assisted ANZ with major legal issues for over 10 years. Prior to ANZ,

Ken was a Partner of Freehills and later Herbert Smith Freehills for

21 years, and for 6 years was a member of the Herbert Smith

Freehills Global Board. Ken is one of Australia’s leading commercial

lawyers with significant experience in class actions, and complex

problems requiring strategic and multi-disciplinary analysis. He

holds a Master of Laws from the University of Melbourne and is

a co-author of Class Actions in Australia.

Simon Pordage

POSITION QUALIFICATIONS

Company Secretary LLB (Hons), FGIA, FCG (CS, CGP)

Simon joined ANZ in May 2016. He is a Chartered Secretary and

Chartered Governance Practitioner and has extensive company

secretarial and corporate governance experience. From 2009 to 2016

he was Company Secretary for Australian Foundation Investment

Company Limited and a number of other listed investment companies.

Other former roles include being Deputy Company Secretary for ANZ

and Head of Board Support for Barclays PLC in the United Kingdom.

He is a formal brand ambassador for, and is a former National President

and Chairman of, Governance Institute of Australia, and is a member

and former Chairman of its National Legislation Review Committee.

Simon is committed to the promotion and practice of good

corporate governance, and regularly presents on governance issues.

Directors’ qualifications, experience and special responsibilities continued

Company Secretaries’ qualifications

and experience

Currently there are two people appointed as Company Secretaries

of the Company. Details of their roles are contained in the Corporate

Governance Statement.

Their qualifications and experience are as follows

48

Entvnitr

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

Our progress
This year we have continued to invest

in our Risk Management Framework,

processes and systems which has further

strengthened our ability to respond to

changes in our existing risks but also deal

with new risks that have been introduced

through the increasingly complex external

environment, with particular focus on the

areas outlined below:

COVID-19

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we

developed a range of support measures to

assist employees and customers, and to

maintain safe and secure operations. The

risk management function contributed to

the successful execution of this support,

including through:

•Enactment of our Business Continuity

Plan enabling our operations to respond

swiftly to the changing environment

without material disruption to critical

business services. This allowed us

to continue operating through the

pandemic by:

–scaling of remote working capacity,

enabling the majority of non-branch

employees to work productively

from home

–ensuring no material impacts on

critical business services

–r

emaining agile and able to adapt

to changing conditions in line with

government restrictions.

•C

ontinued partnering with our

businesses to protect the bank by:

– p

rioritising the re-rating of the Wholesale

book, with re-ratings complete for

93% of our total Institutional portfolio,

74% of our total Commercial Australia

portfolio, and 83% of our New Zealand

Commercial & Agri portfolios; and

– undertaking a series of industry deep

dives and stress tests across our

portfolios to assess potential

credit outcomes.

•I

nvestment in systems, providing:

– enhanced data analytics to better

analyse and observe customer

behaviour


an improved collections and

hardship platform that enables

customers to manage their arrears

online while facilitating holistic

conversations with customers

about their financial situation.

Culture and conduct

•We recognise that an ethical culture is

a pre-determinant for us to deliver on

our strategy, and that in order to prevent

unfair customer outcomes we need to

be able to identify and understand any

behavioural misalignment in order to

take corrective action. This year, to further

enhance how we measure, monitor and

manage conduct risk, we have explored

the use of behavioural science techniques

to improve compliant behaviour and will

look to apply the methodology more

broadly in the coming year.

•I

n order to align with ANZ’s aspirational

culture, priorities for this year have

continued to focus on transforming

behaviours through: focusing on

'speak-up'; continuing to strengthen

our Accountability and Consequence

Framework; fortifying leadership; further

embedding the new remuneration,

recognition and performance

management framework; listening

and responding to our people; and

fostering an 'always learning' culture.

•R

isk culture (as a critical component of

our organisational culture) remains an

important focus for the organisation. In

addition to targeted initiatives created

to enhance elements of our risk culture,

our evolution to a more explicit and

simple approach to the management and

measurement of risk culture will allow us

to more easily monitor progress towards

our desired risk culture state, and assess

the effectiveness of our actions.

Non-financial risk

We are continuing to improve the way in

which we manage our obligations and

operational risks, following the redesign

and simplification of our non-financial risk

framework in 2019. Our Compliance and

Operational Risk Strategy provides a

comprehensive, proactive and well-planned

approach to improving ANZ’s management

of non-financial risk, guided by our purpose

and contributing to the bank’s strategic

priority to improve the financial wellbeing

of our customers.

Financial crime

Protecting the Australian banking system

from criminal use is one of our most

important roles. We continue to invest

in our financial crime risk management

program to ensure we regularly assess

and manage our financial crime risks.

Our program is designed to be compliant

with our financial crime obligations and

we report information that is useful to

government authorities to disrupt

financial crime. Further information is

in our 2020 ESG Supplement available

at anz.com/cs.

Risk management

2020 has seen the external operating environment dramatically impacted by a number of events,

notably the COVID-19 pandemic, the effects of which continue to unfold. The strength of the

ANZ Risk Management Framework has underpinned our response to the crisis. It has provided

the flexibility to adapt to the rapidly changing environment while maintaining sound risk

management practices.

49

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

LINKS TO 2020 GROUP PERFORMANCE FRAMEWORK
COVID-19 introduced a range of both new and increased risks for ANZ, our employees and our customers. Our existing strong Risk

Management Framework enabled us to respond well to these risks. We have continued to develop and improve our financial and

operational resilience and have maintained our focus on managing risk controls, demonstrating accountability for fixing issues in

a timely and sustainable manner. Strong progress continues on risk culture maturity, evidenced in employee engagement scores,

with ‘Leaders accountable for risk’ (87%) – up on 2019, and ‘Raise issues without fear of reprisal’ (74%) – also up on 2019.

See section 4.5.3 of the Remuneration report for more details.

Emerging risks

Three risks that continue to evolve and

that we seek to better understand are:

Geopolitical risk: We continue to closely

monitor and support our businesses to

manage ongoing geopolitical tensions

and uncertainty.

Cybersecurity risk: Our approach to

mitigating cybersecurity risk involves

a range of controls relying on people,

technology and process and we are

continually testing our defences internally

and through independent third parties.

For further detail on our approach to

cybersecurity risk refer to pages 19 to 20.

Climate change risk: The financial risks

associated with climate change remain a

key focus. Developing an enhanced risk

management framework that anticipates

potential climate-related impacts, and

associated regulatory requirements is a

priority. We have set a new ESG target

to develop this enhanced framework

by FY22. For further detail on our

approach to climate-related financial

risk refer to pages 34 to 35.

Our Risk Management

Framework

The Board is responsible for establishing

and overseeing the Group’s Risk

Management Framework (RMF). The

Board has delegated authority to the

Board Risk Committee (BRC) to develop

and monitor compliance with the Group’s

risk management policies. The Committee

reports regularly to the Board on its

activities. The key pillars of the Group’s

RMF include:

•the Risk Appetite Statement (RAS),

which sets out the Board’s expectations

regarding the degree of risk that the

Group is prepared to accept in pursuing

its strategic objectives and its operating

plan; and

•the R

isk Management Statement (RMS),

which describes the Group’s strategy

for managing risks and a summary of

the key elements of the RMF that give

effect to that strategy. The RMS includes:

a description of each material risk; and

an overview of how the RMF addresses

each risk, with reference to the relevant

policies, standards and procedures. It also

includes information on how the Group

identifies, measures, evaluates, monitors,

reports and then either controls or

mitigates material risks.

The Group operates a Three Lines-

of-Defence Model in regard to risk

management that helps embed a culture

where risk is everyone’s responsibility. The

business – as the first line of defence – has

day to day ownership of risks and controls

and is accountable for identifying and

managing its own risks. The Group Risk

function is the second line of defence,

providing a strong and independent

oversight of the work undertaken to

manage the risk, as well as developing

and maintaining the Risk Management

Framework. The final line of defence is

Internal Audit and includes independent

assurance that evaluates the adequacy

and effectiveness of both first and second

line risk management approaches.

The governance and oversight of risk,

while embedded in day-to-day activities,

is also the focus of committees and regular

forums across the bank (see diagram next

page). The committees and forums discuss

and monitor known and emerging risks,

reviewing management plans and

monitoring progress to address

known issues.

The risk

landscape

is continually

evolving and we are

therefore constantly

reviewing issues to

consider their materiality

to the bank’s operations.

"The strength and adaptability of the bank's

risk function has played a key role in helping

navigate the organisation through the

current changing environment."

Kevin Corbally, Chief Risk Officer

50

Entvnitr

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

BOARD OF DIRECTORS
PRINCIPAL BOARD COMMITTEES

Group

Country

Division

Credit & Market

Risk Committee

(CMRC)

Regional or Country Risk

Management Committees (RMCs)

Group Asset &

Liability Committee

(GALCO)

Country Assets and Liabilities

Committees (ALCOs)

Operational Risk

Executive

Committee (OREC)

Ethics &

Responsible

Business Committee

(ERBC)

Investment

Committee

Credit Ratings

System Oversight

Committee

(CRSOC)

Sub-commitee of CMRC

Capital and Stress

Testing Oversight

Committee

(CSTOC)

Sub-commitee of GALCO

Modelling Ratings Working Groups

and Usage Forums

Various Division Specific

Management Committees

Divisional

Consequence

Review

Groups

Divisional

Initiatives

Review

Committees

(DIRC) /

Project Advisory

Councils (PAC)

Divisional

Risk

Management

Committees

(RMC)

Wholesale

Ratings

Working

Group

(WRWG)

Retail

Ratings

Working

Group

(RRWG)

Operational

Risk

Committees

Product

Committees

Wholesale

Model

Usage

Forum

(WMUF)

Audit

Committee

KEY MANAGEMENT COMMITTEES

CEO

Ethics, Environment,

Social & Governance

Committee

Risk

Committee

Digital Business

& Technology

Committee

Nomination &

Board Operations

Committee

Human

Resources

Committee

Consequence

Review Group

Divisional

Consequence

Review

Groups

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

ANZ's most senior executives meet regularly to discuss performance and review shared initiatives

GROUP PERFORMANCE AND EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE (GPEC)

Oversight of the Group's overall operational performance and position and the execution of the operating plan

51

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Key material risks
Risk typeDescriptionManaging the riskMaterial

ESG issues

1

Capital

Adequacy

Risk

The risk of loss arising from the Group

failing to maintain the level of capital

required by prudential regulators and

other key stakeholders (shareholders, debt

investors, depositors, rating agencies, etc.)

to support ANZ’s consolidated operations

and risk appetite.

We pursue an active approach to Capital Management

through ongoing review, and Board approval, of the level

and composition of our capital base against key policy

objectives.

Compliance

Risk

The risk of failure to act in accordance with

laws, regulations, industry standards and

codes, internal policies and procedures

and principles of good governance as

applicable to the Group’s businesses.

Key features of how we manage Compliance Risk as part

of our Operational Risk and Compliance Framework include:

•centralised management of key obligations, and

emphasis on identifying changes in regulations and the

business environment, so as to enable us to proactively

assess emerging compliance risks and implement

robust reporting and certification processes.

•recognition of incident management as a separate

element to enhance ANZ's ability to identify, manage

and report on incidents/breaches in a timely manner.

•the Whistleblower Protection Policy allowing employees

and contractors to make confidential, anonymous

submissions regarding concerns relating to accounting,

internal control, compliance, audit and other matters.

Credit Risk

The risk of financial loss resulting from:

•a count

erparty failing to fulfil its

obligations; or

•a decr

ease in credit quality of a

counterparty resulting in a financial loss

Credit Risk incorporates the risks

associated with us lending to customers

who could be impacted by climate

change or by changes to laws, regulations,

or other policies adopted by governments

or regulatory authorities, including carbon

pricing and climate change adaptation or

mitigation policies.

Our Credit Risk framework is top down, being defined by

credit principles and policies. Credit policies, requirements

and procedures cover all aspects of the credit life cycle

— for example: transaction structuring, risk grading, initial

approval, ongoing management and problem debt

management, as well as specialist policy topics.


Liquidity and

Funding Risk

The risk that the Group is unable to meet

its payment obligations as they fall due,

including:

•repaying depositors or maturing

wholesale debt; or

•the Gr

oup having insufficient capacity

to fund increases in assets.

Key principles in managing our Liquidity and Funding

Risk include:

•maintaining our abilit

y to meet liquidity ‘survival

horizons’ under a range of stress scenarios to meet cash

flow obligations over a short-to-medium term horizon;

•maintaining a str

ong structural funding profile; and

•maintaining a portfolio of high-quality liquid assets to

act as a source of liquidity in times of stress.

The material risks facing the group per the group’s Risk Management Statement, and how these risks are managed, are summarised below.

Note as part of the annual review of our Risk Management Strategy we have removed reputational risk as a key material risk. We recognise

that reputational risk is largely a consequence of the impact of other material risks. Reputational consequences are therefore mitigated

through the appropriate management of other material risks.

52

Overview

How we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

1. See page 3 for information on our material ESG issues
Fairness and

ethical conduct

Risk typeDescriptionManaging the riskMaterial

ESG issues

1

Market Risk

The risk to the Group’s earnings

arising from:

•changes in an

y interest rates, foreign

exchange rates, credit spreads, volatility,

and correlations; or

•fluctuations in bond, commodity or

equity prices.

Our risk management and control framework for Market

Risk involves us quantifying the magnitude of market risk

within the trading and balance sheet portfolios through

independent risk measurement. This identifies the range

of possible outcomes, the likely timeframe, and the

likelihood of the outcome occurring. Then we allocate an

appropriate amount of capital to support these activities.

Operational

Risk

The risk of loss and/or non-compliance

with laws resulting from inadequate or

failed internal processes, people and/or

systems, or from external events. This

definition includes legal risk, and the risk

of reputation loss, or damage arising from

inadequate or failed internal processes,

people and systems, but excludes

strategic risk.

We operate a three-lines-of-defence model to manage

Operational Risk, with each line of defence having

defined roles, responsibilities and escalation paths

to support effective communication and effective

management of our operational risk. We also have

ongoing review mechanisms to ensure Operational

Risk and Compliance Framework continues to meet

organisational needs and regulatory requirements.

Strategic Risk

Risks that affect or are created by an

organisation’s business strategy and

strategic objectives. Strategic risk might

arise from making poor strategic business

decisions, from the sub-standard execution

of decisions, from inadequate resource

allocation, or from a failure to respond well

to changes in the business environment.

We consider and manage strategic risks through our

annual strategic planning process, managed by the

Executive Committee and approved by the Board. Where

the strategy leads to an increase in other Key Material

Risks (e.g. Credit Risk, Market Risk, Operational Risk)

the risk management strategies associated with these

risks form the primary controls.

Technology

Risk

The risk of loss and/or non-compliance

with laws resulting from inadequate or

failed internal processes, people and

systems or from external events impacting

on IT assets, including the compromise of

an IT asset’s confidentiality, integrity

or availability.

Technology Risk is managed in accordance with ANZ’s

Operational Risk and Compliance Framework, which is

consistent with the management of Operational Risk.

Fraud and

data security

Customer

experience

Corporate

governance

Digital

innovation

For further information about

the principal risks and uncertainties

that the Group faces, see our

“Principal Risks and Uncertainties”

disclosure available at anz.com/

shareholder/centre.

53

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Performance overview
OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

54 ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

GROUP PERFORMANCE

The results of the Group’s operations and financial position are set out on pages 54-71. Page 11 outlines the Group’s strategy and pages

10-27 describes in further detail the Group’s prospects in terms of future financial position and performance. Discussion of our approach

to risk management, including a summary of our key material risks is outlined on pages 49-53.

Statutory profit after tax for the year ended 30 September 2020 decreased 40% on the prior year to $3,577 million. Statutory return on

equity is 5.9% and statutory earnings per share is 126.4 cents, a decrease of 40% on prior year.

GROUP PROFIT RESULTS

20202019

Statutory Cash Statutory Cash

Income Statement $m $m$m$m

Net interest income

14,049 14,049

14,33914,339

Other operating income

3,588 3,703

4,4464,690

Operating income

17,637 17,752

18,78519,029

Operating expenses

(9,383) (9,383)

(9,071)(9,071)

Profit before credit impairment and income tax

8,254 8,369

9,7149,958

Credit impairment charge

(2,738) (2,738)

(794)(795)

Profit before income tax

5,516 5,631

8,9209,163

Income tax expense

(1,840) (1,872)

(2,609)(2,678)

Non-controlling interests

(1) (1)

(15)(15)

Profit after tax from continuing operations

3,675 3,758

6,2966,470

Profit/(Loss) after tax from discontinued operations

(98) (98)

(343)(309)

Profit for the year

3,577 3,660

5,9536,161

The Group uses cash profit, a non-IFRS measure, to assess the performance of its business activities. It is an industry-wide measure which

enables comparison with our peer group. We calculate cash profit by adjusting statutory profit for non-core items. In general, it represents the

financial performance of our core business activities. We use cash profit internally to set targets and incentivise our Senior Executives and

leaders through our remuneration plans.

Refer to page 56 for adjustments between statutory and cash profit.

Cash profit is not subject to audit by the external auditor. Our external auditor has informed the Audit Committee that adjustments between

statutory and cash profit have been determined on a consistent basis across each of the periods presented.

As a result of the sale of our OnePath pensions and investment (OnePath P&I) and aligned dealer groups (ADG) businesses to IOOF Holdings

Limited and our life insurance business to Zurich Financial Services Australia, the financial results of these businesses and associated Group

reclassification and consolidation impacts are treated as discontinued operations from a financial reporting perspective (refer to page 67).

CORONAVIRUS (COVID-19)

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic is causing major disruptions to community health and economic activity with wide-ranging impacts across

many business sectors in Australia, New Zealand and globally. Additionally, many of the Group’s customers have been impacted by the

COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, during the year the Group launched support packages for retail and commercial customers in Australia and

New Zealand, including the option of an up to six-month loan repayment deferral. The Group is continuing to work with customers impacted

by COVID-19 to restructure loans and in some circumstances will provide an extension to loan repayment deferrals for a further period.

Regulators and governments have implemented a broad range of measures to promote financial stability in response to COVID-19. Those

measures implemented by governments and regulators in Australia and New Zealand include financial assistance packages for homeowners

and businesses, liquidity and funding initiatives to strengthen the banking system, and regulatory changes to capital requirements.

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has also increased the estimation uncertainty in the preparation of the financial statements. The Group has

made various accounting estimates for future events in the financial statements based on forecasts of economic conditions which reflect

expectations and assumptions as at 30 September 2020 and that the Group believes are reasonable under the circumstances. There is a

considerable degree of judgement involved in preparing these estimates. The underlying assumptions are also subject to uncertainties which

are often outside the control of the Group. Accordingly, actual economic conditions are likely to be different from those forecast since

anticipated events frequently do not occur as expected, and the effect of those differences may significantly impact accounting estimates

included in the financial statements.

54

OverviewHow we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)
ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 55

While pervasive across the financial statements, the estimation uncertainty is predominantly related to expected credit losses where the

Group recognised a credit impairment charge of $2.7 billion pre-tax in the year ended 30 September 2020, the fair value measurement and

recoverable amount assessments of non-financial assets where the Group recognised an impairment charge of $815 million in respect of two

of the Group’s Asian associate investments and an impairment charge of $77 million in respect of goodwill. For further details of these

estimation uncertainties refer to the detailed notes in the financial statements. The ramifications of COVID-19 continue to be uncertain and it

remains difficult to predict the impact or duration of the pandemic.

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADOPTED

During the September 2020 full year, the Group adopted AASB 16 Leases (AASB 16) and applied a modified retrospective transition approach

in recognising all leases (except for leases of low value assets and short term leases) on the balance sheet based on the present value of

remaining lease payments as of 1 October 2019. Consequently on 1 October 2019 the Group recognised an increase in lease liabilities of $1.7

billion, a right-of-use lease asset of $1.6 billion, an increase in deferred tax assets of $37 million and a net reduction to opening retained

earnings of $88 million. For further details on key requirements and impacts of the changes refer to Note 1 of the consolidated financial

statements.

The Group early adopted AASB 2019-3 Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Interest Rate Benchmark Reform from 1 October

2019. The standard modifies certain hedge accounting requirements to provide relief from the potential effects of the uncertainty caused by

interest rate benchmark reform. For further details on interest rate benchmark reform refer Note 1 of the consolidated financial statements.

CONTINUING OPERATIONS

We believe cash profit from continuing operations is a particularly important performance measure as we continue to strategically reposition

ourselves to create a simpler, better capitalised, better balanced and more agile bank. Key measures of our financial position and performance

are set out below.

1.

Information has been presented on a cash profit from continuing operations basis. Discontinued operations are detailed on page 67.

2.

The Directors propose a final dividend of 35 cents fully franked for Australia tax purposes (30% tax rate) and carry New Zealand imputation credits of NZD 4 cents per ordinary shares.

Total operating income –

cash

1

($m)

2019

2020

19,029

17,752

Operating expenses –

cash

1

($m)

2019

2020

9,071

9,383

Credit impairment

charge – cash

1

($m)

2019

2020

795

2,738

Cash prot

1

($m)

2019

2020

6,470

3,758

Return on equity –

cash

1

(%)

2019

2020

10.9

6.2

Earnings per share –

cash

1

(cents)

2019

2020

227.6

132.7

Common equity

tier 1 (%)

2019

2020

11.4

11.3

Dividend per share

(cents)

2

2019

2020

160

60

55

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

56 ANZ 2019 ANNUAL REPORT


Description of adjustments between continuing operations statutory profit and cash profit:


Adjustment Reason for the adjustment

Economic hedges

2020: $121 million

2019: $118 million


Revenue and

expense hedges


2020: ($36) million

2019: ($19) million


The Group enters into economic hedges to manage its interest rate and foreign exchange risk which, in

accordance with accounting standards, result in fair value gains and losses being recognised within the Income

Statement. ANZ removes the fair value adjustments from cash profit since the profit or loss resulting from the

hedge transactions will reverse over time to match with the profit or loss from the economically hedged item as

part of cash profit. This includes gains and losses arising from derivatives not designated in accounting hedge

relationships but which are considered to be economic hedges, including hedges of foreign currency debt

issuances and foreign exchange denominated revenue and expense streams, primarily NZD and USD (and USD

correlated), as well as ineffectiveness from designated accounting hedges.

Structured credit

intermediation

trades


2020: ($2) million

2019: ($2) million


ANZ entered into a series of structured credit intermediation trades prior to the Global Financial Crisis with eight

US financial guarantors. This involved selling credit default swaps (CDSs) as protection over specific debt structures

and purchasing CDS protection over the same structures. ANZ has subsequently exited its positions with six US

financial guarantors. The remaining two portfolios with a $0.3 billion notional value are being monitored with a

view to reducing the exposures when ANZ deems it cost effective relative to the perceived risk associated with a

specific trade or counterparty.

Revaluation of policy

liabilities – OnePath

Life (NZ)


2020: nil

2019: $77 million


When calculating policy liabilities, the projected future cash flows on insurance contracts are discounted to reflect

the present value of the obligation, with the impact of changes in the market discount rate each period being

reflected in the Income Statement. ANZ includes the impact on the re-measurement of insurance contracts

attributable to changes in market discount rates as an adjustment to statutory profit to remove the volatility

attributable to changes in market interest rates which reverts to zero over the life of insurance contracts. With the

sale completion of the OnePath Life (NZ) Ltd business this adjustment is no longer required.

1.

Information has been presented on a cash profit from continuing operations basis. Discontinued operations are detailed on page 67.

2020 Statutory

profit –

continuing

operations

2020 Cash

profit –

continuing

operations

Revenue and

expense hedges

Economic

hedges

Structured

credit

intermediation

trades

ADJUSTMENTS BETWEEN STATUTORY AND CASH PROFIT

1

3,675

3,758

(36)

121

(2)

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OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)
ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 57

GROUP CASH PROFIT PERFORMANCE

Cash profit performance and the analysis thereof has been presented on a cash profit from continuing operations basis. Discontinued

operations are described on page 67.

20202019

$m$mMovt

Net interest income

14,049

14,339-2%

Other operating income

3,703

4,690-21%

Operating income

17,752

19,029-7%

Operating expenses

(9,383)

(9,071)3%

Profit before credit impairment and income tax

8,369

9,958-16%

Credit impairment charge

(2,738)

(795)244%

Profit before income tax

5,631

9,163-39%

Income tax expense

(1,872)

(2,678)-30%

Non-controlling interests

(1)

(15)-93%

Profit after tax from continuing operations

3,758

6,470-42%

Cash profit from continuing operations decreased $2,712 million (42%) compared with the 2019 financial year.

•net interest income decreased $290 million (-2%) largely due to lower interest rates and competitive pressures resulting in a 13 basis point

decrease in the net interest margin, partially offset by 6% growth in average interest earning assets. The lower net interest margin reflects

lower earnings on capital, customers switching to principal and interest home loans in Australia and from variable to fixed loans in both

Australia and New Zealand, a higher proportionate growth in the lower margin Institutional business and the impacts of growth in liquid

assets due to increased system liquidity, partially offset by favourable short-term funding costs and growth in at-call deposits. The increase

in average interest earning assets reflects the impact of foreign currency translation movements and growth in the Institutional banking

portfolio, increases in average trading and investment securities and increases in average cash and other liquid assets.

•other operating income decreased $987 million (-21%) largely as the result of the impairment of Asian associates of $815 million, a reduction

associated with divestments of $342 million, a decrease in net fee and commission income of $252 million excluding divestment impacts, a

reduction in share of associates’ profit of $107 million, and a $79 million decrease due to widening credit spread impacts on loans measured

at fair value in Institutional. This was partially offset by higher Markets Other operating income of $598 million.

•operating expenses increased $312 million (3%) primarily due to an accelerated software amortisation charge of $197 million, lease-related

items of $85 million, higher restructuring expenses of $84 million, goodwill impairments of $77 million and higher compliance spend. This

was partially offset by lower customer remediation of $164 million within operating expenses, and productivity benefits.

•credit impairment charges increased $1,943 million largely due to additional collectively assessed credit impairment charges for the

expected impact of COVID-19.

6,470

2019 Cash

profit –

continuing

operations

3,758

2020 Cash

profit –

continuing

operations

Other

operating

income

Operating

expenses

(987)

(312)

Net interest

income

(290)

Credit

impairment

charge

(1,943)

Income tax

expense &

non-controlling

interests

820

GROUP CASH PROFIT PERFORMANCE

1

57

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

58 ANZ 2019 ANNUAL REPORT

LARGE/NOTABLE ITEMS INCLUDED IN CASH PROFIT FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS

Within continuing cash profit, the Group recognised a number of large/notable items. The impact of these items on a post-tax basis is

as follows:

2020 2019

Gain/(Loss) on sale of divestments

$m $m

OnePath Life NZ Ltd (OPL NZ)

-

157

ANZ Royal Bank (Cambodia) Ltd (Cambodia JV)

-

10

PNG Retail, Commercial and SME

-

1

Paymark

-

37

UDC Finance (UDC)

(34)

-

Divested business results

1


OnePath Life NZ Ltd (OPL NZ)

-

10

ANZ Royal Bank (Cambodia) Ltd (Cambodia JV)

-

11

PNG Retail, Commercial and SME

-

7

Paymark

-

4

UDC Finance (UDC)

57

71

Other large/notable items

Customer remediation

(279)

(475)

Accelerated software amortisation

(138)

-

Asian associates impairments

(815)

-

Asian associate AASB 9 adjustment

(66)

-

Lease-related items

(72)

-

Royal Commission legal costs

-

(10)

Restructuring

(115)

(54)

Goodwill write-off

(77)

-


1.

For business results that relate to completed divestments, comparative information has been restated for large/notable items included in the 2020 financial year.

 

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ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 59

Description of large/notable items:

Item Description

Gain/(Loss) on sale of

divestments

The 2020 financial year included a loss on sale upon completion of the sale of UDC. The 2019 financial year included

a gain on sale upon completion of the sale of OPL NZ, Paymark, Cambodia JV, and PNG Retail, Commercial and SME

businesses.

Divested business

results


The 2020 financial year includes the divested business results of UDC (comparative information restated). The 2019

financial year also included the divested business results of the Cambodia JV, OPL NZ, PNG Retail, Commercial and

SME, and Paymark.

Customer remediation


Customer remediation includes provisions for expected refunds to customers, remediation project costs and related

customer and regulatory claims, penalties and litigation outcomes.

Accelerated software

amortisation


Accelerated amortisation charge arising from the revised application of the Group’s software amortisation policy to

reflect the shorter useful life of software caused by rapidly changing technology and business requirements. Refer

to Note 20 Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets of the consolidated financial statements for further details.

Asian associates

impairments

During the 2020 financial year, the Group recognised an impairment in respect of two of the Group’s investments to

adjust their carrying values in line with their value-in-use calculations (refer Note 26 Investments in Associates of the

consolidated financial statements).

Asian associate AASB

9 adjustment

When the Group adopted AASB 9 Financial Instruments on 1 October 2018, an estimate of PT Panin’s transition

adjustment was recognised through opening retained earnings to align accounting policies. PT Panin adopted

AASB 9 during the current financial year recognising a transition adjustment in retained earnings. The adjustment

represents the Group’s equity accounted share of the transition adjustment net of the previous transition

adjustment.

Lease-related items During the 2020 financial year, the Group recognised charges associated with the adoption of the new lease

accounting standard on 1 October 2019. Comparative information has not been restated for the adoption of the

new lease accounting standard.

Royal Commission

legal costs

External legal costs associated with responding to the Banking Royal Commission.

Restructuring Restructuring charges largely related to business and property changes in Australia Retail and Commercial division.

Goodwill write-off Pacific division:


The impact of COVID-19 on the economies of the Pacific has been significant and is expected to

take some time to recover. Goodwill of $50 million was impaired. No further impairment was required on the

carrying value of other assets in the Pacific.

New Zealand division: As a result of changes in the economic environment and outlook, the Group has announced

its intention to begin winding up the Bonus Bonds business in New Zealand no later than 31 October 2020. As a

result, the Group wrote off the associated goodwill of $27 million.


59

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)
60 ANZ 2019 ANNUAL REPORT

ANALYSIS OF CASH PROFIT PERFORMANCE

Net interest income

20202019

$m$mMovt

Net interest income

1


14,049

14,339-2%

Average interest earning assets

2


862,882

813,2196%

Average deposits and other borrowings

2


679,336

638,3806%

Net interest margin (%) - cash

1,2


1.63

1.76-13bps

1.

Includes the major bank levy of -$406 million (2019: -$363 million).

2.

Average balance sheet amounts include assets and liabilities of continuing operations reclassified as held for sale.

Net interest income

decreased $290 million (-2%) largely due to lower interest rates and competitive pressures, partially offset by 6% growth

in average interest earning assets.

Net interest margin

reduced 13 bps due to the impact of central bank rate cuts on low rate deposits, earnings on capital and replicated

deposits net of repricing. This was also impacted by customers switching to principal and interest home loans in Australia and from variable to

fixed loans in both Australia and New Zealand, higher proportionate growth in the lower margin Institutional business, the impacts of growth

in liquid assets due to increased system liquidity, partially offset by favourable short-term funding costs and growth in at-call deposits.

Average interest earning assets

increased $49.7 billion (6%) reflecting growth in the Institutional banking portfolio, growth in liquid assets

and trading securities in Markets, higher central bank cash balances, higher collateral and the impact of foreign currency translation

movements.

Average deposits and other borrowings

increased $41.0 billion (6%) driven by growth in all divisions but particularly in the Institutional and

Australia Retail and Commercial divisions, and the impact of foreign currency translation movements.

1.

Market Balance Sheet activities includes the impact of discretionary liquid assets and other Balance Sheet activities.

176

2019 Cash

net interest

margin

163

Asset &

deposit

mix

Liquidity

(4)

1

(3)(2)

Impact of

rate net of

repricing

(4)

Wholesale

funding &

deposit

costs

Asset

pricing

2020 Cash

net interest

margin

subtotal

Market

balance

sheet

activities

1

Large/

notable

items

2020 Cash

net interest

margin

_

164

(1)

GROUP NET INTEREST MARGIN FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS (bps)

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ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 61

Other operating income

20202019

$m$mMovt

2,215

2,493-11%

1,884

1,28647%

155

262-41%

Net fee and commission income

1

Markets other operating income

Share of associates' profit

Other

1


(551)

649large

Total cash other operating income

3,703

4,690-21%

Total increase/

(decrease)

$m Movt Explanation

Net fee and

commission

income

1


(278) -11% Net fee and commission income decreased primarily due to lower volume related fees

due to the impact of COVID-19, reduction or removal of fees, loss of income from

divested businesses, partially offset by lower customer remediation impacting Net fee

and commission income.

Markets other

operating income


598 47% Markets other operating income increased across Franchise Trading, Franchise Sales and

Balance Sheet Trading. This was primarily due to increased customer sales flows and

improved trading conditions, particularly in International, as customers sought Markets

risk management products.

Share of associates'

profit


(107) -41% Share of associates’ profit decreased by $107m of which $68 million relates to the

Group’s equity accounted share of PT Panin’s transition adjustment on its adoption of

AASB 9. The equity accounted share of profits decreased by $10 million for PT Panin and

$24 million for AmBank.

Other

1

(1,200) large Other decreased primarily due the impairment of the Asian associates of $815 million,

the impact of divested businesses of $318 million and $79 million in Institutional division

related to widening credit spread impacts on loans measured at fair value.

Total cash other

operating income

from continuing

operations

(987)-21%

1.

Excluding Markets.

Net fee and commission

income

1


Markets other operating

income

Share of associates' prot

155

(551)

2,215

Other

1

2020

649

262

1,2861,884

2,493

2019

OTHER OPERATING INCOME ($m)

61

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)
62 ANZ 2019 ANNUAL REPORT

Operating expenses

20202019

$m$mMovt

Total cash operating expenses from continuing operations

2

9,383

9,0713%

Full time equivalent staff (FTE) from continuing operations

37,506

37,5880%

Average full time equivalent staff (FTE) from continuing operations

37,728

37,4801%

Operating expenses increased by $312 million (3%). Key drivers:

personnel expenses increased $113 million (2%) largely driven by higher investment spend in the New Zealand and Australia Retail and

Commercial divisions, higher customer remediation costs of $80 million, wage inflation and adverse foreign currency translation

movements. This was partially offset by lower variable remuneration and lower business as usual expenses, including reduced employee

leave balances.

premises expenses decreased $6 million (-1%) largely driven by lower premises expense in our International network, partially offset by a

change in accounting treatment associated with the new leasing standard (comparatives not restated).

technology expenses (excluding personnel) increased $290 million (19%) largely as a result of accelerated amortisation of $197 million due

to a change in application of the software amortisation policy, a change in accounting treatment associated with the new leasing standard

(comparatives not restated), an increase in investment spend and customer remediation ($13 million).

restructuring expenses increased $84 million largely related to business and distribution changes in the Australia Retail and Commercial

division.

other expenses decreased $169 million (-9%) largely due to lower customer remediation of $257 million and lower travel expenses, partially

offset by higher investment spend and Goodwill write-offs of $77 million in Pacific and New Zealand divisions.

Credit impairment

20202019Movt

Collectively assessed credit impairment charge/(release) ($m)

1,717

17large

Individually assessed credit impairment charge ($m)

1,021

778large

Credit impairment charge ($m)

2,738

795large

Gross impaired assets ($m)

2,459

2,02921%

Credit risk weighted assets ($b)

360.0

358.11%

Total allowance for expected credit losses (ECL) ($m)

5,899

4,19041%

Individually assessed as % of gross impaired assets

36.2%

40.1%

Collectively assessed as % of credit risk weighted assets

1.39%

0.94%

Personnel

Premises

Technology

(excluding personnel)

1,824

161

1,731

4,878

Restructuring

Other

2020

1,900

77

795

1,534

789

4,765

2019

OPERATING EXPENSES ($m)

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ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 63

GROSS IMPAIRED ASSETS BY DIVISION ($m)

Gross impaired assets increased $430 million (21%) driven by the Institutional division ($169 million), Australia Retail and Commercial division

($166 million) and New Zealand division ($102 million). The increase in the Institutional division primarily relates to impairments on a small

number of single name exposures. The Australia Retail and Commercial division increase was driven by home loans with a combination of the

implementation of a more market responsive collateral valuation methodology and impairments as 90 days past due exposures increased,

combined with impairments on a small number of single name exposures in the commercial portfolio. The increase in the New Zealand

division is driven by impairments on a small number of single name commercial exposures.


The collectively assessed credit impairment charge increased by $1,700 million primarily driven by a $1,044 million increase in the Australia

Retail and Commercial division, a $363 million increase in the Institutional division and a $236 million increase in the New Zealand division.

The significant increases across all divisions are due to forward-looking assessments of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic driven by the

deterioration in the economic outlook as well as management adjustments to recognise the risk of credit quality deterioration expected to

emerge as COVID-19 stimulus and support programs ease.

The individually assessed credit impairment charge increased by $243 million primarily due to a single name impairment in the Institutional

division. This was partially offset by improved delinquencies in the Australia Retail portfolios combined with ongoing lower portfolio growth in

the unsecured portfolio, and lower provisions in the Commercial portfolio.


GROSS IMPAIRED ASSETS BY DIVISION ($m)

Australia Retail

and Commercial

Institutional

New Zealand

Pacic

TSO and

Group Centre

434

347

1,63444

2020

265

245

1,46851

2019

INDIVIDUALLY ASSESSED CREDIT IMPAIRMENT CHARGE ($m)

Australia Retail

and Commercial

Institutional

New Zealand

Pacic

TSO and

Group Centre

321

97

596

7

2020

(12)

75

705(1)

11

2019

COLLECTIVELY ASSESSED CREDIT IMPAIRMENT CHARGE ($m)

Australia Retail

and Commercial

Institutional

New Zealand

Pacic

TSO and

Group Centre

373

248

1,051

45

2020

12

(12)

7

10

2019

63

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

64 ANZ 2019 ANNUAL REPORT



During the September 2020 year the collectively assessed allowance for expected credit losses increased by $1,632 million. This was

attributable to changes in economic outlook including impact of scenario weights of $1,018 million, COVID-19 related management

adjustments of $592 million, changes in risk of $61 million and a change in portfolio composition of $46 million, partially offset by reductions

from foreign exchange and divestments of $85 million.

During the September 2020 year, there was a net increase in the individually assessed allowance for expected credit losses of $77 million.

COVID-19 loan assistance packages offered to customers

1


Since March 2020, the Group has offered various forms of assistance to customers to counteract the impact of COVID-19 on the ability of

customers to meet their loan obligations. The assistance provided has included arrangements such as temporary deferral of principal and

interest repayments, replacing principal and interest with interest only repayments, and extension of loan maturity dates.

The Group does not consider that when a customer is first provided assistance, all other things being equal, that there has been a Significant

Increase in Credit Risk (SICR) and a consequent impact on ECL when assessing provisions. Subsequent to take-up, customers have been

contacted to discuss available options once the packages reach their end date. Additional information on the customer’s financial position

and ability to recommence their loan repayments is used to assist in classification of customers into risk categories. Customers in higher risk

categories, and those that have requested a deferral extension have been classified as having a SICR. The Group continues to work with our

customers on arrangements in respect of their loan obligations once the assistance package has ceased.

The categories of assistance packages provided and the amounts outstanding as at 30 September 2020 are noted in the following table:





Assistance package category

Australia Geography

At 30 September 2020

$m

New Zealand Geography

At 30 September 2020

$m

Total

At 30 September

2020

$m

Loan deferral package


Retail 26,1173,70529,822

Commercial and other 8,9891939,182

Interest only

Retail 1262,2872,413

Commercial and other 33494527

Term extensions

Retail 3611614

Commercial and other 246690

Total 35,2927,35642,648


Retail 26,2466,60332,849

Commercial and other 9,0467539,799

Total 35,2927,35642,648

1.

COVID-19 loan deferral packages are available to customers if either their loan repayments are less than 30 days past due, or if their repayments are less than 90 days past due but were up to date

at 1 March 2020.



TOTAL ALLOWANCE FOR EXPECTED CREDIT LOSSES


($m)


Australia Retail

and Commercial

Institutional

New Zealand

Pacic

TSO and

Group Centre

1,671

672

3,455

101

2020

1,329

446

2,353

62

2019

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OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 65

DDIIVVIISSIIOONNAALL PPEERRFFOORRMMAANNCCEE


Australia

Retail and New

TSO and

Group

2020 Commercial Institutional Zealand Pacific Centre Group

Net interest margin

2.59% 0.76% 2.26% 3.10% n/a 1.63%

Operating expenses to operating income

45.1% 43.9% 44.8% 106.2% n/a 52.9%

Cash profit from continuing

operations ($m)

2,337 1,854 1,017 (62) (1,388) 3,758

Net loans and advances ($b)

339.4 157.6 116.6 1.9 1.6 617.1

Customer deposits ($b)

234.6 223.3 91.0 3.5 - 552.4

Number of FTE

14,078 5,291 5,761 1,113 11,263 37,506


Australia

Retail and New

TSO and

Group

2019 Commercial Institutional Zealand Pacific Centre Group

Net interest margin 2.59% 0.82% 2.33% 3.75% n/a 1.76%

Operating expenses to operating income 43.2% 50.6% 38.8% 64.7% n/a 47.7%

Cash profit from continuing

operations ($m)

3,195 1,828 1,399 59 (11) 6,470

Net loans and advances ($b) 331.9 164.5 116.7 2.1 0.1 615.3

Customer deposits ($b) 208.0 217.3 83.4 3.5 (0.4) 511.8

Number of FTE 13,903 5,468 6,121 1,086 11,010 37,588


65

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

66 ANZ 2019 ANNUAL REPORT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


DIVISIONAL PERFORMANCE


Australia Retail and Commercial

Lending volumes increased in the September 2020 half driven by successful home loan growth, partially offset by lower consumer

demand for unsecured borrowing and increased customer repayments following fiscal and regulatory stimulus and a low interest

rate environment. Net interest margin was flat as the headwinds from official cash rate decreases on low customer rate deposits and

earnings on capital, unfavourable lending mix from proportionately more growth in lower margin home loans compared to higher

margin unsecured lending were offset by home loan repricing benefits, lower funding costs and a favourable deposit mix impact.

Other operating income decreased driven by lower credit card and international transaction volumes driven by COVID-19 impacts

and fee removals. Operating expenses were flat with higher investment spend, higher restructuring expenses, additional charges for

lease-related items, accelerated amortisation due to changes in application of the software policy and inflationary increases being

offset by productivity benefits and lower remediation expenses. Credit impairment charges increased driven by collectively assessed

credit impairment charges for the expected impact of COVID-19.

Institutional

Average lending volumes increased against the prior period. Customer deposits increased in Transaction Banking, partially offset by

decreases in the other businesses. Net interest margin ex-Markets decreased mainly due to the impact of low interest rates on

deposit margins. Other operating income increased due to higher Markets income, partly offset by lower volume related fee income

in the transaction banking business with a subdued international trade environment. Operating expenses decreased as a result of

lower personnel costs, lower discretionary spend, lower property charges and lower remediation expenses, partly offset by

accelerated amortisation due to changes in application of the software policy and additional charges for lease-related items. Credit

impairment charges increased due to higher collectively assessed credit impairment charge for the expected impact of COVID-19

and an increase in individually assessed credit impairment charges in Transaction Banking.

New Zealand

Lending ended flat against the prior period impacted by the sale of UDC at the end of the year. Customer deposit volumes grew

across all portfolios while funds under management increased during the period. Net interest margin decreased mainly due to lower

interest rates compressing deposit margins. Other operating income decreased primarily driven by fee changes and lower volume

related fee income and fee waivers due to the impact of COVID-19. Operating expenses increased due to higher investment spend

on compliance projects, goodwill write-off related to the Bonus Bonds business, accelerated amortisation due to changes in

application of the software policy, and increased restructuring charges. Credit impairment charges increased driven by higher

collectively assessed credit impairment charges for the expected impact of COVID-19.

Pacific

Operating income for the Pacific division declined from the prior year due to the impact of COVID-19. Costs were higher largely due

to a goodwill write-off. Credit impairment charges increased driven by higher collectively assessed credit impairment charges for the

expected impact of COVID-19.

TSO and Group Centre

The 2020 financial year included the impairment of the Asian associates and a loss on sale of UDC. The 2019 financial year included

the gain on sale of OnePath Life (NZ), Paymark, Cambodia JV and PNG Retail, Commercial and SME.


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ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 67

DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS


The financial results of the divested Wealth Australia businesses and associated Group reclassification and consolidation impacts are treated as

discontinued operations from a financial reporting perspective.

The comparative Group Income Statement and Statement of Comprehensive Income have been restated to show discontinued operations

separately from continuing operations in a separate line item ‘Profit/(Loss) from discontinued operations’.

 Sale to IOOF Holdings Limited (IOOF)

On 17 October 2017, the Group announced it had agreed to sell its OnePath P&I and ADGs businesses to IOOF. The aligned dealer groups

business consists of ADGs that operate under their own Australian Financial Services licences. The sale of the ADGs completed on 1 October

2018 and the OnePath P&I business completed on 31 January 2020.

 Sale to Zurich Financial Services Australia (Zurich)

On 12 December 2017, ANZ announced that it had agreed to the sale of its life insurance business to Zurich and regulatory approval was

obtained on 10 October 2018. The transaction was completed on 31 May 2019.

Included in the ‘Cash loss from discontinued operations’ is:

 a $18 million loss on disposal ($13 million loss after tax) was recognised in the September 2020 full year attributable to sale completion

costs. The September 2019 full year included a $23 million loss ($81 million loss after tax) attributable to sale related adjustments and write-

downs, the reversal of the life-to-date cash profit adjustments on the revaluation of policy liabilities sold to Zurich, partially offset by the

recycling on sale completion of gains previously deferred in equity reserves; and

 customer remediation which includes provisions for expected refunds to customers and related remediation costs associated with

inappropriate advice or services not provided in the pensions and investments and life insurance businesses. An amount of $126 million

pre-tax, $96 million post tax was recognised in the 2020 financial year (2019: $241m pre-tax, $207 million post-tax).

E

Exxppllaannaattiioonn ooff aaddjjuussttmmeennttss bbeettwweeeenn ssttaattuuttoorryy pprrooffiitt aanndd ccaasshh pprrooffiitt

 Treasury shares adjustment

ANZ shares held by the Group in Wealth Australia discontinued operations are deemed to be Treasury shares for accounting purposes.

Dividends and realised and unrealised gains and losses from these shares are reversed as they are not permitted to be recognised as income

for statutory reporting purposes. In deriving cash profit, these earnings are included to ensure there is no asymmetrical impact on the

Group’s profits because the Treasury shares are held to support policy liabilities which are revalued through the Income Statement. With the

sale completion of the life insurance business to Zurich, there are no ANZ shares held by the Group in discontinued operations

 Revaluation of policy liabilities

When calculating policy liabilities, the projected future cash flows on insurance contracts are discounted to reflect the present value of the

obligation, with the impact of changes in the market discount rate in each period being reflected in the Income Statement. ANZ includes

the impact on the re-measurement of the insurance contract attributable to changes in market discount rates as an adjustment to statutory

profit to remove the volatility attributable to changes in market interest rates which reverts to zero over the life of the insurance contract.

With the sale completion of the life insurance business to Zurich, the 2019 financial year includes the reversal of the life-to-date cash profit

adjustments on the revaluation of policy liabilities sold, reducing cash profit by $15 million from discontinued operations.


2020 2019

$m $m

Statutory profit/(loss) from discontinued operations (98)

(343)

Adjustments between statutory profit and cash profit

-

34

Treasury shares adjustment

-

(11)

Revaluation of policy liabilities

-

45

Cash profit/(loss) from discontinued operations

(98)

(309)

67

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

68 ANZ 2019 ANNUAL REPORT

FINANCIAL POSITION OF THE GROUP – INCLUDING DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS

Condensed balance sheet

As at


2020 2019

$b $b Movt

Assets

Cash / Settlement balances owed to ANZ / Collateral paid

129.7

100.3 29%

Trading and investment securities

144.3

126.9 14%

Derivative financial instruments

135.3

120.7 12%

Net loans and advances

617.1

615.3 0%

Assets held for sale

-

1.8 -100%

Other

15.9

16.1 -1%

Total assets

1,042.3

981.1 6%


Liabilities

Settlement balances owed by ANZ / Collateral received 31.5 18.8 68%

Deposits and other borrowings 682.3 637.7 7%

Derivative financial instruments 134.7 121.0 11%

Debt issuances 119.7 129.7 -8%

Liabilities held for sale - 2.1 -100%

Other 12.8 11.0 16%

Total liabilities

981.0

920.3 7%

Total equity 61.3

60.8 1%


Cash/Settlement balances owed to ANZ/Collateral paid increased $29.4 billion (+29%) driven by an increase in balances with central

banks, increased overnight inter-bank deposits, and an increase in short term reverse repurchase agreements, partially offset by foreign

currency translation movements.


Trading and investment securities increased $17.4 billion (+14%) primarily driven by an increase in liquid assets in Markets, partially offset

by the impact of foreign currency translation movements.


Derivative financial assets and liabilities increased $14.6 billion (+12%) and $13.7 billion (+11%) respectively as interest rate and foreign

exchange movements resulted in higher derivative volumes and fair values, particularly in interest rate and foreign exchange

swap products.


Net loans and advances increased $1.8 billion (+0%), driven by growth in home loans in the Australia Retail and Commercial division

(+$10.1 billion) and New Zealand division (+$4.4 billion), partially offset by lower credit volumes in other products as a result of the

ongoing impacts of COVID-19 in the Institutional (-$4.1 billion) and Australia Retail and Commercial (-$1.6 billion) divisions, higher credit

provisions (-$1.5 billion) as a result of the ongoing impacts of COVID-19, the sale of the UDC business in New Zealand division in

September 2020 (-$3.4 billion) and foreign currency translation movements.


Deposits and other borrowings increased $44.6 billion (+7%) driven by increased customer deposits in the Australia Retail and

Commercial division (+$26.6 billion), Institutional division (+$11.8 billion), and New Zealand division (+$7.8 billion) and drawdown of the

RBA Term Funding Facility (TFF) (+$12 billion). This was partially offset by a reduction in certificates of deposit (-$4.0 billion), commercial

paper issued (-$2.7 billion) and the impact of foreign currency translation movements.


Debt issuances decreased $10.0 billion (-8%) driven by lower senior debt issuances. Funding was partially replaced by the RBA TFF, which

is classified as Deposits and other borrowings.


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Financial

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OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 69

FFuunnddiinngg


2020 2019


$b $b

Customer liabilities

561.3

521.4

Wholesale funding


277.5

270.3

Shareholders’ equity

61.3

60.8

Total funding


900.1

852.5

Net Stable Funding Ratio


124%

116%

The Group targets a diversified funding base, avoiding undue concentration by investor type, maturity, market source and currency.

$13.2 billion of term wholesale debt with a remaining term greater than one year as at 30 September 2020 was issued during the year.

In March 2020, the RBA announced a Term Funding Facility (TFF) for the banking system. The RBA is providing a three-year secured funding

facility to ADIs at a fixed rate of 0.25%. APRA has determined that the TFF qualifies for inclusion in determining the Liquidity Coverage Ratio

(LCR) and Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR).

ADIs can obtain initial funding of up to 3% of their existing credit outstanding to Australian households and businesses. ADIs have access to

additional funding if they increase lending to small and medium-sized businesses. As at 30 September 2020, ANZ had drawn $12 billion from

its initial TFF allowance of $12 billion and had drawn $0 billion from its additional TFF allowance of $6 billion.

L

Liiqquuiiddiittyy


Full year average


2020 2019

Total liquid assets ($b)

1

213.9

188.4

Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR)

1

139%

140%

1.

Full year average, calculated as prescribed per APRA Prudential Regulatory Standard (APS 210 Liquidity) and consistent with APS 330 requirements.


The Group holds a portfolio of high quality unencumbered liquid assets in order to protect the Group’s liquidity position in a severely stressed

environment, as well as to meet regulatory requirements. High Quality Liquid Assets comprise three categories, with the definitions consistent

with Basel 3 LCR:

 highest-quality liquid assets (HQLA1): Cash, highest credit quality government, central bank or public sector securities eligible for

repurchase with central banks to provide same-day liquidity.

 high-quality liquid assets (HQLA2): High credit quality government, central bank or public sector securities, high quality corporate debt

securities and high quality covered bonds eligible for repurchase with central banks to provide same-day liquidity.

 alternative liquid assets (ALA): Assets qualifying as collateral for the Committed Liquidity Facility (CLF) and other eligible securities listed by

the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ).

The Group monitors and manages the size and composition of its liquid assets portfolio on an ongoing basis in line with regulatory

requirements and the risk appetite set by the Board.

COVID-19 has impacted the normal operations of financial markets including funding markets, however the actions of governments globally

and central banks including the RBA, RBNZ and the US Federal Reserve have provided significant liquidity support to the system and financial

markets generally. ANZ’s liquidity measures have remained above regulatory requirements throughout this period.



69

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)
70 ANZ 2019 ANNUAL REPORT

Capital management

20202019Movt

Common Equity Tier 1 (Level 2)

- APRA Basel 3

11.3%

11.4%

Credit risk weighted assets ($b)

360.0

358.11%

Total risk weighted assets ($b)

429.4

417.03%

APRA Leverage ratio

5.4%

5.6%

APRA, under the authority of the Banking Act 1959, sets minimum regulatory requirements for banks including what is acceptable as

regulatory capital and provides methods of measuring the risks incurred by the Bank.

The Group’s Common Equity Tier 1 ratio was 11.3% based on APRA Basel 3 standards, exceeding APRA’s minimum requirements. It decreased

2 bps as cash earnings and divestments were offset by the impact of dividends during the year.

At 30 September 2020 the Group’s APRA leverage ratio was 5.4% which is above the 3.5% proposed minimum for internal ratings based

approach ADI (IRB ADI) which includes ANZ.

Dividends

Our financial performance allowed us to propose that a final dividend of 35 cents be paid on each eligible fully paid ANZ ordin ary share,

bringing the total dividend for the year ended 30 September 2020 to 60 cents per share. This represents a dividend payout ratio of 45.3% of

cash profit from continuing operations.

The proposed 2020 final dividend of 35 cents per share will be fully franked for Australian taxation purposes, and carry New Zealand

imputation credits of NZD 4 cents per ordinary share. It will be paid on 16 December 2020 to owners of ordinary shares at close of business on

10 November 2020 (record date).

ANZ has a Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRP) and a Bonus Option Plan (BOP) that will operate in respect of the proposed 2020 final dividend.

For the 2020 final dividend, ANZ intends to provide shares under the DRP and BOP through the issue of new shares.

Further details on dividends provided for or paid during the year ended 30 September 2020 are set out in Note 5 of the consolidated financial

statements.

Shareholders Returns

1.

Information has been presented on a cash profit from continuing operations basis. Discontinued operations are detailed on page 67.

OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 71

FIVE YEAR SUMMARY

2020

1

2019

1

2018

1

2017

1

2016

$m$m$m$m$m

Financial performance - cash

2


Net interest income

14,049

14,33914,51414,87515,095

Other operating income

3,703

4,6904,8534,9415,499

Operating expenses

(9,383)

(9,071)(9,401)(8,967) (10,439)

Profit before credit impairment and income tax

8,369

9,9589,96610,84910,155

Credit impairment charge

(2,738)

(795)(688)(1,199)(1,956)

Income tax expense

(1,872)

(2,678)(2,775)(2,826)(2,299)

Non-controlling interests

(1)

(15)(16)(15)(11)

Cash profit from continuing operations

2

3,758

6,4706,4876,8095,889

Cash profit/(loss) from discontinued operations

(98)

(309)(682)129n/a

Cash profit 3,660

6,1615,8056,9385,889

Adjustments to arrive at statutory profit

2


(83)

(208)595(532)(180)

Profit attributable to shareholders of the Company 3,577

5,9536,4006,4065,709

Financial position

Assets

1,042,286

981,137943,182897,326914,869

Net assets

61,297

60,79459,40559,07557,927

Common Equity Tier 1

11.3%

11.4%11.4%10.6%9.6%

Common Equity Tier 1 – Internationally

Comparable Basel 3

3


16.7%

16.4%16.8%15.8%14.5%

Return on average ordinary equity (statutory)

4


5.9%

10.0%10.9%11.0%10.0%

Return on average assets (statutory)

0.3%

0.6%0.7%0.7%0.6%

Cost to income ratio (cash)

2


53.8%

49.5%52.0%46.1%50.7%

Shareholder value – ordinary shares

Total return to shareholders (share price movement plus

dividends)

-36.9%

9.2%0.6%13.1%9.2%

Market capitalisation

48,839

80,84280,97986,94880,886

Dividend (cents)

60

160160160160

Franked portion – interim

100%

100%100%100%100%

– final

100%

70%100%100%100%

Share price – high (dollars)

$28.67

$29.30$30.80$32.95$29.17

– low (dollars)

$14.10

$22.98$26.08$25.78$21.86

– closing (dollars)

$17.22

$28.52$28.18$29.60$27.63

Share information

(per fully paid ordinary share)

Earnings per share (cents) (statutory)

126.4

210.0221.6220.1197.4

Dividend payout ratio (statutory)

47.6%

76.2%72.1%73.4%81.9%

Net tangible assets per ordinary share

5


$20.04

$19.59$18.47$17.66

$17.13

No. of fully paid ordinary shares issued (millions)

2,840

2,8352,8742,9372,927

Dividend reinvestment plan (DRP) issue price

– interim

$18.06

$27.79$27.76$28.80$24.82

– final

- $ 25.03

$26.03$29.02$28.16

Other information

No. of employees (full time equivalents)



38,579

39,06039,92444,89646,554

No. of shareholders

553,171

506,847509,238522,425545,256

1.

During 2018, part of Wealth Australia and TSO and Group Centre division was classified as a discontinued operation. 2017 comparatives have been restated accordingly. 2016 has not been

restated. All ratios are presented on a Group basis inclusive of discontinued operations across all periods.

2.

Cash profit excludes non-core items included in statutory profit and is provided to assist readers in understanding the result of the ongoing business activities of the Group. Cash profit is not

audited; however, the external auditor has informed the Audit Committee that the adjustments have been determined on a consistent basis across each period presented, and the adjustments

for the sale impact of Shanghai Rural Commercial Bank (SRCB) in 2018 and 2017 are appropriate.

3.

Internationally Comparable Methodology applied for 2016–2020 aligns with APRA’s information paper entitled ‘International Capital Comparison Study’ (13 July 2015). Basel Internationally

Comparable ratios do not include an estimate of the Basel l capital floor requirement.

4.

Average ordinary equity excludes non-controlling interests and preference shares.

5.

Equals shareholders’ equity less preference share capital, goodwill, software and other intangible assets divided by the number of ordinary shares

Earnings per share –

cash

1

(cents)

Total shareholder

return (%)

Dividend per share

(cents)

Dividend payout

ratio

1

(%)

2019

227.6

2019

160

2019

70.1

2019

9.2

2020

132.7

2020

60

2020

45.3

2020

(36.9)

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Five year summary
OUR PERFORMANCE (continued)

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT 71

FIVE YEAR SUMMARY

2020

1

2019

1

2018

1

2017

1

2016

$m$m$m$m$m

Financial performance - cash

2


Net interest income

14,049

14,33914,51414,87515,095

Other operating income

3,703

4,6904,8534,9415,499

Operating expenses

(9,383)

(9,071)(9,401)(8,967) (10,439)

Profit before credit impairment and income tax

8,369

9,9589,96610,84910,155

Credit impairment charge

(2,738)

(795)(688)(1,199)(1,956)

Income tax expense

(1,872)

(2,678)(2,775)(2,826)(2,299)

Non-controlling interests

(1)

(15)(16)(15)(11)

Cash profit from continuing operations

2

3,758

6,4706,4876,8095,889

Cash profit/(loss) from discontinued operations

(98)

(309)(682)129n/a

Cash profit 3,660

6,1615,8056,9385,889

Adjustments to arrive at statutory profit

2


(83)

(208)595(532)(180)

Profit attributable to shareholders of the Company 3,577

5,9536,4006,4065,709

Financial position

Assets

1,042,286

981,137943,182897,326914,869

Net assets

61,297

60,79459,40559,07557,927

Common Equity Tier 1

11.3%

11.4%11.4%10.6%9.6%

Common Equity Tier 1 – Internationally

Comparable Basel 3

3


16.7%

16.4%16.8%15.8%14.5%

Return on average ordinary equity (statutory)

4


5.9%

10.0%10.9%11.0%10.0%

Return on average assets (statutory)

0.3%

0.6%0.7%0.7%0.6%

Cost to income ratio (cash)

2


53.8%

49.5%52.0%46.1%50.7%

Shareholder value – ordinary shares

Total return to shareholders (share price movement plus

dividends)

-36.9%

9.2%0.6%13.1%9.2%

Market capitalisation

48,839

80,84280,97986,94880,886

Dividend (cents)

60

160160160160

Franked portion – interim

100%

100%100%100%100%

– final

100%

70%100%100%100%

Share price – high (dollars)

$28.67

$29.30$30.80$32.95$29.17

– low (dollars)

$14.10

$22.98$26.08$25.78$21.86

– closing (dollars)

$17.22

$28.52$28.18$29.60$27.63

Share information

(per fully paid ordinary share)

Earnings per share (cents) (statutory)

126.4

210.0221.6220.1197.4

Dividend payout ratio (statutory)

47.6%

76.2%72.1%73.4%81.9%

Net tangible assets per ordinary share

5


$20.04

$19.59$18.47$17.66

$17.13

No. of fully paid ordinary shares issued (millions)

2,840

2,8352,8742,9372,927

Dividend reinvestment plan (DRP) issue price

– interim

$18.06

$27.79$27.76$28.80$24.82

– final

- $ 25.03

$26.03$29.02$28.16

Other information

No. of employees (full time equivalents)



38,579

39,06039,92444,89646,554

No. of shareholders

553,171

506,847509,238522,425545,256

1.

During 2018, part of Wealth Australia and TSO and Group Centre division was classified as a discontinued operation. 2017 comparatives have been restated accordingly. 2016 has not been

restated. All ratios are presented on a Group basis inclusive of discontinued operations across all periods.

2.

Cash profit excludes non-core items included in statutory profit and is provided to assist readers in understanding the result of the ongoing business activities of the Group. Cash profit is not

audited; however, the external auditor has informed the Audit Committee that the adjustments have been determined on a consistent basis across each period presented, and the adjustments

for the sale impact of Shanghai Rural Commercial Bank (SRCB) in 2018 and 2017 are appropriate.

3.

Internationally Comparable Methodology applied for 2016–2020 aligns with APRA’s information paper entitled ‘International Capital Comparison Study’ (13 July 2015). Basel Internationally

Comparable ratios do not include an estimate of the Basel l capital floor requirement.

4.

Average ordinary equity excludes non-controlling interests and preference shares.

5.

Equals shareholders’ equity less preference share capital, goodwill, software and other intangible assets divided by the number of ordinary shares

71

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

20202019201820172016
Fair and Responsible Banking

Net Promoter Score Ranking (relative to peers)

Australia Retail

1

34342

Australia Commercial

2

43344

Australia Institutional

l3

11121

New Zealand Retail

4

44444

New Zealand Commercial and Agricultural

5

55555

New Zealand Institutional

6

11131

Code of conduct

Breaches5707841,1141,4431,408

Investigations resulting in termination94151226262254

Whistleblower reports15715613712171

Financial Wellbeing

Help enable social and economic participation

of 1 million people by 2020 (cumulative total)

7

1,070,930 998,474 889,135550,361453,054

Employees

Employee Engagement (%)

8

8677737274

Total Women in Leadership (%)

9

33.432.532.031.129.9

Community

Total community investment ($m)139.6142.2136.9131.189.8

Volunteer hours66,402134,930124,113113,127113,071

Employee volunteering participation rate (%)

10

20.542.434.629.4-

Sustainable solutions AU$50 billion target

11

Total funded or facilitated towards:

Environmental sustainability (AU$ billion)7.577.604.654.512.37

Housing (AU$ billion)

2

1.45

Other social (AU$ billion)

3

0.06

Environmental Sustainability

Environmental footprint

Total scope 1 & 2 GHG emissions (tCO

2

e)133,492156,568171,012180,993193,569

Total scope 1,2 & 3 GHG emissions (tCO

2

e)202,953250,857266,906273,216299,224

Project finance portfolio

4

Renewables (%)8783767063

Coal (%)59131619

Gas (%)78101318

Project finance commitment to renewable energy ($m)1,5011,3711,0761,141875

Average emissions intensity of generation financed

Australia (tCO

2

e/MWH generated)0.400.540.660.580.62

Outside Australia (tCO

2

e/MWH generated)0.010.020.080.240.16

Five year summary (continued)

1 Roy Morgan Single Source, Australian population aged 14+, Main Financial Institution, six month rolling average to Sep’16, Sep’17, Sep’18, Sep’19 & Sep'20. Ranking based on the four major

Australian banks. 2 DBM Business Atlas. Base: Commercial (<$100 million annual turnover) Main Financial Institution customers. Six month average to Sep’16, Sep’17, Sep’18, Sep’19 & Sep'20.

Ranking based on the four major Australian banks. 3 Peter Lee Associates, 2020 Large Corporate and Institutional Relationship Banking surveys, Australia. 4 Retail Market Monitor, Camorra

Research, six month rolling average to Sep’16, Sep’17, Sep’18, Sep’19 & Sep'20. Ranking based on the five major New Zealand banks. 5 Business Finance Monitor, TNS Kantar Research. Base:

Commercial ($3 million – $150 million annual turnover) and Agricultural (>500K annual turnover) customers. Four quarter rolling average to Q3’16, Q3’17, Q3’18, Q3’19 & Q3’20. Ranking based on

the five major New Zealand commercial / agricultural banks. 6 Peter Lee Associates Large Corporate and Institutional Relationship Banking surveys, New Zealand 2016 - 2020, ranked against the

Top 4 competitors (in 2016 rank based on question ‘which bank would you most likely to recommend’). 7 Target commenced in FY 2016. Performance includes people helped through our

initiatives to support financial wellbeing, including our financial inclusion, employment and community programs, and targeted banking products and services for small business and retail

customers. Refer to the 2019 ESG Supplement for methodology (to be released in December). 8 The 2017 engagement survey was run as a pulse survey sent to 10% of the bank's employees

with a 57% response rate. 9 Measures representation at the Senior Manager, Executive and Senior Executive levels. Includes all employees regardless of leave status but not contractors (which

are included in FTE). 10 Commenced reporting in 2017. 11 2016 – 2019 figures represent annual contributions towards ANZ’s 2020 $15bn sustainable solutions target, which had an environmental

focus. In FY20, ANZ set a new 2025 $50bn target with an expanded focus on environmental sustainability, housing and financial wellbeing. 12 Commenced reporting in 2020. Includes Green,

Social, Sustainability Bond transactions issued by Financial Institutions that align to SDG 6, 7, 9, 11, 12 and 13 and indirectly align to Financial Wellbeing. 13 Breakdowns for 2020, 2018 and 2017

do not total to 100% due to rounding.

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73

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Ilana Atlas, AO,
Chair – Human

Resources Committee

Remuneration report

Dear Shareholder,

2020 Remuneration Report –

audited

In many respects this was not the year

we planned it to be. However, despite the

unprecedented combination of challenges

from COVID-19, bushfires and ongoing

industry transformation, management

navigated the year extremely well and

delivered the vast majority of the priorities

and objectives agreed with the Board. Like

many businesses, ANZ has been affected

both operationally and financially.

From an operational perspective, we took

swift action to ensure our people could

safely and productively work at home, while

still supporting customers during a period

of significant stress.

Since March 2020 we have provided

142,000 home and business loan repayment

deferrals in Australia and New Zealand –

providing much needed relief for those who

had either lost income or face uncertainty

due to the pandemic.

Shareholders will be acutely aware of the

financial impacts COVID-19 has had on the

bank. Increased provisions for potential

future credit losses (which the Board

determined were appropriate), along with

the impairment of two of the Group’s Asian

associate investments, have reduced profits

and our share price has also been adversely

affected.

While these provisions were appropriate

given the uncertain environment, they have

reduced the amount of profit we are able to

pay to shareholders in the form of dividends

this year.

Aside from the financial impact of COVID-19,

the Group Performance Framework met the

Board’s expectations when considering the

stretching objectives we set ourselves at

the start of the year. Solid growth in our key

markets, a continued simplification of our

operations and maintaining our disciplined

approach to expense management were

key highlights.

The Board was also pleased with the way

the bank responded to the challenges

of COVID-19 with our plan designed to

protect our people and the things that

matter, adapt quickly to the new operating

environment, increase engagement

with important stakeholders, including

Governments and regulators and prepare

for the future.

In 2020 we also moved to a new approach

to how we reward, recognise and manage

the performance of our employees as

part of the Group’s Reimagining Reward

program. This included basing variable

remuneration on Group rather than

individual performance for around 80%

of employees.

Fixed remuneration

To ensure remuneration remained

market competitive, the Board engaged

PricewaterhouseCoopers in September 2019

to assist the Board to conduct a detailed

remuneration market benchmarking review

for our Chief Executive Officer and our

Disclosed Executives.

Shayne Elliott’s fixed remuneration was

increased (effective 1 October 2019 before

the COVID-19 pandemic) from $2.1 million

to $2.5 million and this is reflected in this

year’s Remuneration Report. Shayne’s Long

Term Variable Remuneration was reduced

by $700k, with the target decreasing from

200% to 140% of fixed remuneration.

The Annual Variable Remuneration target

remained unchanged at 100% of fixed

remuneration.

It should be noted that Shayne has not

received a fixed remuneration increase

since starting as Chief Executive Officer

in January 2016, and his target total

remuneration remains largely consistent

with previous years.

74

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Fixed remuneration increases were also
applied to five Disclosed Executives

on 1 October 2019 to improve market

positioning, and one increase was made

on permanent appointment. For the year

commencing 1 October 2020, the Board

determined there would be no fixed

remuneration increases for any of the

Disclosed Executives, including the Chief

Executive Officer.

There were no increases to the Chairman

fee or Non-Executive Director base fee for

the 2020 year.

Variable remuneration

outcomes

Shayne had a successful year and has ANZ

well positioned to assist our customers and

the community in the most challenging

environment in decades, while also

delivering a decent result for shareholders.

Shayne has role modelled ANZ’s values

and culture, demonstrated outstanding

leadership as well as making strong

progress in simplifying and improving our

operations. Despite this good performance,

the Board took into account the significant

impact of COVID-19 on returns and the

profitability of our business as well as the

impact on the broader community, and

exercised its discretion by applying a 50%

reduction to his 2020 Annual Variable

Remuneration outcome.

As a result, the Board awarded an Annual

Variable Remuneration outcome of $1.25

million (33% of maximum opportunity)

for 2020.

Long Term Variable Remuneration of

$3.5 million (reduced from $4.2 million

the previous year) is proposed. This

reinforces Shayne’s focus on achieving

longer term strategic objectives and

creating long-term value for all stakeholders.

This allocation of course remains subject to

shareholder approval at the 2020 Annual

General Meeting and performance hurdles

being met.

For Disclosed Executives, the Board also

exercised its discretion and applied a

50% reduction to their 2020 Variable

Remuneration outcomes resulting in an

average outcome of 36% of maximum

opportunity. Total remuneration reduced

by 15% year-on-year for 2020 Disclosed

Executives who were in role for the full

year 2019 and 2020.

Performance rights granted in late 2016 to

the Chief Executive Officer and Disclosed

Executives (excluding the Chief Risk Officer)

did not meet their hurdles when tested in

November 2019. Therefore, the rights were

lapsed and executives received no value

from these awards.

This has been a difficult year for all our

stakeholders and as a Board we believe

we have struck the right balance in

rewarding our executives for good

performance while also taking into

account the broader environment.

On behalf of the Board, I invite you to

consider our Remuneration Report which will

be presented to shareholders for adoption

at the 2020 Annual General Meeting.

Ilana Atlas, AO

Chair – Human Resources Committee

1. Who is covered by this report 76

2. 2020 outcomes at a glance 76

3. Overview of ANZ’s

remuneration framework 77

4. 2020 outcomes 79

5. Executive remuneration

structure and delivery 93

6. Accountability and

Consequence Framework 97

7. Non-Executive Director

(NED) remuneration 98

8. Remuneration governance 100

9. Other information 102

Contents

75

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

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1.1 DISCLOSED EXECUTIVE AND NED CHANGES

There were several changes to our Key Management Personnel

(KMP) during the 2020 year:

•Paul O’Sullivan was appointed as a Non-Executive Director (NED)

from November 2019 and as Chairman from 28 October 2020

(following the retirement of Chairman, David Gonski on that date).

•All Group Executive Committee (ExCo) roles with key

responsibility for the strategic direction and management of

the Group, and who report directly to the Chief Executive Officer

(CEO) have been included in this year’s report, and so the roles of

Group Executive, Talent and Culture (Kathryn van der Merwe) and

Group Executive, Technology (Gerard Florian) are now included.

•Antonia Watson was permanently appointed to the Group

Executive and Chief Executive Officer, New Zealand (NZ) role

in December 2019 (acting since June 2019).

1.2 KEY MANAGEMENT PERSONNEL (KMP)

The KMP whose remuneration is disclosed in this year’s report are:

2020 Non-Executive Directors (NEDs)

D Gonski

Chairman (retired 28 October 2020)

I Atlas

Director

P Dwyer

Director

J Halton

Director

J Key

Director

G Liebelt

Director

J Macfarlane

Director

P O’Sullivan

Director – appointed 4 November 2019

(Chairman from 28 October 2020)

2020 Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Disclosed Executives

S Elliott

Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director

M Carnegie

Group Executive, Digital and

Australia Transformation

K Corbally

Chief Risk Officer (CRO)

G Florian

Group Executive, Technology

A George

Deputy Chief Executive Officer (title changed

effective 22 September 2020 from Deputy

Chief Executive Officer and Group Executive,

Wealth Australia)

M Hand

Group Executive, Australia Retail and

Commercial Banking

M Jablko

Chief Financial Officer (CFO)

K van der

Merwe

Group Executive, Talent and Culture (GE T&C)

A Watson

Group Executive and Chief Executive Officer,

New Zealand (NZ) – appointed 18 December

2019 (Acting Group Executive and Chief

Executive Officer, NZ to 17 December 2019)

M Whelan

Group Executive, Institutional

There have been no changes to KMP since the end of 2020 up to

the date of signing the Directors’ Report, other than Paul O’Sullivan

commencing as Chairman on the retirement of David Gonski from

that role.

The Remuneration Report for the Group outlines our remuneration

strategy and framework and the remuneration practices that apply

to KMP. This report has been prepared, and audited, as required by

the Corporations Act 2001. It forms part of the Directors’ Report.

1. WHO IS COVERED BY THIS REPORT

2. 2020 OUTCOMES AT A GLANCE

•For the 2021 financial year (i.e. year

commencing 1 October 2020), the

Board determined that there would be

no increases to fixed remuneration for

either the CEO or Disclosed Executives.

•The Board exercised their discretion and

applied a 50% reduction to the Annual

Variable Remuneration (AVR)/Variable

Remuneration (VR) outcomes for the CEO

and Disclosed Executives having regard

to the impact of COVID-19 (see section 4).

–The CEO received an AVR award

of 33% of maximum opportunity.

–Disclosed Executives’ VR outcomes

averaged 36% of maximum

opportunity, with individual

outcomes ranging from 31% to

44% of maximum opportunity.

•The CEO will be awarded LTVR of $3.5

million subject to shareholder approval at

the 2020 Annual General Meeting (AGM).

•100% of the performance rights granted

in late 2016 to the CEO and Disclosed

Executives (excluding the CRO) were

lapsed, as the performance hurdles were

not met when tested at the end of the

performance period in November 2019

(see section 4.4.3).

•As part of the Group’s Reimagining

Reward program effective 1 October

2019, ANZ made adjustments to the

remuneration mix for staff (increased

fixed/reduced variable remuneration),

which included replacing individual

variable remuneration for around 80%

of employees with variable remuneration

based on the overall performance of the

Group (see section 4.5.1).

•Enhancements were made to continue

to strengthen and further embed

ANZ’s Accountability and Consequence

Framework (A&CF) (see section 6).

2020 OUTCOMES

The following remuneration changes

were made at the start of the 2020

financial year following a detailed

review to better align to the external

market:

•On 1 October 2019 the CEO’s fixed

remuneration was increased and

Long Term Variable Remuneration

(LTVR) was reduced (see section 3.2).

•On 1 October 2019 fixed

remuneration was increased for

a number of Disclosed Executives

(see section 4.1).

•No increase to the Chairman fee

or NED base fee, and Committee

fees remained unchanged except

for the Digital Business and

Technology Committee Chair fee

in recognition of the significant

increase in workload of the

Committee Chair (see section 7.1).

2020 REMUNERATION CHANGES

3. OVERVIEW OF ANZ’S REMUNERATION FRAMEWORK
3.1 REMUNERATION FRAMEWORK OVERVIEW

The structure of our remuneration framework is aligned with our Reward Principles and has been designed to support ANZ’s purpose and strategy.

1. See the ‘About our business’ and ‘Our vision and strategy’ sections of the Annual Report. 2. ANZ’s values (Integrity, Collaboration, Accountability, Respect, Excellence (ICARE)) – the

foundation of how we work, supported by our Code of Conduct and our New Ways of Leading framework. 3. Malus relates to downward adjustment of unvested remuneration. 4. The

maximum opportunity and delivery of VR differs for the CRO to that of other Disclosed Executives. See section 5 for further details. 5. Performance rights face value at full vesting.

DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

4

Variable Remuneration (VR)

•Rewarded under a single VR framework enabling us to:

–Provide the appropriate mix of short and long-term rewards

(including performance hurdles) to drive performance, and

attract and retain talent;

–Tie the full VR award to the performance of ANZ; and

–Defer VR over the short, medium and longer term.

•Determination: ANZ Group Performance Framework,

Divisional Performance Frameworks, ANZ values and risk/

compliance assessments, and Board discretion

•Maximum opportunity: 402% of fixed remuneration

5

•Delivery: 25% cash, 25% as ANZ shares deferred over four

years subject to malus, and 50% as performance rights

deferred for four years subject to performance hurdles

and malus

•Performance hurdles: Relative TSR (75%), absolute TSR (25%)

CEO

Annual Variable Remuneration (AVR)

•Rewards the achievement of Group, and individual outcomes

over a 12-month period

•Determination: ANZ Group Performance Framework, individual

strategic objectives, ANZ values

2

and risk/compliance

assessments, and Board discretion

•Maximum opportunity: 150% of fixed remuneration

•Delivery: 50% cash and 50% as ANZ shares deferred over

four years, subject to malus

3

Long Term Variable Remuneration (LTVR)

•Reinforces the CEO’s focus on achieving longer term strategic

objectives and creating long-term value for all stakeholders

•Face value at full vesting: 140% of fixed remuneration

•Delivery: Performance rights deferred for four years subject to

performance hurdles and malus

•Performance hurdles: Relative total shareholder return (TSR)

(75%), absolute TSR (25%)

Fixed remuneration Cash salary and superannuation contributions. The Board sets (and reviews annually) the CEO and

Disclosed Executives’ fixed remuneration based on financial services market relativities reflecting their responsibilities,

performance, qualifications, experience and location.

Variable remuneration (at risk) The CEO and Disclosed Executives are eligible to receive variable remuneration under the ANZ

Incentive Plan (ANZIP), our variable remuneration plan.

Board discretion is applied when determining CEO and Disclosed Executive performance and remuneration outcomes, and also

before any scheduled release of previously deferred remuneration (see section 5.3). All deferred variable remuneration is subject

to malus adjustment.

WITH REMUNERATION DELIVERED TO OUR CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES THROUGH:

Determining

accountability and

applying consequences

where appropriate

Prohibiting

the hedging

of unvested

equity

Determining variable

remuneration outcomes,

with risk as a key input at

a pool and individual level

Weighting remuneration

toward the longer-

term with a significant

proportion at risk

Assessing behaviours based on ANZ’s

values and risk/compliance standards

(including the Banking Executive

Accountability Regime (BEAR))

REINFORCED BY ALIGNING REMUNERATION AND RISK:

Are fair and simple

to understand

Reward our people for doing the right thing

having regard to our customers and shareholders

Focus on how things are achieved

as much as what is achieved

Attract, motivate and

keep great people

IS UNDERPINNED BY OUR REMUNERATION POLICY WHICH INCLUDES OUR REWARD PRINCIPLES:

The Human Resources (HR) Committee and the Board determining fixed remuneration and the variable remuneration outcomes for the

CEO and each Disclosed Executive. Additionally, the CEO’s LTVR outcome is also subject to shareholder approval at the AGM.

WHILE GOVERNED BY:

ANZ’S PURPOSE AND STRATEGY

1

Significant variable

remuneration deferral

in ANZ equity

Use of relative and

absolute TSR hurdles

Substantial shareholding

requirements

WHILE SUPPORTING THE ALIGNMENT OF EXECUTIVES AND SHAREHOLDERS THROUGH:

Consideration of cash

profit and economic profit

in determining the ANZIP

variable remuneration pool

Consideration of the

impact to shareholders

of the reduction in share

price and dividends

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3.2 CHANGES TO THE CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES’ REMUNERATION FRAMEWORKS MADE IN 2020
CEO

With the assistance of a detailed market benchmarking review conducted by PricewaterhouseCoopers in September 2019, the Board

re-balanced the CEO’s remuneration mix from 1 October 2019 to ensure both the CEO’s fixed remuneration and total remuneration were

market competitive at that time. There have been no changes to the delivery of AVR or LTVR for the 2020 financial year.

In summary:

•Fixed remuneration was increased from $2.1 million to $2.5 million (to better align to the external market while also recognising the

skills and experience the CEO brings to the role, noting that this was the first increase since his appointment in January 2016).

•Target AVR remains unchanged at 100% of fixed remuneration.

•LTVR has reduced from 200% to 140% of fixed remuneration providing an appropriate balance between rewarding for short-term and

long-term performance and ensuring total remuneration at target remains largely unchanged.

•Total remuneration at target increased from $8.4 million to $8.5 million (~1%).

CHANGE IN CEO’S REMUNERATION MIX

Fixed remunerationTarget AVRLTVR face value at full vesting

$8.4 million

$8.5 million

2019

2020

29%29%42%

$2.5 million$2.5 million$3.5 million

$2.1 million$2.1 million$4.2 million

25%25%50%

Disclosed Executives

No changes have been made to the remuneration framework for Disclosed Executives for 2020.

A detailed review of our remuneration frameworks was planned for 2020, however this is now expected to occur in 2021 to enable

appropriate consideration of the new APRA Prudential Standard CPS 511 Remuneration and to ensure that our frameworks continue to

appropriately support ANZ’s purpose, strategy and Reward Principles.

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4. 2020 OUTCOMES
Variable remuneration at ANZ is truly at risk and can range from zero to maximum opportunity. The HR Committee and the Board make

variable remuneration outcome decisions for the CEO and Disclosed Executives following lengthy and detailed discussions and assessment,

supported by comprehensive analysis of performance from a number of sources.

The tables in sections 4.1 and 4.2 supplement, and are different to, the Statutory Remuneration table (see section 9.1) which presents the

accounting expense for both vested and unvested awards in accordance with Australian Accounting Standards.

4.1 YEAR-ON-YEAR REMUNERATION AWARDED

These tables show a year-on-year comparison of remuneration awarded to the CEO and Disclosed Executives for the 2018, 2019 and 2020

performance periods. Remuneration awarded includes any cash payments (e.g. fixed remuneration and cash variable remuneration) and the

value of deferred shares and performance rights awarded for the year but which have not yet vested (i.e. the value was not received during

the year).

Although 2020 performance was assessed as ‘Met Expectations’, the Board determined it was both necessary and appropriate to use its

discretion to ensure the market conditions arising from COVID-19 were factored into the process, resulting in a 50% reduction to the AVR/VR

outcomes for the CEO and Disclosed Executives. In determining the 50% reduction, the Board judged what was fair and reasonable having

regard to the impact on shareholders, and considering expectations from customers and the community.

CEO

The 2020 LTVR shown below has not yet been awarded to the CEO, approval will be sought from shareholders at the 2020 AGM. Note the

CEO’s 2018 LTVR award was significantly reduced as a result of the matters raised in the Royal Commission relating to conduct issues and

associated reputational damage (as previously disclosed).

YEAR-ON-YEAR REMUNERATION AWARDED – CEO

Threshold vestingFull vestingAVR as % of

Financial

year

Fixed

remuneration

$

AVR

cash

$

AVR

deferred

shares

$

Total

AVR

$

LT V R

performance

rights

$

Total

remuneration

awarded

$

LT V R

performance

rights

$

Total

remuneration

awarded

$

Target

opport-

unity

Maximum

opport-

unity

CEO

S Elliott

2020 2,500,000 625,000 625,000 1,250,000 1,750,000 5,500,000 3,500,000 7,250,00050%33%

2019 2,100,000 750,000 750,000 1,500,000 2,100,000 5,700,000 4,200,000 7,800,000 71%48%

2018 2,100,000 875,000 875,000 1,750,000 1,400,000 5,250,000 2,800,000 6,650,000 83%56%

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Disclosed Executives
•Fixed remuneration increases were applied to five Disclosed Executives on 1 October 2019 to improve alignment to desired market

positioning, and one increase was made on permanent appointment (Antonia Watson). External benchmarking conducted by

PricewaterhouseCoopers in September 2019 highlighted that ANZ was paying behind the market on fixed remuneration and these increases

were designed to deliver more market competitive remuneration reflecting executive’s responsibilities, qualifications and experience.

•There were no fixed remuneration increases for the 2021 year commencing 1 October 2020.

•Year-on-year remuneration awarded for both Mark Hand and Antonia Watson is not directly comparable, as they were Disclosed Executives

for only part of the 2019 financial year. In addition, Antonia Watson’s 2020 remuneration awarded reflects her permanent appointment to

the Group Executive and CEO, NZ role.

•The average 2020 VR outcome for Disclosed Executives was 36% (45% in 2019) of maximum opportunity (ranging from 31% to 44%).

Despite good performance these outcomes were deemed by the Board to better reflect the impact of the current economic conditions.

•Despite the increases to fixed remuneration applied to a number of executives at the start of 2020, year-on-year total remuneration has

reduced by 15%, and VR by 28% (at full vesting), for the 2020 Disclosed Executives who were in role for full year 2019 and 2020.

•Variable remuneration continues to differ both year-on-year and between different executives demonstrating the at risk nature of this

element of remuneration and the variability in Group and individual performance year-on-year. See section 4.4 for details.

YEAR-ON-YEAR REMUNERATION AWARDED – DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

Threshold vestingFull vestingVR as % of

Financial

year

Fixed

remuneration

$

VR

cash

$

VR

deferred

shares

$

VR

performance

rights

1


$

Total

remuneration

awarded

$

VR

performance

rights

1


$

Total

remuneration

awarded

$

Target

opport-

unity

Maximum

opport-

unity

Current Disclosed Executives

M Carnegie

2020 1,200,000 409,200 409,200 421,600 2,440,000 843,200 2,861,600 52%34%

2019 1,000,000 495,000 495,000 510,000 2,500,000 1,020,000 3,010,000 75%50%

2018 1,000,000 528,000 528,000 544,000 2,600,000 1,088,000 3,144,000 80%53%

K Corbally

2020 1,100,000 429,000 429,000 442,000 2,400,000 442,000 2,400,000 66%44%

2019 950,000 478,500 478,500 493,000 2,400,000 493,000 2,400,000 85%57%

2018 486,000 164,835 164,835 169,830 985,500 169,830 985,500 83%55%

(6.5 months in role)

G Florian

2020 1,075,000 371,250 371,250 382,500 2,200,000 765,000 2,582,500 52%35%

A George

2020 1,100,000 363,000 363,000 374,000 2,200,000 748,000 2,574,000 50%33%

2019 1,000,000 528,000 528,000 544,000 2,600,000 1,088,000 3,144,000 80%53%

2018 876,000 354,750 354,750 365,500 1,951,000 731,000 2,316,500 61%41%

(12 months/4.5 months

as Deputy CEO)

M Hand

2020 1,200,000 462,000 462,000 476,000 2,600,000 952,000 3,076,000 58%39%

2019 726,000 198,000 198,000 204,000 1,326,000 408,000 1,530,000 41%28%

(9 months as Disclosed

Executive)

M Jablko

2020 1,100,000 363,000 363,000 374,000 2,200,000 748,000 2,574,000 50%33%

2019 1,000,000 544,500 544,500 561,000 2,650,000 1,122,000 3,211,000 83%55%

2018 1,000,000 577,500 577,500 595,000 2,750,000 1,190,000 3,345,000 88%58%

K van der Merwe

2020 850,000 330,000 330,000 340,000 1,850,000 680,000 2,190,000 59%39%

A Watson

2

2020 1,015,599 334,681 334,681 344,822 2,029,783 689,645 2,374,605 50%33%

2019 219,440 170,255 113,504 - 503,199 - 503,199 65%43%

(3.5 months in role)

M Whelan

2020 1,200,000 363,000 363,000 374,000 2,300,000 748,000 2,674,000 46%31%

2019 1,200,000 874,500 874,500 901,000 3,850,000 1,802,000 4,751,000 110%74%

2018 1,200,000 717,750 717,750 739,500 3,375,000 1,479,000 4,114,500 91%60%

1. Deferred share rights for the CRO. 2. Paid in NZD and converted to AUD.

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4.2 2020 ACTUAL REMUNERATION RECEIVED
This table shows the remuneration the CEO and Disclosed Executives actually received in relation to the 2020 performance year as cash,

or in the case of prior equity awards, the value which vested in 2020. The final column also shows the value of prior equity awards which

lapsed/were forfeited in 2020 (these awards reflect the 2016 performance rights which fully lapsed when tested against their performance

hurdles in November 2019).

2020 ACTUAL REMUNERATION RECEIVED – CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

Fixed

remuneration

$

Cash variable

remuneration

$

Total

cash

$

Deferred variable

remuneration

which vested

during the year

1

$

Other deferred

remuneration

which vested

during the year

1

$

Actual

remuneration

received

$

Deferred variable

remuneration which

lapsed/forfeited

during the year

1, 2

$

CEO and Current Disclosed Executives

S Elliott

2,500,000 625,000 3,125,000 597,362 - 3,722,362 (3,768,401)

M Carnegie

1,200,000 409,200 1,609,200 276,999 - 1,886,199 (241,617)

K Corbally

1,100,000 429,000 1,529,000 247,891 - 1,776,891 (135,003)

G Florian

1,075,000 371,250 1,446,250 141,723 - 1,587,973 -

A George

1,100,000 363,000 1,463,000 222,997 - 1,685,997 (117,474)

M Hand

1,200,000 462,000 1,662,000 335,786 - 1,997,786 (196,368)

M Jablko

3

1,100,000 363,000 1,463,000 326,785 195,305 1,985,090 (241,617)

K van der Merwe

850,000 330,000 1,180,000 125,309 - 1,305,309 -

A Watson

4

1,015,599 334,681 1,350,280 289,148 - 1,639,428 (90,473)

M Whelan

1,200,000 363,000 1,563,000 570,684 - 2,133,684 (1,374,281)

1. The point in time value of previously deferred remuneration granted as shares/share rights and/or performance rights is based on the one day Volume Weighted Average Price (VWAP) of

the Company’s shares traded on the ASX on the date of vesting or lapsing/forfeiture multiplied by the number of shares/share rights and/or performance rights. 2. The lapsed/forfeited values

relate to the performance rights we awarded in November/December 2016 which lapsed in November/December 2019 due to the performance hurdles not being met. 3. Other deferred

remuneration for M Jablko relates to previously disclosed compensation for deferred remuneration forfeited as a result of joining ANZ. 4. Paid in NZD and converted to AUD.

4.3 APPLICATION OF REWARD PRINCIPLES

In considering the 2020 outcomes the HR Committee and Board reflected on the application of ANZ’s Reward Principles in the current

environment:

•Reward our people for doing the right thing having regard to our customers and shareholders: Variable remuneration should be

primarily based on ‘outcomes’ rather than ‘effort’ and proportionate relative to performance. It also needs to consider the experience/

expectations of all stakeholders (including shareholders, customers, employees, community and regulators). On this basis, for 2020 the

Board determined to apply a 50% reduction to the outcomes for the CEO (AVR) and Disclosed Executives (VR).

•Attract, motivate and keep great people: The Board acknowledged the importance of fixed remuneration being market competitive

to ensure retention of key talent – particularly in a more volatile and uncertain environment.

•Focus on how things are achieved as much as what is achieved: The Board has ensured that appropriate consideration and weight was

given to performance against objectives and how that performance was achieved (i.e. in accordance with our values and purpose).

•Be fair and simple to understand: Variable remuneration should be fair and consistent through the cycle and have regard to external

influences outside of management’s control.

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4.4 VARIABLE REMUNERATION – DETAIL

4.4.1 CEO performance, AVR and LTVR

Performance

With regard to AVR, the CEO is assessed 50% on the ANZ Group

Performance Framework and 50% on achievement of individual

strategic objectives aligned to ANZ’s strategy. Both the Group

Performance Framework and individual strategic objectives are agreed

by the Board at the start of the financial year and are stretching.

WEIGHTING OF FINANCIAL METRICS

AVR

Financial metrics have a 35% weighting in the Group

Performance Framework and therefore notionally have a

17.5% weighting in the CEO’s AVR. However, the CEO’s AVR

is not formulaic – outcomes are moderated by the Risk and

Reputation element of the Group Performance Framework

and the Board’s judgement on the appropriate AVR

considering all aspects of performance.

LTVR

100% of the LTVR hurdles are based on TSR (both relative

and absolute).

At the end of the financial year, ANZ’s performance is assessed against

the Group Performance Framework, and the CEO’s performance

is assessed against his individual strategic objectives, the ANZ

values (behaviours), delivery of the BEAR obligations and ANZ’s risk

and compliance standards. In conducting the CEO’s performance

assessment, the HR Committee seeks input from the Chairman, CRO

(on risk management), CFO (on financial performance), GE T&C (on

talent and culture matters) and Group General Manager Internal Audit

(GGM IA) (on internal audit matters). Material risk events that have

either occurred or come to light in the year (provided by the CRO) are

also considered together with input from both the Audit Committee

and the Risk Committee of the Board.

The Board has assessed the CEO’s 2020 performance as follows:

Group Performance Framework=Met Expectations

(see section 4.5.3)

Individual strategic objectives= Met Expectations (see Board

assessment below)

ANZ values=Above Expectations

Risk/compliance assessment=Met Expectations

The Board has exercised their discretion in determining the

appropriate AVR outcome for 2020 and applied a 50% reduction

which has resulted in an AVR outcome of 33% of maximum

opportunity.

2020 CEO individual strategic objectives

•Lead and role model the culture and accountability

required to transform ANZ

•Enhance the reputation of ANZ

•Drive the strategic direction of the organisation with a

focus on growth

•Show material progress on the productivity initiatives to

improve customer and staff experience while driving cost

towards a materially reduced run rate by close of 2022

•Continue to build ExCo effectiveness and CEO succession

•Focus on operational excellence, including remediation and

system stability, to ensure ANZ has a robust and reliable

platform to support long-term growth

Board assessment of performance on individual

strategic objectives: Met Expectations

The CEO has had a successful year, despite this being a

difficult period, marked by the pandemic and other problems

affecting Australia. He has been a role model for ANZ’s

values and culture – including risk culture, demonstrating

outstanding leadership both internally and externally,

particularly in providing support and caring for our customers,

community and employees during COVID-19.

His crafting and leadership of ANZ’s response to COVID-19

enabled the organisation to focus on what mattered most:

•Protecting our people, our customers and our balance sheet

•Adapting to the COVID-19 environment

•Engaging and staying connected with all of our stakeholders

•Preparing for the future and being ready to embrace

opportunities

The CEO has maintained the strength of ANZ’s leadership,

infrastructure, balance sheet, and employee engagement to

allow ANZ to be well positioned to assist our customers and the

community in the most challenging environment in decades.

He has also enhanced the reputation of ANZ, by embedding

purpose and values in our decision making and through his

leadership in response to COVID-19.

During the last 12 months the CEO has remained focused on

driving the strategic agenda for ANZ with progress towards

simplifying the business, improving our IT infrastructure and

restoring momentum in our core home loans business, while

re-shaping the business for the future. Growth continued to be

an area of focus in 2020, however opportunities have had to be

balanced against our COVID-19 response.

2020 has seen the bulk of our employees working from home

(remotely) and productivity has not faltered. The CEO has

focused on the safety, wellbeing and engagement of our

people whilst also continuing to invest in the business and

cultivating a more efficient workforce at all levels. In difficult

times, he has continued productivity improvements, with strong

management of expenses.

ExCo is functioning very effectively under his leadership and the

addition of the Group Executive, Data and Automation role this

year appropriately reflects the importance of data within ANZ.

Infrastructure stability has improved and ANZ is well on track in

building a better platform for responsible well managed growth.

AVR and LTVR
At the end of the financial year, the HR Committee makes a recommendation to the Board for their approval in respect of the CEO’s

AVR outcome.

The CEO’s AVR will vary up or down year-on-year, it is not guaranteed, and may range from zero to a maximum opportunity.

The 2020 AVR awarded to the CEO is 33% of maximum opportunity.

Despite having been assessed as being above expectations on the ANZ values, and having met expectations on risk/compliance assessment,

individual strategic objectives and the Group Performance Framework, the Board has exercised its discretion and applied a 50% reduction

to the AVR. This takes into account the current environment in light of the COVID-19 pandemic (including the decline in returns and

profitability), the impact on shareholders and having regard to customer, community and regulator expectations. Accordingly, the Board

determined that an AVR outcome of $1.25 million (33% of maximum opportunity) was appropriate for 2020, noting that this is 17% lower

than 2019.

The CEO’s proposed LTVR of $3.5 million (performance rights face value at full vesting) (reduced from $4.2 million in 2019) is subject to

shareholder approval at the 2020 AGM.

2020 AVR Awarded

This table shows the AVR awarded to the CEO for the year ending 30 September 2020.

S Elliott

1

LTVR $3,500,000 performance rights face value at full vesting (subject to shareholder approval at the 2020 AGM)

AVR $1,250,000

33% of max

2020 AVR AWARDED – CEO

+

Maximum opportunity

CEO

Deferred shares

=

+

$625,000$625,000

Cash

1. Variable remuneration for the CEO = AVR + LTVR.

Summary of Total Remuneration

The remuneration Shayne Elliott received in 2020 differs to the remuneration he was awarded in relation to the 2020 performance year

(which may or may not vest in future years). It also differs to his statutory remuneration which reflects the accounting expense value for 2020.

Awarded remuneration shown below includes the face value of the performance rights at both threshold (50%) and full (100%) vesting.

SUMMARY OF TOTAL REMUNERATION – CEO

Total Remuneration

Awarded

Threshold vesting

$

Full vesting

$

Received

1

$

Statutory

2

$

2020 5,500,000 7,250,000 3,722,362 5,225,308

2019 5,700,000 7,800,000 4,093,464 5,181,339

2018 5,250,000 6,650,000 3,849,666 5,645,295

1. Includes the value of previously awarded AVR deferred shares and LTVR performance rights at the date of vesting. 2. Includes the value of AVR and LTVR that has been expensed in the year.

The CEO’s awarded remuneration based on full vesting value reduced by 7% from 2019 to 2020, despite the increase in fixed remuneration,

reflecting the significant reduction in his 2020 variable remuneration awards. Note his 2018 (variable) remuneration reflected ANZ’s

acknowledgement of the matters raised in the Royal Commission relating to conduct issues and associated reputational damage.

The reduction in the CEO’s received remuneration from 2019 to 2020 reflects the reduction in 2020 variable remuneration and the fact that

the LTVR performance rights granted in December 2016 failed to vest when tested in November 2019.

Historical AVR and LTVR

This table shows the AVR as a % of maximum opportunity and LTVR vesting outcomes for the CEO over the last three years.

HISTORICAL AVR AND LTVR – CEO

201820192020

AVR outcome (% of maximum opportunity)56%48%33%

LTVR vesting outcome (% vested)0%21.8%0%

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4.4.2 Disclosed Executive performance and VR

Performance

At the start of each year, stretching performance objectives are

set by the HR Committee in the form of Divisional Performance

Frameworks for each of our Disclosed Executives, in alignment with

the Group Performance Framework approved by the Board.

Similar to the Group Performance Framework, the Divisional

Performance Frameworks include the key elements of Financial

and Discipline, Customer, and People and Culture, with Risk and

Reputation acting as a modifier

1

. The weighting of each element

varies to reflect the responsibilities of each individual’s role. The

Financial and Discipline element weightings range from 20% to 45%.

At the end of the financial year, the performance of each Disclosed

Executive

2

is assessed against their contribution to the Group

Performance Framework, their Divisional Performance Framework,

ANZ’s values (behaviours), delivery of BEAR obligations and ANZ’s

risk and compliance standards.

The HR Committee seeks input from the CEO, and independent

reports from Risk, Finance, Talent and Culture, and Internal Audit,

and also reviews material risk event data provided by the CRO, and

seeks input from both the Audit Committee and the Risk Committee

of the Board.

The HR Committee reviews and recommends to the Board for

approval the overall performance outcomes for each Disclosed

Executive.

1. Except for the CRO who has a weighting assigned to Risk and Reputation measures.

2. Performance arrangements for the CRO are addressed additionally by the Risk Committee.

Performance arrangements for the Group Executive and CEO, NZ are determined and

approved by the ANZ NZ HR Committee/ANZ NZ Board in consultation with and endorsed

by the HR Committee/Board, consistent with their respective regulatory obligations.

VR

At the end of the financial year, the CEO and HR Committee

determine VR recommendations for each Disclosed Executive, which

are ultimately approved by the Board

3

. VR should and does vary year-

on-year in line with performance – it is not guaranteed and may be

adjusted up or down ranging from zero to a maximum opportunity.

The variance in individual VR outcomes reflect the relative

performance of the different areas/individuals, ensuring appropriate

alignment between performance and reward. There is less individual

differentiation in 2020 in recognition of the significant collaboration

and team work across the Executive Committee throughout 2020 and

particularly in managing ANZ’s response to COVID-19. The outcomes

demonstrate the at risk nature of VR, and that outcomes vary across

the Disclosed Executives and also from year to year. The average 2020

VR for Disclosed Executives is 36% of maximum opportunity (ranging

from 31% to 44%), reflecting the impact of the 50% reduction applied

by the Board.

3. Remuneration arrangements for the Group Executive and CEO, NZ are determined and

approved by the ANZ NZ Board in consultation with and endorsed by the Board, consistent

with their respective regulatory obligations.

2020 VR Awarded
This table shows the combined VR awarded to Disclosed Executives for the year ending 30 September 2020.

34% of max

44% of max

35% of max

33% of max

Maximum opportunityCurrent Disclosed Executives

2020 VR AWARDED – DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

Deferred shares or deferred share rightsPerformance rights face value at full vesting

2

M Carnegie

VR $1,661,600

=

K Corbally

1

VR $1,300,000

A George

VR $1,474,000

G Florian

VR $1,507,500

M Hand

VR $1,876,000

=

=

=

=

=

=

=

=

39% of max

33% of max

39% of max

33% of max

31% of max

++

++

++

+

++

++

+

$429,000$429,000$442,000

$371,250$765,000$371,250

$748,000

M Jablko

VR $1,474,000

$462,000$462,000$952,000

A Watson

VR $1,359,006

K van der Merwe

VR $1,340,000

M Whelan

VR $1,474,000

$330,000$330,000$680,000

+

+

$334,681$334,681$689,645

$363,000$363,000

++

$748,000$363,000$363,000

++

$748,000$363,000$363,000

$409,200$843,200$409,200

Cash

1. CRO receives deferred share rights instead of performance rights. 2. Divide by two to convert to face value at threshold vesting for performance rights.

Historical Disclosed Executive VR

This table shows the VR as a % of maximum opportunity for the executives who were disclosed over the last three years. Although ANZ’s

performance has been stronger this year and the Group has been assessed by the Board as having ‘Met Expectations’ against the Group

Performance Framework, the 50% reduction applied by the Board has resulted in a significant reduction in 2020 VR outcomes compared

to prior years.

HISTORICAL DISCLOSED EXECUTIVE VR

201820192020

VR outcome (average % of maximum opportunity)51%45%36%

VR outcome (range % of maximum opportunity)40% – 60%0% – 74%31% – 44%

VR performance rights vesting outcome (% vested)0%21.8%0%

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4.4.3 Performance rights outcomes (CEO and Disclosed Executives)

Performance rights granted to the CEO in December 2016 and Disclosed Executives (excluding the CRO) in November 2016 reached the

end of their performance period in November 2019. As the performance hurdles were not met none of these performance rights vested,

the rights were lapsed and executives received no value from these awards.

PERFORMANCE RIGHTS OUTCOMES

HurdleGrant date

1

First date

exercisable

1

ANZ TSR

over three years/

CAGR

2

TSR

Median TSR

over three years/

CAGR

2

TSR target% vested

Overall

performance

rights outcome

75% relative TSR

– Select Financial Services (SFS)

comparator group

3

22 Nov 1622 Nov 1918.32%26.21%0%

0% vested and

100% lapsed

25% absolute CAGR

2

TSR22 Nov 1622 Nov 195.78%9.00%0%

1. Grant date for the CEO was 16 December 2016, and date first exercisable was 16 December 2019. The CEO’s performance period was the same as the performance period for Disclosed

Executives. 2. Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR). 3. See section 5.2.3a for details of the SFS comparator group.

4.5 ANZIP VARIABLE REMUNERATION POOL AND GROUP PERFORMANCE

4.5.1 ANZIP variable remuneration

The ANZ Incentive Plan (ANZIP) is the variable remuneration plan operating across ANZ, and 2020 is the first year employees will participate

in a single Group plan where individual variable remuneration for around 80% of employees has been replaced with a variable payment

based on the overall performance of the Group. This change addresses many of the concerns about ‘bonus culture’ raised in the final report

of the Royal Commission, and forms part of wide ranging reforms for 2020 as to how we reward, recognise and manage the performance

of employees.

With the exception of the CEO, individual variable remuneration outcomes for all other employees including Disclosed Executives are

funded under ANZIP. The Board decides the CEO’s variable remuneration outcomes separately to help mitigate potential conflicts of interest.

See section 8.1.3.

At the end of each financial year, the HR Committee makes a recommendation to the Board for their approval on the size of the ANZIP variable

remuneration pool for that year. The Board exercise their judgement to determine the appropriate pool size – it is not a formulaic outcome.

Board review and

approve the ANZIP variable

remuneration pool

Business and individual

allocations from ANZIP

variable remuneration pool

ANZIP variable remuneration

pool recommended to the

Board for approval based on

performance and affordability

<<

The Board considered a range of factors in determining a fair and reasonable ANZIP pool, particularly given the unique circumstances in 2020.

01

The balance between performance

in 2020, considering financial and

non-financial performance, and the

long-term (strengthening the bank):

•Our 2020 financial performance – in particular cash profit and economic profit,

informed the pool range. Given financials were down on 2019 (due to the significant

impact of the COVID-19 pandemic), the pool range was negatively impacted.

•The ‘Met Expectations’ Group Performance Framework assessment (see 4.5.3) and the

quality of the result then guided the broad positioning in the pool range.

02

The final ANZIP pool outcome also

considered:

•The shareholder experience during 2020 and customer and community expectations.

•Increased volatility and uncertainty in the current environment.

•Our Reward Principles.

4.5.2 ANZ Group Performance Framework

The ANZ Group Performance Framework is approved by the Board at the start of each year and is designed around the following three key inputs:

Creating a safe

bank with sound

risk practices

Achieving our

agreed annual and

longer term goals

Realising our

strategic vision

010203

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4.5.3 Assessment against the Group Performance Framework for 2020

RISK & REPUTATION

Overall

Adjustment


ASSESSMENT:

Met Expectations

FINANCIAL &

DISCIPLINE

35%

weight


ASSESSMENT:

Below Expectations

CUSTOMER

35%

weight


ASSESSMENT:

Met Expectations

PEOPLE & CULTURE

30%

weight


ASSESSMENT:

Above Expectations

OVERALL

Group

Performance


ASSESSMENT:

Met Expectations

x

++

=

The key objective of our Group Performance Framework is to

enable aligned focus across the organisation on delivering the

critical outcomes that matter most in delivering on our strategy.

It plays a key role to:

•message internally what matters most;

•reinforce the importance of sound management in addition

to risk, customer, people and financial outcomes; and

•inform focus of effort, prioritisation and decision-making

across ANZ.

The emergence of the significant economic and social impacts

of the COVID-19 pandemic required a rapid response and

reprioritisation of resources. We tested our business strategy and

resolved it remains relevant to create long-term sustainable value

for our stakeholders, notwithstanding changes caused by the

impact of COVID-19.

However, our priorities, sequencing and emphasis needed to

change, particularly in the short to medium-term. We also reviewed

our 2020 Group performance objectives and determined that

while they too remained directionally appropriate, the pandemic

demanded a material shift in our focus for the second half of the

year resulting in a sharpened emphasis on some key objectives and

a shift of focus within others.

These in-year adjustments occurred through the lens of our

purpose-led approach to managing through COVID-19 with

our objectives being to:

•Protect our people, customers, shareholders and ANZ,

including strengthening our operational resilience;

•Adapt to the changing environment;

•Engage even more proactively with our stakeholders; and

•Prepare for the future.

For example:

•Balancing our immediate responses and medium-term cost

ambitions became even more critical, particularly in the current

low interest-rate environment;

•In times of a crisis, restoring and retaining community trust is

crucial, making a focus on strong governance, leadership and

corporate citizenship vital in supporting our customers and the

community to navigate through the pandemic;

•Our focus on providing great digital solutions was accelerated,

encouraged by rapid changes in customer behaviour;

•Immediate efforts to embed positive cultural change involved

enabling our people to work safely and productively, while

supporting them through clear communications to engage and

maintain their wellbeing and performance; and

•Our talent priorities shifted partly away from hiring and retaining

strategic capabilities and towards supporting rapid internal

moves to maintain operational resilience and respond to rapid

changes in customer needs.

As managing risk appropriately is fundamental to the way ANZ operates, Risk and Reputation forms an integral part of the assessment, directly

impacting the overall Group Performance Framework outcome (a modifier ranging from 0% to 110% of the Group Performance assessment).

When assessing Financial and Discipline (see section below), the Board considered a range of factors. This included an assessment of external

influences outside of the control of management. In 2020, returns and profitability were significantly impacted by COVID-19 – including

higher collective credit provision charges and the impairment of two of the Group’s Asian associate investments. Accordingly, cash profit from

continuing operations decreased 42% and Return on Equity (ROE) declined to 6.2%. This decline in profitability and returns was also considered

when the Board determined the size of the ANZIP variable remuneration pool for the year. For the purpose of assessing performance against the

Group Performance Framework, the extent these factors were considered outside of the control of management, have been factored into the

assessment of performance.

Overall, ANZ’s performance ‘Met Expectations’ when considering the objectives we set ourselves. While we were largely on track to achieve the

targets we set before COVID-19, we also demonstrated appropriate responses to the pandemic, supporting our customers and people while

remaining well-managed, including through the demonstration of strong financial discipline.

The below table outlines ANZ’s focus areas in 2020 (aligned to the three key inputs), and provides a summary of performance outcomes

for each of the key performance categories to inform the overall assessment for 2020. Performance against expectations is evaluated using

a range of objective indicators and subjective considerations including management input on work undertaken, evidence of outcomes

realised and lessons learned, and with consideration given to the operating, regulatory and competitive environment.

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RISK & REPUTATION (MODIFIER 0% TO 110%)

COVID-19 introduced a range of both new and increased risks for ANZ, our employees and our customers. Our existing strong risk

management framework enabled ANZ to respond well to these risks and continue to support our customers and the communities we

serve. In anticipation of the potential future impact of COVID-19 on our customers we increased our forward looking expected credit loss

provisions using a range of economic scenarios and we have continued to stress test our portfolio to re-assess our provisioning levels. At

the same time, management demonstrated accountability for fixing issues in a sustainable manner.

Risk culture measures reached all time high levels as concerted efforts to transform our culture prepared the bank well to manage

through the pandemic in a calm, measured and proactive manner. Strong leadership and citizenship have been paramount, centred

on regaining the trust of the community through our commitment to fair and responsible banking.

2020 focus areasPerformance commentary

Performance against

expectations

Below Met Above

Strengthen our financial

and non-financial risk,

control, governance

and compliance focus

in line with the risk

management framework

•We have continued to develop and improve our financial and operational

resilience which has helped position us well to respond to the impact

of the evolving external environment including from the impacts of

COVID-19, increased regulatory and compliance focus, bushfires and

floods, the uncertainty from geopolitical and trade tensions and increased

cyber activities.

•We prepared and adapted our workforce and increased operational

resilience by enabling over 95% of our workforce to work from home.

Focus on being

well-managed and

maintaining or improving

across key risk control

and cultural indicators

•We have maintained our focus on managing risk controls, and

demonstrated accountability for fixing issues in a timely and sustainable

manner.

•Strong progress continues on risk culture maturity, evidenced in employee

engagement scores, with ‘Leaders accountable for risk’ (87%) – up on

2019, and ‘Raise issues without fear of reprisal’ (74%) – also up on 2019.

Timely delivery of the

APRA Governance,

Culture and

Accountability (GCA)

self-assessment action

plan recommendations

and success measures

•We have strengthened the bank’s focus on non-financial risk (NFR) and

progress has been made in uplifting our NFR control, governance and

compliance focus, including continuing to deliver sound progress to

address the themes identified by the self-assessment and lessons learned

from the Royal Commission.

Improve our reputation

relative to industry as

evaluated by all key

stakeholders

•After being the first bank to make Royal Commission commitments, ANZ

continues to act on these with a particular focus on supporting our most

vulnerable customers in both Australia and NZ.

•We remained committed to supporting our customers during the

Australian bushfires and COVID-19, through loan payment deferrals and

financial support whilst also remaining focused on responsible credit

decision making.

•Across the industry, community perception scores have fluctuated

however, ANZ currently leads the major banks in the IPSOS survey

measuring social media sentiment, while in the RepTrak survey ANZ led

for the majority of 2020 and was second based on July to September

results. An A- rating was achieved in the 2019 CDP climate change

assessment, the leading score for Australian banks.

Risk & Reputation overall: Met Expectations

RISK & REPUTATION (MODIFIER 0% TO 110%)

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We have continued to demonstrate our commitment to improve the financial wellbeing of our customers, including ensuring our most

vulnerable customers and those undergoing COVID-19 related stress are aware of and can access the support we have available to them.

Despite the serious challenges faced by the sector and community this year, our actions over previous years to simplify and strengthen the

bank provided us with the capacity to support our customers at a time of need and strengthen our long-term relationships. A proactive

approach to reallocating resources and keeping in close contact with customers through the Australian bushfires and COVID-19 ensured

we were available to listen and respond effectively. Across all our retail and commercial businesses in the region, we were also able to work

quickly and comprehensively provide an appropriate series of support packages including loan deferrals and access to working capital.

While the focus has clearly been on assisting customers in need, there has also been opportunity to build new customer relationships and

enable more digital services that have been especially valued in a restricted COVID-19 environment.

2020 focus areasPerformance commentary

Performance against

expectations

Below Met Above

Strengthen relationships

and maintain customer

experience in our target

segments

•Net Promoter Score (NPS)

1

centred on key onboarding episodes in Australia,

where strong improvements have been made in retail home lending and

business lending, while NZ Retail achieved all time high scores.

•ANZ was ranked the #1 lead institutional bank by Peter Lee Associates

2


for the fifth year running and #1 for relationship strength for the seventh

consecutive year, while a new online payments experience has been

processing ~1 million payments daily and providing digital self-service for

our Institutional customers.

•In Australia, customer complaint resolution and home lending assessment

timeframes have remained a challenge, however uplift programs are

in place to improve these outcomes. Customer complaint timeframes

improved from 63% to 66% resolved within five business days, while

median home lending decision times increased from 6.0 days to 9.4 days

as improved processes and campaigns drove an overwhelmingly strong

demand from customers.

Help our people to make

wise customer-focused

choices every day

•Launched a public campaign to improve financial wellbeing and behaviours

in the community and commenced embedding financial wellbeing

principles into key products and services.

•Supporting our customers through the Australian bushfires and COVID-19

pandemic has been a priority, incorporating financial relief packages and

making sure we have remained available to provide assistance where it has

been needed.

•In Australia, significant progress was made on the customer commitments

and initiatives announced in 2019, including a focus on supporting

vulnerable customers. In NZ, our Good Customer Outcome principles and

product simplification reviews are delivering better customer experiences,

including the removal or reduction of several fees, including on Visa debit,

low rate products, payments and statements.

Quickly and effectively

remediate individual and

systemic customer issues

across the Group

•Approximately 1.8 million customer accounts in Australia have been

refunded (against a target of 500,000 accounts), with a total of ~$161

million returned. Sound progress continues to be made in closing out

large remediation streams in both Australia and NZ.

Customer overall: Met Expectations

CUSTOMER (35% WEIGHT)

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PEOPLE & CULTURE (30% WEIGHT)

In a challenging year, significant capacity and attention was focused on managing through COVID-19 and the Australian bushfires,

however strong progress was still made on key priorities including embedding our new reward framework, building strategic and

leadership capabilities, and strengthening governance, accountability and culture. Our ability to make progress in the face of disruption

is the product of sustained efforts to embed our purpose and aspirational culture over multiple years, including through implementing

agile working practices and strong leadership behaviours.

In response to COVID-19, our core focus was protecting the safety of our people and in turn, our customers. By quickly enabling

significant increases in our remote working capacity, over 95% of all employees (excluding Australian branches) were able to continue

to work productively and safely from home and continue to deliver great outcomes for our customers.

2020 focus areasPerformance commentary

Performance against

expectations

Below Met Above

Strengthen governance,

accountability, actions

and measurement of

culture

•Continued to embed the Accountability and Consequence Framework

(A&CF) including in support of our new reward model, with 12 full and

26 preliminary accountability reviews completed.

•Divisions have continued to share progress and lessons learned through

our culture steering groups and we have undertaken a review of our

culture measurement and assessment approach.

Engaging our people

and diversifying our

workforce

•Overall engagement score increased to a record high of 86% (up from

77% in 2019), with strong results also seen in key measures, reflecting

ANZ’s strong support for our employees and clear senior leader

communication during the pandemic.

•Women in leadership increased 0.9% to 33.4% (against a 34.1% target).

Improve leader capability

•Commenced rollout of a bank wide leadership capability program for all

people leaders.

•Key leadership survey results continued to improve, including scores for

leaders role modelling our values and demonstrating effective leadership

behaviours.

Embed Reimagining

Reward, including

new Performance

Management approach

•Finalised and embedded changes to how we manage and reward our

people to better focus on the interests of our customers, collaboration,

and the long-term health of the bank.

•Implemented a more dynamic approach to performance management,

including a stronger emphasis on more frequent check-in conversations

to review and drive performance, as well as maintain employee wellbeing

during COVID-19. Some plans to embed performance changes had to be

scaled back due to capacity constraints.

Strengthen strategic

capabilities

•In response to COVID-19, safe internal workforce movement principles

were developed, and we rapidly enabled internal moves to support

operational resilience and supplement areas where customer demand

was highest.

•Enhanced recruiting, assessment and onboarding processes, especially for

graduates and high demand capabilities. Achieved targets for hiring into

strategic capability areas, such as data and engineering skillsets.

People & Culture overall: Above Expectations

PEOPLE & CULTURE (30% WEIGHT)

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FINANCIAL & DISCIPLINE (35% WEIGHT)

Profitability and returns have been significantly impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic this year, including the impact of higher credit

provision charges and the impairment of two of the Group’s Asian associate investments. ANZ has been able to manage well through

this challenging period given our long-term strategy to simplify the business and strengthen the balance sheet enabled us to enter the

COVID-19 environment in a strong financial position. As a result, we have been able to both support our customers and enable prudent

dividends to be paid to our shareholders, while absorbing a significant increase in credit reserves and without needing to raise capital.

Costs have again been well managed, with expenses broadly flat despite record levels of investment to grow and simplify the business,

and increased regulatory and compliance spend. Divestments during the year reduced the complexity of the Group. Ongoing work to

identify and rectify customers in need of remediation led to further remediation charges, which impacted financial performance.

2020 focus areasPerformance commentary

Performance against

expectations

Below Met Above

Balance appropriately

between financial results,

safety and soundness,

and investment in the

future

•On a cash continuing basis, ROE decreased to 6.2% and NPAT fell 42%

due to the impacts of COVID-19 outlined above. Excluding large/notable

items

3

, a 1% decline in profit before provisions (PBP) was

on target, noting the difficult operating environment.

•Costs remained broadly flat despite record levels of investment to grow and

simplify the business, and increased regulatory and compliance spend.

•Capital continued to be well managed. CET1 of 11.3% has remained above

regulatory minimums, while enabling dividends (albeit reduced) to be

paid to our shareholders and the disciplined use of our balance sheet to

support our customers.

•Liquidity and funding was prudently managed in the environment, with

the Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) of 139% and Net Stable Funding Ratio

(NSFR) of 124%, well above regulatory minimums.

Progress agreed

simplification plan

•We continued to reduce the complexity of our business (e.g. sale of UDC

Finance to Shinsei Bank, sale of offsite ATM network to Armaguard).

•Through strong cost management, we created capacity to invest into the

business and remain committed to building a simpler and better bank.

Prepare NZ business

for Reserve Bank of

New Zealand (RBNZ)

outsourcing policy (BS11)

and capital changes

•We are well progressed in the preparation for both the RBNZ capital

changes and BS11 compliance.

Financial & Discipline overall: Below Expectations

OVERALL

Group Performance assessment: Met Expectations

The impact to profitability and returns in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic was considered

when the Board determined the ANZIP outcome (see section 4.5.1). For the purpose of assessing financial

performance against the Group Performance Framework, the extent these factors were considered outside

of the control of management, have been considered when forming the overall assessment of performance.

On balance, the Board considered an overall assessment of ‘Met Expectations’ fair and appropriate.

1. Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a customer loyalty metric used globally to evaluate a company’s brand, products or services. Net Promoter® and NPS® are registered trademarks and Net

Promoter Score and Net Promoter System are trademarks of Bain & Company, Satmetrix Systems and Fred Reichheld. 2. Peter Lee Associates 2020 Large Corporate and Institutional

Relationship Banking surveys, Australia and NZ. 3. Large/notable items include the impact of divestments, customer remediation, accelerated software amortisation, Royal Commission legal

costs, lease-related items, restructuring and impairments.

FINANCIAL & DISCIPLINE (35% WEIGHT)

OVERALL

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4.5.4 ANZ performance outcomes

ANZ’s financial performance 2016 – 2020

As discussed in section 4.5.1, when determining variable remuneration outcomes for Disclosed Executives and employees more broadly

cash profit and economic profit are considered. The Group uses cash profit

1

as a measure of performance for the Group’s ongoing business

activities, as this provides a basis to assess Group and Divisional performance against earlier periods and against peer institutions. Although

cash profit is not audited, the external auditor has informed the Audit Committee that recurring adjustments have been determined on a

consistent basis across each period presented.

Statutory profit has decreased 40% compared to the prior financial year, while cash profit from continuing operations has decreased 42%.

The decline was driven primarily by:

•Credit impairment charges of $2.7 billion pre-tax (up from $795 million in the prior financial year), which included increased credit reserves

for the impacts of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic; and

•An $815 million impairment in the valuation of two of the Group’s Asian associate investments, largely due to the impact COVID-19 has

had in those markets.

Excluding the movement in these two items, cash profit fell 5% from the prior financial year.

The table below provides ANZ’s financial performance, including cash profit, over the last five years.

20162017201820192020

Statutory profit ($m)5,7096,4066,4005,9533,577

Cash profit ($m, unaudited)5,8896,9385,8056,1613,660

Cash profit – Continuing operations ($m, unaudited)

2

5,8896,8096,4876,4703,758

Cash profit before provisions – Continuing operations ($m, unaudited)

2

10,15510,8499,9669,9588,369

Cash ROE (%) – Continuing operations (unaudited)

2

10.311.711.010.96.2

Cash EPS – Continuing operations (unaudited)

2

202.6232.7223.4227.6132.7

Share price at 30 September ($)

(On 1 October 2015, opening share price was $27.25)

27.6329.6028.1828.5217.22

Total dividend (cents per share)16016016016060

Total shareholder return (12 month %)9.213.10.69.2(36.9)

1. Cash profit excludes non-core items included in statutory profit and is provided to assist readers understand the results of the core business activities of the Group. 2. Cash profit from

continuing operations has been presented for 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020 (2016 has not been restated). Cash profit from continuing operations represents the Group’s cash profit excluding the

impact of our discontinued businesses, which consist of OnePath Pensions and Investments and aligned dealer groups, and the Group’s life insurance business in Australia. The businesses

were reclassified to discontinuing in 2018, and only the 2017 result was restated in the table above. During 2019, the Group adopted AASB 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers and only

2018 has been restated.

ANZ TSR performance (1 to 10 years)

The table below compares ANZ’s TSR performance against the median TSR and upper quartile TSR of the performance rights Select

Financial Services (SFS) comparator group

1

over one to ten years, noting that for this table TSR is measured over a different timeframe to the

performance period for our performance rights, i.e. to 30 September 2020.

•ANZ’s TSR performance was slightly above the median TSR of the SFS comparator group

1

when comparing over one and three years;

•slightly below the median over five years; and

•below the median over ten years.

While ANZ’s TSR performance over 10 years was lower than the median, since Shayne Elliott’s tenure as CEO, ANZ’s TSR has performed around

the median when assessed over one, three and five years.

Years to 30 September 2020

13

2

510

ANZ (%)(36.9)(31.8)(15.7)28.5

Median TSR SFS (%)(37.3)(32.0)(14.9)40.9

Upper quartile TSR SFS (%)(18.4)(1.7)13.4111.1

1. See section 5.2.3a for details of the SFS comparator group. 2. The outcomes for performance rights granted in November/December 2016 and tested in November 2019 are detailed in

section 4.4.3.

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5. EXECUTIVE REMUNERATION STRUCTURE AND DELIVERY

There are two core components of remuneration at ANZ – fixed remuneration and at risk variable remuneration.

In structuring remuneration, the Board aims to find the right balance between fixed and variable remuneration (at risk), the way it is delivered

(cash versus deferred remuneration) and appropriate time frames (the short, medium and long-term).

The Board sets (and reviews annually) the CEO and Disclosed Executives’ fixed remuneration based on financial services market relativities

and reflecting their responsibilities, performance, qualifications, experience and location.

The way variable remuneration operates differs somewhat between the CEO and Disclosed Executives. Namely:

•The CEO’s variable remuneration is comprised of AVR and LTVR (subject to shareholder approval), which provides consistency with external

market practice, and LTVR reinforces his focus on achieving longer term strategic objectives and long-term stakeholder value creation.

•Disclosed Executives are subject to one combined VR plan which enables us to:

–provide the appropriate mix of short and long-term rewards (including performance hurdles) to drive performance, and attract and

retain talent;

–tie the full VR award to the performance of ANZ; and

–defer VR over the short, medium and longer term.

Variable remuneration seeks to differentiate for performance and is designed to focus our CEO and Disclosed Executives on stretching

performance objectives supporting our business strategy, and encourage the delivery of long-term stakeholder value.

By deferring a significant portion of variable remuneration (74% of maximum opportunity for the CEO, 75% for Disclosed Executives and

67% for the CRO), we seek to ensure alignment with shareholder interests to deliver on ANZ’s strategic objectives and ensure a focus

on long-term value creation. Deferred variable remuneration has significant retention elements, and most importantly, can be adjusted

downwards, including to zero, allowing the Board to hold executives accountable, individually or collectively, for the longer term impacts

of their decisions and actions.

Board discretion is applied when determining all CEO and Disclosed Executive variable remuneration outcomes, and also before any

scheduled release of previously deferred remuneration (i.e. consider malus or further deferral).

5.1 REMUNERATION MIX

We structure the CEO and Disclosed Executives’ remuneration as follows:

REMUNERATION MIX – CEO

Minimum = Fixed remuneration ($2.5 million)

Target = Fixed remuneration + target AVR (100% of fixed remuneration) + LTVR (140% of fixed remuneration (performance rights

at full vesting))

Maximum = Fixed remuneration + maximum AVR (150% of fixed remuneration) + LTVR (140% of fixed remuneration (performance rights

at full vesting))

Fixed remunerationAVR cashAVR deferred sharesLTVR performance rights

$2.5 million

$9.75 million

$8.5 million

Minimum opportunity

Maximum opportunity

Target opportunity

100%

29%14.5%14.5%42%

26%19%19%36%

27%18%18%37%

20%20%20%40%

REMUNERATION MIX – DISCLOSED EXECUTIVE

1

Minimum = Fixed remuneration

Target = Fixed remuneration + target VR (268% of fixed remuneration (performance rights at full vesting))

Maximum = Fixed remuneration + maximum VR (402% of fixed remuneration (150% of target VR and performance rights at full vesting))

Fixed remuneration

VR cash

VR deferred shares

VR performance rights

Minimum opportunity

Maximum opportunity

Target opportunity

100%

1. Excluding CRO.

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CRO

To preserve the independence of the role and to minimise any conflicts of interest in carrying out the risk control function across the

organisation, the CRO’s remuneration arrangements differ to other Disclosed Executives.

The remuneration mix is 27% fixed remuneration and 73% VR maximum opportunity. The VR target opportunity is 180% of fixed

remuneration and VR maximum opportunity is 270% of fixed remuneration. VR is delivered as 33% cash, 33% deferred shares and 34%

deferred share rights (instead of performance rights).

5.2 VARIABLE REMUNERATION DELIVERY

Variable remuneration for the CEO and the Disclosed Executives (excluding the CRO) is delivered partly in cash, shares deferred over four

years, and performance rights deferred for four years. The performance rights are also subject to performance hurdles which determine

whether they vest in four years’ time.

60% of variable remuneration (AVR plus LTVR) for the CEO, 53% of VR for Disclosed Executives (other than the CRO), and 41% of VR for

the CRO will be deferred for at least four years (from the date the Board approved the variable remuneration in October (and the date

shareholders approve the CEO’s LTVR)), noting that this complies with the BEAR minimum deferral requirement of 60% for the CEO and

40% for Disclosed Executives.

Before any scheduled release of deferred shares/deferred share rights/performance rights, the Board considers whether any malus/

downward adjustment of previously deferred remuneration (or further deferral of vesting) should be made for the CEO and Disclosed

Executives. See section 5.3.

VARIABLE REMUNERATION DELIVERY – CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

1 Oct

2019

30 Sep

2020

Variable remuneration paid/allocated

Dec 2020

1

Nov 2021

Nov 2022

Nov 2023

Nov 2024

Fixed remuneration

ANZ

financial year

Deferred

shares

2

(AVR/VR)

Cash

(AVR/VR)

Vesting is subject to

meeting TSR performance

hurdles at the end of year 4

40% vesting at

the end of year 1

30% vesting at

the end of year 2

20% vesting at

the end of year 3

Performance

rights

3


(LTVR/VR)

10% vesting at

the end of year 4

1. Variable remuneration outcomes were approved by the Board on 21 October 2020 (noting that the CEO’s performance rights are subject to shareholder approval at the 2020 AGM).

2. Deferred shares for the CRO vest as follows: 30% at the end of years 1 and 2, and 20% at the end of years 3 and 4. 3. Deferred share rights for the CRO.

5.2.1 Cash – CEO (AVR) and Disclosed Executives (VR)

The cash component is paid to executives at the end of the annual Performance and Remuneration Review (December 2020).

5.2.2 Deferred shares – CEO (AVR) and Disclosed Executives (VR)

Deferred shares are ordinary shares, deferred over one to four years. By deferring part of an executives’ remuneration over time (and it

remaining subject to malus), we enable a substantial amount of their remuneration to be directly linked to delivering long-term shareholder

value. We grant deferred shares in respect of performance for the 1 October to 30 September financial year in late November/early

December each year.

We calculate the number of deferred shares to be granted based on the VWAP of the shares traded on the ASX in the week leading up to and

including the date of grant. For disclosure and expensing purposes, we use the one day VWAP to determine the fair value.

In some cases (generally due to regulatory or tax reasons), we may grant deferred share rights to executives instead of deferred shares.

Each deferred share right entitles the holder to one ordinary share.

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5.2.3a Performance rights – CEO (LTVR) and Disclosed Executives (VR) excluding the CRO

A performance right is a right to acquire one ordinary ANZ share at nil cost – as long as time and performance hurdles are met. The future

value of performance rights may range from zero to an indeterminate value. The value depends on our performance against the hurdles and

on the share price at the time of exercise.

The performance rights have a four-year performance period (and remain subject to malus up to the vesting date). For the 2020 grant, the

performance period is from 22 November 2020 to 21 November 2024. A four-year performance period provides sufficient time for longer

term performance to be reflected.

More detail relating to the 2020 performance rights is provided below.

ElementDetail

Performance

rights hurdles

The performance rights have TSR performance hurdles reflecting the importance of focusing on achieving longer term

strategic objectives and aligning executives’ and shareholders’ interests. We will apply two TSR performance hurdles for

the 2020 grants of performance rights:

•75% will be measured against a relative TSR hurdle, tranche 1.

•25% will be measured against an absolute TSR hurdle, tranche 2.

TSR represents the change in value of a share plus the value of reinvested dividends paid. We regard it as the most

appropriate long-term measure – it focuses on the delivery of shareholder value and is a well understood and tested

mechanism to measure performance.

The combination of relative and absolute TSR hurdles provides balance to the plan by:

•Relative: rewarding executives for performance that exceeds that of comparator companies; and

•Absolute: ensuring there is a continued focus on providing positive growth – even when the market is declining.

The two hurdles measure separate aspects of performance:

•the relative TSR hurdle measures our TSR compared to that of the Select Financial Services (SFS) comparator group,

made up of core local and global competitors. This comparator group is chosen to broadly reflect the geographies

and business segments in which ANZ competes for revenue; and

•the absolute Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) TSR hurdle provides executives with a more direct line of sight

to the level of shareholder return to be achieved. It also provides a tighter correlation between the executives’ rewards

and the shareholders’ financial outcomes.

We will measure ANZ’s TSR against each hurdle at the end of the four-year performance period to determine whether

each tranche of performance rights become exercisable. We measure each tranche independently from the other – for

example one tranche may vest fully or partially but the other tranche may not vest.

Relative TSR

hurdle for the

November/

December

2020 grant

The relative TSR hurdle is an external hurdle that measures our TSR against that of the SFS comparator group over four

years. The SFS comparator group (unchanged from prior years) is made up of: Bank of Queensland Limited; Bendigo and

Adelaide Bank Limited; Commonwealth Bank of Australia Limited; DBS Bank Limited; Macquarie Group Limited; National

Australia Bank Limited; Standard Chartered PLC; Suncorp Group Limited; and Westpac Banking Corporation.

If our TSR when compared to the TSR of the comparator groupthen the percentage of performance rights that vest

is less than the 50

th

percentileis nil

reaches at least the 50

th

percentile, but is less than

the 75

th

percentile

is 50% plus 2% for every one percentile increase

above the 50

th

percentile

reaches or exceeds the 75

th

percentileis 100%

Absolute TSR

hurdle for the

November/

December

2020 grant

The absolute CAGR TSR hurdle is an internal hurdle as to whether ANZ achieves or exceeds a threshold level of growth

the Board sets at the start of the performance period.

The Board reviews and approves the absolute TSR targets each year for that year’s award. When reviewing the targets,

the Board references ANZ’s assessed Cost of Capital. The Cost of Capital is determined using methodologies including

the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM). There has been no change to the absolute CAGR TSR targets for 2020.

If the absolute CAGR of our TSRthen the percentage of performance rights that vest

is less than 8.5%is nil

is 8.5%is 50%

reaches at least 8.5%, but is less than 12.75%is progressively increased on a pro-rata, straight-line,

basis from 50% to 100%

reaches or exceeds 12.75%is 100%

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Calculating TSR

performance

When calculating performance against TSR, we:

•reduce the impact of share price volatility – by using an averaging calculation over a 90-trading day period for start

and end values;

•ensure an independent measurement – by engaging the services of an external organisation, Mercer Consulting

(Australia) Pty Ltd, to calculate ANZ’s performance against the TSR hurdles; and

•test the performance against the relevant hurdle once only at the end of the four-year performance period – the

rights lapse if the performance hurdle is not met – there is no retesting.

Calculating

the number of

performance

rights

The number of performance rights we grant is calculated using a face value basis – i.e. the full share price. Face value

at full vesting is split into two tranches. Each tranche value is then divided by the market price (five trading day VWAP

of ANZ shares at the start of the performance period) to determine the number of performance rights we award in

each tranche.

Performance rights are allocated in late November/early December for Disclosed Executives and December for the

CEO (subject to shareholder approval).

Expensing

performance

rights

ANZ engages PricewaterhouseCoopers to independently determine the fair value of performance rights, which is only

used for expensing purposes. They consider factors including: the performance conditions, share price volatility, life

of the instrument, dividend yield, and share price at grant date.

5.2.3b Deferred share rights – CRO (VR)

The CRO receives deferred share rights instead of performance rights to preserve the independence of the role and to minimise any conflicts

of interest in carrying out the risk control function across the organisation.

The CRO’s deferred share rights are subject to a time-based vesting hurdle of four years. The value the Board uses to determine the number

of deferred share rights to be allocated to the CRO is the face value of the Company’s shares traded on the ASX at the time of grant (five

trading day VWAP).

5.3 MALUS (DOWNWARD ADJUSTMENT OF PREVIOUSLY DEFERRED REMUNERATION) – BOARD DISCRETION

All deferred remuneration we award to an employee is subject to ANZ’s on-going and absolute discretion to adjust this downward (malus)

(including to zero) at any time.

ANZ may exercise this discretion, for example, where:

•there is a need to protect the financial soundness of ANZ or to meet regulatory requirements or there has been a material failure of risk

management or controls within ANZ;

•the employee has acted fraudulently or dishonestly, failed to act with due care, skill and diligence, or failed to comply with ANZ policies

(including the Code of Conduct), processes or directions;

•the employee is responsible or accountable, directly or indirectly, by virtue of their role or seniority for an occurrence/event which has had

an adverse impact on ANZ;

•there has been misconduct and the employee was involved directly or indirectly, failed to take adequate steps, could be considered

responsible due to their seniority, or the decision to award or grant the deferred remuneration was made on the basis of misinformation.

Further, where the CEO and/or Disclosed Executives of ANZ have failed to comply with their accountability obligations under the BEAR, their

deferred remuneration will be reduced by an amount that is proportionate to the failure, as required by the BEAR.

An employee’s deferred remuneration is also subject to ANZ’s on-going and absolute discretion to further defer the vesting. Where ANZ

exercises this discretion, the vesting date is postponed and will not vest unless and until ANZ determines it should vest.

Before any scheduled vesting of deferred remuneration, the Board (for the CEO, Disclosed Executives and other specified roles) and/or the

Consequence Review Group (CRG) (for other employees) considers whether malus/downward adjustment or further deferral should be

applied. See section 6 for details.

6. ACCOUNTABILITY AND CONSEQUENCE FRAMEWORK
In 2020, we continued to strengthen and embed the Accountability

and Consequence Framework (A&CF).

The HR Committee and Board determine accountability and

consequences for the CEO and Disclosed Executives, including the

application of malus to previously deferred remuneration.

The CRO presented a report to the HR Committee of the Board

on the most material risk events for 2020, and input was also

sought from the Audit and Risk Committees of the Board. All of this

information was taken into consideration by the HR Committee and

the Board when considering the performance of the Group, and

determining the performance and remuneration outcomes for our

Group Executives including the CEO and the 2020 ANZIP variable

remuneration pool for all employees.

Adjustments were made to 2020 individual variable remuneration

outcomes to reflect accountability for relevant matters.

No malus was applied to the previously deferred remuneration

of the CEO and Disclosed Executives during 2020.

The Consequence Review Group (CRG) supports the Board in

monitoring the implementation and ongoing effectiveness of ANZ’s

A&CF, being cognisant of its impact on the culture of ANZ. The

CRG is chaired by the CEO and members include the CRO, CFO and

GE T&C. The CRG reviews material events, accountability and the

application of suitable consequences where appropriate.

When determining consequences consideration will be given to

the level of accountability, and the severity of the issue, including

customer impacts. Consequences may include, for example, one

or more of the following: counselling, formal warnings, impacts to

in year performance and remuneration outcomes or application

of malus to previously deferred remuneration and ultimately

termination of employment for the most serious issues.

Our ongoing focus on accountability, consequences and driving

a strong risk culture supports our customer commitment that when

things go wrong, we fix them quickly and hold executives, current

(and former where we can), to account where appropriate. We are

also focused on ensuring that we learn from the cause of the event,

and mitigate the risk of future recurrences and continuously seek

to strengthen our risk culture.

We review the effectiveness of the A&CF every year and implement

enhancements to further strengthen the framework based on

regulatory and internal stakeholder input.

We also examined the impact of the A&CF on our ‘speak up’ culture.

Across all measures reviewed, including our annual My Voice

survey, and percentage of self-disclosed audit issues and internal

audit cultural review data, we found that our speak-up culture had

strengthened in 2020 compared to 2019. This gives

us confidence that the implementation of the A&CF

is consistent with our speak-up culture. We continue

to raise employee awareness of, and promote the various

ways that employees can speak up including through

initiatives such as the annual Whistleblower Awareness Week.

In 2020 across the Group, there were 1,448 Code of Conduct cases

managed resulting in 199 employees being terminated for breaches

of our Code of Conduct, or who otherwise left the bank after an

investigation had been initiated. A further 370 employees received

a formal disciplinary outcome, with managers required to apply

impacts to their performance and remuneration outcomes as part

of the annual review process.

At the senior leadership level, 34 current or former senior

leaders (senior executives, executives and senior managers) had

consequences applied in 2020 for Code of Conduct breaches or

findings of accountability for a relevant event, or otherwise left the

bank after an investigation had been initiated. The 34 employees

represent 1.4% of our 2,443 senior leaders. The consequences

applied included warnings, impacts to performance and/or

remuneration outcomes and cessation of employment.

Senior leader consequences in 2020

1

Formal warnings

2

19

No longer employed7

Performance impacts

3

18

1. Individuals are included under all categories that are relevant meaning one individual may

be reflected in multiple categories. 2. As part of the annual Performance and Remuneration

Review process, performance and remuneration consequences are applied in line with our

A & C F. 3. Performance rating impacts are as at end of October 2020. Remuneration impacts

will also be applied.

There are also performance and remuneration consequences for

employees who are non-compliant with the mandatory learning

requirements by over 30 days, with these employees being deemed

ineligible to participate in the year-end remuneration review

process (unless genuinely exceptional circumstances exist). In

2020, less than 0.4% of employees had a mandatory learning non-

compliance flag applied to their profiles as a result of becoming

overdue for 30 days on their mandatory learning requirements. The

remaining 99.6% of our employees completed their mandatory

learning requirements within the required period.

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7. NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR (NED) REMUNERATION

7.1 REMUNERATION STRUCTURE

The HR Committee reviewed NED fees for 2020 and determined not to increase Chairman, NED or Committee fees except for the Digital

Business and Technology Committee Chair fee (which increased from $35,000 to $45,000) in recognition of the significant increase in

workload of the Committee Chair.

NEDs receive a base fee for being a Director of the Board, and additional fees for either chairing, or being a member of a Board Committee.

The Chairman of the Board does not receive additional fees for serving on a Board Committee.

In setting Board and Committee fees, the Board considers: general industry practice, ASX Corporate Governance Principles and

Recommendations, the responsibilities and risks attached to the NED role, the time commitment expected of NEDs on Group and Company

matters, and fees paid to NEDs of comparable companies.

ANZ compares NED fees to a comparator group of Australian listed companies with a similar market capitalisation, with particular focus on

the major financial services institutions. This is considered an appropriate group, given similarity in size and complexity, nature of work and

time commitment by NEDs.

To maintain NED independence and impartiality:

•NED fees are not linked to the performance of the Group; and

•NEDs are not eligible to participate in any of the Group’s variable remuneration arrangements.

The current aggregate fee pool for NEDs of $4 million was approved by shareholders at the 2012 AGM. The annual total of NEDs’ fees,

including superannuation contributions, is within this agreed limit.

This table shows the NED fee policy structure for 2020.

2020 NED FEE POLICY STRUCTURE

Board

1, 2

Audit

Committee

Risk

Committee

HR

Committee

Digital Business &

Technology

Committee

Ethics, Environment,

Social & Governance

Committee

Chair fee$825,000$65,000$62,000$57,000$45,000$35,000

Member fee$240,000$32,500$31,000$29,000$15,000$15,000

1. Including superannuation. 2. The Chairman of the Board does not receive additional fees for serving on a Board Committee. The Chairman of the Board and NEDs do not receive a fee for

serving on the Nomination and Board Operations Committee.

NED shareholding guidelines

We expect our NEDs to hold ANZ shares. NEDs are required:

•to accumulate shares – over a five-year period from their appointment – to the value of 100% (200% for the Chairman) of the NED

member fee; and

•to maintain this shareholding while they are a Director of ANZ.

Based on the ANZ share price as at 30 September 2020, all NEDs who have served five years met the holding requirement. NEDs appointed

within the last five years have either met or are building towards their shareholding requirement.

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7.2 2020 STATUTORY REMUNERATION – NEDS

2020 STATUTORY REMUNERATION – NEDS

Short-term NED benefitsPost-employment

Financial

yearFees

1


$

Non monetary

benefits

$

Super

contributions

1


$

Total

remuneration

2


$

Current Non-Executive Directors

D Gonski

1

2020 803,824 - 21,176 825,000

2019 639,351 - 20,649 660,000

I Atlas

1

2020 323,324 - 21,176 344,500

2019 275,851 - 20,649 296,500

P Dwyer

1

2020 354,326 - 10,674 365,000

2019 296,351 - 20,649 317,000

J Halton

1

2020 307,824 - 21,176 329,000

2019 246,058 - 20,649 266,707

J Key

1, 3

2020 279,824 - 21,176 301,000

2019 229,131 - 20,649 249,780

G Liebelt

1

2020 342,324 - 21,176 363,500

2019 294,851 - 20,649 315,500

J Macfarlane

1

2020 297,324 - 21,176 318,500

2019 249,851 - 20,649 270,500

P O’Sullivan

4


2020 243,331 - 19,207 262,538

Total of all Non-Executive Directors

20202,952,101 - 156,937 3,109,038

2019 2,231,444 - 144,543 2,375,987

1. Year-on-year differences in fees relate to the 20% reduction to the Chairman fee and the NED member fees in 2019 (as a consequence of a decision taken by the Directors that their fees

should reflect shared accountability for the failures highlighted by the Royal Commission), changes in Committee memberships and changes to the superannuation Maximum Contribution

Base. From 1 January 2020 to 30 June 2020, P Dwyer elected to receive all payments in fees and therefore did not receive superannuation contributions during this period. 2. Long-term

benefits and share-based payments do not apply for the NEDs. 3. In addition to the fees shown above that J Key received as a NED for Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited

(ANZBGL), as Chairman for ANZ Bank New Zealand Limited J Key also received a total of NZD 391,000 in 2020 and NZD 382,950 in 2019. 4. P O’Sullivan commenced as a NED on 4 November

2019, so 2020 remuneration reflects a partial service year.

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8. REMUNERATION GOVERNANCE

8.1 THE HUMAN RESOURCES (HR) COMMITTEE

8.1.1 Role of the HR Committee

The HR Committee supports the Board on remuneration and other

HR matters. It reviews the remuneration policies and practices

of the Group, and monitors market practice and regulatory and

compliance requirements in Australia and overseas.

During the year the HR Committee met on six occasions

1

and

reviewed and approved, or made recommendations to the Board

on matters including:

•remuneration for the CEO and other key executives (broader

than those disclosed in the Remuneration Report) covered

by the ANZBGL Remuneration Policy, and fees for the NEDs;

•reward structure changes (including the Reimagining Reward

initiative);

•ANZ’s response to the industry-wide Retail Remuneration Review

by Stephen Sedgwick AO;

•updates on APRA’s draft Prudential Standard CPS 511

Remuneration, the BEAR Thematic Review, Treasury’s Financial

Accountability Regime (FAR), and ASIC’s review of governance

practices in the exercise of board discretion on executive

variable pay;

•the ANZ Group Performance Framework (annual objectives

setting and assessment) and annual variable remuneration spend;

•performance and reward outcomes for key senior executives,

including the consideration of material risk events that have

either occurred or came to light in the year, and malus/downward

adjustment;

•key senior executive appointments and terminations;

•the effectiveness of the ANZBGL Remuneration Policy;

•succession plans for key senior executives;

•culture and governance including updates on the strengthened

Accountability and Consequence Framework (A&CF); and

•diversity, inclusion, and employee engagement.

More details about the role of the HR Committee, including its

Charter, can be found on our website. Go to anz.com > Our

company > Strong governance framework > ANZ Human Resources

Committee Charter.

1. A subset of the HR Committee also met on a number of occasions during the year to

discuss regulatory developments and 2020 outcomes.

8.1.2 Link between remuneration and risk

The HR Committee has a strong focus on the relationship between

business performance, risk management and remuneration,

aligned with our business strategy. The chairs of the Risk and Audit

Committees are members of the HR Committee and the full Board

is in attendance for specific HR Committee meetings.

To further reflect the importance of the link between

remuneration and risk:

•the Board had three NEDs (in addition to the

Chairman) in 2020 who served on both the HR Committee

and the Risk Committee;

•the HR Committee has free and unfettered access to risk

and financial control personnel (the CRO and CFO attend

HR Committee meetings for specific agenda items);

•the CRO provides an independent report to the HR Committee on

material risk events to help inform considerations of performance

and remuneration, and accountability and consequences at the

Group, Divisional and individual level; and

•the chairs of the Audit and Risk Committees are asked to provide

input to the HR Committee to ensure appropriate consideration

of all relevant risk and internal audit issues.

8.1.3 Conflict of interest

To help mitigate potential conflicts of interest:

•management are not in attendance when their own performance

or remuneration is being discussed by the HR Committee or Board;

•the CEO’s AVR is funded and determined separately from the

ANZIP pool;

•the CRO’s remuneration arrangements differ to other Disclosed

Executives to preserve the independence of the role; and

•the HR Committee seeks input from a number of sources to

inform their consideration of performance and remuneration

outcomes for the CEO and Disclosed Executives including:

–independent reports from Risk, Finance, Talent and Culture

and Internal Audit;

–material risk event data provided by the CRO;

–input from both the Audit Committee and the Risk

Committee of the Board.

8.1.4 External advisors provided information but not

recommendations

The HR Committee can engage independent external advisors

as needed.

Throughout the year, the HR Committee and management received

information from the following external providers: Aon, Ashurst, EY,

Mercer Consulting (Australia) Pty Ltd and PricewaterhouseCoopers.

This information related to market data, market practices, legislative

requirements and the interpretation of governance and regulatory

requirements.

During the year, ANZ did not receive any remuneration

recommendations from external consultants about the

remuneration of KMP.

ANZ employs in-house remuneration professionals who provide

recommendations to the HR Committee and the Board. The Board

made its decisions independently, using the information provided

and with careful regard to ANZ’s strategic objectives, purpose

and values, risk appetite and the ANZBGL Remuneration Policy

and Principles.

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8.2 INTERNAL GOVERNANCE

8.2.1 Hedging prohibition

All deferred equity must remain at risk until it has fully vested. Accordingly, executives and their associated persons must not enter

into any schemes that specifically protect the unvested value of equity allocated. If they do so, then they forfeit the relevant equity.

8.2.2 CEO and Disclosed Executives’ shareholding guidelines

We expect the CEO and each Disclosed Executive to, over a five-year period:

•accumulate ANZ shares to the value of 200% of their fixed remuneration; and

•maintain this shareholding level while they are an executive of ANZ.

For this purpose, shareholdings include all vested and unvested equity that is not subject to performance hurdles.

CEO

While the CEO is still within his five-year accumulation period his shareholdings are above the holding guideline and we note that he has not

sold any ANZ shares since his commencement as CEO.

Disclosed Executives

All but one Disclosed Executive are still within their five-year accumulation period and are building their holdings. One Disclosed Executive has

passed the five-year period and their shareholding (based on 30 September 2020 share price) was below the holding guideline. The impact of

COVID-19 on ANZ’s share price has resulted in the overall value of the executive’s holding reducing and the Board has exercised its discretion and

is not requiring the executive to purchase additional shares at this time.

8.2.3 CEO and Disclosed Executives’ contract terms and equity treatment

The details of the contract terms and also the equity treatment on termination (in accordance with the Conditions of Grant) relating to the

CEO and Disclosed Executives are below. Although they are similar, they vary in some cases to suit different circumstances.

Type of contract

Permanent ongoing employment contract.

Notice on resignation

•12 months by CEO;

•6 months by Disclosed Executives.

Notice on termination

by ANZ

1

•12 months by ANZ for CEO and Disclosed Executives.

However, ANZ may immediately terminate an individual’s employment at any time in the case of serious

misconduct. In that case, the individual will be entitled only to payment of fixed remuneration up to the

date of their termination and their statutory entitlements.

How unvested equity

is treated on leaving

ANZ

Executives who resign or are terminated will forfeit all their unvested deferred equity – unless the Board

determines otherwise.

If an executive is terminated due to redundancy or they are classified as a ‘good leaver’, then:

•their deferred shares/share rights are released at the original vesting date; and

•their performance rights

2

are prorated for service to the full notice termination date and released at the

original vesting date (to the extent that the performance hurdles are met).

On an executive’s death or total and permanent disablement, their deferred equity vests.

Unvested equity remains subject to malus post termination.

Change of control

(applies to the CEO only)

If a change of control or other similar event occurs, then we will test the performance conditions applying

to the CEO’s performance rights. They will vest to the extent that the performance conditions are satisfied.

1. For K Corbally and M Hand, their contracts state that in particular circumstances they may be eligible for a retrenchment benefit in accordance with the relevant ANZ policy, as varied from

time to time. For A Watson, notice on retrenchment is 6 weeks and compensation on retrenchment is calculated on a scale up to a maximum of 79 weeks after 25 years’ service. 2. Or deferred

share rights granted to the CRO instead of performance rights.

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9. OTHER INFORMATION

9.1 2020 STATUTORY REMUNERATION – CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

The following table outlines the statutory remuneration disclosed in accordance with Australian Accounting Standards. While it shows the

fixed remuneration awarded (cash and superannuation contributions) and also the cash component of the 2020 variable remuneration

award, it does not show the actual variable remuneration awarded or received in 2020 (see sections 4.1 and 4.2), but instead shows

the amortised accounting value for this financial year of deferred remuneration (including prior year awards).

2020 STATUTORY REMUNERATION – CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

Short-term employee benefitsPost-employment

Long-term

employee

benefitsShare-based payments

7

Total amortisation value of

Variable

remuneration

Other equity

allocations

8

Financial

year

Cash salary

1

$

Non monetary

benefits

2

$

Total cash

incentive

3

$

Super

contributions

4

$

Retirement

benefit accrued

during year

5

$

Long service leave

accrued during

the year

6

$

Shares

$

Share rights

$

Performance

rights

$

Shares

$

Termination

benefits

9

$

Total

remuneration

$

CEO and Current Disclosed Executives

S Elliott

2020 2,478,824 15,089 625,000 21,176 - 100,651 828,507 - 1,156,061 - - 5,225,308

2019 2,079,351 19,383 750,000 20,649 - 31,819 830,753 - 1,449,384 - - 5,181,339

M Carnegie

2020 1,178,824 20,646 409,200 21,676 - 28,120 502,572 - 196,150 - - 2,357,188

2019 979,351 32,221 495,000 21,149 - 15,152 470,209 - 344,501 - - 2,357,583

K Corbally

10

2020 1,078,824 9,589 429,000 21,176 - 32,255 378,884 258,090 16,398 - - 2,224,216

2019 929,351 16,633 478,500 20,649 - 29,179 340,108 171,583 35,455 194,492 - 2,215,950

G Florian

2020 1,053,824 20,646 371,250 21,176 - 24,403 333,927 - 238,329 - - 2,063,555

A George

2020 1,078,824 26,146 363,000 21,676 - 25,551 430,514 - 219,525 - - 2,165,236

2019 979,351 37,721 528,000 21,149 - 15,152 392,589 - 260,314 - - 2,234,276

M Hand

11

2020 1,178,824 9,589 462,000 21,176 25,177 112,623 367,507 - 203,224 - - 2,380,120

2019 710,307 10,868 198,000 15,693 17,851 80,949 259,006 - 129,198 - - 1,421,872

M Jablko

12

2020 1,078,824 9,589 363,000 21,676 - 21,570 535,573 - 307,228 50,316 - 2,387,776

2019 979,351 17,083 544,500 21,149 - 15,152 539,647 - 400,011 133,552 - 2,650,445

K van der Merwe

2020 828,824 15,089 330,000 21,676 - 16,580 358,605 - 229,707 - - 1,800,481

A Watson

13

2020 975,974 11,176 334,681 39,625 - 17,383 237,502 82,845 93,742 711 - 1,793,639

2019 214,999 273 170,255 4,441 - 3,580 35,358 83,500 11,290 141 - 523,837

M Whelan

2020 1,178,824 9,589 363,000 21,176 - 18,232 754,535 - 417,161 - - 2,762,517

2019 1,179,351 13,883 874,500 20,649 - 18,182 839,283 - 717,098 - - 3,662,946

1. Cash salary includes any adjustments required to reflect the use of ANZ’s Lifestyle Leave Policy for the period in the KMP role. 2. Non monetary benefits generally consist of company-

funded benefits (and the associated Fringe Benefits Tax) such as car parking, taxation services and costs met by the Company in relation to in-country benefits. 3. The total cash incentive

relates to the cash component only. The relevant amortisation of the AVR/VR deferred components is included in share-based payments and has been amortised over the vesting period.

The total AVR/VR was approved by the Board on 21 October 2020. 100% of the cash component of the AVR/VR awarded for the 2019 and 2020 years vested to the executive in the applicable

financial year. 4. For all Australian based executives, the 2019 and 2020 superannuation contributions reflect the Superannuation Guarantee Contribution based on the Maximum Contribution

Base. A Watson participates in KiwiSaver where ANZ provides an employer superannuation contribution matching member contributions up to 4% of total gross pay (less employer

superannuation contribution tax). 5. Accrual relates to Retirement Allowance. As a result of being employed with ANZ before November 1992, M Hand is eligible to receive a Retirement

Allowance on retirement, retrenchment, death, or resignation for illness, incapacity or domestic reasons. The Retirement Allowance is calculated as three months of preserved notional salary

(which is 65% of fixed remuneration) plus an additional 3% of notional salary for each year of full-time service above 10 years less the total accrual value of long service leave (including taken

and untaken). 6. Long service leave accrued during the year increased year-on-year for S Elliott, M Carnegie, A George, K Corbally, M Hand, M Jablko and A Watson as a result of their fixed

remuneration increases. 7. As required by AASB 2 Share-based payments, the amortisation value includes a proportion of the fair value (taking into account market-related vesting conditions)

of all equity that had not yet fully vested as at the commencement of the financial year. The fair value is determined at grant date and is allocated on a straight-line basis over the relevant

vesting period. The amount included as remuneration neither relates to, nor indicates, the benefit (if any) that the executive may ultimately realise if the equity becomes exercisable. No terms

of share-based payments have been altered or modified during the financial year.

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Short-term employee benefitsPost-employment

Long-term

employee

benefitsShare-based payments

7

Total amortisation value of

Variable

remuneration

Other equity

allocations

8

Financial

year

Cash salary

1

$

Non monetary

benefits

2

$

Total cash

incentive

3

$

Super

contributions

4

$

Retirement

benefit accrued

during year

5

$

Long service leave

accrued during

the year

6

$

Shares

$

Share rights

$

Performance

rights

$

Shares

$

Termination

benefits

9

$

Total

remuneration

$

CEO and Current Disclosed Executives

S Elliott

2020 2,478,824 15,089 625,000 21,176 - 100,651 828,507 - 1,156,061 - - 5,225,308

2019 2,079,351 19,383 750,000 20,649 - 31,819 830,753 - 1,449,384 - - 5,181,339

M Carnegie

2020 1,178,824 20,646 409,200 21,676 - 28,120 502,572 - 196,150 - - 2,357,188

2019 979,351 32,221 495,000 21,149 - 15,152 470,209 - 344,501 - - 2,357,583

K Corbally

10

2020 1,078,824 9,589 429,000 21,176 - 32,255 378,884 258,090 16,398 - - 2,224,216

2019 929,351 16,633 478,500 20,649 - 29,179 340,108 171,583 35,455 194,492 - 2,215,950

G Florian

2020 1,053,824 20,646 371,250 21,176 - 24,403 333,927 - 238,329 - - 2,063,555

A George

2020 1,078,824 26,146 363,000 21,676 - 25,551 430,514 - 219,525 - - 2,165,236

2019 979,351 37,721 528,000 21,149 - 15,152 392,589 - 260,314 - - 2,234,276

M Hand

11

2020 1,178,824 9,589 462,000 21,176 25,177 112,623 367,507 - 203,224 - - 2,380,120

2019 710,307 10,868 198,000 15,693 17,851 80,949 259,006 - 129,198 - - 1,421,872

M Jablko

12

2020 1,078,824 9,589 363,000 21,676 - 21,570 535,573 - 307,228 50,316 - 2,387,776

2019 979,351 17,083 544,500 21,149 - 15,152 539,647 - 400,011 133,552 - 2,650,445

K van der Merwe

2020 828,824 15,089 330,000 21,676 - 16,580 358,605 - 229,707 - - 1,800,481

A Watson

13

2020 975,974 11,176 334,681 39,625 - 17,383 237,502 82,845 93,742 711 - 1,793,639

2019 214,999 273 170,255 4,441 - 3,580 35,358 83,500 11,290 141 - 523,837

M Whelan

2020 1,178,824 9,589 363,000 21,176 - 18,232 754,535 - 417,161 - - 2,762,517

2019 1,179,351 13,883 874,500 20,649 - 18,182 839,283 - 717,098 - - 3,662,946

8. Other equity allocations relate to employment arrangements such as compensation for bonus opportunity foregone and deferred remuneration forfeited, retention awards, and shares

received in relation to the Employee Share Offer. 9. No 2020 Disclosed Executive received a termination benefit. Whilst F Ohlsson (former Group Executive, Australia and 2019 Disclosed

Executive) concluded in a Disclosed Executive role on 28 December 2018, he ceased employment 15 November 2019 while on career break. Termination benefits paid on cessation (relating

to accrued annual and long service leave, and pay in lieu of notice in accordance with his contract), annual leave and long service leave taken at the commencement of his career break, and

non monetary benefits relating to cessation totalled $1,303,863. 10. In relation to K Corbally’s role before his appointment to the ExCo, in August 2016 the Board approved an equity retention

award of $600,000 vesting in August 2019. Other equity allocations relate to this award. 11. M Hand’s 2019 remuneration reflects a partial service year as he commenced in a Disclosed

Executive role on 29 December 2018. 12 . Other cash and other equity allocations for M Jablko relate to previously disclosed compensation for bonus opportunity foregone and deferred

remuneration forfeited. 13. A Watson’s 2019 remuneration reflects a partial service year as she commenced in a Disclosed Executive role on 17 June 2019 as Acting Group Executive and CEO,

NZ. A Watson’s fixed remuneration is paid in NZD and converted to AUD. In 2018, 2019 and 2020 A Watson was eligible to receive shares under the Employee Share Offer. That offer provided

a grant of ANZ shares in each financial year to eligible employees subject to Board approval. See Note 31 Employee Share and Option Plans for further details on the Employee Share Offer.

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9.2 EQUITY HOLDINGS

For the equity granted to the CEO and Disclosed Executives in November/December 2019, all deferred shares were purchased on the market.

For deferred share rights and performance rights, we will determine our approach to satisfying awards closer to the time of vesting.

9.2.1 CEO and Disclosed Executives equity granted, vested, exercised/sold and lapsed/forfeited

The table below sets out details of deferred shares and rights that we granted to the CEO and Disclosed Executives:

•during the 2020 year; or

•in prior years and that then vested, were exercised/sold or which lapsed/were forfeited during the 2020 year.

EQUITY GRANTED VESTED, EXERCISED/SOLD AND LAPSED/FORFEITED – CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

Type of equity

Number

granted

1

Equity fair

value at

grant

(for 2020

grants

only)

$

Grant

date

First

date

exercisable

Date

of

expiry

Vested

Lapsed/

ForfeitedExercised/Sold

Vested

and

exercis

able as

at 30

Sep

2020

3

Unexer

cisable

as at 30

Sep

2020

4

NameNumber%

Value

2


$Number%

Value

2


$Number%

Value

2


$

CEO and Current Disclosed Executives

S Elliott

Deferred shares 6,941 22-Nov-1622-Nov-19 - 6,941 100 172,095 - - - (6,941) 100 173,814 - -

Deferred shares 8,529 22-Nov-1722-Nov-19 - 8,529 100 211,468 - - - (8,529) 100 213,581 - -

Deferred shares 8,623 22-Nov-1822-Nov-19 - 8,623 100 213,799 - - - (8,623) 100 215,935 - -

Deferred shares 12,006 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 12,006

Deferred shares 9,003 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 9,003

Deferred shares 6,002 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 6,002

Deferred shares 3,001 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,001

Performance rights 112,862 16-Dec-1616-Dec-1916-Dec-21 - - - (112,862) 100 (2,826,313) - - - - -

Performance rights 37,620 16-Dec-1616-Dec-1916-Dec-21 - - - (37,620) 100 (942,088) - - - - -

Performance rights 126,050 10.25 17-Dec-1917-Dec-2317-Dec-25 - - - - - - - - - - 126,050

Performance rights 42,016 5.03 17-Dec-1917-Dec-2317-Dec-25 - - - - - - - - - - 42,016

M Carnegie

Deferred shares 1,182 22-Nov-1622-Nov-19 - 1,182 100 29,307 - - - - - - 1,182 -

Deferred shares 4,785 22-Nov-1722-Nov-19 - 4,785 100 118,639 - - - - - - 4,785 -

Deferred shares 5,205 22-Nov-1822-Nov-19 - 5,205 100 129,053 - - - - - - 5,205 -

Deferred shares 7,924 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 7,924

Deferred shares 5,942 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 5,942

Deferred shares 3,961 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,961

Deferred shares 1,980 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 1,980

Performance rights 7,309 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - (7,309) 100 (181,219) - - - - -

Performance rights 2,436 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - (2,436)

100 (60,398) - - - - -

Performance rights 30,612 10.45 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 30,612

Performance rights 10,204 5.14 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 10,204

K Corbally

Deferred shares 21,497 22-Nov-1620-Aug-19 - - - - - - - (21,497) 100 526,105 - -

Deferred shares 2,758 22-Nov-1622-Nov-19 - 2,758 100 68,382 - - - (2,758) 100 67,498 - -

Deferred shares 4,230 22-Nov-1722-Nov-19 - 4,230 100 104,879 - - - (4,230) 100 103,522 - -

Deferred shares 3,010 22-Nov-1822-Nov-19 - 3,010 100 74,630 - - - (3,010) 100 73,665 - -

Deferred shares 5,745 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 5,745

Deferred shares 5,744 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 5,744

Deferred shares 3,829 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,829

Deferred shares 3,829 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,829

Deferred share rights 19,727 24.99 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2329-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - 19,727

Performance rights 5,445 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - (5,445) 100 (135,003) - - - - -

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Type of equity

Number

granted

1

Equity fair

value at

grant

(for 2020

grants

only)

$

Grant

date

First

date

exercisable

Date

of

expiry

Vested

Lapsed/

ForfeitedExercised/Sold

Vested

and

exercis

able as

at 30

Sep

2020

3

Unexer

cisable

as at 30

Sep

2020

4

NameNumber%

Value

2


$Number%

Value

2


$Number%

Value

2


$

CEO and Current Disclosed Executives

G Florian

Deferred shares 2,462 22-Nov-1722-Nov-19 - 2,462 100 61,043 - - - - - - 2,462 -

Deferred shares 3,254 22-Nov-1822-Nov-19 - 3,254 100 80,680 - - - - - - 3,254 -

Deferred shares 4,491 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 4,491

Deferred shares 3,367 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,367

Deferred shares 2,244 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 2,244

Deferred shares 1,122 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 1,122

Performance rights 17,346 10.45 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 17,346

Performance rights 5,782 5.14 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 5,782

A George

Deferred shares 2,400 22-Nov-1622-Nov-19 - 2,400 100 59,506 - - - - - - 2,400 -

Deferred shares 3,096 22-Nov-1722-Nov-19 - 3,096 100 76,762 - - - - - - 3,096 -

Deferred shares 3,498 22-Nov-1822-Nov-19 - 3,498 100 86,729 - - - - - - 3,498 -

Deferred shares 8,453 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 8,453

Deferred shares 6,338 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 6,338

Deferred shares 4,225 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 4,225

Deferred shares 2,112 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 2,112

Performance rights 2,746 18-Nov-1518-Nov-1818-Nov-20 - - - - - - (1,793) 65 46,678 - -

Performance rights 4,738 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - (4,738) 100 (117,474) - - - - -

Performance rights 32,653 10.45 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 32,653

Performance rights 10,884 5.14 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 10,884

M Hand

Deferred shares 4,012 22-Nov-1622-Nov-19 - 4,012

100 99,474 - - - (4,012) 100 99,242 - -

Deferred shares 6,277 22-Nov-1722-Nov-19 - 6,277 100 155,632 - - - (6,277) 100 155,270 - -

Deferred shares 3,254 22-Nov-1822-Nov-19 - 3,254 100 80,680 - - - (3,254) 100 80,492 - -

Deferred shares 4,755 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 4,755

Deferred shares 3,565 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,565

Deferred shares 2,376 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 2,376

Deferred shares 1,188 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 1,188

Performance rights 7,920 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - (7,920) 100 (196,368) - - - - -

Performance rights 18,367 10.45 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 18,367

Performance rights 6,122 5.14 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 6,122

M Jablko

Deferred shares 3,153 20-Aug-1620-Aug-17 - - - - - - - (3,153) 100 80,580 - -

Deferred shares 3,153 20-Aug-1620-Aug-18 - - - - - - - (3,153) 100 80,580 - -

Deferred shares 7,617 20-Aug-1627-Feb-20 - 7,617 100 195,305 - - - - - - 7,617 -

Deferred shares 1,182 22-Nov-1622-Nov-17 - - - - - - - (1,182) 100 30,208 - -

Deferred shares 1,182 22-Nov-1622-Nov-18 - - - - - - - (1,182) 100 30,208 - -

Deferred shares 1,182 22-Nov-1622-Nov-19 - 1,182 100 29,307 - - - - - - 1,182 -

Deferred shares 6,305 22-Nov-1722-Nov-18 - - - - - - - (6,305) 100 161,135 - -

Deferred shares 6,305 22-Nov-1722-Nov-19 - 6,305 100 156,326 - - - - - - 6,305 -

Deferred shares 5,693 22-Nov-1822-Nov-19 - 5,693 100 141,152 - - - - - - 5,693 -

Deferred shares 8,717 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 8,717

Deferred shares 6,536 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 6,536

Deferred shares 4,357 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 4,357

Deferred shares 2,178 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 2,178

Performance rights 7,309 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - (7,309) 100 (181,219) - - - - -

Performance rights 2,436 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - (2,436) 100 (60,398)

- - - - -

Performance rights 33,673 10.45 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 33,673

Performance rights 11,224 5.14 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 11,224

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Shareholder

information

Type of equity

Number

granted

1

Equity fair

value at

grant

(for 2020

grants

only)

$

Grant

date

First

date

exercisable

Date

of

expiry

Vested

Lapsed/

ForfeitedExercised/Sold

Vested

and

exercis

able as

at 30

Sep

2020

3

Unexer

cisable

as at 30

Sep

2020

4

NameNumber%

Value

2


$Number%

Value

2


$Number%

Value

2


$

CEO and Current Disclosed Executives

K van der

Merwe

Deferred shares 1,477 22-Nov-1722-Nov-19 - 1,477 100 36,621 - - - - - - 1,477 -

Deferred shares 3,577 22-Nov-1822-Nov-19 - 3,577 100 88,688 - - - - - - 3,577 -

Deferred shares 6,604 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 6,604

Deferred shares 4,951 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 4,951

Deferred shares 3,301 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,301

Deferred shares 1,650 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 1,650

Performance rights 25,510 10.45 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 25,510

Performance rights 8,503 5.14 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 8,503

A Watson

Deferred shares 3,904 24.7922-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,904

Deferred shares 3,901 24.7922-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,901

Deferred shares 3,901 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,901

Deferred shares 4,541 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 4,541

Employee share offer 32 25.05 02-Dec-1902-Dec-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 32

Deferred share rights 2,237 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21 2,237 100 55,464 - - - (2,237) 100 55,277 - -

Deferred share rights 4,409 22-Nov-1722-Nov-1922-Nov-21 4,409 100 109,317 - - - (4,409) 100 108,948 - -

Deferred share rights 5,016 22-Nov-1822-Nov-1922-Nov-21 5,016 100 124,367 - - - (5,016) 100 123,947 - -

Performance rights 3,649 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - (3,649) 100 (90,473) - - - - -

M Whelan

Deferred shares 6,724 22-Nov-1622-Nov-19 - 6,724 100 166,715 - - - (6,724) 100 166,715 - -

Deferred shares 9,218 22-Nov-1722-Nov-19 - 9,218 100 228,551 - - - (9,218) 100 228,551 - -

Deferred shares 7,075 22-Nov-1822-Nov-19 - 7,075

100 175,418 - - - (7,075) 100 175,418 - -

Deferred shares 13,998 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-20 - - - - - - - - - - - 13,998

Deferred shares 10,498 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-21 - - - - - - - - - - - 10,498

Deferred shares 6,998 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-22 - - - - - - - - - - - 6,998

Deferred shares 3,499 24.79 22-Nov-1922-Nov-23 - - - - - - - - - - - 3,499

Performance rights 41,571 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21

- - -

(41,571) 100 (1,030,711)

- - - - -

Performance rights 13,857 22-Nov-1622-Nov-1922-Nov-21

- - -

(13,857) 100 (343,570)

- - - - -

Performance rights 54,081 10.45 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 54,081

Performance rights 18,027 5.14 22-Nov-1922-Nov-2322-Nov-25 - - - - - - - - - - 18,027

1. For the purpose of the five highest paid executive disclosures, Executives are defined

as Disclosed Executives or other members of the ExCo. For the 2020 financial year the

five highest paid executives include four Disclosed Executives and the Group Executive,

International (F Faruqui). Rights granted to Disclosed Executives as remuneration in 2020

are included in the table. Rights granted to F Faruqui as remuneration in 2020 include

four tranches of deferred share rights and two tranches of performance rights granted on

22 Nov 2019. (14,298 (tranche 1) deferred share rights first exercisable 22 Nov 2020, expiring

29 Nov 2020; 11,363 (tranche 2) deferred share rights first exercisable 22 Nov 2021, expiring

29 Nov 2021; 8,033 (tranche 3) deferred share rights first exercisable 22 Nov 2022, expiring

29 Nov 2022; 4,257 (tranche 4) deferred share rights first exercisable 22 Nov 2023, expiring

29 Nov 2023; 51,839 (tranche 1) and 17,279 (tranche 2) performance rights first exercisable

22 Nov 2023 subject to meeting performance hurdles, expiring 22 Nov 2025). No rights

have been granted to the CEO, Disclosed Executives or the five highest paid executives

since the end of 2020 up to the Directors’ Report sign-off date. 2. The point in time

value of shares/share rights and/or performance rights is based on the one day VWAP

of the Company’s shares traded on the ASX on the date of vesting, lapsing/forfeiture or

exercising/sale/transfer out of trust, multiplied by the number of shares/share rights and/

or performance rights. The exercise price for all share rights/performance rights is $0.00.

No terms of share-based payment transactions have been altered or modified during the

reporting period. 3. The number vested and exercisable is the number of shares, options

and rights that remain vested at the end of the reporting period. No shares, options and

rights were vested and unexercisable.

4. Performance rights granted in prior years (by grant date) that remained unexerciseable at

30 Sep 2020 include:

Nov-17Nov-18Nov-19

S Elliott143,294110,365168,066

M Carnegie39,44042,88440,816

K Corbally4,230--

G Florian20,30026,80223,128

A George25,52028,81343,537

M Hand6,27726,80224,489

M Jablko51,96846,90544,897

K van der Merwe12,18029,48234,013

A Watson3,9344,802-

M Whelan75,98058,29672,108

Performance rights granted to S Elliott in 2020 were approved by shareholders at the 2019

AGM in accordance with ASX Listing Rule 10.14.

107
Ilan A AnItts,OnChir–H

9.2.2 NED, CEO and Disclosed Executives equity holdings

The table below sets out details of equity held directly, indirectly or beneficially by each NED, the CEO and each Disclosed Executive,

including their related parties.

EQUITY HOLDINGS – NED, CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

NameType of equity

Opening

balance at

1 Oct 2019

Granted during

the year as

remuneration

1

Received during

the year on

exercise of

options or rights

Resulting from

any other

changes during

the year

2

Closing

balance at

30 Sep 2020

3, 4

Current Non-Executive Directors

D Gonski

Ordinary shares 31,488 - - - 31,488

I Atlas

Ordinary shares 14,360 - - - 14,360

P Dwyer

Ordinary shares 17,500 - - - 17,500

J Halton

Ordinary shares 9,049 - - - 9,049

J Key

Ordinary shares 3,000 - - - 3,000

G Liebelt

Ordinary shares 20,315 - - - 20,315

Capital notes 1 1,500 - - - 1,500

Capital notes 2 2,500 - - - 2,500

J Macfarlane

Ordinary shares 17,851 - - - 17,851

Capital notes 2 2,000 - - - 2,000

Capital notes 3 5,000 - - - 5,000

P O’Sullivan

5

Ordinary shares 4,078 --- 4,078

Capital notes 2 9,250 --- 9,250

CEO and Current Disclosed Executives

S Elliott

Deferred shares 73,958 30,012 - (24,093) 79,877

Ordinary shares 189,258 - - 27,563 216,821

Performance rights 438,874 168,066 - (150,482) 456,458

M Carnegie

Deferred shares 54,732 19,807 - - 74,539

Ordinary shares 3,071 - - 2,420 5,491

Performance rights 92,069 40,816 - (9,745) 123,140

K Corbally

Deferred shares 42,631 19,147 - (31,495) 30,283

Ordinary shares 1,350 - - (255) 1,095

Deferred share rights 14,546 19,727 - - 34,273

Performance rights 9,675 - - (5,445) 4,230

G Florian

Deferred shares 23,141 11,224 - - 34,365

Ordinary shares 978 - - 1,216 2,194

Performance rights 47,102 23,128 - - 70,230

A George

Deferred shares 58,962 21,128 - - 80,090

Ordinary shares 5,614 - 1,793 2,882 10,289

Capital notes 1 802 - - - 802

Performance rights 60,864 43,537 (1,793) (4,738) 97,870

M Hand

Deferred shares 26,434 11,884 - (13,543) 24,775

Ordinary shares 760 - - 429 1,189

Performance rights 40,999 24,489 - (7,920) 57,568

M Jablko

Deferred shares 84,494 21,788 - (16,851) 89,431

Ordinary shares 2,925 - - 2,319 5,244

Performance rights 108,618 44,897 - (9,745) 143,770

K van der Merwe

Deferred shares 20,388 16,506 - - 36,894

Ordinary shares 774 - - 1,162 1,936

Performance rights 41,662 34,013 - - 75,675

A Watson

Deferred shares - 16,247 - - 16,247

Employee share offer 102 32 -

-


134

Ordinary shares - - 11,662

386


12,048

Deferred share rights 22,129 - (11,662) - 10,467

Performance rights 12,385 - - (3,649) 8,736

M Whelan

Deferred shares 69,393 34,993 - (23,017) 81,369

Ordinary shares - - - 1,126 1,126

Performance rights 189,704 72,108 - (55,428) 206,384

1. Details of options/rights granted as remuneration during 2020 are provided in the previous table. 2. Shares resulting from any other changes during the year include the net result of any

shares purchased (including under the ANZ Share Purchase Plan), forfeited, sold or acquired under the Dividend Reinvestment Plan. 3. The following shares (included in the holdings above)

were held on behalf of the NEDs, CEO and Disclosed Executives (i.e. indirect beneficially held shares) as at 30 September 2020: D Gonski – 31,488, I Atlas – 14,360, P Dwyer – 17,500, J Halton – 0,

J Key – 3,000, G Liebelt – 8,158, J Macfarlane – 24,851, P O’Sullivan – 0, S Elliott – 291,099, M Carnegie – 74,539, K Corbally – 30,283, G Florian – 34,365, A George – 83,570, M Hand – 24,775, M

Jablko – 89,431, K van der Merwe – 36,894, A Watson – 16,381 and M Whelan – 81,369. 4. 34,733 rights were vested and exercisable, and zero options/rights were vested and unexerciseable as

at 30 September 2020. There was no change in the balance as at the Directors’ Report sign-off date. 5. Commencing balance is based on holdings as at the date of commencement as a KMP.

108
RelAe,locOoColCC

7AltslCet4nl

5lA6OAat 7lC

OelAe,lo

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

9.3 LOANS

9.3.1 Overview

When we lend to NEDs, the CEO or Disclosed Executives, we do so in the ordinary course of business and on normal commercial terms and

conditions that are no more favourable than those given to other employees or customers – this includes the term of the loan, the security

required and the interest rate. Details of the terms and conditions of lending products can be found on anz.com. No amounts have been

written off during the period, or individual provisions raised in respect of these balances.

The table below sets out details of loans outstanding to NEDs, the CEO and Disclosed Executives including their related parties, if – at any

time during the year – the individual’s aggregate loan balance exceeded $100,000.

Total loans to NEDs, the CEO and Disclosed Executives, including their related parties at 30 September 2020 (including those with balances

less than $100,000) was $31,807,543 (2019: $29,359,432) with interest paid of $888,019 (2019: $731,353) during the period.

9.3.2 NED, CEO and Disclosed Executives loan transactions

LOAN TRANSACTIONS – NED, CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

Name

Opening balance at

1 October 2019

$

Closing balance at

30 September 2020

$

Interest paid and payable

in the reporting period

1

$

Highest balance in the

reporting period

$

Current Non-Executive Directors

I Atlas - 1,608,0288,0212,308,028

J Key - - 23,2064,000,000

J Macfarlane13,330,65313,280,942370,05315,470,727

P O'Sullivan

2

1,005,057888,9162,3481,022,409

CEO and Current Disclosed Executives

S Elliott2,926,2672,782,31968,3582,938,399

G Florian2,362,3662,306,80762,6022,389,584

A George

3

1,612,8991,535,41451,5381,618,459

M Hand4,437,1794,226,595149,6954,444,867

K van der Merwe1,982,9963,584,607101,2283,818,341

M Whelan

4

1,653,4141,575,95350,2631,696,126

Total 29,310,831 31,789,581 887,312 39,706,940

1. Actual interest paid after considering offset accounts. The loan balance is shown gross, however the interest paid takes into account the impact of offset amounts. 2. Opening balance is at

the date of commencement as KMP. 3. Opening balance has been restated to include a credit card balance. 4. Opening balance has been adjusted to take account of a minor timing variance.



9.4 OTHER TRANSACTIONS

Other transactions with NEDs, the CEO and Disclosed Executives, and their related parties included deposits.

OTHER TRANSACTIONS – NED, CEO AND DISCLOSED EXECUTIVES

Opening balance at

1 October 2019

1

$

Closing balance at

30 September 2020

2, 3

$

Total KMP deposits

48,951,51548,364,383

1. Opening balance is at 1 October 2019 or the date of commencement as KMP if part way through the year. 2. Closing balance is at 30 September 2020 or at the date of cessation as KMP if

part way through the year. 3. Interest paid on deposits for 2020 was $498,931 (2019: $682,040).

Other transactions with KMP and their related parties included amounts paid to the Group in respect of investment management service

fees, brokerage, bank fees and charges. The Group has reimbursed KMP for the costs incurred for security and secretarial services associated

with the performance of their duties. These transactions are conducted on normal commercial terms and conditions are no more favourable

than those given to other employees or customers.

The Directors’ Report for the financial year ended 30 September
2020 has been prepared in accordance with the requirements of

the Corporations Act 2001. The information below forms part of

this Directors’ Report:

•Principal activities on page 10

•Operating and financial review on pages 54 to 71

•Dividends on page 70

•I

nformation on the Directors, Company Secretaries and

Directors’ meetings on pages 38 to 48

•Remuneration report on pages 74 to 108

Significant changes in state of affairs

There have been no significant changes in the Group’s state of affairs.

Events since the end of the financial year

There have been no significant events from 30 September 2020

to the date of signing this report.

Political donations

Our policy is that we will make an annual donation to the two major

federal parties to support the democratic process in Australia. In the

2020 calendar year, we donated $100,000 to the Liberal Party of

Australia and $100,000 to the Australian Labor Party.

Environmental regulation

ANZ recognises the expectations of its stakeholders – customers,

shareholders, staff and the community – to operate in a way that

mitigates its environmental impact.

In Australia, ANZ meets the requirements of the National

Greenhouse and Energy Reporting Act 2007 (Cth), which imposes

reporting obligations where energy production, usage or

greenhouse gas emissions trigger specified thresholds.

The Group does not believe that its operations are subject to any other

particular and significant environmental regulation under a law of

the Commonwealth of Australia or of an Australian State or Territory.

It may become subject to environmental regulation as a result of its

lending activities in the ordinary course of business and has developed

policies to identify and manage such environmental matters.

Having made due enquiry, and to the best of ANZ’s knowledge,

no entity of the Group has incurred any material environmental

liability during the year.

Further details of ANZ’s environmental performance, including

progress against its targets and details of its emissions profile, are

available on anz.com.au/about-us/sustainability-framework/

environmental-sustainability/.

Corporate Governance Statement

ANZ is committed to maintaining a high standard in its governance

framework. ANZ confirms it has followed the ASX Corporate Governance

Council’s Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations (3rd

edition) during the 2020 financial year. ANZ’s Corporate Governance

Statement, together with the ASX Appendix 4G which relates to

the Corporate Governance Statement, can be viewed at anz.com/

corporategovernance and has been lodged with the ASX.

Pillar 3 information

ANZ provides information required by APS 330: Public Disclosure in

the Regulatory Disclosures section at anz.com/shareholder/centre/

reporting/regulatory-disclosure/.

Non-audit services

The Group’s Stakeholder Engagement Model for Relationship with

the External Auditor (the Policy), which incorporates requirements

of the Corporations Act 2001 and industry best practice, prevents the

external auditor from providing services that are perceived to be in

conflict with the role of the external auditor or breach independence

requirements. This includes consulting advice and sub-contracting

of operational activities normally undertaken by management, and

engagements where the external auditor may ultimately be

required to express an opinion on its own work.

Specifically the Policy:

•limits the scope of non-audit ser

vices that may be provided;

•r

equires that audit, audit-related and permitted non-audit services

be considered in light of independence requirements and for

any potential conflicts of interest before they are approved by

the Audit Committee, or approved by the Chair of the Audit

Committee (or delegate) and notified to the Audit Committee;

and

•requires pre-approval before the external auditor can commence

any engagement for the Group.

Further details about the Policy can be found in the Corporate

Governance Statement.

The external auditor has confirmed to the Audit Committee that it has:

•implement

ed procedures to ensure it complies with

independence rules in applicable jurisdictions; and

•complied with applicable policies and r

egulations in those

jurisdictions regarding the provision of non-audit services,

and the Policy.

The Audit Committee has reviewed the non-audit services provided

by the external auditor during the 2020 financial year, and has

confirmed that the provision of these services is consistent with

the Policy, compatible with the general standard of independence

for auditors imposed by the Corporations Act 2001 and did not

compromise the auditor independence requirements of the

Corporations Act 2001. This has been formally advised by the Audit

Committee to the Board of Directors.

The categories of non-audit services supplied to the Group during

the year ended 30 September 2020 by the external auditor, KPMG,

or by another person or firm on KPMG’s behalf, and the amounts

paid or payable (including GST ) by the Group are as follows:

Amount paid/payable

$’000

Non-audit services20202019

Training related services16106

Methodology and procedural reviews10710

Total123116

Directors’ report

109

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

Further details on the compensation paid to KPMG is provided
in Note 34 Auditor Fees to the financial statements including details

of audit-related services provided during the year of $5.37 million

(2019: $5.71 million).

For the reasons set out above, the Directors are satisfied that the

provision of non-audit services by the external auditor during the

year ended 30 September 2020 is compatible with the general

standard of independence for external auditors imposed by the

Corporations Act 2001 and did not compromise the auditor

independence requirements of the Corporations Act 2001.

Directors’ and officers’ indemnity

The Company’s Constitution (Rule 11.1) permits the Company to:

•indemnify any officer or employee of the Company, or its auditor,

against liabilities (so far as may be permitted under applicable law)

incurred as such by an officer, employee or auditor, including

liabilities incurred as a result of appointment or nomination by

the Company as a trustee or as an officer or employee of another

corporation; and

•make payments in respect of legal costs incurred by an officer,

employee or auditor in defending an action for a liability incurred

as such by an officer, employee or auditor, or in resisting or

responding to actions taken by a government agency, a duly

constituted Royal Commission or other official inquiry, a liquidator,

administrator, trustee in bankruptcy or other authorised official.

It is the Company’s policy that its employees should be protected

from any liability they incur as a result of acting in the course of their

employment, subject to appropriate conditions.

Under the policy, the Company will indemnify employees and former

employees against any liability they incur to any third party as a result

of acting in the course of their employment with the Company or a

subsidiary of the Company and this extends to liability incurred as a

result of their appointment/nomination by or at the request of the

Group as an officer or employee of another corporation or body or

as trustee.

The indemnity is subject to applicable law and certain exceptions.

In accordance with the employee indemnity policy, the Company has

during or since the year ended 30 September 2020 paid legal expenses

totalling $1,233,965.13 incurred by Mr Richard Moscati in relation to legal

proceedings brought against him and the Company by a third party.

The Company has entered into Indemnity Deeds with each of its

Directors, with certain secretaries and former Directors of the Company,

and with certain employees and other individuals who act as directors

or officers of related bodies corporate or of another company, to

indemnify them against liabilities and legal costs of the kind

mentioned in the Company’s Constitution.

During the financial year, the Company has paid premiums for

insurance for the benefit of the Directors and employees of the

Company and related bodies corporate of the Company. In

accordance with common commercial practice, the insurance

prohibits disclosure of the nature of the liability insured against

and the amount of the premium.

Key management personnel and employee

share and option plans

The Remuneration Report contains details of Non-Executive

Directors, Chief Executive Officer and Disclosed Executives’ equity

holdings and options/rights issued during the 2020 financial year

and as at the date of this report.

Note 31 Employee Share and Option Plans to the 2020 Financial

Report contains details of the 2020 financial year and as at the date

of this report:

•Options/rights issued over shares granted to employees;

•Shar

es issued as a result of the exercise of options/rights

granted to employees; and

•O

ther details about share options/rights issued, including any

rights to participate in any share issues of the Company.

The names of all persons who currently hold options/rights are entered

in the register kept by the Company pursuant to section 170 of the

Corporations Act 2001. This register may be inspected free of charge.

Rounding of amounts

The Company is a company of the kind referred to in Australian

Securities and Investments Commission Corporations (Rounding in

Financial/Directors’ Reports) Instrument 2016/191 dated 24 March 2016

and, in accordance with that Instrument, amounts in the consolidated

financial statements and this Directors’ Report have been rounded

to the nearest million dollars unless specifically stated otherwise.

This report is made in accordance with a resolution of the Board

of Directors and is signed for and on behalf of the Directors.

Paul D O'Sullivan

Shayne C Elliott

Chairman

Managing Director

4 November 2020

Lead Auditor’s Independence Declaration

The Lead Auditors Independence Declaration given under Section

307C of the Corporations Act 2001 is set out below and forms part of

the Directors' Report for the year ended 30 September 2020.

To: the Directors of Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited

I declare that, to the best of my knowledge and belief, in relation to

the audit of Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited for

the financial year ended 30 September 2020, there have been:

•no contraventions of the auditor independence requirements as

set out in the Corporations Act 2001 in relation to the audit; and

•no contraventions of any applicable code of professional conduct

in relation to the audit.

KPMG

Alison Kitchen

Partner

©2020 KPMG, an Australian partnership and a member firm of the KPMG global

organisation of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Limited,

a private English company limited by guarantee. All rights reserved. The KPMG name

and logo are trademarks used under license by the independent member firms of the

KPMG global organisation. Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional

Standards Legislation.

110

OverviewHow we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information

110

Financial report
Consolidated Financial Statements

Income Statement 112

Statement of Comprehensive Income 113

Balance Sheet 114

C

ash Flow Statement 115

Statement of Changes in Equity 116

Notes to The Consolidated Financial Statements

Basis of Preparation

1. About Our Financial Statements 117

Financial Performance

2. Operating Income 123

3.

Operating Expenses


126

4. Income Tax 128

5. Dividends 130

6.

Earnings per Ordinary Share 132

7.

S

egment Reporting

133

Financial Assets

8. Cash and Cash Equivalents 137

9.

T

rading Securities

138

10.

Derivative Financial Instruments 139

11. Investment Securities 147

12. Net Loans and Advances 149

13.

Allo

wance for Expected Credit losses

150

Financial Liabilities

14. Deposits and Other Borrowings 160

15. Debt Issuances  161

Financial Instrument Disclosures

16. Financial Risk Management 166

17. Fair Value of Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities 182

18. Assets Charged as Security for Liabilities

and Collateral Accepted as Security for Assets


187

19. Offsetting 188

Non-Financial Assets

20. Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets 189

Non-Financial Liabilities

21. Other Provisions 194

Equity

22. Shareholders’ Equity 196

23.

C

apital Management

198

Consolidation and Presentation

24. Parent Entity Financial Information 200

25.

C

ontrolled Entities

201

26.

Investments in Associates 203

27. Structured Entities 205

28. Transfers of Financial Assets 208

29.

Discontinued Operations and A

ssets

and Liabilities Held For Sale 209

Employee and Related Party Transactions

30. Superannuation and Post Employment

B

enefits Obligations

212

31.

Employee Share and Option Plans 214

32.


R

elated Party Disclosures

219

Other Disclosures

33. Commitments, Contingent Liabilities

and Contingent Assets 220

34.


A

uditor Fees

223

35. Events Since the End of the Financial Year 224


Directors’ Declaration 225

Independent Auditor’s Report 226

CONTENTS

111

ANZ 2020 Annual Report


112

FINANCIAL REPORT

INCOME STATEMENT

20202019

For the year ended 30 September Note

$m$m

Interest income

1


24,426

31,077

Interest expense

(10,377)

(16,738)

Net interest income 2

14,049

14,339

Other operating income 2

3,355

4,058

Net income from insurance business 2

78

126

Share of associates’ profit 2

155

262

Operating income

17,637

18,785

Operating expenses 3

(9,383)

(9,071)

Profit before credit impairment and income tax

8,254

9,714

Credit impairment charge 13

(2,738)

(794)

Profit before income tax

5,516

8,920

Income tax expense 4

(1,840)

(2,609)

Profit after tax from continuing operations

3,676

6,311

Profit/(Loss) after tax from discontinued operations 29

(98)

(343)

Profit for the year

3,578

5,968

Comprising:

Profit attributable to shareholders of the Company

3,577

5,953

Profit attributable to non-controlling interests

1

15

Earnings per ordinary share (cents) including discontinued operations

Basic 6 126.4 210.0

Diluted 6

118.0 201.9

Earnings per ordinary share (cents) from continuing operations

Basic 6 129.8 222.1

Diluted 6

121.1 213.0

Dividend per ordinary share (cents) 5

60 160

1.

Includes interest income calculated using the effective interest method of $23,837 million on financial assets measured at amortised cost or fair value through other comprehensive income (2019: $30,224

million).

The notes appearing on pages 117 to 225 form an integral part of these financial statements.

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

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113
FINANCIAL REPORT

STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

20202019

For the year ended 30 September

$m$m

Profit for the year from continuing operations

3,676

6,311

Other comprehensive income

Items that will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss

Investment securities - equity securities at FVOCI

(157)

45

Other reserve movements

13

67

Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss

Foreign currency translation reserve

1


(550)

697

Other reserve movements

712

909

Income tax attributable to the above items (180)

(288)

Share of associates’ other comprehensive income

2

51

26

Other comprehensive income after tax from continuing operations

(111)

1,456

Profit/(Loss) after tax from discontinued operations

(98)

(343)

Other comprehensive income/(loss) after tax from discontinued operations

-

(97)

Total comprehensive income for the year

3,467

7,327

Comprising total comprehensive income attributable to:

Shareholders of the Company

3,467

7,307

Non-controlling interests

-

20

1.

Includes foreign currency translation differences attributable to non-controlling interests of a $1 million loss (2019: $5 million gain).

2.

Share of associates’ Other comprehensive income includes a FVOCI reserve gain of $48 million (2019: $20 million gain), defined benefits gain of $3 million (2019: $7 million gain), cash flow hedge reserve

loss of $1 million (2019: $2 million loss) and a foreign currency translation reserve gain of $1 million (2019: $1 million gain) that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss.

The notes appearing on pages 117 to 225 form an integral part of these financial statements.


112

FINANCIAL REPORT

INCOME STATEMENT

20202019

For the year ended 30 September Note $m$m

Interest income

1


24,426

31,077

Interest expense

(10,377)

(16,738)

Net interest income 2

14,049

14,339

Other operating income 2

3,355

4,058

Net income from insurance business 2

78

126

Share of associates’ profit 2

155

262

Operating income

17,637

18,785

Operating expenses 3

(9,383)

(9,071)

Profit before credit impairment and income tax

8,254

9,714

Credit impairment charge 13

(2,738)

(794)

Profit before income tax 5,516

8,920

Income tax expense 4

(1,840)

(2,609)

Profit after tax from continuing operations 3,676

6,311

Profit/(Loss) after tax from discontinued operations 29

(98)

(343)

Profit for the year 3,578

5,968

Comprising:

Profit attributable to shareholders of the Company

3,577

5,953

Profit attributable to non-controlling interests

1

15

Earnings per ordinary share (cents) including discontinued operations

Basic 6 126.4 210.0

Diluted 6 118.0 201.9

Earnings per ordinary share (cents) from continuing operations

Basic 6 129.8 222.1

Diluted 6 121.1 213.0

Dividend per ordinary share (cents) 5 60 160

1.

Includes interest income calculated using the effective interest method of $23,837 million on financial assets measured at amortised cost or fair value through other comprehensive income (2019: $30,224

million).

The notes appearing on pages 117 to 225 form an integral part of these financial statements.

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

113

ANZ 2020 Annual Report


114

FINANCIAL REPORT (continued)

BALANCE SHEET

20202019

As at 30 September Note $m$m

Assets

Cash and cash equivalents 8

107,923

81,621

Settlement balances owed to ANZ

7,541

3,739

Collateral paid

14,308

15,006

Trading securities 9

50,913

43,169

Derivative financial instruments 10

135,331

120,667

Investment securities 11

93,391

83,709

Net loans and advances 12

617,093

615,258

Regulatory deposits

801

879

Assets held for sale 29

-

1,831

Investments in associates 26

2,164

2,957

Current tax assets

161

265

Deferred tax assets

1


2,124

1,356

Goodwill and other intangible assets 20

4,379

4,861

Premises and equipment

1


3,013

1,924

Other assets

3,144

3,895

Total assets

1,042,286

981,137

Liabilities

Settlement balances owed by ANZ

22,241

10,867

Collateral received

9,304

7,929

Deposits and other borrowings 14

682,333

637,677

Derivative financial instruments 10

134,711

120,951

Current tax liabilities

349

260

Deferred tax liabilities

80

67

Liabilities held for sale 29

-

2,121

Payables and other liabilities

1

9,128

7,968

Employee entitlements

596

589

Other provisions 21

2,579

2,223

Debt issuances 15

119,668

129,691

Total liabilities

980,989

920,343

Net assets 61,297

60,794

Shareholders' equity

Ordinary share capital 22

26,531

26,490

Reserves 22

1,501

1,629

Retained earnings

1

22

33,255

32,664

Share capital and reserves attributable to shareholders of the Company

22

61,287

60,783

Non-controlling interests 22

10

11

Total shareholders' equity

22

61,297

60,794

1.

On adoption of AASB 16 on 1 October 2019, the Group recognised right-of-use assets of $1.6 billion presented within Premises and equipment and lease liabilities of $1.7 billion presented within Payables

and other liabilities. This resulted in a reduction to opening retained earnings of $88 million and an increase in deferred tax assets of $37 million. Comparative information has not been restated. Refer to

Note 1 for further details.

The notes appearing on pages 117 to 225 form an integral part of these financial statements.

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Financial

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114

FINANCIAL REPORT (continued)

BALANCE SHEET

20202019

As at 30 September Note $m$m

Assets

Cash and cash equivalents 8

107,923

81,621

Settlement balances owed to ANZ

7,541

3,739

Collateral paid

14,308

15,006

Trading securities 9

50,913

43,169

Derivative financial instruments 10

135,331

120,667

Investment securities 11

93,391

83,709

Net loans and advances 12

617,093

615,258

Regulatory deposits

801

879

Assets held for sale 29

-

1,831

Investments in associates 26

2,164

2,957

Current tax assets

161

265

Deferred tax assets

1


2,124

1,356

Goodwill and other intangible assets 20

4,379

4,861

Premises and equipment

1


3,013

1,924

Other assets

3,144

3,895

Total assets

1,042,286

981,137

Liabilities

Settlement balances owed by ANZ

22,241

10,867

Collateral received

9,304

7,929

Deposits and other borrowings 14

682,333

637,677

Derivative financial instruments 10

134,711

120,951

Current tax liabilities

349

260

Deferred tax liabilities

80

67

Liabilities held for sale 29

-

2,121

Payables and other liabilities

1

9,128

7,968

Employee entitlements

596

589

Other provisions 21

2,579

2,223

Debt issuances 15

119,668

129,691

Total liabilities

980,989

920,343

Net assets 61,297

60,794

Shareholders' equity

Ordinary share capital 22

26,531

26,490

Reserves 22

1,501

1,629

Retained earnings

1

22

33,255

32,664

Share capital and reserves attributable to shareholders of the Company

22

61,287

60,783

Non-controlling interests 22

10

11

Total shareholders' equity

22

61,297

60,794

1.

On adoption of AASB 16 on 1 October 2019, the Group recognised right-of-use assets of $1.6 billion presented within Premises and equipment and lease liabilities of $1.7 billion presented within Payables

and other liabilities. This resulted in a reduction to opening retained earnings of $88 million and an increase in deferred tax assets of $37 million. Comparative information has not been restated. Refer to

Note 1 for further details.

The notes appearing on pages 117 to 225 form an integral part of these financial statements.

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT



115

FINANCIAL REPORT


CASH FLOW STATEMENT

The Consolidated Cash Flow Statement includes discontinued operations. Please refer to Note 29 for cash flows associated with discontinued

operations and cash and cash equivalents reclassified as held for sale.



2020 2019

For the year ended 30 September $m $m

Profit after income tax

3,578

5,968


Adjustments to reconcile to net cash provided by/(used in) operating activities:

Allowance for expected credit losses

2,738

794

Impairment of investment in associates

815

-

Depreciation and amortisation

1, 2


1,391

871

Goodwill impairment

77

-

(Profit)/loss on sale of premises and equipment

(8)

(5)

Net derivatives/foreign exchange adjustment

(3,046)

4,940

(Gain)/loss on sale from divestments

25

(137)

Other non-cash movements

(80)

(356)

Net (increase)/decrease in operating assets:


Collateral paid

283

(3,493)

Trading securities

(1,803)

(7,941)

Net loans and advances

(7,119)

(10,268)

Investments backing policy liabilities

-

(3,542)

Other assets

(76)

(454)

Net increase/(decrease) in operating liabilities:


Deposits and other borrowings

51,875

7,006

Settlement balances owed by ANZ

11,476

(1,077)

Collateral received

1,739

1,004

Other liabilities

(9,581)

2,140

Total adjustments

48,706

(10,518)

Net cash (used in)/provided by operating activities

3


52,284

(4,550)

Cash flows from investing activities

Investment securities assets:

Purchases

(40,029)

(23,847)

Proceeds from sale or maturity

28,642

21,228

Proceeds from divestments, net of cash disposed

1,309

2,121

Proceeds from/(Repayment of) IOOF secured notes

(800)

800

Other assets

(587)

(508)

Net cash (used in)/provided by investing activities

(11,465)

(206)

Cash flows from financing activities

Debt issuances:

4


Issue proceeds

12,260

25,900

Redemptions

(21,430)

(22,958)

Dividends paid

5


(2,861)

(4,471)

On market purchase of treasury shares

(122)

(112)

Repayment of lease liabilities

6


(281)

-

Share buyback

-

(1,120)

Net cash (used in)/provided by financing activities

(12,434)

(2,761)

Net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents

28,385

(7,517)

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

81,621

84,964

Effects of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents

(2,083)

4,174

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

7


107,923

81,621

1.

Includes depreciation of right-of-use assets recognised on 1 October 2019 following the adoption of AASB 16. Comparatives have not been restated.

2.

Includes accelerated amortisation of $197 million following the Group’s change in the application of its software amortisation policy to reflect the shorter useful life of software caused by rapidly changing

technology and business requirements. Refer to Note 20 Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets for further details.

3.

Net cash inflows/(outflows) from operating activities includes income taxes paid of $2,348 million (2019: $3,129 million).

4.

Non-cash changes in debt issuances includes fair value hedging loss of $1,127 million (2019: $2,437 million loss) and foreign exchange gains of $1,623 million (2019: $3,815 million loss).

5.

Cash outflow for shares purchased to satisfy the dividend reinvestment plan are classified in Dividends paid.

6.

Relates to repayments of lease liabilities which the Group commenced recognising on 1 October 2019 following the adoption of AASB 16. Comparative information has not been restated.

7.

Includes cash and cash equivalents recognised on the face of balance sheet of $107,923 million (2019: $81,621 million) with no amounts recorded as part of assets held for sale. (2019: nil).

The notes appearing on pages 117 to 225 form an integral part of these financial statements.

115

ANZ 2020 Annual Report



116

FINANCIAL REPORT (continued)

STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY


Ordinary

share capital Reserves

Retained

earnings

Share capital

and reserves

attributable to

shareholders

of the Company

Non-

controlling

interests

Total

shareholders’

equity


$m $m $m $m $m $m

As at 1 October 2018

27,205 323 31,737 59,265 140 59,405

Impact on transition to AASB 9 - 14 (624) (610) - (610)

Profit or loss from continuing operations - - 6,296 6,296 15 6,311

Profit or loss from discontinued operations - - (343) (343) - (343)

Other comprehensive income for the year from

continuing operations

- 1,393 58 1,451 5 1,456

Other comprehensive income for the year from

discontinued operations

- (97) - (97) - (97)

Total comprehensive income for the year

- 1,296 6,011 7,307 20 7,327

Transactions with equity holders in their capacity

as equity holders:

Dividends paid - - (4,481) (4,481) (2) (4,483)

Dividend income on treasury shares held within

the Group’s life insurance statutory funds

- - 12 12 - 12

Group share buy-back

2

(1,120) - - (1,120) - (1,120)

Other equity movements:

Treasury shares Wealth Australia

discontinued operations adjustment

3


405 - - 405 - 405

Other items - (4) 9 5 (147) (142)

As at 30 September 2019

26,490 1,629 32,664 60,783 11 60,794

Impact on transition to AASB 16 - - (88) (88) - (88)

Profit or loss from continuing operations

- - 3,675 3,675 1 3,676

Profit or loss from discontinued operations

- - (98) (98) - (98)

Other comprehensive income for the year from

continuing operations

- (124) 14 (110) (1) (111)

Total comprehensive income for the year

- (124) 3,591 3,467 - 3,467

Transactions with equity holders in their capacity

as equity holders:

Dividends paid

- - (2,922) (2,922) - (2,922)

Dividend Reinvestment Plan

1


61 - - 61 - 61

Other equity movements:

Group employee share acquisition scheme

(20) - - (20) - (20)

Other items

- (4) 10 6 (1) 5

As at 30 September 2020

26,531 1,501 33,255 61,287 10 61,297

1

3.4 million shares were issued under the Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRP) for the 2020 interim dividend (nil shares for the 2019 final Dividend; nil shares for the 2019 interim dividend as the shares were

purchased on-market and provided directly to shareholders participating in the DRP). On-market share purchases for the DRP in 2020 were $185 million (2019: $432 million).

2

The Company completed a $3.0 billion on-market share buy-back of ANZ ordinary shares purchasing $1,120 million worth of shares in 2019 resulting in 42.0 million shares being cancelled.

3

The successor funds transfer performed in preparation for the sale of the Group’s wealth business to Zurich and IOOF completed on 13 April 2019. As a result, the Group no longer eliminates the ANZ shares

previously held in Wealth Australia discontinued operations (treasury shares).

The notes appearing on pages 117 to 225 form an integral part of these financial statements.

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116

FINANCIAL REPORT (continued)

STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY


Ordinary

share capital Reserves

Retained

earnings

Share capital

and reserves

attributable to

shareholders

of the Company

Non-

controlling

interests

Total

shareholders’

equity


$m $m $m $m $m $m

As at 1 October 2018

27,205 323 31,737 59,265 140 59,405

Impact on transition to AASB 9 - 14 (624) (610) - (610)

Profit or loss from continuing operations - - 6,296 6,296 15 6,311

Profit or loss from discontinued operations - - (343) (343) - (343)

Other comprehensive income for the year from

continuing operations

- 1,393 58 1,451 5 1,456

Other comprehensive income for the year from

discontinued operations

- (97) - (97) - (97)

Total comprehensive income for the year

- 1,296 6,011 7,307 20 7,327

Transactions with equity holders in their capacity

as equity holders:

Dividends paid - - (4,481) (4,481) (2) (4,483)

Dividend income on treasury shares held within

the Group’s life insurance statutory funds

- - 12 12 - 12

Group share buy-back

2

(1,120) - - (1,120) - (1,120)

Other equity movements:

Treasury shares Wealth Australia

discontinued operations adjustment

3


405 - - 405 - 405

Other items - (4) 9 5 (147) (142)

As at 30 September 2019

26,490 1,629 32,664 60,783 11 60,794

Impact on transition to AASB 16 - - (88) (88) - (88)

Profit or loss from continuing operations

- - 3,675 3,675 1 3,676

Profit or loss from discontinued operations

- - (98) (98) - (98)

Other comprehensive income for the year from

continuing operations

- (124) 14 (110) (1) (111)

Total comprehensive income for the year - (124) 3,591 3,467 - 3,467

Transactions with equity holders in their capacity

as equity holders:

Dividends paid

- - (2,922) (2,922) - (2,922)

Dividend Reinvestment Plan

1


61 - - 61 - 61

Other equity movements:

Group employee share acquisition scheme

(20) - - (20) - (20)

Other items

- (4) 10 6 (1) 5

As at 30 September 2020 26,531 1,501 33,255 61,287 10 61,297

1

3.4 million shares were issued under the Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRP) for the 2020 interim dividend (nil shares for the 2019 final Dividend; nil shares for the 2019 interim dividend as the shares were

purchased on-market and provided directly to shareholders participating in the DRP). On-market share purchases for the DRP in 2020 were $185 million (2019: $432 million).

2

The Company completed a $3.0 billion on-market share buy-back of ANZ ordinary shares purchasing $1,120 million worth of shares in 2019 resulting in 42.0 million shares being cancelled.

3

The successor funds transfer performed in preparation for the sale of the Group’s wealth business to Zurich and IOOF completed on 13 April 2019. As a result, the Group no longer eliminates the ANZ shares

previously held in Wealth Australia discontinued operations (treasury shares).

The notes appearing on pages 117 to 225 form an integral part of these financial statements.

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT



117

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

1. ABOUT OUR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

These are the financial statements for Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited (the Company) and its controlled entities (together, ‘the

Group’ or ‘ANZ’) for the year ended 30 September 2020. The Company is incorporated and domiciled in Australia. The address of the Company’s

registered office and its principal place of business is ANZ Centre, 833 Collins Street, Docklands, Victoria, Australia 3008. The Group provides banking

and financial services to individuals and business customers and operates in and across 33 markets.

On 4 November 2020, the Directors resolved to authorise the issue of these financial statements.

Information in the financial statements is included only to the extent we consider it material and relevant to the understanding of the financial

statements. A disclosure is considered material and relevant if, for example:


the amount is significant in size (quantitative factor);


the information is significant by nature (qualitative factor);


the user cannot understand the Group’s results without the specific disclosure (qualitative factor);


the information is critical to a user’s understanding of the impact of significant changes in the Group’s business during the period - for example,

business acquisitions or disposals (qualitative factor);


the information relates to an aspect of the Group’s operations that is important to its future performance (qualitative factor); and


the information is required under legislative requirements of the Corporations Act 2001, the Banking Act 1959 (Cth) or by the Group’s principal

regulators, including the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) and the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA).

This section of the financial statements:


outlines the basis upon which the Group’s financial statements have been prepared; and


discusses any new accounting standards or regulations that directly impact the financial statements.

BASIS OF PREPARATION

This financial report is a general purpose (Tier 1) financial report prepared by a ‘for profit’ entity, in accordance with Australian Accounting Standards

(AASs) and other authoritative pronouncements of the Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB), the Corporations Act 2001, and International

Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and interpretations published by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).

We present the financial statements of the Group in Australian dollars, which is the Company’s functional and presentation currency. We have

rounded values to the nearest million dollars ($m), unless otherwise stated, as allowed under the ASIC Corporations (Rounding in Financial/Directors

Report) Instrument 2016/191. We measure the financial statements of each entity in the Group using the currency of the primary economic

environment in which that entity operates (the functional currency).

BASIS OF MEASUREMENT

We have prepared the financial information in accordance with the historical cost basis - except the following assets and liabilities which we have

stated at their fair value:


derivative financial instruments and in the case of fair value hedging, a fair value adjustment made to the underlying hedged exposure;


financial instruments held for trading;


financial assets and financial liabilities designated at fair value through profit or loss;


financial assets at fair value through other comprehensive income; and


assets and liabilities classified as held for sale (except those at their carrying value as per Note 29).

In accordance with AASB 1038 Life Insurance Contracts (AASB 1038) we have measured life insurance liabilities using the Margin on Services (MoS)

model. In accordance with AASB 119 Employee Benefits (AASB 119) we have measured defined benefit obligations using the Projected Unit

Credit Method.

DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS

The aligned dealer groups business sold to IOOF Holdings Limited (IOOF) completed on 1 October 2018; the life insurance business sold to Zurich

Financial Services Australia Limited completed on 31 May 2019; and the Wealth Australia pensions and investments business sold to IOOF was

completed on 31 January 2020. As a result of these sale transactions, the associated Group reclassification and consolidation impacts are treated as

discontinued operations from a financial reporting perspective.


Notes to the consolidated financial statements

117

ANZ 2020 Annual Report



118

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

1. ABOUT OUR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

BASIS OF CONSOLIDATION

The consolidated financial statements of the Group comprise the financial statements of the Company and all its subsidiaries. An entity, including a

structured entity, is considered a subsidiary of the Group when we determine that the Company has control over the entity. Control exists when the

Group is exposed to, or has rights to, variable returns from its involvement with the entity and has the ability to affect those returns through its

power over the entity. We assess power by examining existing rights that give the Group the current ability to direct the relevant activities of the

entity. We have eliminated, on consolidation, the effect of all transactions between entities in the Group.

FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION

TRANSACTIONS AND BALANCES

Foreign currency transactions are translated into the relevant functional currency at the exchange rate prevailing at the date of the transaction. At the

reporting date, monetary assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into the functional currency at the relevant spot rate.

Any foreign currency translation gains or losses that arise are included in profit or loss in the period they arise.

We measure translation differences on non-monetary items at fair value through profit or loss and report them as part of the fair value gain or loss on

these items. For non-monetary items classified as investment securities measured at fair value through other comprehensive income translation

differences are included in Other comprehensive income.

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF FOREIGN OPERATIONS THAT HAVE A FUNCTIONAL CURRENCY THAT IS NOT AUSTRALIAN DOLLARS

The financial statements of our foreign operations are translated into Australian dollars for consolidation into the Group financial statements using the

following method:

Foreign currency item Exchange rate used

Assets and liabilities The reporting date rate

Equity

The initial investment date rate

Income and expenses

The average rate for the period – but if for a significant transaction we believe the average rate is not

reasonable, then we use the rate at the date of the transaction

Exchange differences arising from the translation of financial statements of foreign operations are recognised in the foreign currency translation

reserve in equity. When we dispose of a foreign operation, the cumulative exchange differences are transferred to profit or loss as part of the gain or

loss on sale.

FIDUCIARY ACTIVITIES

The Group provides fiduciary services to third parties including custody, nominee and trustee services. This involves the Group holding assets on

behalf of third parties and making decisions regarding the purchase and sale of financial instruments. If ANZ is not the beneficial owner or does not

control the assets, then we do not recognise these transactions in these financial statements, except when required by accounting standards or

another legislative requirement.

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

118

OverviewHow we

create value

Performance

overview

Remuneration

report

Directors’

report

Financial

report

Shareholder

information



118

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

1. ABOUT OUR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

BASIS OF CONSOLIDATION

The consolidated financial statements of the Group comprise the financial statements of the Company and all its subsidiaries. An entity, including a

structured entity, is considered a subsidiary of the Group when we determine that the Company has control over the entity. Control exists when the

Group is exposed to, or has rights to, variable returns from its involvement with the entity and has the ability to affect those returns through its

power over the entity. We assess power by examining existing rights that give the Group the current ability to direct the relevant activities of the

entity. We have eliminated, on consolidation, the effect of all transactions between entities in the Group.

FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION

TRANSACTIONS AND BALANCES

Foreign currency transactions are translated into the relevant functional currency at the exchange rate prevailing at the date of the transaction. At the

reporting date, monetary assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into the functional currency at the relevant spot rate.

Any foreign currency translation gains or losses that arise are included in profit or loss in the period they arise.

We measure translation differences on non-monetary items at fair value through profit or loss and report them as part of the fair value gain or loss on

these items. For non-monetary items classified as investment securities measured at fair value through other comprehensive income translation

differences are included in Other comprehensive income.

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF FOREIGN OPERATIONS THAT HAVE A FUNCTIONAL CURRENCY THAT IS NOT AUSTRALIAN DOLLARS

The financial statements of our foreign operations are translated into Australian dollars for consolidation into the Group financial statements using the

following method:

Foreign currency item Exchange rate used

Assets and liabilities The reporting date rate

Equity

The initial investment date rate

Income and expenses

The average rate for the period – but if for a significant transaction we believe the average rate is not

reasonable, then we use the rate at the date of the transaction

Exchange differences arising from the translation of financial statements of foreign operations are recognised in the foreign currency translation

reserve in equity. When we dispose of a foreign operation, the cumulative exchange differences are transferred to profit or loss as part of the gain or

loss on sale.

FIDUCIARY ACTIVITIES

The Group provides fiduciary services to third parties including custody, nominee and trustee services. This involves the Group holding assets on

behalf of third parties and making decisions regarding the purchase and sale of financial instruments. If ANZ is not the beneficial owner or does not

control the assets, then we do not recognise these transactions in these financial statements, except when required by accounting standards or

another legislative requirement.

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

119

1. ABOUT OUR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADOPTED IN THE PERIOD

AASB 16 Leases (AASB 16)

AASB 16 became effective for the Group from 1 October 2019 and replaced the previous standard AASB 117 Leases (AASB 117). AASB 16 primarily

impacts the Group’s property and technology leases which were previously classified as operating leases. Under AASB 117, operating leases were not

recognised on balance sheet and rent payments were expensed over the lease term.

Under AASB 16, the Group recognises all leases (except for leases of low value assets and short term leases) on balance sheet under a single

accounting model. Accordingly, the Group recognises its right to use an underlying leased asset over the lease term as a right-of-use (ROU) asset, and

its obligation to make lease payments as a lease liability. In the income statement, the Group recognises depreciation expense on the ROU asset and

interest expense on the lease liability. As a result, lease expenses will be higher in the early periods of a lease and lower in the later periods of the lease

compared to the previous standard where expenses were constant over the lease term. Cumulative expenses over the life of a lease will not change.

As permitted by the standard, the Group does not recognise ROU assets and lease liabilities for leases of low value items and short term leases (less

than 12 months). Instead, the lease payments associated with these leases are recognised as an operating expense in the income statement on a

straight-line basis over the lease term.

The Group has applied the modified retrospective transition approach whereby initial lease liabilities are recognised based on the present value of

remaining lease payments as of the transition date. The initial ROU asset recognised for certain large commercial and retail leases was measured as if

AASB 16 had always been applied to the leases. For all other leases, the initial ROU asset was measured as equal to the initial lease liability.

The implementation of AASB 16 requires management to make certain key judgements including the determination of lease terms, discount rates

and identifying arrangements that contain a lease. Extension options are included in the lease term if the Group is reasonably certain the option will

be exercised. This assessment includes consideration of facts and circumstances that create an economic incentive for the Group to exercise the

option.

Based on the modified retrospective transition approach, the Group recognised lease liabilities of $1.7 billion presented within Payables and other

liabilities and ROU assets of $1.6 billion presented within Premises and equipment. This resulted in a reduction to opening retained earnings of $88

million and an increase in deferred tax assets of $37 million as of 1 October 2019. Comparatives have not been restated.

KEY JUDGEMENTS AND ESTIMATES

In the process of applying the Group’s accounting policies, management has made a number of judgements and applied estimates

and assumptions about past and future events. Further information on the key judgements and estimates that we consider material to

the financial statements are contained within each relevant note to the financial statements.

Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic and its effect on the global economy have impacted our customers, operations and Group performance. The

outbreak necessitated governments to respond at unprecedented levels to protect the health of the population, local economies and

livelihoods. It has affected different regions at different times and at varying degrees and there remains a risk of subsequent waves of

infection. Thus the pandemic has significantly increased the estimation uncertainty in the preparation of these financial statements

including:

•the extent and duration of the disruption to business arising from the actions of governments, businesses and consumers to

contain the spread of the virus;

•the extent and duration of the expected economic downturn, and subsequent recovery. This includes the impacts on capital

markets and liquidity, credit quality, increasing unemployment, declines in consumer spending, reductions in production, and

other restructuring activities; and

•the effectiveness of government and central bank measures to support businesses and consumers through this disruption and

economic downturn.

The Group has made various accounting estimates in these financial statements based on forecasts of economic conditions which

reflect expectations and assumptions as at 30 September 2020 about future events that the Directors believe are reasonable in the

circumstances. There is a considerable degree of judgement involved in preparing these estimates. The underlying assumptions are

also subject to uncertainties which are often outside the control of the Group. Accordingly, actual economic conditions are likely to be

different from those forecast since anticipated events frequently do not occur as expected, and the effect of those differences may

significantly impact accounting estimates included in these financial statements.

The significant accounting estimates impacted by these forecasts and associated uncertainties are predominantly related to expected

credit losses, fair value measurement, and the assessment of the recoverable amount of non-financial assets.

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on each of these estimates is discussed further in the relevant note of these financial

statements. Readers should carefully consider these disclosures in light of the inherent uncertainty described above.

Notes to the consolidated financial statements (continued)

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NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)
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1. ABOUT OUR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADOPTED IN THE PERIOD (continued)

In addition, the Group elected to apply the following practical expedients as permitted under the modified retrospective transition approach:

a)Impairment of ROU assets at the transition date was assessed by relying on onerous lease provisions previously recognised as of 30 September

2019 under AASB 117;

b)Initial direct costs associated with entering leases prior to the transition date were excluded from the carrying value of ROU assets recognised at

transition;

c)No ROU assets or lease liabilities were recognised for certain leases with less than 12 months remaining as of the transition date; these leases were

treated as short-term leases with all lease payments recognised in rent expense as incurred; and

d)Hindsight was used to determine the lease term of contracts that contained options to extend the lease.

The following table reconciles the operating lease commitments disclosed under AASB 117 as at 30 September 2019 to the opening lease liabilities

recognised under AASB 16 as at 1 October 2019.

$m

Operating Lease Commitments as at 30 September 2019

1,656

Increase in lease term for extension options 210

Exclusion of low value leases and leases of less than 12 months (19)

Exclusion of service components (10)

Other(17)

Total Undiscounted Lease Payments 1,820

Effect of discounting at a weighted average incremental borrowing rate of 2.44% (141)

Total lease liabilities under AASB 16 as at 1 October 2019 1,679

During the reporting period, the Group recognised the following amounts in the income statement

$m

Depreciation expense on ROU assets 394

Interest expense on lease liabilities 37

Interest expense on makegood provisions 2

Rent expense in relation to low value leases and leases of less than 12 months 35

Other income in relation to subleases 21

The Group's accounting policies with respect to lease arrangements where it acts as lessor have not changed under AASB 16 except where the Group

subleases certain leased properties. Where the Group acts as intermediate lessor, it classifies the sublease as either a finance lease or operating lease

by reference to the ROU asset of the head lease. Income from operating subleases is recognised in Other operating income in the Income Statement.

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NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)
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1. ABOUT OUR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADOPTED IN THE PERIOD (continued)

In addition, the Group elected to apply the following practical expedients as permitted under the modified retrospective transition approach:

a)Impairment of ROU assets at the transition date was assessed by relying on onerous lease provisions previously recognised as of 30 September

2019 under AASB 117;

b)Initial direct costs associated with entering leases prior to the transition date were excluded from the carrying value of ROU assets recognised at

transition;

c)No ROU assets or lease liabilities were recognised for certain leases with less than 12 months remaining as of the transition date; these leases were

treated as short-term leases with all lease payments recognised in rent expense as incurred; and

d)Hindsight was used to determine the lease term of contracts that contained options to extend the lease.

The following table reconciles the operating lease commitments disclosed under AASB 117 as at 30 September 2019 to the opening lease liabilities

recognised under AASB 16 as at 1 October 2019.

$m

Operating Lease Commitments as at 30 September 2019

1,656

Increase in lease term for extension options 210

Exclusion of low value leases and leases of less than 12 months (19)

Exclusion of service components (10)

Other(17)

Total Undiscounted Lease Payments 1,820

Effect of discounting at a weighted average incremental borrowing rate of 2.44% (141)

Total lease liabilities under AASB 16 as at 1 October 2019 1,679

During the reporting period, the Group recognised the following amounts in the income statement

$m

Depreciation expense on ROU assets 394

Interest expense on lease liabilities 37

Interest expense on makegood provisions 2

Rent expense in relation to low value leases and leases of less than 12 months 35

Other income in relation to subleases 21

The Group's accounting policies with respect to lease arrangements where it acts as lessor have not changed under AASB 16 except where the Group

subleases certain leased properties. Where the Group acts as intermediate lessor, it classifies the sublease as either a finance lease or operating lease

by reference to the ROU asset of the head lease. Income from operating subleases is recognised in Other operating income in the Income Statement.

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

121

1. ABOUT OUR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADOPTED IN THE PERIOD (continued)

Interest Rate Benchmark Reform

Background

Interbank offered rates (IBORs), such as the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), play a critical role in global financial markets, serving as reference

rates for derivatives, loans and securities, and as parameters in the valuation of financial instruments.

Uncertainty surrounding the integrity of IBOR rates has in recent years, led regulators, central banks and market participants to work towards a

transition to alternative risk-free benchmark reference rates (RFRs) and market-led working groups in respective jurisdictions have recommended

alternative risk-free reference rates, which are gradually being adopted. Progress in the transition to these new benchmarks has resulted in significant

uncertainty in the future of IBOR benchmarks beyond 1 January 2022.

Accounting amendments

In response to the uncertainty about the long-term viability of these benchmark rates, and LIBOR in particular, the International Accounting Standards

Board (IASB) has established a project to consider the financial reporting implications of the reform. The transition from IBORs is expected to have an

impact on various elements of financial instrument accounting, including hedge accounting, as well as fair value methodologies and disclosures.

In October 2019, the AASB issued AASB 2019-3 Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Interest Rate Benchmark Reform, which amends certain

existing hedge accounting requirements to provide relief from potential effects of the uncertainty caused by the interest rate benchmark reform. The

Group elected to early adopt the amendments from 1 October 2019 which have not had a significant impact on the Group. These amendments

address the accounting effects of uncertainty in the period leading up to the reform arising from the Group’s ability to satisfy the existing prospective

hedge effectiveness requirements of AASB 139. This uncertainty arises as it is not known when the hedged items (such as debt issuances) and

associated hedging instruments (such as interest rate swaps) will be changed to reference the RFRs, or if both the hedging item and the associated

hedging instrument will move to the new rates at the same time. The Group has applied this amendment to all hedge accounted relationships (cash

flow or fair value hedges) where the reform gives rise to uncertainties about the timing or amount of IBOR based cash flows of the hedged item or

hedging instrument.

In September 2020, the AASB issued AASB 2020-8 Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Interest Rate Benchmark Reform – Phase 2 which is

mandatory for the Group for the 2022 financial year. This standard addresses issues that may affect the Group at the point of transition from an

existing IBOR rate to a RFR, including the effects of changes to contractual cash flows or hedging relationships. The standard includes amendments in

respect of:

Modification of a financial asset or a financial liability measured at amortised cost

IBOR reform is expected to result in a change to the basis for determining contractual cash flows of impacted assets and liabilities of the Group.

The amendments provide a practical expedient to account for a change in the basis for determining the contractual cash flows as a result of

IBOR reform by updating the effective interest rate. As a result, no immediate gain or loss is recognised. This applies only when the change is

necessary as a direct consequence of the reform, and the new basis for determining the contractual cash flows is economically equivalent to the

previous basis.


Additional relief for hedging relationships

Th

e Standard also amends a number of existing hedge accounting requirements that will assist the Group to maintain its existing hedge

accounted relationships post IBOR transition. The Group will continue to record any ongoing hedge ineffectiveness, including that generated by

changes as a result of interest rate reform, within the Income Statement.

The Group is in the process of assessing the impact of the new standard on its financial statements.

Impact of IBOR reform

The Group has exposure to IBOR through its issuance of debt, the structural interest rate risk position, holdings of investment securities, products

denominated in foreign currencies and associated hedging activities in our treasury and markets businesses within the TSO and Group Centre and

Institutional divisions respectively.

The Group has established an enterprise-wide Benchmark Transition Program to manage the transition. The program includes the assessment and

actions necessary to accommodate the transition to RFRs as they apply to internal processes and systems including pricing, risk management,

documentation and hedge arrangements. The program includes management of the impact on customers.

Impact of IBOR reform on the Group’s hedging relationships

Certain IBOR rates are subject to replacement by RFRs. The Group has hedge accounted relationships referencing IBORs, with the most significant

interest rate benchmarks to which the Group's hedging relationships are exposed to are USD LIBOR, Euro Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), Bank Bill

Swap Rate (BBSW) and Bank Bill Market (BKBM).

Of these benchmarks the Group expects BBSW, BKBM and EURIBOR to exist as benchmark rates for the foreseeable future and therefore does not

believe its BBSW, BKBM or EURIBOR benchmark fair value or cash flow hedges will be directly impacted by IBOR reform.

Notes to the consolidated financial statements (continued)

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NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)
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1. About Our Financial Statements (continued)

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADOPTED IN THE PERIOD (continued)

Interest Rate Benchmark Reform (continued)

The table below details the carrying values of the Group's exposures designated in hedge accounting relationships that will be impacted by IBOR

reform, principally USD LIBOR. The nominal value of the associated hedging instruments is also included:

As at 30 September 2020

Hedged items

USD LIBOR exposures

$m

Investment securities at FVOCI15,002

Net loans and advances111

Debt issuances32,235

Hedging instruments

Notional designated up to

31 December 2021

$m

Notional designated

beyond 31 December 2021

$m

Total Notional Amount

$m

Fair value hedges 12,778 32,250 45,028

Cash flow hedges - 1,055 1,055

As at 30 September 2020 the Group also has GBP LIBOR, CHF LIBOR and JPY LIBOR exposures designated in hedge accounting relationships of $927

million, $975 million and $2,131 million respectively.

In addition to hedge accounted relationships that will be impacted by IBOR reform, the Group has exposures to other financial instruments

referencing an IBOR rate that are also subject to reform. The Group is continuing to monitor market developments in relation to the transition to RFRs

from IBOR rates and their impact on the Group’s financial assets and liabilities to ensure that there are no unexpected consequences or disruption

from the transition.

AASB INTERPRETATION 23 UNCERTAINTY OVER INCOME TAX TREATMENTS (AASB Interpretation 23)

AASB Interpretation 23 became effective for the Group from 1 Octo

ber 2019. The interpretation clarifies application of recognition and measurement

requirements in AASB 112 Income Taxes where there is uncertainty over income tax treatments. As the Group’s existing policy aligned with the

requirements of AASB Interpretation 23, the interpretation had no material impact on the Group.

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NOT EARLY ADOPTED

A number of new standards, amendments to standards and interpretations have been published but are not mandatory for the financial statements

for the year ended 30 September 2020, and have not been applied by the Group in preparing these financial statements. Further details of these are

set out below.

GENERAL HEDGE ACCOUNTING

AASB 9 introduces new hedge accounting requirements which more closely align accounting with risk management activities undertaken when

hedging both financial and non-financial risks. AASB 9 provides the Group with an accounting policy choice to continue to apply the AASB 139 hedge

accounting requirements until the International Accounting Standards Board’s ongoing project on macro hedge accounting is completed. The Group

continues to apply the hedge accounting requirements of AASB 139.

AASB 17 INSURANCE CONTRACTS (AASB 17)

The final version of AASB 17 was issued in July 2017 and is not effective for the Group until 1 October 2023. It will replace AASB 4 Insurance Contracts,

AASB 1023 General Insurance Contracts and AASB 1038 Life Insurance Contracts. AASB 17 establishes principles for the recognition, measurement,

presentation and disclosure of insurance contracts.

The measurement, presentation and disclosure requirements under AASB 17 are significantly different from current accounting standards. Although

the overall profit recognised in respect of insurance contracts will not change, it is expected that the timing of profit recognition will change.

AASB 17 is not expected to have material impact on the Group.

REVISED CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK

In June 2019 the AASB issued a revised Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting. The new Framework includes updated definitions and criteria

for the recognition and derecognition of assets and liabilities. Additionally, it introduces new concepts on measurement, including factors to consider

when selecting a measurement basis. The revised Conceptual Framework will apply to the Group from 1 October 2020 and is not expected to have a

material impact on the Group.

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NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)
122

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

1. About Our Financial Statements (continued)

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADOPTED IN THE PERIOD (continued)

Interest Rate Benchmark Reform (continued)

The table below details the carrying values of the Group's exposures designated in hedge accounting relationships that will be impacted by IBOR

reform, principally USD LIBOR. The nominal value of the associated hedging instruments is also included:

As at 30 September 2020

Hedged items

USD LIBOR exposures

$m

Investment securities at FVOCI15,002

Net loans and advances111

Debt issuances32,235

Hedging instruments

Notional designated up to

31 December 2021

$m

Notional designated

beyond 31 December 2021

$m

Total Notional Amount

$m

Fair value hedges 12,778 32,250 45,028

Cash flow hedges - 1,055 1,055

As at 30 September 2020 the Group also has GBP LIBOR, CHF LIBOR and JPY LIBOR exposures designated in hedge accounting relationships of $927

million, $975 million and $2,131 million respectively.

In addition to hedge accounted relationships that will be impacted by IBOR reform, the Group has exposures to other financial instruments

referencing an IBOR rate that are also subject to reform. The Group is continuing to monitor market developments in relation to the transition to RFRs

from IBOR rates and their impact on the Group’s financial assets and liabilities to ensure that there are no unexpected consequences or disruption

from the transition.

AASB INTERPRETATION 23 UNCERTAINTY OVER INCOME TAX TREATMENTS (AASB Interpretation 23)

AASB Interpretation 23 became effective for the Group from 1 Octo

ber 2019. The interpretation clarifies application of recognition and measurement

requirements in AASB 112 Income Taxes where there is uncertainty over income tax treatments. As the Group’s existing policy aligned with the

requirements of AASB Interpretation 23, the interpretation had no material impact on the Group.

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NOT EARLY ADOPTED

A number of new standards, amendments to standards and interpretations have been published but are not mandatory for the financial statements

for the year ended 30 September 2020, and have not been applied by the Group in preparing these financial statements. Further details of these are

set out below.

GENERAL HEDGE ACCOUNTING

AASB 9 introduces new hedge accounting requirements which more closely align accounting with risk management activities undertaken when

hedging both financial and non-financial risks. AASB 9 provides the Group with an accounting policy choice to continue to apply the AASB 139 hedge

accounting requirements until the International Accounting Standards Board’s ongoing project on macro hedge accounting is completed. The Group

continues to apply the hedge accounting requirements of AASB 139.

AASB 17 INSURANCE CONTRACTS (AASB 17)

The final version of AASB 17 was issued in July 2017 and is not effective for the Group until 1 October 2023. It will replace AASB 4 Insurance Contracts,

AASB 1023 General Insurance Contracts and AASB 1038 Life Insurance Contracts. AASB 17 establishes principles for the recognition, measurement,

presentation and disclosure of insurance contracts.

The measurement, presentation and disclosure requirements under AASB 17 are significantly different from current accounting standards. Although

the overall profit recognised in respect of insurance contracts will not change, it is expected that the timing of profit recognition will change.

AASB 17 is not expected to have material impact on the Group.

REVISED CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK

In June 2019 the AASB issued a revised Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting. The new Framework includes updated definitions and criteria

for the recognition and derecognition of assets and liabilities. Additionally, it introduces new concepts on measurement, including factors to consider

when selecting a measurement basis. The revised Conceptual Framework will apply to the Group from 1 October 2020 and is not expected to have a

material impact on the Group.

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

123

2.OPERATING INCOME

20202019

$m$m

Net interest income

Interest income by type of financial asset

Investment securities - FVOCI

1,162

1,624

Financial assets at amortised cost

22,675

28,600

Trading securities

584

848

Financial assets designated at FV through profit or loss

5

5

Interest income

24,426

31,077

Interest expense by type of financial liability

Financial liabilities at amortised cost

(9,783)

(16,149)

Securities sold short

(95)

(110)

Financial liabilities designated at FV through profit or loss

(93)

(116)

Interest expense

(9,971)

(16,375)

Major bank levy

(406)

(363)

Net interest income 14,049

14,339

Other operating income

i) Fee and commission income

Lending fees

1


579

602

Non-lending fees

2,687

3,059

Commissions

121

124

Funds management income

275

254

Fee and commission income

3,662

4,039

Fee and commission expense

(1,337)

(1,462)

Net fee and commission income

2,325

2,577

ii) Other income

Net foreign exchange earnings and other financial instruments income

2


1,809

1,278

Impairment of AmBank

(595)

-

Impairment of PT Panin

(220)

-

Sale of UDC

(7)

-

Sale of OnePath Life (NZ) Ltd (OPL NZ)

-

89

Sale of Paymark Limited (Paymark)

-

37

Sale of ANZ Royal Bank (Cambodia) Ltd (Cambodia JV)

-

10

Sale of PNG Retail, Commercial & SME

-

1

Dividend income on equity securities

26

28

Other

17

38

Other income

1,030

1,481

Other operating income 3,355

4,058

Net income from insurance business 78

126

Share of associates' profit

155

262

Operating income

3

17,637

18,785

1.

Lending fees exclude fees treated as part of the effective yield calculation in interest income.

2.

Includes fair value movements (excluding realised and accrued interest) on derivatives not designated as accounting hedges entered into to manage interest rate and foreign exchange risk on funding

instruments, ineffective portions of cash flow hedges, and fair value movements in financial assets and liabilities designated at fair value through profit or loss.

3.

Includes charges for customer remediation of $174 million (2019: $212 million).

Notes to the consolidated financial statements (continued)

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NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

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ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

2. OPERATING INCOME (continued)


RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT

NET INTEREST INCOME

Interest Income and Expense

We recognise interest income and expense for all financial instruments, including those classified as held for trading, assets measured at fair

value through other comprehensive income or designated at fair value through profit or loss in net interest income. We use the effective

interest rate method to calculate the amortised cost of assets held at amortised cost and to recognise interest income on financial assets

measured at fair value through other comprehensive income. The effective interest rate is the rate that discounts the stream of estimated

future cash receipts or payments over the expected life of the financial instrument or, when appropriate, a shorter period, to the net

carrying amount of the financial asset or liability. For assets subject to prepayment, we determine their expected life on the basis of

historical behaviour of the particular asset portfolio - taking into account contractual obligations and prepayment experience.

We recognise fees and costs, which form an integral part of the financial instrument (for example loan origination fees and costs), using the

effective interest rate method. This is presented as part of interest income or expense depending on whether the underlying financial

instrument is a financial asset or financial liability.

Major Bank Levy

The Major Bank Levy Act 2017 (‘Levy’ or ‘Major bank levy’) applies a rate of 0.06% to certain liabilities of the Company. The Group has

determined that the levy represents a finance cost for the Group and $406 million (2019: $363 million) is presented as interest expense in

the Income Statement

.

OTHER OPERATING INCOME

Fee and Commission Revenue

We recognise fee and commission revenue arising from contracts with customers (a) over time when the performance obligation is

satisfied across more than one reporting period or (b) at a point in time when the performance obligation is satisfied immediately or is

satisfied within one reporting period.


lending fees exclude fees treated as part of the effective yield calculation of interest income. Lending fees include certain guarantee

and commitment fees where the loan or guarantee is not likely to be drawn upon, and other fees charged for providing customers a

distinct good or service that are recognised separately from the underlying lending product (including annual package fees that

provide benefits on other ANZ products).


non-lending fees includes fees associated with deposit and credit card accounts, interchange fees and fees charged for specific

customer transactions such as international money transfers. Where the Group provides multiple goods or services to a customer

under the same contract, the Group allocates the transaction price of the contract to distinct performance obligations based on the

relative stand-alone selling price of each performance obligation. Revenue is recognised as each performance obligation is satisfied.


commissions represent fees from third parties where ANZ acts as an agent by arranging a third party (e.g. an insurance provider) to

provide goods and services to a customer. In such cases, ANZ is not primarily responsible for providing the underlying good or service

to the customer. If the Group collects funds on behalf of a third party when acting as an agent, the Group only recognises the net

commission it retains as revenue. When the commission is variable based on factors outside the control of the Group (e.g. a trail

commission), revenue is only recognised if it is highly probable that a significant reversal of the variable amount will not be required in

future periods.


funds management income represents fees earned from customers for providing financial advice and fees for asset management

services and advice provided to investment funds. Revenue is recognised either at the point the financial advice is provided or over

the period in which the asset management services are delivered. Performance fees associated with funds management activities are

only recognised when it becomes highly probable the performance hurdle will be achieved.

Net Foreign Exchange Earnings and Other Financial Instruments Income

We recognise the following as net foreign exchange earnings and other financial instruments income:


exchange rate differences arising on the settlement of monetary items and translation differences on monetary items translated at

rates different to those at which they were initially recognised or included in a previous financial report;


fair value movements (excluding realised and accrued interest) on derivatives that we use to manage interest rate and foreign

exchange risk on funding instruments not designated as accounting hedges;


the ineffective portions of fair value hedges, cash flow hedges and net investment hedges;



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NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

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2. OPERATING INCOME (continued)


RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT

NET INTEREST INCOME

Interest Income and Expense

We recognise interest income and expense for all financial instruments, including those classified as held for trading, assets measured at fair

value through other comprehensive income or designated at fair value through profit or loss in net interest income. We use the effective

interest rate method to calculate the amortised cost of assets held at amortised cost and to recognise interest income on financial assets

measured at fair value through other comprehensive income. The effective interest rate is the rate that discounts the stream of estimated

future cash receipts or payments over the expected life of the financial instrument or, when appropriate, a shorter period, to the net

carrying amount of the financial asset or liability. For assets subject to prepayment, we determine their expected life on the basis of

historical behaviour of the particular asset portfolio - taking into account contractual obligations and prepayment experience.

We recognise fees and costs, which form an integral part of the financial instrument (for example loan origination fees and costs), using the

effective interest rate method. This is presented as part of interest income or expense depending on whether the underlying financial

instrument is a financial asset or financial liability.

Major Bank Levy

The Major Bank Levy Act 2017 (‘Levy’ or ‘Major bank levy’) applies a rate of 0.06% to certain liabilities of the Company. The Group has

determined that the levy represents a finance cost for the Group and $406 million (2019: $363 million) is presented as interest expense in

the Income Statement

.

OTHER OPERATING INCOME

Fee and Commission Revenue

We recognise fee and commission revenue arising from contracts with customers (a) over time when the performance obligation is

satisfied across more than one reporting period or (b) at a point in time when the performance obligation is satisfied immediately or is

satisfied within one reporting period.


lending fees exclude fees treated as part of the effective yield calculation of interest income. Lending fees include certain guarantee

and commitment fees where the loan or guarantee is not likely to be drawn upon, and other fees charged for providing customers a

distinct good or service that are recognised separately from the underlying lending product (including annual package fees that

provide benefits on other ANZ products).


non-lending fees includes fees associated with deposit and credit card accounts, interchange fees and fees charged for specific

customer transactions such as international money transfers. Where the Group provides multiple goods or services to a customer

under the same contract, the Group allocates the transaction price of the contract to distinct performance obligations based on the

relative stand-alone selling price of each performance obligation. Revenue is recognised as each performance obligation is satisfied.


commissions represent fees from third parties where ANZ acts as an agent by arranging a third party (e.g. an insurance provider) to

provide goods and services to a customer. In such cases, ANZ is not primarily responsible for providing the underlying good or service

to the customer. If the Group collects funds on behalf of a third party when acting as an agent, the Group only recognises the net

commission it retains as revenue. When the commission is variable based on factors outside the control of the Group (e.g. a trail

commission), revenue is only recognised if it is highly probable that a significant reversal of the variable amount will not be required in

future periods.


funds management income represents fees earned from customers for providing financial advice and fees for asset management

services and advice provided to investment funds. Revenue is recognised either at the point the financial advice is provided or over

the period in which the asset management services are delivered. Performance fees associated with funds management activities are

only recognised when it becomes highly probable the performance hurdle will be achieved.

Net Foreign Exchange Earnings and Other Financial Instruments Income

We recognise the following as net foreign exchange earnings and other financial instruments income:


exchange rate differences arising on the settlement of monetary items and translation differences on monetary items translated at

rates different to those at which they were initially recognised or included in a previous financial report;


fair value movements (excluding realised and accrued interest) on derivatives that we use to manage interest rate and foreign

exchange risk on funding instruments not designated as accounting hedges;


the ineffective portions of fair value hedges, cash flow hedges and net investment hedges;



NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

125

2. OPERATING INCOME (continued)

RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT (continued)


immediately upon sale or repayment of a hedged item, the unamortised fair value adjustments in items designated as fair value

hedges and amounts accumulated in equity related to designated cash flow hedges;


fair value movements on financial assets and financial liabilities designated at fair value through profit or loss or held for trading;


amounts released from the fair value through other comprehensive income (FVOCI) reserve when a debt instrument classified as

FVOCI is sold; and


the gain or loss on derecognition of financial assets or liabilities measured at amortised cost.

Gain or Loss on Disposal of Non-Financial Assets

The gain or loss on the disposal of assets is the difference between the carrying value of the asset and the proceeds of disposal net of costs.

This is recognised in other income in the year in which the significant risks and rewards from the asset transfer to the buyer.

NET INCOME FROM INSURANCE BUSINESS

We recognise

:


premiums received (net of reinsurance premiums paid) based on an assessment of the likely pattern in which risk will emerge over the

term of the policies written. This assessment is undertaken periodically and updated in accordance with the latest pattern of risk

emergence; and


claims incurred net of reinsurance, on an accruals basis once the liability to the policy owner has been established under the terms of

the contract and through actuarial assumptions of future claims.

SHARE OF ASSOCIATES’ PROFIT

The equity method is applied to accounting for associates. Under the equity method, the Group’s share of the after tax results of

associates is included in the Income Statement and the Statement of Comprehensive Income.


Notes to the consolidated financial statements (continued)

125

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)
126

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT


RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT

OPERATING EXPENSES

Operating expenses are recognised as services are provided to the Group, over the period in which an asset is consumed, or once a

liability is created.

SALARIES AND RELATED COSTS - ANNUAL LEAVE, LONG SERVICE LEAVE AND OTHER EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

Wages and salaries, annual leave and other employee entitlements expected to be paid or settled within twelve months of

employees

rendering service are measured at their nominal amounts using remuneration rates that the Group expects to pay when

the liabilities are settled.

We accrue employee entitlements relating to long service leave using an actuarial calculation. It includes assumptions regarding staff

departures, leave utilisation and future salary increases. The result is then discounted using market yields at the reporting date. The market

yields are determined from a blended rate of high quality corporate bonds with terms to maturity that closely match the estimated future

cash outflows.

If we expect to pay short term cash bonuses, then a liability is recognised when the Group has a present legal or constructive obligation to pay

this amount (as a result of past service provided by the employee) and the obligation can be reliably measured.

3. OPERATING EXPENSES

20202019

1


$m$m

Personnel

Salaries and related costs

4,310

4,249

Superannuation costs

329

293

Other

239

223

Personnel

1

4,878

4,765

Premises

Rent

84

450

Depreciation

517

167

Other

188

178

Premises

2

789

795

Technology

Depreciation and amortisation

2,3


858

694

Subscription licences and outsourced services

780

672

Other

186

168

Technology (excluding personnel)

1

1,824

1,534

Restructuring 161

77

Other

Advertising and public relations

177

226

Professional fees

667

537

Freight, stationery, postage and communication

205

216

Royal Commission legal costs

-

15

Other

4


682

906

Other

1

1,731

1,900

Operating expenses

1

9,383

9,071

1.

Includes customer remediation expenses of $209 million in 2020 (2019: $373 million).

2.

Following the adoption of AASB 16 on 1 October 2019, with the exception of low value leases and leases of less than 12 months, expenses associated with leases are shown as depreciation of the right-of-

use asset and interest expense associated with the lease liability (comparatives not restated).

3.

During the 2020 financial year, the Group amended the application of its software amortisation policy to reflect the shorter useful life of software caused by rapidly changing technology and business

requirements. As a result of these changes, the Group recognised accelerated amortisation of $197 million during the year. Refer to Note 20 Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets for further details.

4.

Includes goodwill write-off of $77 million in the September 2020 financial year.

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NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)
126

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT


RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT

OPERATING EXPENSES

Operating expenses are recognised as services are provided to the Group, over the period in which an asset is consumed, or once a

liability is created.

SALARIES AND RELATED COSTS - ANNUAL LEAVE, LONG SERVICE LEAVE AND OTHER EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

Wages and salaries, annual leave and other employee entitlements expected to be paid or settled within twelve months of

employees

rendering service are measured at their nominal amounts using remuneration rates that the Group expects to pay when

the liabilities are settled.

We accrue employee entitlements relating to long service leave using an actuarial calculation. It includes assumptions regarding staff

departures, leave utilisation and future salary increases. The result is then discounted using market yields at the reporting date. The market

yields are determined from a blended rate of high quality corporate bonds with terms to maturity that closely match the estimated future

cash outflows.

If we expect to pay short term cash bonuses, then a liability is recognised when the Group has a present legal or constructive obligation to pay

this amount (as a result of past service provided by the employee) and the obligation can be reliably measured.

3. OPERATING EXPENSES

20202019

1


$m$m

Personnel

Salaries and related costs

4,310

4,249

Superannuation costs

329

293

Other

239

223

Personnel

1

4,878

4,765

Premises

Rent

84

450

Depreciation

517

167

Other

188

178

Premises

2

789

795

Technology

Depreciation and amortisation

2,3


858

694

Subscription licences and outsourced services

780

672

Other

186

168

Technology (excluding personnel)

1

1,824

1,534

Restructuring 161

77

Other

Advertising and public relations

177

226

Professional fees

667

537

Freight, stationery, postage and communication

205

216

Royal Commission legal costs

-

15

Other

4


682

906

Other

1

1,731

1,900

Operating expenses

1

9,383

9,071

1.

Includes customer remediation expenses of $209 million in 2020 (2019: $373 million).

2.

Following the adoption of AASB 16 on 1 October 2019, with the exception of low value leases and leases of less than 12 months, expenses associated with leases are shown as depreciation of the right-of-

use asset and interest expense associated with the lease liability (comparatives not restated).

3.

During the 2020 financial year, the Group amended the application of its software amortisation policy to reflect the shorter useful life of software caused by rapidly changing technology and business

requirements. As a result of these changes, the Group recognised accelerated amortisation of $197 million during the year. Refer to Note 20 Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets for further details.

4.

Includes goodwill write-off of $77 million in the September 2020 financial year.

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS




127


RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT

Personnel expenses also include share-based payments which may be cash or equity settled. We calculate the fair value of equity

settled remuneration at grant date, which is then amortised over the vesting period, with a corresponding increase in share capital or

the share option reserve as applicable. When we estimate the fair value, we take into account market vesting conditions, such as

share price performance conditions. We take non-market vesting conditions, such as service conditions, into account by adjusting

the number of equity instruments included in the expense.

After the grant of an equity-based award, the amount we recognise as an expense is reversed when non-market vesting conditions

are not met, for example an employee fails to satisfy the minimum service period specified in the award on resignation, termination

or notice of dismissal for serious misconduct. However, we do not reverse the expense if the award does not vest due to the failure to

meet a market-based performance condition.

Further information on share-based payment schemes operated by the Group during the current and prior year is included in Note

31 Employee Share and Option Plans.

3. OPERATING EXPENSES (continued)

















Notes to the consolidated financial statements (continued)

127

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

128

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

4. INCOME TAX


INCOME TAX EXPENSE

Reconciliation of the prima facie income tax expense on pre-tax profit with the income tax expense recognised in profit or loss:


2020 2019

$m $m

Profit before income tax from continuing operations

5,516

8,920

Prima facie income tax expense at 30%

1,655

2,676

Tax effect of permanent differences:

Gains or losses on sale from divestments

2

(25)

Impairment of investment in AmBank and PT Panin

245

-

Share of associates' profit

(47)

(78)

Interest on convertible instruments

52

63

Overseas tax rate differential

(86)

(112)

Provision for foreign tax on dividend repatriation

20

39

Other

25

63

Subtotal

1,866

2,626

Income tax (over)/under provided in previous years

(26)

(17)

Income tax expense

1,840

2,609

Current tax expense

2,637

2,779

Adjustments recognised in the current year in relation to the current tax of prior years

(26)

(17)

Deferred tax expense/(income) relating to the origination and reversal of temporary differences

(771)

(153)

Income tax expense

1,840

2,609

Australia

1,115

1,682

Overseas

725

927

Effective tax rate

33.4%

29.2%

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NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)

128

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

4. INCOME TAX


INCOME TAX EXPENSE

Reconciliation of the prima facie income tax expense on pre-tax profit with the income tax expense recognised in profit or loss:


2020 2019

$m $m

Profit before income tax from continuing operations 5,516

8,920

Prima facie income tax expense at 30%

1,655

2,676

Tax effect of permanent differences:

Gains or losses on sale from divestments

2

(25)

Impairment of investment in AmBank and PT Panin

245

-

Share of associates' profit

(47)

(78)

Interest on convertible instruments

52

63

Overseas tax rate differential

(86)

(112)

Provision for foreign tax on dividend repatriation

20

39

Other

25

63

Subtotal 1,866

2,626

Income tax (over)/under provided in previous years

(26)

(17)

Income tax expense 1,840

2,609

Current tax expense

2,637

2,779

Adjustments recognised in the current year in relation to the current tax of prior years

(26)

(17)

Deferred tax expense/(income) relating to the origination and reversal of temporary differences

(771)

(153)

Income tax expense 1,840

2,609

Australia

1,115

1,682

Overseas

725

927

Effective tax rate 33.4%

29.2%

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS




129

KEY JUDGEMENTS AND ESTIMATES

Judgement is required in determining provisions held in respect of uncertain tax positions. The Group estimates its tax liabilities

based on its understanding of the relevant law in each of the countries in which it operates and seeks independent advice where

appropriate.

4. INCOME TAX (continued)

TAX CONSOLIDATION

The Company and all its wholly owned Australian resident entities are part of a tax-consolidated group under Australian taxation law. The Company is

the head entity in the tax-consolidated group. We recognise each of the following in the separate financial statements of members of the tax

consolidated group on a ‘group allocation’ basis: tax expense/income, and deferred tax liabilities/assets that arise from temporary differences of the

members of the tax-consolidated group. The Company (as head entity in the tax-consolidated group) recognises current tax liabilities and assets of

the tax-consolidated group.

Under a tax funding arrangement between the entities in the tax-consolidated group, amounts are recognised as payable to or receivable by the

Company and each member of the tax-consolidated group in relation to the tax contribution amounts paid or payable between the Company and

the other members of the tax-consolidated group.

Members of the tax-consolidated group have also entered into a tax sharing agreement that provides for the allocation of income tax liabilities

between the entities were the head entity to default on its income tax payment obligations.


UNRECOGNISED DEFERRED TAX ASSETS AND LIABILITIES

Unrecognised deferred tax assets related to unused realised tax losses (on revenue account) total $10 million (2019: $10 million).

Unrecognised deferred tax liabilities related to additional potential foreign tax costs (assuming all retained earnings in offshore branches and

subsidiaries are repatriated) total $329 million (2019: $429 million).





 

 



RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT

INCOME TAX EXPENSE





CURRENT TAX EXPENSE

DEFERRED TAX ASSETS AND LIABILITIES

Notes to the consolidated financial statements (continued)

129

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)
130

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

5. DIVIDENDS

ORDINARY SHARE DIVIDENDS

Dividends are provided for in the financial statements once determined, accordingly, the final dividend announced for the current financial year is provided for

and paid in the following financial year.

Amount Total dividend

Dividends % of total per share $m

Financial Year 2019

2018 final dividend paid

1,2

80 cents2,295

2019 interim dividend paid

1,2

80 cents2,267

Bonus option plan adjustment (81)

Dividends paid during the year ended 30 September 2019

4,481

Cash 90.4%4,049

Dividend reinvestment plan 9.6%432

Dividends paid during the year ended 30 September 2019

4,481

Financial Year 2020

2019 final dividend paid

2,3


80 cents 2,268

2020 interim dividend paid

1,2


25 cents 709

Bonus option plan adjustment

(55)

Dividends paid during the year ended 30 September 2020

2,922

Cash

93.7% 2,737

Dividend reinvestment plan

6.3% 185

Dividends paid during the year ended 30 September 2020

2,922

Amount

Total

dividend

Dividends announced and to be paid after year-end Payment date per share $m

2020 final dividend (fully franked for Australian tax, New Zealand imputation

credit NZD 4 cents per share)

16 December 2020 35 cents 994

1.

Fully franked for Australian tax purposes (30% tax rate).

2.

Carries New Zealand imputation credits of NZD 3 cents for the 2020 interim dividend, NZD 9 cents for the 2019 final dividend, 2019 interim dividend and 2018 final dividend.

3.

Partially franked at 70% for Australian tax purposes (30% tax rate).

DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT PLAN AND BONUS OPTION PLAN

Eligible shareholders can elect to reinvest their dividend entitlement into ANZ ordinary shares under the Company’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan

(DRP). Eligible shareholders can elect to forgo their dividend entitlement and instead receive ANZ ordinary shares under the Company’s Bonus Option

Plan (BOP). For the 2020 final dividend, DRP and BOP participation will be satisfied by an issue of new ANZ ordinary shares. There will be no discount

applied to the DRP and BOP price.

See Note 22 Shareholders’ Equity for details of shares the Company issued or purchased in respect of the DRP and BOP.

DIVIDEND FRANKING ACCOUNT

20202019

Currency

$m$m

Australian franking credits available at 30% tax rate AUD

477

35

New Zealand imputation credits available (which can be attached to our Australian

dividends but may only be used by New Zealand resident shareholders)

NZD

4,583

4,068

The above amounts represent the balances of the franking accounts as at the end of the financial year, adjusted for:


franking credits that will arise from the payment of income tax payable as at the end of the financial year; and


franking credits/debits from the receipt/payment of dividends that have been recognised as tax receivables/payables as at the end of the financial

year.

The proposed final 2020 dividend will utilise $426 million of the franking credits available at 30 September 2020.

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NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)
130

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

5. DIVIDENDS

ORDINARY SHARE DIVIDENDS

Dividends are provided for in the financial statements once determined, accordingly, the final dividend announced for the current financial year is provided for

and paid in the following financial year.

Amount Total dividend

Dividends % of total per share $m

Financial Year 2019

2018 final dividend paid

1,2

80 cents2,295

2019 interim dividend paid

1,2

80 cents2,267

Bonus option plan adjustment (81)

Dividends paid during the year ended 30 September 2019

4,481

Cash 90.4%4,049

Dividend reinvestment plan 9.6%432

Dividends paid during the year ended 30 September 2019

4,481

Financial Year 2020

2019 final dividend paid

2,3


80 cents 2,268

2020 interim dividend paid

1,2


25 cents 709

Bonus option plan adjustment

(55)

Dividends paid during the year ended 30 September 2020 2,922

Cash

93.7% 2,737

Dividend reinvestment plan

6.3% 185

Dividends paid during the year ended 30 September 2020 2,922

Amount

Total

dividend

Dividends announced and to be paid after year-end Payment date per share $m

2020 final dividend (fully franked for Australian tax, New Zealand imputation

credit NZD 4 cents per share)

16 December 2020 35 cents 994

1.

Fully franked for Australian tax purposes (30% tax rate).

2.

Carries New Zealand imputation credits of NZD 3 cents for the 2020 interim dividend, NZD 9 cents for the 2019 final dividend, 2019 interim dividend and 2018 final dividend.

3.

Partially franked at 70% for Australian tax purposes (30% tax rate).

DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT PLAN AND BONUS OPTION PLAN

Eligible shareholders can elect to reinvest their dividend entitlement into ANZ ordinary shares under the Company’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan

(DRP). Eligible shareholders can elect to forgo their dividend entitlement and instead receive ANZ ordinary shares under the Company’s Bonus Option

Plan (BOP). For the 2020 final dividend, DRP and BOP participation will be satisfied by an issue of new ANZ ordinary shares. There will be no discount

applied to the DRP and BOP price.

See Note 22 Shareholders’ Equity for details of shares the Company issued or purchased in respect of the DRP and BOP.

DIVIDEND FRANKING ACCOUNT

20202019

Currency $m$m

Australian franking credits available at 30% tax rate AUD

477

35

New Zealand imputation credits available (which can be attached to our Australian

dividends but may only be used by New Zealand resident shareholders)

NZD

4,583

4,068

The above amounts represent the balances of the franking accounts as at the end of the financial year, adjusted for:


franking credits that will arise from the payment of income tax payable as at the end of the financial year; and


franking credits/debits from the receipt/payment of dividends that have been recognised as tax receivables/payables as at the end of the financial

year.

The proposed final 2020 dividend will utilise $426 million of the franking credits available at 30 September 2020.

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

131

5. DIVIDENDS (continued)

RESTRICTIONS ON THE PAYMENT OF DIVIDENDS

APRA’s written approval is required before paying dividends on ANZ ordinary shares:

if the aggregate dividends exceed the Company’s after tax earnings (in calculating those after tax earnings, we take into account any payments we

made on senior capital instruments) in the financial year to which they relate; or

if the Group’s Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio falls within capital range buffers specified by APRA.

If the Company fails to pay a dividend or distribution on its ANZ Capital Notes or ANZ Capital Securities on the scheduled payment date, it may

(subject to a number of exceptions) be restricted from resolving to pay or paying any dividend on the ANZ ordinary shares.

In July 2020, APRA provided an update to their guidance on capital management. In the updated guidance, APRA acknowledged that the uncertainty

in the economic outlook has reduced somewhat since April 2020 and APRA had the opportunity to review ADIs’ financial projections and stress

testing results. Taking these and other developments since April 2020 into account, APRA advised ADIs to maintain caution in planning capital

distributions, including dividend payments and that for the remainder of the calendar year, the ADIs’ Board should:

seek to retain at least half of their earnings when making decisions on capital distributions (and utilise dividend reinvestment plans and other

initiatives to offset the diminution in capital from capital distributions where possible);

conduct regular stress testing to inform decision-making and demonstrate ongoing lending capacity; and

make use of capital buffers to absorb the impacts of stress, and continue to lend to support households and businesses.

The Company’s 2020 interim dividend of 25 cents per share (paid to shareholders on 30 September 2020) and 2020 final dividend of 35 cents per

share took into account the updated regulatory guidance above.

Notes to the consolidated financial statements (continued)

131

ANZ 2020 Annual Report

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (continued)
132

ANZ 2020 ANNUAL REPORT

6. EARNINGS PER ORDINARY SHARE

20202019

Earnings per ordinary share (EPS) - Basic centscents

Earnings Per Share

126.4

210.0

Earnings Per Share from continuing operations

1


129.8

222.1

Earnings Per Share from discontinued operations

(3.4)

(12.1)

20202019

Earnings per ordinary share (EPS) - Diluted

centscents

Earnings Per Share

118.0

201.9

Earnings Per Share from continuing operations

1


121.1

213.0

Earnings Per Share from discontinued operations

(3.1)

(11.1)

Basic EPS is calculated by dividing the profit or loss attributable to ordinary shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares

outstanding during the period (after eliminating ANZ shares held within the Group known as treasury shares). Diluted EPS is calculated by adjusting

the profit or loss attributable to ordinary shareholders and the weighted average number of ordinary shares used in the basic EPS calculation for the

effect of dilutive potential ordinary shares.

20202019

Reconciliation of earnings used in earnings per share calculations

$m$m

Basic:

Profit for the year

3,578

5,968

Less: Profit attributable to non-controlling interests

1

15

Earnings used in calculating basic earnings per share

3,577

5,953

Less: Profit/(Loss) after tax from discontinued operations

(98)

(343)

Earnings used in calculating basic earnings per share from continuing operations

3,675

6,296

Diluted:

Earnings used in calculating basic earnings per share 3,577

5,953

Add: Interest on convertible subordinated debt

201

268

Earnings used in calculating diluted earnings per share

3,778

6,221

Less: Profit/(Loss) after tax from discontinued operations

(98)

(343)

Earnings used in calculating diluted earnings per share from continuing operations

3,876

6,564

20202019

Reconciliation of weighted average number of ordinary shares (WANOS) used in earnings per

share calculations

1,2


millionsmillions

WANOS used in calculating basic earnings per share

2,830.9

2,834.9

Add: Weighted average dilutive potential ordinary shares

Convertible subordinated debt

362.2

237.9

Share based payments (options, rights and deferred shares)

8.0

8.8

WANOS used in calculating diluted earnings per share

3,201.1

3,081.6

1.

The successor fund transfer performed in preparation for the sale of the Group’s wealth businesses to Zurich and IOOF was completed on 13 April 2019. Post this date, treasury shares held in Wealth Australia

discontinued operations ceased to be eliminated in the Group’s consolidated financial statements and are included in the denominator used in calculating earnings per share. If the weighted average

number of treasury shares held in Wealth Australia discontinued operations was included in the denominator used in calculating earnings per share from continuing operations in the comparative period,

basic

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