ABC Home | Radio | Television | News | Your Local ABC | More Subjects… | Shop

Email

NAB debt provisions cause shares to tumble

Posted July 25, 2008 12:18:00

The National Australia Bank has made provisions for a possible loss of $830 million on debt-related investments because of the global credit crunch and the slump in the United States housing market.

That is on top of $181 million NAB has already set aside to cover risky investments.

NAB chief executive John Stewart says losses are likely because of a rapid increase in mortgage defaults.

"Unfortunately the behaviour of the housing market in the US leads us to believe that the worst case scenario may not be too far away from the most likely scenario," he said.

"Now we see our dividend being unaffected by today's announcement and our capital position remains strong."

The announcement of the provisions means NAB shares dived more than 12 per cent in early trade, as sentiment worsened in an already nervous market.

Even before NAB's announcement, Australian shares were in for a rocky ride after steep falls on Wall Street overnight.

The falls were sparked by figures showing US home sales have slumped to a 10-year low and Ford's record quarterly loss of $US9.1 billion.

By 12:00pm AEST, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had plunged 2.4 per cent.

Other banks followed NAB's lead, dragging the ASX 200 3.2 per cent lower to 4,978 and the All Ordinaries index down 150 points to 5,039.

The Australian dollar was worth 95.64 US cents.

Tags: company-news, economic-trends, banking, finance-markets, stockmarket, futures-markets, currency-markets, australia

Feature

Cliffs at Elliston

Old rocks

Even to palaeontologists, 500 million years is not just the blink of an eye.

Feature

Commuters crowd a subway train station in Beijing

Longer lifespan

A new United Nations report says Chinese people are living longer than ever before.

Listen

Mitchell Johnson celebrates a wicket

First Test

Australia's Mitchell Johnson speaks to Grandstand after taking four wickets against New Zealand.