1982–1999 National Bank of Australasia, now located at
Old Gippstown in
MoeNational Australia Bank was formed as National Commercial Banking Corporation of Australia Limited in 1982 by the merger of
National Bank of Australasia and the
Commercial Banking Company of Sydney. The resulting company was subsequently renamed National Australia Bank Limited. The expanded financial base of the merged entity triggered significant offshore expansion over ensuing years. Representative offices were established in
Beijing (1982),
Chicago (1982),
Dallas (1983),
Seoul (1983, upgraded to a branch in 1990),
San Francisco (1984),
Kuala Lumpur (1984),
Athens (1984, closed 1989),
Frankfurt (1985, closed 1992),
Atlanta (1986), Bangkok (1986),
Taipei (1986 upgraded to branch 1990),
Shanghai (1988, closed 1990),
Houston (1989) and
New Delhi (1989). In 1987, NAB bought
Clydesdale Bank (
Scotland) and
Northern Bank (
Northern Ireland and
Republic of Ireland) from
Midland Bank. It rebranded Northern Bank branches in the Republic of Ireland to
National Irish Bank and changed both banks' logos from that of the Midland Bank. In 1990, NAB bought
Yorkshire Bank (
England and Wales). In 1992, NAB purchased the
Bank of New Zealand, which became a subsidiary of the Australian bank, but retained local governance, with a New Zealand board of directors. At some point, a business entity known as Bank of New Zealand in Australia (BNZA) was absorbed by NAB. Further acquisitions followed – which at the time had about a 26% market share in the market, and
Michigan National Bank (MNB) in 1995. NAB had earlier rationalised its operations in the US and closed its offices in Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Houston and San Francisco in 1991. This period of rapid expansion through acquisition concluded with the purchases in 1997 of HomeSide Lending, a leading US mortgage originator and servicer based in
Florida, and most significantly, the acquisition in 2000 of
MLC Limited (and related entities) for $4.56bn, one of the biggest mergers in Australian corporate history.
2000s NAB encountered a difficult period in the period 2000–2005. In 2000, NAB sold Michigan National Bank to
ABN AMRO, then in 2001 sold HomeSide's operating assets for US$1.9b to
Washington Mutual, the largest US savings and loan company, as well as the mortgage unit's loan-servicing technology and operating platform. The foreign currency trader fraud was the catalyst for the resignations of CEO
Frank Cicutto and Chairman Charles Allen. The resignations were preceded by a Board revolt where Catherine Walters emerged as a whistle blower citing serious culture issues at the company having led to the string of failures. Frank Cicutto was CEO of NAB from 1999 to 2004. The Australian economic environment during his leadership was stable and productive after 17 consecutive years of economic growth since 1992, averaging 3.3 per cent per annum. In February 2004, John Stewart was appointed CEO of NAB following the resignation of Cicutto. Stewart proceeded with a far reaching re-organisation of the company along regional lines leading to the appointment of
Ahmed Fahour as the CEO of Australia in September 2004. On 20 February 2009 Fahour stepped down from the principal board and group executive committee. In 2005, NAB announced a cut of 2,000 Australian jobs as part of a global cost-cutting program with the intention of cutting around 4,200 positions – about 10.5% of its total workforce globally. It began to outsource back office positions offshore, beginning with a pilot with 23 jobs from the accounts payable department in Melbourne going to
Bangalore, India in an agreement with
Accenture. Later that year, it sold
Northern Bank and
National Irish Bank to the Danish
Danske Bank. Over 200 additional jobs had been sent offshore by 2006. As part of the culture change program, a new Australian head office was purpose built at
Docklands in Melbourne. This building is characterised by its open plan layout and was officially opened in October 2004. After Cameron Clyne became CEO in 2009, the Docklands building became the global headquarters replacing 500 Bourke Street. By 2006, NAB had turned its fortunes around, reporting an industry record $4.3 billion profit and winning two local Bank of the Year awards. It also had a major reform which included the refurbishment of all of its branches, and the replacement of signage in and around National branches and buildings, being changed from 'National' to 'nab'. In May 2007, NAB announced that it would delist from the
New York Stock Exchange, and this took place in August 2007. NAB delisted from the London and Tokyo exchanges in 2006. In March 2008, NAB announced that it would send maintenance and support for some core banking applications to India through an offshoring arrangement with
Infosys and
Satyam, affecting another 260 employees. On 25 July 2008, NAB's announcement of an additional A$830 million provision associated with deterioration in US real estate markets triggered the biggest single-day fall in its share price in 21 years, wiping over A$7 billion from the stock's value. In October 2008, NAB launched a branchless
direct bank trading separately as
UBank under the leadership of Greg Sutherland and Gerd Schenkel. In January 2009,
Cameron Clyne became CEO, and began a strategy of reputation change, wealth management and a focus on domestic markets. As part of this strategy, NAB's underweight retail bank – under the leadership of Lisa Gray – attempted to increase market share by competing on price and cutting fees. Initially denting earnings in the division, the strategy produced mixed results over the medium term, with cash earnings, market share and customer satisfaction rising, but operating margin and cost to income ratio worsening since it began in 2009. In line with the strategy, NAB attempted to differentiate itself from the other "Big 4" Australian banks in a large, national public relations campaign centred around a theme of "breaking up" with the other banks on Valentine's Day 2011. The campaign received both a positive and negative reception. It also attracted swift competitive responses from other major banks. The campaign won an advertising award at Cannes. In 2009, NAB acquired the mortgage business of Challenger Financial Services for $385 million, in order to boost its market share in the broker channel. The purchase also included the PLAN, Choice, and FAST mortgage aggregation businesses and approximately 17.5% in Homeloans Ltd. In June that year it paid A$825m ($660m:£401m) for UK insurer
Aviva's Australian wealth management businesses, including their
Navigator platform. NAB beat off competition from
AMP for Navigator. news In July 2009 NAB acquired an 80% stake in the private wealth management division of
Goldman Sachs JBWere, for A$99m. In December 2009 NAB began a nine month attempt to purchase
Axa Asia Pacific. This attempt was blocked twice by the
Australian Competition & Consumer Commission. The first time, in April 2010, was because the regulator believed that the merger would cause a substantial lessening of competition in the
retail investment platform market. NAB subsequently lodged a revised bid which aimed to address these concerns but was rejected a second time in September of that year. The Axa deal's drawn out process drew criticism for the bank's underperformance.
2010s NAB's poor 2012 financial results called its strategy into question: net profit dropped by 22% compared to the previous year. In 2014, the NAB Melbourne Government announced that Cameron Clyne would be succeeded as CEO by Andrew Thorburn, NAB's New Zealand head. In August 2014, Lisa Gray left NAB as part of a broader set of executive changes. As part of a strategy to focus NAB on its domestic markets, the bank listed its US subsidiary,
Great Western Bank, on the
New York Stock Exchange in October 2014 as part of an
initial public offering. NAB sold its final 28.5% holding in Great Western in July 2015. in
Brisbane In May 2015, NAB also confirmed it would demerge its
Clydesdale and
Yorkshire Bank business in the UK, through an initial public offering. The business was partially floated on the
London Stock Exchange and
Australian Securities Exchange under a new holding company, The
CYBG plc, in February 2016, with the remaining shares distributed to NAB's shareholders. In July 2019,
Ross McEwan was appointed group chief executive officer and managing director, after resigning from the
Royal Bank of Scotland in April of that year.
2020s In January 2021, NAB announced plans to acquire the
neobank 86 400 for $220 million and subsequently merge it with
UBank. In May 2021, NAB completed its sale of its advice, platforms, superannuation and investments and asset management businesses to
IOOF Holdings. As part of the
MLC Wealth Transaction, NAB retained the companies that operated the advice businesses. In September 2021, NAB temporarily rebranded their logo to JAB to promote
vaccines for
COVID-19. In the first half of 2022, NAB relocated its global headquarters from 800 Bourke Street Docklands to a new natural light and greenery purpose built 39 storey building at 395 Bourke Street. The move also replaced
National Bank House at 500 Bourke Street. The bank currently has 2 main buildings for employees at 700 Bourke Street Docklands and at 395 Bourke Street (NAB Place). On 1 June 2022, National Australia Bank Limited (NAB) acquired the consumer banking business from Citigroup Pty Ltd (Citi), an Australian branch of
Citibank. On 19 January 2023, NAB announced that it would create a
stablecoin called the AUDN that would be pegged to the
Australian Dollar, and that the
digital asset would be on the
Ethereum network. The objective is to streamline cross-border banking transactions, and will also be used for trading
carbon credits. AUDN is expected to be live in mid-2023. ==Corporate affairs==