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Rémy Cointreau

rmc · ASX Financial Services
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FY2023 Annual Report · Rémy Cointreau
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RESIMAC GROUP LTD

2023 
Annual 
Report.

We announced 
another year of strong 
shareholder returns.

Over the last 12 months, we’ve made significant progress on our strategic objectives 
amidst an extremely challenging macroeconomic environment. The resilience of the 
business throughout these cyclical challenges is testament to the strength of the 
Resimac brand in home loans and capital markets. Strategically, we continue to deliver 
on our diversification agenda for Resimac Asset Finance, continue to lay the foundation 
for scale on several fronts. Firstly, our cloud-based origination system recently went 
live giving us the ability to expand our broker reach with a market-leading application 
process. We’ve materially increased our funding capacity with a global bank, adding 
to our extensive list of incumbent banking partners. And finally, we created an asset 
finance back office team in Manila to drive cost efficiency as we scale originations 
and AUM. We are encouraged by the growing demand for our commercial auto and 
equipment and secured business loans as we head into FY24. 

 Scott McWilliam

TABLE OF

CONTENTS

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

About Resimac

Chairman’s message

CEO’s message

Board of Directors

Sustainability report

Directors' report

Remuneration report

Financial statements

Notes to the consolidated financial statements

10 Directors' declaration

11

12

13

14

15

Independent auditor’s declaration

Independent auditor’s report

Shareholder information

Managing your shareholding

Corporate information

4

6

8

10

12

18

26

40

46

122

123

124

130

132

133

Welcome!Welcome!About 
Resimac.

Est. 1985

Resimac Group Ltd ('Resimac Group') is a leading 
non-bank lender and multi-channel distribution 
business. 

Its fully integrated business model comprises 
originating, servicing and funding prime, non- 
conforming residential mortgages and asset 
finance products in Australia and New Zealand. 

With a history dating back to 1985, Resimac 
Group has a proven track record of growth 
and stability. We are pleased to service over 
55,000 customers with a portfolio of home loans 
on balance sheet of over $13 billion, an asset 
finance portfolio of over $600 million, and total 
assets under management of over $14 billion. 

As a pioneer of the Residential Mortgage-
Backed Securities ('RMBS') industry, we have 
one of Australia’s most respected securitisation 
programs, having issued in excess of $45 billion 
in domestic and global markets since 1987. 

Resimac Group has access to a diversified 
funding platform with multiple warehouse lines 
provided by domestic and offshore banks 
for short-term funding in addition to a global 
securitisation program to fund its assets longer 
term. 

Thanks to our flexible global capital markets 
programme, we provide solutions to a wide 
range of customers including the self-employed 
and contractors, as well as customers with 
previous credit impairments through our network 
of over 12,000 broker partners. 

Resimac Group is a profitable organisation 
with diverse income streams - net interest 
margin on principally funded loans, annuity trail 
income on non-principally funded loans and 
other fee income. We operate a proprietary 
servicing platform and hold a Standard & Poor's 
('S&P') "STRONG" Servicer Ranking, which was 
reaffirmed in October 2022. 

Over

$13b

Assets Under 
Management

Issued in excess of

$45b

RMBS in Domestic 
and Global markets

Home Loan 
settlements

$3.7b

Asset Finance
settlements

$0.5b

Our
purpose.

Our
vision.

Our service
proposition.

To provide Australians 
and New Zealanders with 
better lending solutions, 
because we believe 
everyone deserves an 
opportunity to achieve 
their dreams and attain 
their ambitions.

To be a customer-
obsessed company, 
making home 
ownership, financial 
freedom and 
business success 
more accessible to 
everyone.

  Origination: Wholesale, Third 
Party, Direct and White Label 
distribution channels.
  Servicing: Underwriting, 

Loan Management, Arrears 
Management.

  Funding: Global capital 
markets programme.

Our values.

2021
2022
INSURANCE 
AUSTRALIAN 
MORTGAGE 
BUSINESS 
AWARDS 
AWARDS 
E X C E L L ENCE AWARDEE

Quality

Passion

Professionalism
& Integrity

Respect

Agility

Accountability

O
W
N

E

R

O

C

C

(cid:31)(cid:30)(cid:31)(cid:31)

U

PIER HO M E  

E
L
B
A
RI

N - VA

A

O

L

4   |

|   5

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD 
Chairman’s 
message.

Warren McLeland

In the financial year ended 30 June 2022, we reported 
outstanding financial results of a normalised net profit 
after tax of $104.4 million. This was approximately 5% 
lower than FY 2021.  

In FY23, things look different. We are reporting 
normalised net profit after tax of $73.7 million (excl. 
the impact of FV gains/losses on derivatives), or 29% 
lower than FY22. For both years, our annual fully 
franked dividend to shareholders has been 8.0 cents 
per share.

How do we explain the difference in earnings?  

FY23 was dominated by our macro-operating 
conditions; namely inflation, rising interest 
rates against a backdrop of near to full national 
employment. Business and investment confidence 
was at best subdued, and supply problems continued 
across many sections of the economy. Much the 
same scenario applied to the free world’s economies, 
especially our major trading partners.  

The flow on impact on the Australian housing industry 
was profound. Housing construction figures were low, 
the demand for housing finance across all states was 
less than historical longer-term averages, and for most 
of the Australian community, affordability remained 
unreachable. If anything, it was worsening in impact 
over the year to become a major constraint on activity, 
requiring Government intervention. 

For effectively the last 20 years, conflation from 
these economic and market features was manifest in 
the most aggressive price competition between the 
major banks and the non-banks. This was mirrored 
between banks as each fought vigorously to achieve 
an incremental uplift in market share, exacerbating an 
already intense price situation. Refinancing loans as 
a proportion of total new business loans expanded to 
unseen levels, eliminating effectively all profitability in 
writing new prime loans for all non-banks, and by mid 
financial year, essentially all banks, too.

Hope is on the horizon. A modicum of common sense 
may finally be returning by the end of fourth quarter 
of FY23. But there is still a long way to go before full 
pricing rationality is restored. 

Again, the pendulum is shifting. We are slowly and 
somewhat tentatively re-entering the prime loan 
segment, but on very specific criteria. Disappointingly, 
the Australian Government and the RBA’s exclusive 
focus on providing funding assistance to the 
banking sector during the Covid-19 crisis essentially 
amounted to creating an anti-competitive market by 
discriminating against the non-bank segment of the 
home lending market. 

Non-banks “punch well above their weight”, especially 
during tougher economic conditions, and to ignore the 
non-banks again worked to the disadvantage of the 
total market and to the economy. 

Normalised NPAT
(excl. the impact of FV 
gains/losses on derivatives)

$73.7m

Contrary to our lending activities in prime lending, our 
business activity progressed handsomely in higher 
risk lending products such as our specialist and non-
conforming loans. In particular, our asset financing 
activity is growing well above system.

Measuring and monitoring our implementation of 
strategy is a regular and priority item of discussion 
and debate at Board and executive management 
meetings. This also necessitates us to keep abreast of 
technology and systems developments such as AI. 

Notwithstanding the scale and severe impact the 
macro-environment has placed on Resimac this year, 
and the short-term outlook for an improvement is still 
very clouded, your Board and executive management 
team continue to have confidence in the future of 
our industry, and in particular, your company and its 
position in the industry. We constantly review our 
medium-term business strategy and acknowledge the 
prevailing very difficult conditions, but at the core, our 
strategy remains the same.

In an attempt to “right size” for immediate, day to 
day business conditions, we have implemented a 
wide-ranging series of expense reductions, including 
strengthening our Manila operations to assist in 
balancing our overheads and to simultaneously gain 
more operating leverage.

I emphasise to shareholders and investors that our 
dedication to all dimensions of enterprise risk and 
controls remains paramount, as is our conservative 
philosophy to credit risk and proactive asset 
management. Resimac maintains a capital light 
business model and is therefore incessantly seeking 
improvements in capital efficiency and incremental 
changes to uplift our productivity. 

To that end, our underlying strategy, about which I 
have briefly mentioned and detailed in more depth 
last year, is intact. However, we are prudently and 
regularly making small changes to ensure strategy 
is aligned, not just with the huge changes we have 
been required to make in light of the economic and 
industry, but also with careful respect to the obvious 
extensions in time frames we have adopted to reach 
specific objectives.

It is becoming an increasing and difficult challenge 
to balance an incessant demand for systems 
improvements to “stay in the game”, so to speak, 
let alone attempt to maintain a superior level of 
customer demand with respect to product and service 
deliverability. Technology “eats” capital and seems to 
possess an insatiable and irrepressible appetite!

Our workplace environment faces a huge task in 
managing complexities and simultaneously minimising, 
if not eliminating, vulnerabilities such as cybercrime. 
But overarching every challenge is a level of 
excitement as we achieve the small wins that ladder 
up to bigger achievements.

I acknowledge again the sustained commitment and 
contributions made daily throughout FY23 by my 
Director colleagues and by our team of professionals 
at Resimac, and especially the loyalty and hard work 
invested each day by our senior leadership team 
under the leadership of our CEO, Scott McWilliam.

Resimac emerged from the Covid-19 lockdowns in 
remarkably good shape. Our long-standing banking 
partners are continuing to admirably support us 
across the globe, and we strive to never diminish our 
efforts to sustain their confidence in our organisation. 
We are delighted to receive their support as our 
business diversification expands commensurately with 
our capital and funding requirements. Our confidence 
in asset finance business is high, and we expect the 
activity to contribute significantly to group profitability 
in the coming three years and of course beyond.

Warren J McLeland
Chairman

Our long-standing banking partners are continuing to 
admirably support us across the globe, and we strive to 
never diminish our efforts to sustain their confidence in 
our organisation.

6   |

|   7

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTDCEO’s 
message.

Scott McWilliam

Resimac rose to the challenge of a subdued lending 
market in FY23. An aggressive tightening of monetary 
policy (12 cash rate increases in 13 months) was the 
dominant force in the macro environment. Higher 
rates naturally impacted credit demand and had 
consequences for lending activity.

As the home loan market softened, competition for 
existing borrowers became fierce. The banks were 
aggressive in the refinance market, offering upfront 
cashbacks and discounting to entice borrowers. Yet 
our people were able to identify opportunities and use 
our strengths to find and serve borrowers who needed 
help.   

I am proud of the results we delivered during this 
difficult time. In FY23, the business recorded a 
normalised NPAT of $73.7 million (excluding the 
impact of FV gains/losses on derivatives). I am equally 
pleased we were able to deliver strong returns. Our 
shareholders will receive a fully franked final dividend 
of 4.0 cents per ordinary share. The full year dividend 
is 8.0 cents per ordinary share.

The economic environment remains challenging for 
household budgets. Inflation and borrowing costs 
have increased financial pressures on many. We 
continue to work with customers who need assistance 
and offer hardship measures. Our people closely 
monitor the progress of customers and I can report 
that arrears stabilised in the second half of FY23. Our 
loan book is robust and we remain conservatively 
provisioned to guard against the possibility of any 
losses.  

In FY24, our priorities are to continue growing the 
asset finance business, improve mortgage originations 
and AUM, and the ongoing digitalisation of Resimac 
Group. We see growth opportunities in targeting 
segments of Prime, self-employed and investor 
borrowers across home loans and asset finance. 
Our strong broker relationships and diverse range 
of products will be valuable in exploiting these 
opportunities.

The asset finance business 
keeps thriving after full-year 
settlements rose to $482 
million in FY23. We are 
steadily growing our portfolio 
and market reach as there is 
plenty of appetite for our car 
and equipment loans. A new 
origination platform is in place 
and is helping brokers do 
business with us more easily. 
We have all the building 
blocks in place and look 
forward to material growth in 
originations in FY24.

Progress across the group will 
be aided by key technology 
platforms delivered in FY23. 
A new loan management 
platform for customers, a 
new mortgage origination 
platform and a new asset 
finance origination platform 
all improve operational 
efficiency and customer 
experience. These platforms 
are important pillars of our 
digital operating model. We 
are continuing to refine these platforms and know they 
will deliver greater benefit to customers and brokers 
in future.

While investing in technology and our people has been 
beneficial, we do so within a strong cost discipline. 
We are targeting lower operating expenditure in FY24 
and any future investment proposals will be assessed 
against stringent criteria.  

Underpinning all of our activity has been our global 
funding program. Our funding activities in domestic 
and offshore markets have provided the company 
with a pleasing amount of capacity for our growth 
aspirations. 

Assets Under 
Management

$13.8b

FY23 Dividend 
Fully Franked

8.0c

FY23                  

Settlements

$4.2b

The asset finance 
business keeps 
thriving after full-
year settlements 
rose to $482m 
in FY23.

We have brought in new banking partners to support 
our home loan and asset businesses. I am confident 
that our funding capabilities will remain strong in 
FY24.

To conclude, I want to express my gratitude to the 
executive leadership team and general management 
group for their dedication during this past year. I am 
thankful for their ongoing support. I pay tribute to our 
people throughout Australia, New Zealand and the 
Philippines, whose hard work makes the company 
what it is. We are indebted to the efforts of our 

broker and business partners who help us provide 
competitive and flexible lending solutions to Australian 
and New Zealand borrowers. We are grateful to our 
customers for choosing us to help them achieve their 
dream of home ownership. Thank you, as well, to our 
board members whose commitment and expertise has 
been of immense benefit.  

Scott McWilliam
CEO

8   |

|   9

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTDBoard of 
Directors.

Resimac Group Ltd 

Warren 
McLeland

Susan 
Hansen

Wayne 
Spanner

Duncan 
Saville

Caroline 
Waldron

Peter 
Fitzpatrick

Chairman
Non-Executive 
Director

Warren is a former 
stockbroker and investment 
banker with over 35 years 
of experience in domestic 
and international financial 
services. In addition, Warren 
acts as an adviser in funds 
management and business 
strategy to companies 
operating in the Asia Pacific 
region. Warren is the former 
Executive Chairman of 
Resimac Limited.

Independent
Non-Executive 
Director

Susan is a Chartered 
Accountant and holds a 
Bachelor of Commerce 
degree and an MBA from 
University of Cape Town. 
Susan has 40 years of 
experience including a 
Big Four Accounting firm 
and an investment bank 
(financial analysis and 
risk assessment). Susan 
is a Principal of a financial 
training organisation based 
in New Zealand.

Independent
Non-Executive 
Director

Wayne holds a Bachelor of 
Commerce and Law degree 
from The University of Cape 
Town and a Masters of 
Science degree from Oxford 
University. Wayne has over 
30 years experience as a 
lawyer and over 15 years 
senior executive experience 
in an international law 
firm. He was previously 
the Managing Partner of 
an international law firm 
in Australia from 2012 to 
2020. Wayne has extensive 
experience in executive 
management and corporate 
governance at Board level. 

Non-Executive
Director

Duncan is a Chartered 
Accountant and an 
experienced non-executive 
Director. He is chairman of 
ICM Limited, an international 
fund manager. Duncan is 
a fellow of the Institute of 
Chartered Accountants 
Australia and New Zealand, 
the Australian Institute of 
Company Directors and the 
Financial Services Institute 
of Australasia.

Independent
Non-Executive 
Director

Caroline is a Non-Executive 
Director and cross border 
advisor with over 30+ years’ 
experience in regulated 
consumer sectors such as 
technology, retail and health. 
Caroline brings to Resimac 
commercial and governance 
experience in many areas 
including technology rollouts 
and complex transactions. 
Caroline holds an LLB 
Hons (London), and has 
been admitted to the Bars 
of England and Wales, 
Malaysia, Australia and New 
Zealand.  

Company
Secretary

Peter is a Chartered 
Accountant who joined 
Resimac Limited in 1987 
and is responsible for the 
Group’s company secretarial 
function. He is a member of 
the Governance Institute of 
Australia and the Financial 
Services Institute of 
Australasia.

10   |
10   |

|   11
|   11

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD2023 ANNUAL REPORT

Sustainability 
report.

This report should be read in conjunction with the Corporate Governance Statement located on Resimac’s website 
resimac.com.au and the Remuneration Report set out on pages 26 to 39 in this Annual Report. 

Our ESG strategy supports our ability to achieve our overarching 
business strategy in a manner that is sustainable and accountable. 

At Resimac, we believe it is important that our people have ownership of our ESG initiatives. This is why we have a 
people-run Environmental, Social and Governance Committee with representation from every team in the business 
that reports to the CEO and Resimac Board.

Resimac’s overarching Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) purpose is:

   Passion: We understand that it is our duty to incorporate sustainability into the fabric of our organisation, 

ensuring we can drive action that benefits our people, customers, business partners, investors, shareholders, 
the community.

   Inclusion: Everyone must play their part, however small, to achieve meaningful change in our communities, 

countries and within our global network.

   Accountability: It is our responsibility to ensure that the services we deliver are ethical and sustainable.

Our core values of quality, passion, agility, respect, accountability, professionalism, and integrity serve as the 
foundation upon which our ESG purpose is built.

Incorporating core values into our ESG initiatives strengthens our commitment to responsible business practices, 
sustainability, and positive social impact. They serve as the baseline for our journey towards a more sustainable and 
equitable future for all.

Stakeholder 
engagement & 
consultation.

Understanding the priorities and passions of our various 
stakeholders helps us align our ESG initiatives accordingly. 
We do this by:

Customers:

Communities:

Our regulators:

  Customer care services 
  Surveys
  Social media

 Volunteering
 Partnerships
 Fund raising / donations

 Industry forums / briefings
 Policy review and analysis
 Regulatory meetings

Business partners:

Employees:

Shareholders:

  Surveys
  Industry research
  Face to face discussions / 

presentations

 Engagement survey
 Surveys 
 ESG workshop
 DEI committee

 Investor meetings
 Regular financial reporting
 Market disclosures
 Social media

OFFERINGS 
Delivering lending solutions that are diverse, flexible 
and technology-enabled, with a service experience 
that is continually improving and evolving to benefit 
our customers and brokers.

PEOPLE 
Via our people, who cultivate a sense of purpose 
in delivering better outcomes for customers and 
for each other.

CHANNELS 
Using efficient and effective distribution 
to chosen segments, at scale.

OPERATING MODEL 
Supported by a fit-for-purpose and 
technology-enabled operating model/s.

CAPITAL
With access to sufficient, diversified 
and efficient funding and capital base.

STAKEHOLDER VALUE
Ultimately producing superior, 
sustainable returns with a 
'capital light' model.

12   |

|   13

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|  SUSTAINABILITY REPORT

|  SUSTAINABILITY REPORT

Environmental.

We understand the importance of supporting the 
environment. We are committed to this by: 

   Offering our customers a green loan product. Our 
green loan product was developed to encourage 
our customers to join the movement towards a 
cleaner and more sustainable future. The Green 
Loan can be used to purchase and install energy-
efficient items for household improvements such 
as battery packs and storage, electrical energy 
storage, hot water heat pump or solar hot water 
system, insulation and/or double-glazed windows 
and solar panels.

   Partnering with Carbon Positive Australia, which 

conducts and funds biodiverse community 
reforestation projects to assist with carbon setting. 
For every settled loan, our customers have the 
opportunity to select one of three community 
projects that they would like to support on its 
Plant Trees Australia funding platform. We then 
contribute to that project on their behalf. 

The projects are:

1.   'Pocket forest' in schools and communities 

across Australia. This project funds 
compressed forests in schools and community 
parks. For schoolchildren, it offers multiple 
learning opportunities and practical action 
against climate change.

2.   Biodiversity and ecosystem restoration in 

VIC and WA. These projects engage with rural 
and metro communities across Victoria and 
Western Australia to restore degraded land and 
increase biodiversity in agricultural landscapes.

3.   Indigenous-led projects in WA and central 
Australia. These projects focus on bringing 
the community together, with initiatives that 
support tree nursery establishment, seed 
collection and tree planting.

Our focus.

The United Nations has embraced 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and Resimac supports all of these 
objectives. In alignment with the strategic direction set by the Resimac Board and management in 2022, our SDGs 
of focus are:

As part of our commitment to 
promote Good-Health and Well-
Being, we partner with Run-Rocket-
Run, an initiative focused on mental 
and physical resilience through 
endurance running. All funds raised 
by Run-Rocket-Run go to support 
Invictus Australia. 

In addition, we partner with The 
Station, a not-for-profit drop-in 
centre in Sydney that helps adults 
having difficulty obtaining and 
sustaining accommodation with a 
range of services, including a warm 
meal for lunch and dinner every day 
of the year. To help The Station, 
we have a team of volunteers who 
assist with food service twice 
a week, and we have an annual 
collection of personal and hygiene 
products.

We believe quality education 
should be accessible to everyone. 
In line with this SDG, we have 
connected with the GO Foundation 
who support Aboriginal and 
Torres Strait Islander students 
through their scholarship program, 
promoting social inclusion 
through the provision of essential 
items. Moving forward, we look 
to deepen our connection by 
providing our support to the 
Foundation. 

In addition, we are looking to 
develop an internal graduate 
program to support members 
of the younger generation in 
gaining invaluable insight and 
work experience in the financial 
industry – an initiative that could 
help propel their careers. 

Resimac is a proud partner 
of Plant Trees Australia, an 
online platform run by Carbon 
Conscious Australia that helps 
fund community tree-planting 
projects. As part of the loan 
settlements process, our 
customers have an opportunity 
to select a community tree-
planting project they would like 
to support, and we contribute 
funds to those projects on 
their behalf.  

Under our previously held 
decade-long partnership 
with Carbon Conscious, we 
planted over 46,000 trees, 
which offset nearly 5 million 
kilograms of carbon from the 
Earth’s atmosphere over their 
lifetime. 

OVER
46,000
TREES

14   |

|   15

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTDSocial.

As a leading non-bank lender, we embrace the 

social responsibilities that impact our diverse range of 

stakeholders, including our customers, employees, investors, 

and the broader community. Our people are all passionate 

about assisting and supporting the community by way of 

volunteering; donations; and educating and building awareness. 
Some of the community initiatives we support are:

   Food Ladder

   Sanctuary Housing

   Run Rocket Run

We firmly believe that the success of our business is propelled by the 
quality care our people provide to our customers, business partners, 
and wider community. To support this, we provide an array of employee 
benefits, including study support, flexible work hours, wellness 
programs, an employee assistance program, salary continuance 
insurance, options for purchased leave, a paid community day and 
access to hybrid working arrangements promote a healthy work/life 
balance. 

Additionally, in a bid to foster an inclusive and diverse workforce, 
we have recently launched a Women and Leadership program. This 
initiative is dedicated to empowering women within our organisation, 
cultivating their professional growth, and supporting the development 
of female leadership.

Looking ahead, we are dedicated to further expanding our ESG 
financing capabilities, encompassing green and sustainable funding 
initiatives, to meet the evolving demands of our investors.

RESIMAC GROUP LTD

In 2021 we 
funded our first 
co-branded 
hydroponic 
greenhouse in a  
Brisbane primary 
school, and since 
then, we have 
funded another 
two greenhouse 
builds in Sydney 
and Adelaide.

|  SUSTAINABILITY REPORT

Governance.

Resimac has a strong governance framework in place. 
This ensures all regulatory obligations are adhered 
to in line with our Australian Financial Services, our 
Australian Credit Licence requirements, and as an 
ASX-listed entity. 

We have several committees, policies, and procedures 
in place to complement this framework. These 
committees include: 

•  Risk & Compliance; 
•  Audit; 
•  Remuneration & Nominations; 
•  Asset & Liability; 
•  Credit;  
•  Technology, Digital & Innovation; and 
•  Diversity, Equity & Inclusion.  

The policies we have in place to uphold the ethical 
conduct of our people include but are not limited to: 

   Code of Ethics; 

   Modern Slavery Statement; 

   Conflicts of Interest; 

   Securities Trading Policy; 

   Breach & Incident Policy & Reporting; 

   Anti-Bribery & Corruption Policy; 

   Anti-Money Laundering Program; and 

  Whistleblower Policy.

In addition, our people undergo regular training in 
compliance, risk and cyber security to ensure we 
remain vigilant against emerging threats that may be 
detrimental to our business.

Food Ladder.

Resimac is a proud sponsor of Food Ladder, a not-for-profit and global 
pioneer in the use of environmentally sustainable technologies to create 
food and economic security for remote communities. Food Ladder not 
only addresses food security, it also creates employment and training 
opportunities for adults and education outcomes for children. Food 
Ladder systems have benefited over 31,500 individuals, with 6,000 
getting a consistent, significant part of their diet from Food Ladder. 
Furthermore, it has created 600 jobs. In 2021 we funded our first co-
branded hydroponic greenhouse in a Brisbane primary school, and since 
then, we have funded another two greenhouse builds in Sydney and 
Adelaide.

Philippines.

Each year, we partner with our staff in Manila to support a 
community charity for their annual outreach program.

This year, the Resimac team chose the Dumagat tribe in Tanay, 
Rizal Province. The tribespeople are the original inhabitants 
of the forest, and rely on the natural environment to help their 
livelihood. While they have preserved their culture, they have 
faced several challenges – one being access to education. To 
assist the Dumagat people, the Resimac team donated school 
supplies, learning materials, a printer, shirts, slippers, toiletries, 
a fan and mattress. The visit was a great lesson for the 
Resimac team on the benefit of social responsibility.

16   |

|   17

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|  DIRECTORS' REPORT

|  DIRECTORS' REPORT

Directors' 
report.

Resimac Group Ltd 
and its controlled entities

The Directors of Resimac Group Ltd (“Resimac” or “the Company”) and its controlled entities (“the Group”) submit 
herewith the financial report for the financial year ended 30 June 2023. In order to comply with the provisions of 
the Corporations Act 2001, the Directors’ Report is as follows:

Information about the Directors
Names and particulars of the Directors of the Company during or since the end of the financial year are:

Mr Warren McLeland
Non-Executive Director and Chairman 
since February 2020

Mrs Susan Hansen
Independent Non-Executive Director 
since October 2016

Warren is a former stockbroker and investment banker 
with over 35 years of experience in domestic and 
international financial services. In addition, Warren 
acts as an adviser in funds management and business 
strategy to companies operating in the Asia Pacific 
region. Warren is the former Executive Chairman of 
Resimac Limited.

Susan is a Chartered Accountant and holds a 
Bachelor of Commerce degree and an MBA from 
University of Cape Town. Susan has 40 years of 
experience including a Big Four Accounting firm 
and an investment bank (financial analysis and risk 
assessment). Susan is a Principal of a financial training 
organisation based in New Zealand.

Other listed Directorships (last three years):

Other listed Directorships (last three years):

•  Chairman of Thorn Group Limited (since October 

2019, Director since August 2019).

•  Non-Executive Director of Utilico Emerging 
Markets Limited (since September 2013).

in Bermuda (resigned February 2021).

Limited (resigned July 2022).

•  Former non-executive Director of UIL Limited 

(resigned September 2019).

Special responsibilities:

•  Chair of the Audit Committee (since November 

Special responsibilities:

2016).

•  Chairman of Resimac Group Ltd (since February 

•  Member of the Remuneration and Nomination 

2020).

Committee (since November 2016).

•  Chairman of the Risk and Compliance Committee 

•  Member of the Risk and Compliance Committee 

(since February 2017).

(since November 2016).

•  Member of the Remuneration and Nomination 

•  Member of the Technology, Digital and Innovation 

Committee (since November 2016).

Committee (since April 2021).

•  Member of the Audit Committee (since August 

•  Chair of Resimac NZ Home Loans Limited (since 

2017).

May 2012).

18   |

Mr Wayne Spanner
Independent Non-Executive Director 
since February 2020

Wayne holds a Bachelor of Commerce and Law degree 
from The University of Cape Town and a Masters of 
Science degree from Oxford University. Wayne has 
over 30 years experience as a lawyer and over 15 
years senior executive experience in an international 
law firm. He was previously the Managing Partner of 
an international law firm in Australian from 2012 to 
2020. Wayne has extensive experience in executive 
management and corporate governance at Board 
level. 

Other listed Directorships (last three years):

•  Nil.

Special responsibilities:

•  Chair of the Remuneration and Nomination 

Committee (since February 2020).

technology rollouts and complex transactions. 
Caroline holds an LLB Hons (London), and has been 
admitted to the Bars of England and Wales, Malaysia, 
Australia and New Zealand.  

Other listed Directorships (last three years):

•  Non-executive Director of AMA Group Limited 

(since March 2022).

•  Non-executive Director of Genetic Signatures 

Limited (since May 2022).

Special responsibilities:

•  Chair of the Technology, Digital and Innovation 

Committee (since April 2021).

•  Member of the Remuneration and Nomination 

Committee (since January 2021).

•  Member of the Risk and Compliance Committee 

(since February 2022).

•  Member of the Risk and Compliance Committee 

Company Secretary

(since July 2020).

•  Member of the Audit Committee (since July 2020).

Mr Peter Fitzpatrick 
Since November 2016

Mr Duncan Saville
Non-Executive Director 
since November 2017

Duncan is a Chartered Accountant and an experienced 
non-executive Director. He is chairman of ICM Limited, 
an international fund manager. Duncan is a fellow of 
the Institute of Chartered Accountants Australia and 
New Zealand, the Australian Institute of Company 
Directors and the Financial Services Institute of 
Australasia.

Other listed Directorships (last three years):

Limited (since 2012).

Special responsibilities:

Peter is a Chartered Accountant who joined Resimac 
Limited in 1987 and is responsible for the Group’s 
company secretarial function. He is a member of the 
Governance Institute of Australia and the Financial 
Services Institute of Australasia.

The abovenamed Directors and officer held office 
during the financial year and since the end of the 
previous financial year.

Directors’ shareholdings
The following table sets out each Director’s relevant 
interest in shares and rights of the company or in a 
related body corporate as at 30 June 2023:

•  Member of the Technology Digital and Innovation 

Committee (since April 2021).

DIRECTOR

Fully paid 
ordinary shares

Number of 
rights over 
ordinary shares

Mrs Caroline Waldron
Independent Non-Executive Director 
since November 2020

Caroline is a non-executive Director and cross border 
advisor with over 30+ years’ experience in regulated 
consumer sectors such as technology, retail and 
health. Caroline brings to Resimac commercial and 
governance experience in many areas including 

Warren McLeland

12,130,165

Susan Hansen

212,738

Wayne Spanner

15,732

Duncan Saville

254,586,353

Caroline Waldron

Nil

Nil

Nil

Nil

Nil

Nil

|   19

•  Former Chairman of Somers Limited incorporated 

•  Former non-Executive Director of Go2 People 

•  Non-executive Director of West Hamilton Holdings 

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|  DIRECTORS' REPORT

|  DIRECTORS' REPORT

Remuneration of Key Management Personnel
Information about the remuneration of Key Management Personnel (KMP) is set out in the Remuneration Report 
section of this Directors’ Report. The term ‘KMP’ refers to those persons having authority and responsibility for 
planning, directing and controlling the activities of the Company and its controlled entities or indirectly, including 
any Director whether executive or otherwise of the consolidated entity.

Share options or rights granted to Directors and senior management
An aggregate of 1,284,875 shares were granted/exercised:

Results and dividends
The information appearing on pages 18 to 24 forms part of the Directors’ Report for the financial year ended 30 
June 2023 and is to be read in conjunction with the following information:

PROFIT

FY23

$’000

FY22

$’000

 Profit attributable to ordinary equity holders of the parent 

66,446

102,147

•  199,875 shares granted under the Employee Share Plan on 10 October 2022;

DIVIDENDS

•  785,000 options exercised by senior management on 6 September 2022 in relation to the FY20 Long Term 

Incentive Plan; and 

•  300,000 options exercised by Scott McWilliam on 16 June 2023 in relation to Tranche 3 of the FY18 Long Term 

Incentive Plan.

Further details included in the Remuneration report.

Directors’ meetings 
The following table sets out the number of Directors’ meetings (including meetings of committees of Directors) 
held during the financial year and the number of meetings attended by each Director (while they were a Director or 
committee member).

The following dividends have been paid by the Company or declared by the Directors since the commencement of 
the financial year ended 30 June 2023:

(a)  out of the profits for the year ended 30 June 2022 and retained earnings on the 

fully-paid ordinary shares:

•  fully-franked final dividend of 4.00 cents (FY21: 4.00 cents) per share paid on 

23 September 2022. 

16,1161

16,336

(b)  out of the profits for the half-year ended 31 December 2022 and retained 

earnings on the fully-paid ordinary shares:

•  fully-franked interim dividend of 4.00 cents (HY22: 4.00 cents) per share paid 

on 24 March 2023.

16,0572

16,343

Board meetings

Audit

Risk and 
compliance

Remuneration 
and nomination

Technology, 
digital and 
innovation

•  fully-franked final dividend of 4.00 cents (FY22: 4.00 cents) per share 

declared on 28 August 2023.

16,065

16,277

COMMITTEES

(c)  out of the profits for the full year ended 30 June 2023 and retained earnings on 

the fully-paid ordinary shares:

DIRECTOR

(A)

(B)

(A)

(B)

(A)

(B)

(A)

(B)

(A)

(B)

1  The final FY22 dividend paid is net of dividend paid to treasury shares held by the Group ($122,286), eliminated on consolidation.
2  The interim FY23 dividend paid is net of dividend paid to treasury shares held by the Group ($110,864), eliminated on consolidation.

Warren McLeland

Susan Hansen

Wayne Spanner

Duncan Saville

Caroline Waldron

12

12

12

12

12

12

12

12

12

11

4

4

4

-

-

4

4

4

-

-

5

5

5

-

5

5

5

4

-

5

5

5

5

-

5

5

5

5

-

5

-

4

-

4

4

-

4

-

3

4

(A) Number of meetings eligible to attend.
(B) Number of meetings attended.

Operating and Financial Review

Principal activities
The Group is a leading residential mortgage and 
asset finance lending business, distributing Prime 
and Specialist products through various channels in 
Australia and New Zealand. The Group focuses on 
originating and servicing a high-quality loan portfolio, 
supported by a global funding program.

The Group’s core capabilities include:

•  Lending products: Leveraging the Group’s deep 

understanding of the Australian and New Zealand 
markets to offer products that address consumer 
and SME customer demands, with attractive risk 
and return profiles;

•  Distribution: Distributing loans in Australia and 

New Zealand through partnerships with accredited 
brokers and wholesale channels, ensuring 
effective reach and market presence;

•  Treasury and funding expertise: Maintaining 

strong, long-term relationships with onshore and 
offshore banking and funding partners. The Group 
has extensive experience in issuing securities in 
global and domestic term securitisation markets, 
bolstering the Group’s financial position; and

•  Risk management: Operating a comprehensive 
enterprise risk management and governance 
framework, following the three lines of defence 
model. This enables the Group to proactively 
identify, assess, and mitigate risks, safeguarding 
the interests of all stakeholders.

As part of the Group’s commitment to transparency 
and responsible reporting, this information is 
presented in the Group’s annual report to the 
shareholders. These activities drive sustainable 
growth and enhance value for the Group’s 
shareholders.

20   |

|   21

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|  DIRECTORS' REPORT

|  DIRECTORS' REPORT

Debt funding
The Group maintains access to a diversified 
funding platform supported by established funding 
relationships and the Board approved funding 
strategy.

The following funding channels are used to support 
the Group’s lending activities:

•  Corporate debt facility & NIM bond: Utilised for 

investment in business growth;

•  Securitisation trusts: Loans that are initially 

funded via a warehouse facility, are pooled and 
refinanced by being sold to new funding Special 
Purpose Vehicles (SPV) that issue limited-recourse 
independently rated Bonds, such as Residential 
Mortgage-Backed Securities (RMBS) and Asset-
Backed Securities (ABS) to institutional investors 
in multiple jurisdictions; and

•  Warehouse facilities: Third-party funders provide 
limited-recourse financing to SPVs established 
by the Group. At 30 June 2023, the Group had 
three domestic and seven foreign offshore bank 
warehouse providers.

Principal risks
The Group’s key risks include but are not limited to:

•  Funding risk: The Group relies on a mix of 

warehouse facilities, securitisation trusts, and 
corporate debt to fund mortgage originations;

•  Capital and liquidity requirements: To meet 
the Australian Financial Services Licence 
requirements, the Group must maintain sufficient 
liquidity levels. There’s a potential risk of needing 
to provide additional ‘first loss’ equity capital to 
support senior ranking note holders, impacting 
profitability, growth, and potentially requiring 
raising additional capital;

•  Regulatory and licence compliance: Operating 
in highly regulated markets, changes in laws or 
regulations could significantly impact the Group’s 
business. Possessing multiple Australian Credit 
Licences, any alterations to licensing regimes, 
license revocations, or failure to obtain necessary 
licenses could have a material adverse effect on 
the Group’s business, operational, and financial 
performance;

•  Macroeconomic factors: An economic downturn 
leading to materially higher unemployment could 
lead to customer difficulty in maintaining loan 
serviceability, posing credit risk; 

•  Interest rates: RBA cash rate increases have 

materially increased loan servicing for customers. 
Increased loan repayments combined with the 
higher cost of living from inflationary pressures, 
have impacted our customers as evidenced with 
arrears increasing during the year;

•  Climate and extreme weather events: Australia 

and New Zealand have a track record of extreme 
events including bushfires and floods, which could 
impact the underlying security of our loans and 
advances where customers are impacted by these 
events.

Business strategy
The Group is focused on a number of growth 
strategies to continue to drive revenue and 
profitability.

1. Organic lending growth

The Group is well-positioned to grow volume driven 
by:

•  Customers favourably viewing the Group as an 

alternative to the major lenders;

•  Opportunity to grow volume in the Specialist and 
Prime segments of the residential mortgages 
market;

•  Opportunity to grow volume in the asset finance 
segment under the Resimac Asset Finance brand 
and materially scale this segment over the next 3 
years;

•  Launch of our new digital customer banking 

environment; and 

•  Continued investment in modernising core banking 
platforms to optimise loan servicing capabilities 
and operational efficiency.

2. Growth through acquisition

•  Management has demonstrated an ability to 

identify and execute profit accretive acquisitions 
in targeted markets consistent with the Group’s 
strategy; 

•  On 1 August 2022 Resimac exercised the option to 
acquire a controlling stake in 23 Degrees Capital 
Partners Pty Ltd (operating as Sonder), increasing 
Resimac’s interest in 23 Degrees Capital Partners 
Pty Ltd from 15% to 51%. Sonder is a commercial 
asset finance wholesaler; 

•  On 20 June 2023 Resimac entered in a sale and 
purchase agreement to purchase a $150 million 
portfolio of asset finance loan receivables from 
Thorn Group Limited (ASX: TGA). The purchase 
is subject to Thorn Group Limited shareholder 
approval and is expected to complete in 
September 2023. Resimac and Thorn are related 
parties as both are controlled by a common 
shareholder; and

•  The Group continues to evaluate M&A 

opportunities in both the home loan and asset 
finance segments in Australia and New Zealand.

Review of operations 
The Group generated a statutory net profit after tax 
(NPAT) of $66,459,000 for the year ended 30 June 
2023. To reflect the Group’s normalised earnings the 
NPAT has been adjusted to remove non-recurring 
costs and one-off gains/losses. Management believe 
the disclosure of the normalised NPAT provides 
additional insight into the underlying performance for 
the year, by excluding one off, non-recurring items. 

The following table reconciles the unaudited 
normalised earnings to the statutory NPAT for the year 
in accordance with International Financial Reporting 
Standards (IFRS). 

UNAUDITED NON-IFRS INFORMATION

Statutory NPAT

Dividend income from listed equity 
investment

Fair value write-down on unlisted 
equity investment

FY23

$’000

66,459

(5,401)

3,600

Customer fee remediation program

(529)

Customer compensation provision

Tax effect of normalised items

Normalised NPAT

450

564

65,143

FY23 normalised NPAT excluding fair value losses on 
derivatives (net of tax) is $73,722,000.

Net interest income of $222,507,000 decreased 7% on 
prior year driven by the decrease in the Group’s assets 
under management. 

Operating expenses of $83,857,000 increased 6% on 
prior year driven by higher employment costs, and 
costs associated with an organisational restructure.

Loan impairment expense decreased 80% to 
$2,240,000. The Collective Provision was increased 
in FY22 to increase coverage for potential 
macroeconomic headwinds.

Group’s total home loan settlements were $3.7 billion, 
down 41% on prior year. Settlements were impacted 
by lower system activity and aggressive ADI cashback 
offers, particularly in the Prime segment.  

The Group’s assets under management at 30 June 
2023 comprise: 

•  On balance sheet home loans and advances to 

customers of $13.1 billion, down 14% compared to 
30 June 2022; 

•  On balance sheet asset finance loans of $0.6 
billion, up 60% compared to 30 June 2022; 

•  White label portfolio of $0.8 billion, down 30% 

compared to 30 June 2022 in line with the Group’s 
strategy to cease originating white label loans; and

•  Combined these make up the total assets under 

management of $14.5 billion.

Political donations
In the year ended 30 June 2023, the Group’s political 
contributions were Nil (FY22: Nil).

Funding programmes
During the year ended 30 June 2023, the following 
new Residential Mortgage Backed Securities (RMBS) 
and Asset Backed Securities (ABS) were issued to 
facilitate assets under management, optimise term 
duration and funding costs: 

•  The RESIMAC Asset Finance Trust – Warehouse 
Series No.1 was settled on 31 August 2022 and 
is a domestic asset financing warehouse with an 
initial facility limit of $516 million.

•  The RESIMAC Triomphe Trust - Premier Series 

2022-2 transaction was settled on 28 September 
2022 and is a domestic prime issue with a total 
issuance size of $500 million.

•  The RESIMAC Bastille Series 2022-2NC 

transaction was settled on 15 December 2022 and 
is a domestic non-conforming issue with a total 
issuance of $500 million. 

22   |

|   23

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTDThe Directors are of the opinion that the services as 
disclosed in Note 28 to the financial report do not 
compromise the external auditor’s independence, 
based on advice received from the Audit Committee, 
for the following reasons:

•  All non-audit services have been reviewed and 
approved to ensure that they do not impact the 
integrity and objectivity of the auditors; and

•  None of the services undermine the general 
principles as set out in APES Code of Ethics 
for Professional Accountants issued by the 
Accounting Professional and Ethical Standards 
Board, including reviewing or auditing the auditor’s 
own work, acting in a management or decision 
making capacity for the Company, acting as 
advocate for the Company or jointly sharing 
economic risks and rewards.

Auditor’s independence declaration
The auditor’s independence declaration is included on 
page 123 of this financial report.

Rounding off amounts
Unless otherwise indicated, the Company has 
rounded off amounts in this Directors’ Report and 
the accompanying financial statements to the 
nearest thousand dollars in accordance with ASIC 
Corporations Instrument 2016/191.

|  DIRECTORS' REPORT

•  The RESIMAC Versailles Series 2022-1 transaction 
was settled on 22 December 2022 and is a New 
Zealand prime issue with a total issuance size of 
NZD$200 million. 

•  The RESIMAC RAF Trust – Warehouse Series No.2 
transaction was settled on 2 February 2023 and 
is a domestic asset financing warehouse with an 
initial facility limit of $180 million. 

•  The RESIMAC Bastille Series 2023-1NC 

transaction was settled on 20 April 2023 and is 
a domestic non-conforming issue with a total 
issuance size of $1 billion. 

•  The RESIMAC Versailles Series 2023-1 transaction 

was settled on 29 June 2023 and is a New 
Zealand prime issue with a total issuance size of 
NZD$250 million.

Indemnification of officers and auditors
During the financial year, the Company paid a premium 
to a related party in respect of a contract insuring the 
Directors of the Company, the Company Secretary 
and all executive officers of the Company against 
a liability incurred as such a Director, Secretary or 
executive officer to the extent permitted by the 
Corporations Act 2001. The contract of insurance 
prohibits disclosure of the nature of the liability and 
the amount of the premium.

The Company has not otherwise, during or since 
the financial year, except to the extent permitted by 
law, indemnified or agreed to indemnify an officer or 
auditor of the Company against a liability incurred.

Subsequent events
Final dividend declared

The Board of Resimac Group Ltd has declared a fully 
franked final dividend of $0.04 per share. The record 
date will be 8 September 2023. The payment date will 
be 20 September 2023. The dividend has not been 
provided for in this financial report. 

Non-audit services 
Details of amounts paid or payable to the auditor for 
non-audit services provided during the year by the 
auditor are outlined in Note 28 to the financial report.

The Directors are satisfied that the provision 
of non-audit services during the year, by the 
auditor is compatible with the general standard 
of independence for auditors imposed by the 
Corporations Act 2001.

The Group 
generated a 
statutory net 
profit after 
tax (NPAT) of 
$66,459,000 for 
the year ended 
30 June 2023.

24   |

|   25

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTDRemuneration 
report.

2023
(Audited)

Contents

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

Summary

Remuneration objectives, strategy and principles

Remuneration and cultural activities

Key management personnel

KMP remuneration approach (excl. Non-Executive Directors)

Short-term and long-term incentive plans

Overview of company performance

Statutory remuneration

Non-Executive Director remuneration

10 Other remuneration information

27

27

27

28

28

29

32

33

34

36

|  REMUNERATION REPORT

1.  Summary
This Remuneration Report provides shareholders 
with an overview of Resimac Group’s (the Group) 
remuneration strategy and framework that applies 
to the Group’s Directors, Key Management Personnel 
(KMP), Executive Management and employees 
(referred to collectively as Employees) for the year 
ended 30 June 2023.

Resimac’s vision is to be a customer focused 
company, making home ownership, financial freedom 
and business success more accessible to everyone 
by leveraging technology and data driven insights. 
This vision is facilitated by promoting a culture of 
transparency that is diverse, inclusive and impactful 
and by a remuneration framework that provides 
positive outcomes for our customers, shareholders 
and employees. 

2.  Remuneration objectives, strategy  
and principles
The Group’s commitment is to reward its employees 
with a level of remuneration and benefits that is 
commensurate with their individual responsibilities 
and position within the business, recognising that an 
engaged workforce is a requisite for the achievement 
of Resimac’s strategic objectives.  

The Board’s remuneration strategy is aligned to the 
following objectives:

•  To attract, motivate and retain high calibre 

employees;

•  To provide fair and equitable remuneration to all 

employees in line with the Group’s Diversity, Equity 
& Inclusion Policy;

•  To promote and reward behaviours within the 

business that are in the interest of all stakeholders 
which includes customers and shareholders;

•  To align effective risk management and 

demonstration of appropriate behaviours, values 
and ethics; 

•  To reinforce a culture of continuous employee 

growth and knowledge; and

•  To ensure the Group’s Governance framework 

operates within and above industry best practice.

The following principles provide the basis of the 
remuneration framework at Resimac:

•  Resimac remunerates its employees in a manner 

that is market competitive whilst being acceptable 
to its shareholders;

•  Total remuneration for KMP is achieved by a 
balance of fixed and variable components;

•  Key Performance measures for Resimac 

management are linked to both financial and non-
financial measures, and designed to be in the best 
interest of all stakeholders including customers 
and shareholders;

•  Fixed and variable remuneration for KMP are 

periodically benchmarked to ensure remuneration 
is in line with the external market; and

•  Pay parity is paramount. Fair and equitable 
remuneration is applied to all employees 
regardless of gender, sexual identity, age, religion, 
ethnicity or disability.

3.  Remuneration and cultural activities
Continuous review and assessment of our 
remuneration and benefits continued throughout FY23 
with a number of initiatives being included as part of 
the Remuneration and Culture Activities plan.

These activities included:

•  Implementation of a new Human Resources 

Information System;

•  Diversity celebrations including NAIDOC week, 

International Womens Day, International Mens Day 
and International Guide Dogs Day;

•  Community outreach programs;

•  Senior leadership health assessments;

•  Wellbeing Program: Run Club, JP Morgan 

Challenge, Resilience workshops;

•  Opportunities for individual leadership and 

coaching programs;

•  Expansion of Parental Leave program to provide 

extra benefits including the recognition of prenatal 
leave, fertility leave, and miscarriage/stillbirth 
leave;

•  Introduction of Sabbatical Leave;

•  Continuation of Remote Working Policy;

•  Salary Continuance Insurance;

•  Secondment and on the job learning opportunities.

|   27

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRemuneration.Remuneration.|  REMUNERATION REPORT

|  REMUNERATION REPORT

4.  Key Management Personnel
The KMP are the people who have the authority and responsibility for planning, directing, implementing and 
controlling the activities of the Resimac business. The KMP are:

Name

CURRENT

Position

Term as KMP

Scott McWilliam

Chief Executive Officer (CEO) 

Jason Azzopardi

Chief Financial Officer (CFO) 

Andrew Marsden

Chief Treasury Officer (CTO)

Majid Muhammad

Chief Information Officer (CIO)

Full Term

Full Term

Full Term

Full Term

Danielle Corcoran

Chief Operating Officer (COO)

Resigned on 6 April 2023

The Directors classified as KMP and required to be disclosed as part of this report are:

Name

CURRENT

Position

Term as KMP

Warren McLeland

Chairman, Non-Executive Director

Susan Hansen

Independent Non-Executive Director

Duncan Saville

Non-Executive Director

Wayne Spanner

Independent Non-Executive Director

Caroline Waldron

Independent Non-Executive Director

Full Term

Full Term

Full Term

Full Term

Full Term

5.  KMP remuneration approach (excl. Non-Executive Directors)
Resimac’s remuneration strategy for KMP focuses on both financial and non-financial measures and the Board’s 
Remuneration & Nomination Committee assist with reviewing and recommending remuneration arrangements for 
KMP that is both consistent and competitive within the market. The total remuneration of the KMP comprise a fixed 
component and an at-risk variable component. The FY23 at-risk variable component is comprised of a short-term 
incentive. 

Remuneration is based on:

•  role in which the person is performing (i.e. accountability, responsibility, qualifications, skills and experience 

required); 

•  market benchmarking;

•  performance against set Key Performance Indicators (KPIs);

•  achievement of performance hurdles which includes tenure;

•  regulatory compliance; and

•  company performance.

5.1.  KMP fixed remuneration (excl. Non-Executive 
Directors)

The fixed component of the KMP remuneration 
includes base salary plus any other fixed elements 
such as superannuation, salary sacrifice and benefits 
and is known as Total Fixed Remuneration (TFR). 
Annually the TFR for the role in which the KMPs 
are performing is considered by the Remuneration 
and Nomination Committee which then makes final 
recommendations to the Board.

5.2.  KMP variable remuneration framework (excl. 
Non-Executive Directors)

Variable remuneration is a means to provide at-
risk remuneration to reward executives for their 
performance against set criteria. The objectives and 
criteria are designed to align with near term, mid term 
and long term strategy, ensuring value creation for 
shareholders.

5.3.  Non-KMP remuneration approach

For Senior Management that report directly to 
the CEO and are not classified as KMP, the same 
remuneration approach will apply to that of the 
KMP approach to ensure all Senior Management are 
aligned with the strategic objectives, behaviours and 
standards of Resimac. 

6.  Short-term and long-term  
incentive plans

6.1.  Short-term incentive plan (STI Plan)

Chief Executive Officer STI Plan and KPI metrics        

CEO, Scott McWilliam is eligible for a STI up to a cap 
of 100% of his TFR. CEO’s performance is assessed 
against predetermined KPIs by the Remuneration 
and Nomination Committee at the end of each 
performance period. Any STI awarded is paid in cash; 
66.7% at the end of the performance period with 
the remaining 33.3% in cash deferred for 12 months 
subject to a look back being undertaken by the 
Remuneration and Nominations Committee. 

CEO KPI components for FY23 are:

•  Financial Performance:  Cost Management, 
Interest Margin Management, Asset Finance 
settlement growth, Asset Under Management, 
Arrears rates;

•  Technology & Digital Strategy:  Infrastructure and 

application technologies;

•  Market Opportunities;

•  Regulatory obligations; and

•  Leadership, People & Culture  

KMP STI Plan and KPI metrics       

The performance of KMPs is measured against 
predetermined KPIs assessed by the CEO at the end 
of each performance period and the Remuneration 
and Nomination Committee are responsible for 
reviewing and approving any awarded STI which will 
be paid 100% in cash at the end of the performance 
period (i.e. 1 July to 30 June). KPIs and relevant 
measurements will be set at the commencement of 
the performance period.

KMPs participate in the annual STI plan whereby 
they have an opportunity to earn a percentage of 
their TFR. The performance of KMPs is measured 
against predetermined KPIs set by the CEO at the 
commencement of the performance period. The 
Remuneration & Nominations Committee measures 
KMP performance against the set KPI objectives 
and approves any STI awarded at the end of each 
performance period. The amount of an STI award 
will depend on whether and to what extent those 
objectives are achieved. The STI assessment is 
undertaken in July of each year and any award is 
payable in September of the same year.   

KPIs include:

•  Corporate strategy initiatives 

•  Financial metrics including NPAT growth, cost to 
income ratio and demonstrated innovative cost 
initiatives;

•  Innovation and technology initiatives and 

enhancements to allow for simplification, scale 
and digitalisation;

•  Operational efficiency and effectiveness; 

•  People, strategic leadership and culture;

•  Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG); and

•  Governance through Resimac’s Risk and 

Compliance frameworks which focuses on 
adherence to obligations, reduction of customer 
complaints, incidents and breaches.   

28   |

|   29

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD 
|  REMUNERATION REPORT

|  REMUNERATION REPORT

6.2.  Long-term incentive plan (LTI Plan)

FY18 LTI Plan - CEO

The vested options are required to be 
exercised no later than 30 June 2025.

The CEO, Scott McWilliam, was offered a LTI in 
FY18. The details of the offer were:

During FY23, cash component of $1,710,000 
was paid and 785,000 options were exercised.

•  Granted 900,000 Options pursuant to the 
Resimac Group Employee Share Options 
and Rights Plan;

•  Grant Date 18 August 2017;

•  Exercise price of $0.55 per option;

•  Options vest in equal tranches of 300,000 
on each anniversary of the Grant Date: 

  First tranche of 300,000 vested on 1 July 
2018 and was exercised on 26 April 2021, 

  Second tranche of 300,000 vested on 
1 July 2019 and was exercised on 16 
September 2021,

  Third tranche of 300,000 vested on 1 

July 2020 and was exercised on 16 June 
2023.

•  Exercise period was 3 years for every 

tranche vesting; and

•  Vesting condition was 100% tenure.

FY20 LTI Plan - KMPs and Executives

In 2019 the Board established a LTI Plan for the 
CEO, KMPs and eligible executives pursuant to 
the Resimac Group Ltd Employee Share Option 
& Rights Plan Rules. The CEO, KMPs and 
eligible executives were offered options over 
ordinary shares, and a combined total cash 
component of up to $2.4m. 3,900,000 options 
were granted on 15 August 2019 (900,000 
allocated to the CEO and 375,000 for each 
eligible executive).

All options vested on 31 August 2022 after the 
Group achieved the following conditions:

•  Net Profit After Tax (NPAT) growth hurdles; 

•  Digital transformation;

•  Compliance hurdles; and

•  Participant remaining employed with the 

Group until the vesting date.  

30   |

The graphs below set out the relative mix of 
TFR, STI and LTI for:

•  Scott McWilliam, CEO

•  Other KMP

14%

CEO

56%

30%

TFR

STI

LTI

12%

17%

OTHER
KMP

71%

TFR

STI

LTI

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|   31

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
|  REMUNERATION REPORT

|  REMUNERATION REPORT

7.  Overview of company performance
The table below summarises details of Resimac’s performance for key financial measures over the past four 
financial years. Note the Group undertook a buyback programme and cancelled 5,290,163 shares in FY23 (FY22: 
2,482,741 shares).

FINANCIAL YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE

FY23

FY22

FY21

FY20

Statutory NPAT ($’000)1

66,446

102,147

107,557

55,908

Total dividends per share (cents)2

Dividend payout ratio (%)2

8.00

48.4

8.00

32.0

4.20

15.9

2.70

19.6

Basic earnings per share (cents)

16.52

25.05

26.37

13.75

Return on equity (ROE) (%)3

Return on assets (%)4

Share price at 30 June ($)

16.4

4.4

0.92

29.9

6.1

1.15

36.9

7.3

2.46

25.5

4.3

1.01

1   NPAT excludes non-controlling interest (FY23: 13k, FY22: Nil).
2   Dividends per share and dividend payout ratio are calculated on dividends paid during the financial year.
3   ROE based on normalised NPAT and average shareholders’ equity per consolidated statement of financial position.
4   ROA based on statutory NPAT and total assets. As a result of the requirement under AASB 10 – Consolidated Financial Statements, the parent 

company exercises control over the Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) and securitisation trusts, therefore significant assets have been added to the 
consolidated statement of financial position without any appreciable increase in net profit.  

.

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|   33

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2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
|  REMUNERATION REPORT

|  REMUNERATION REPORT

9.  Non-Executive Director remuneration

9.1.  Overview of Non-Executive Directors’ 
remuneration arrangements

NAME

Position

Maximum 
fee ($)

9.1.1.  Policy objectives

•  To be market competitive: aim to set Directors’ 

fees competitive with Non-Executive Directors in 
comparable businesses with respect to product 
mix, market capitalisation, geographical market 
and employee size;

•  To ensure complementary skills: aim to ensure 

that the mix of Directors at any one time is diverse 
and adequate to carry out the objectives of the 
business; and

•  To safeguard independence: to exclude any 

performance related element in order to preserve 
the independence of the Non-Executive Directors.

9.1.2.  Aggregate fees approved by shareholders

At the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of shareholders 
held on 16 November 2021, the shareholders approved 
an increase to the maximum aggregate fee pool per 
annum for non-executives to $800,000. 

9.1.3.  Regular reviews of Directors' fees

The Board reviews the level of Directors’ fees 
annually to ensure the fees are in line with market 
and are suitable for the level of skill and expertise 
required to carry out the duties of Directors in a listed 
environment in conjunction with holding an Australian 
Financial Services Licence and several Australian 
Credit Licences.

The agreed fee structure is that a fee is paid to reflect 
the Chairman’s responsibilities. Each Director receives 
a base fee and if a Director chairs a Board committee, 
an additional fee is applied. Superannuation is payable 
in addition to the base fee where a Director is paid via 
the Resimac employee payroll system. 

The Remuneration & Nominations Committee met in 
June 2023 to review the Directors fees and resolved 
to not increase fees in FY24. 

The FY23 fee levels inclusive of superannuation where 
applicable were as follows:

Warren 
McLeland

Chairman and Risk & 
Compliance Chair

141,303 p.a.

Susan 
Hansen

Wayne 
Spanner

Duncan 
Saville1

Caroline 
Waldron

Independent Non-
Executive Director, 
Audit Chair & Resimac 
New Zealand Chair

Independent Non-
Executive Director 
& Remuneration and 
Nomination Chair

141,628 p.a.

93,925 p.a.

Non-Executive 
Director

74,900 p.a.

Independent Non-
Executive Director & 
Technology, Digital 
and Innovation Chair

116,897 p.a.

1   Exclusive of superannuation.

9.1.4.  Board skills and behaviours

A key objective for Resimac is to ensure that we have 
a diverse Board of Directors. The Board undertakes 
an assessment of the skills that each Director holds 
biennially which is summarised in a skills matrix. The 
skills matrix was last completed by the board in March 
2023.

Although it is not expected that all Directors will have 
the same skills and behaviours, the purpose of the 
matrix is to ensure there is a balance within the Board 
to ensure we have diversity of thought. The matrix 
skills and behaviours include:

•  Strategy, planning, monitoring and policy 

development
•  ASX experience
•  Governance
•  Regulatory and stakeholder relations
•  Risk and compliance management
•  Relevant technical and industry knowledge
•  Sustainability
•  Finance and audit
•  Capital management
•  People, culture & remuneration
•  Health, safety & environment
•  Marketing and business development
•  Technology, digital and innovation

9.1.5.  Board evaluation reporting

The Board is committed to transparency in determining Board membership and in assessing the performance of 
Directors. The Board undertook performance reviews in 2018 and 2020. At the conclusion of the last full evaluation 
in 2020 the Board determined to undertake more frequent assessments which resulted in an assessment of 
their effectiveness at the conclusion of each Board meeting. By rotation a Director is responsible for collation of 
feedback and any change recommendations. The purpose of this is to assess the performance of the Board as a 
whole with respect to time keeping, relevance, preparation and outcomes.

The performance of Directors is assessed against a range of criteria including contribution at meetings, 
understanding the major risks affecting the Group, contributing to the development of the strategy, committing the 
time required to fulfill the role and perform their responsibilities effectively, listening and respecting the ideas of 
fellow Directors and management and consistently taking the perspective of creating shareholder value. 

The Board with the assistance of the Remuneration and Nominations Committee conducts a review of the 
performance of each Director seeking re-election at the Annual General Meeting. 

9.1.6.  Non-Executive Director remuneration

The fees paid or payable to the Non-Executive Directors in relation to FY23 are set out below:

CURRENT

Warren McLeland

FY23

FY22

Susan Hansen2

FY23

FY22

Wayne Spanner

FY23

FY22

Duncan Saville

FY23

FY22

Caroline Waldron2

FY23

FY22

TOTAL REMUNERATION

FY23

FY22

SHORT-TERM 
BENEFITS

POST-EMPLOYMENT 
BENEFITS

Fees ($)

Superannuation1 ($)

Total ($)

127,876

127,876

132,099

131,334

85,000

85,000

74,900

74,975

107,972

103,211

527,847

522,396

13,427

12,788

9,529

9,075

8,925

8,500

-

-

8,925

8,500

40,806

38,863

141,303

140,664

141,628

140,409

93,925

93,500

74,900

74,975

116,897

111,711

568,653

561,259

The assessment of skills and behaviours ties into 
Board succession and selection of Directors.

1   Australian superannuation is paid where applicable. New Zealand Kiwisaver is not paid. 
2   A portion of remuneration is paid in NZD.

34   |

|   35

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|  REMUNERATION REPORT

|  REMUNERATION REPORT

10.  Other remuneration information

10.1.  Remuneration governance

10.1.1.  Remuneration governance and responsibility

The Resimac Board of Directors has responsibility for setting and overseeing the Company’s remuneration policies, 
practices and structure. The Board considers recommendations made by the Remuneration and Nomination 
Committee.

The remuneration framework and matters considered by the Remuneration and Nomination Committee and the 
Board include:

•  Review of Board size and composition (mix of skills, qualifications, experience, independence, diversity and 

other competencies);

•  Identification and recommendation of candidates to the Board for nomination as members of the Board or its 

Committees;

•  Development and implementation process for induction and orientation of new Directors;

•  Review and approval of Company objectives and appropriate KPIs relevant to the KMP annual short-term 

incentive arrangement, and evaluate KMP performance in light of those KPIs; 

•  Review and approval of the remuneration of KMP, Directors and senior management (including total fixed 

remuneration, short-term incentives and long-term incentives); 

•  Approval of executive recruitment practices;

•  Succession planning and talent management; and

•  Diversity, equity and inclusion in the workplace.

10.1.2.  Remuneration and nomination committee

The Board has established a Remuneration and Nomination Committee. This Committee has a formal charter and is 
available on the Company’s website www.resimac.com.au. 

The Remuneration and Nomination Committee members are:

•  Wayne Spanner - Chair; and

•  Susan Hansen

•  Warren McLeland

•  Caroline Waldron

The Remuneration and Nomination Committee reviews and makes recommendations to the Board on remuneration 
governance, policies, practices and structure which will apply to the KMP, senior management and the non-
executive Directors. The Committee also makes recommendations to the Board on the Company’s overall 
remuneration framework. The Remuneration and Nomination Committee receives regular reports from Human 
Resources and ensures it is abreast of all regulatory change. The Committee meets at least 4 times per year.

10.1.3.  Services from remuneration consultants

The Company engaged Godfrey Remuneration Group and Colvin Consulting Group to provide advice on a revised 
equity plan and Long Term Variable Remuneration (LTVR) design. Fees payable for FY23 were $17,000 excluding 
GST (FY22: $20,000).

10.1.4.  KMP share ownership 

The table below sets out the number of shares held directly, indirectly or beneficially by the current and former KMP 
(including their related parties):  

NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS

Warren McLeland

Susan Hansen

Wayne Spanner

Duncan Saville

Caroline Waldron

SENIOR EXECUTIVES

Scott McWilliam

Jason Azzopardi

Andrew Marsden

Danielle Corcoran1

Majid Muhammad

Held at 
1 July 2022

Net 
change

Held at 
30 June 2023

12,130,165

212,738

15,732

254,586,353

-

266,944,988

-

-

-

-

-

-

12,130,165

212,738

15,732

254,586,353

-

266,944,988

1,450,000

46,831

1,496,831

50,000

-

-

-

50,000

-

96,738

(4,835)

91,903

-

375,000

375,000

1,596,738

416,996

2,013,734

Total

268,541,726

416,996

268,958,722

1   Danielle Corcoran resigned with effect from 6 April 2023.

36   |

|   37

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|  REMUNERATION REPORT

|  REMUNERATION REPORT

10.1.5.  Share trading restrictions 

Resimac Securities Trading Policy reflects the 
Corporations Act 2001 prohibition on KMP and their 
closely related parties entering into any arrangement 
that would have the effect of limiting the KMP’s 
exposure to risk relating to an element of their 
remuneration that remains subject to restrictions on 
disposal.

Resimac Directors, management team, and members 
of their immediate family and controlled entities are 
also required to obtain written consent and clearance 
for security trading during trading windows from 
the Chairman. All other employees must adhere to 
the Securities Trading Policy and are restricted from 
trading within the blackout periods.

The policy is available on the Corporate Governance 
section of the Company’s website at www.resimac.
com.au. Breaches of the policy are subject to 
disciplinary action, which may include termination of 
employment. 

10.1.6.  Further information on remuneration

10.1.6.1. Service agreements

Each KMP has entered into an employment contract 
with the Company (Resimac Limited). These contracts 
have unlimited duration however may be terminated 
with relevant notice as set out below unless in the 
case of serious misconduct in which the KMP may be 
terminated immediately. 

All KMPs are entitled to receive payment in lieu of 
notice of any accrued statutory entitlement (i.e. 
annual and long service leave) on cessation of their 
employment.

Notice period / 
termination payment

NAME

Details regarding loans outstanding to KMP and their related parties during the reporting period, are outlined below.

Balance
1 July 2022

Balance
30 June 2023

Interest payable 
for the year2

Highest balance 
during the year

Scott McWilliam

•  Six months’ notice (or 

NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS

($)

($)

($)

($)

payment in lieu)

•  May be terminated 

immediately for serious 
misconduct

Duncan Saville

15,449,316

13,558,651

859,407

15,478,864

Jason Azzopardi

•  Three months’ notice (or 

SENIOR EXECUTIVES

payment in lieu)

•  May be terminated 

immediately for serious 
misconduct 

Andrew Marsden

•  Three months’ notice (or 

payment in lieu)

•  May be terminated 

immediately for serious 
misconduct 

Danielle Corcoran1

•  Three months’ notice (or 

payment in lieu)

•  May be terminated 

immediately for serious 
misconduct 

Majid Muhammad

•  Three months’ notice (or 

payment in lieu)

•  May be terminated 

immediately for serious 
misconduct 

1   Danielle Corcoran resigned with effect from 6 April 2023.

10.1.7.  Related party transactions

Loans to KMP and their related parties are secured 
residential mortgage loans provided in the ordinary 
course of the Group’s mortgage lending business. All 
loans have normal commercial terms. No amounts 
have been written down or recorded as specific 
provisions as the balances are considered fully 
collectable. 

Scott McWilliam

2,000,000

2,000,000

Danielle Corcoran

356,412

346,393

76,237

18,354

2,008,455

373,048

17,805,728

15,905,044

953,998

17,860,367

2   Interest is charged on an arm’s-length basis.

10.1.7.1. Other transactions and balances with KMP

From time to time, Directors of the Company or its controlled entities, or their Director-related entities may obtain 
loans or ad hoc services from the Group, on the same terms and conditions as those entered into by other group 
employees or customers. In FY23, a Director-related entity of Duncan Saville obtained a short term loan on market 
terms from the Group and the amount outstanding at 30 June 2023 is $8,000,000 (FY22: Nil). The loan has a 
contractually obliged repayment date of 30 September 2023. 

This Directors’ report, including the remuneration report, is signed in accordance with a resolution of the Directors 
made pursuant to s.298 (2) of the Corporations Act 2001.

On behalf of the Directors of Resimac Group Ltd.

Warren McLeland
Chairman 
Sydney
28 August 2023

38   |

|   39

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|  CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF PROFIT OR LOSS

|  CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

Financial 
statements.

Consolidated statements 
for the year ended 30 June 2023

Interest income

Interest expense

Net interest income

Fee and commission income

Fee and commission expense

Fair value (losses)/gains on derivatives

Fair value write-down on unlisted equity investment

Other income

Employee benefits expense

Other expenses 

Loan impairment expense

Profit before tax

Income tax expense

PROFIT AFTER TAX 

Attributable to:

Owners of the parent

Non-controlling interest

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

1

 2

1

2

1/2

2

1

2

2

2

3

902,131

490,695

(679,624)

(252,617)

222,507

238,078

2,670

8,178

(34,055)

(40,477)

(12,255)

26,082

(3,600)

-

6,215

2,480

(51,226)

(45,267)

(32,631)

(34,168)

(2,240)

(11,446)

95,385

143,460

(28,926)

(41,313)

66,459

102,147

66,446

102,147

13

-

66,459

102,147

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

PROFIT AFTER TAX

66,459

102,147

Other comprehensive income, net of income tax
Items that will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss:

Fair value movement on equity investment in listed companies through 
OCI, net of tax

(1,614)

(1,683)

Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss:

Changes in fair value of cash flow hedges  

Tax effect

Currency translation differences 

Other comprehensive income, net of tax

11,618

(3,877)

(3,477)

1,163

789

7,316

(1,236)

(5,633)

TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE INCOME FOR THE YEAR

73,775

96,514

Attributable to:

Owners of the parent

Non-controlling interest

EARNINGS PER SHARE

Basic 

Diluted 

73,762

96,514

13

-

73,775

96,514

FY23

FY22

cents 
per share

cents 
per share

21

21

16.52

16.48

25.05

24.90

40   |

|   41

Notes to the consolidated financial statements are included on pages 46 to 121.  

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|  CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION

|  CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY

ASSETS

Cash and cash equivalents

Trade and other receivables 

Current tax receivable

Loans and advances 

Contract assets

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Derivative financial assets

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Plant and equipment

Other assets

Deferred tax assets

NOTE

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$'000

FY22

$'000

4        

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1,320

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11    

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27,496

14,942,038

16,737,172

LIABILITIES

Trade and other payables                                                                                                         

12       

27,146

Current tax payable

Interest-bearing liabilities

Lease liabilities

Other financial liabilities

Derivative financial liabilities

Other liabilities

Provisions

Deferred tax liabilities

NET ASSETS

EQUITY

Share capital

Reverse acquisition reserve                  

Total issued capital

Reserves

Retained earnings

Equity attributable to owners of the parent

Non-controlling interest

Notes to the consolidated financial statements are included on pages 46 to 121.  

42   |

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|  CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY

|  CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS

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NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

900,834

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(658,365)

(227,173)

28,918

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CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES

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CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES

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Net cash (used in) / provided by financing activities

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Net increase in cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the financial year (1 July)

Effects of exchange rate changes on cash balances held in foreign currencies

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619,809

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Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

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44   |

|   45

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Notes to the 
consolidated 
financial 
statements.

For the year ended
30 June 2023

About this report

Segment information

Key numbers and policies

Capital

Risk

Group structure

Unrecognised items

Other

47

50

52

78

84

108

112

113

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 

ABOUT THIS REPORT

About this 
report.

For the year ended
30 June 2023

Resimac Group Ltd (“Resimac” or “the Company”) is 
a for-profit company limited by shares incorporated 
and domiciled in Australia whose shares are publicly 
traded on the Australian Securities Exchange. The 
nature of the operations and principal activities of 
Resimac and entities that it controls (referred to as 
“the Group”) are described in the segment information.

The consolidated general purpose financial report 
of the Group for the year ended 30 June 2023 was 
authorised for issue in accordance with a resolution of 
the Directors on 28 August 2023. The Directors have 
the power to amend and reissue the financial report.

The financial report is a general purpose financial 
report which:

•  has been prepared in accordance with the 
requirements of the Corporations Act 2001, 
Australian Accounting Standards (AAS) and 
other authoritative pronouncements of the 
Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB) 
and International Financial Reporting Standards 
(IFRS) as issued by the International Accounting 
Standards Board (IASB);

•  has been prepared on a historical cost basis, and 
with certain financial instruments measured at fair 
value. The carrying values of recognised assets 
and liabilities that are the hedged items in fair 
value hedge relationships, which are otherwise 
carried at amortised cost, are adjusted to record 
changes in the fair values attributable to the risks 
that are being hedged;

•  is presented in Australian dollars with all values 
rounded to the nearest thousand dollars ($’000) 
unless otherwise stated, in accordance with ASIC 
Corporations (Rounding in Financial/Directors’ 
Reports) Instrument 2016/191; and

•  adopts all new and amended Accounting 

Standards and Interpretations issued by the AASB 
that are relevant to the Group and effective for 
reporting periods beginning on or before 1 July 
2022. Refer to Note 32 for further details.

Key judgements and estimates
In the application of the Group’s accounting policies, 
the Directors are required to make judgements, 
estimates and assumptions about the carrying value 
of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent 
from other sources. The estimates and associated 
assumptions are based on historical experience 
and various other factors that are believed to be 
reasonable under the circumstances, the results of 
which form the basis of making judgements. Actual 
results may differ from these estimates.

Judgements and estimates which are material to the 
financial report are found in the following notes:

NOTE

Relates to

11

Goodwill impairment

22 & 23

Impairment of financial assets

46   |

|   47

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTDNotes to the consolidatedfinancial statements.Notes to the consolidatedfinancial statements.|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 

ABOUT THIS REPORT

Basis of consolidation
The consolidated financial statements comprise the 
financial statements of the Group. A list of controlled 
entities (subsidiaries) at year end is contained in Note 
24.

The financial statements of subsidiaries are prepared 
for the same reporting period as the parent company, 
using consistent accounting policies. 

Subsidiaries are consolidated from the date on which 
control is obtained to the date on which control is 
disposed. 

The Group controls an investee if and only if the Group 
has: 

•  power over the investee (i.e. existing rights that 
give it the current ability to direct the relevant 
activities of the investee);

•  exposure, or rights, to variable returns from its 

involvement with the investee; and 

•  the ability to use its power over the investee to 

affect its return.

In preparing the consolidated financial statements, all 
inter-company balances and transactions, income and 
expenses and profits and losses resulting from intra-
Group transactions have been eliminated.

The acquisition of subsidiaries is accounted for using 
the acquisition method.

Refer to Note 24 for detail on the consolidation of 
special purpose vehicles.

Foreign currency

As at the reporting date, assets and liabilities of 
overseas subsidiaries are translated into Australian 
dollars at the rate of exchange at the balance sheet 
date and the income statements are translated at the 
average exchange rate for the year. The exchange 
differences arising on the retranslation are taken 
directly to a separate component of equity.

Transactions in foreign currencies are initially recorded 
in the functional currency at the exchange rates 
ruling at the date of the transaction. Monetary assets 
and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies 
are translated at the rate of exchange ruling at the 
balance sheet date. Exchange differences arising from 
the application of these procedures are taken to the 
income statement, with the exception of differences 
on foreign currency borrowings that provide a hedge 
against a net investment in a foreign entity, which 
are taken directly to equity until the disposal of the 
net investment, and then recognised in the income 

statement. Tax charges and credits attributable to 
exchange differences on those borrowings are also 
recognised in equity.

Other accounting policies

Significant and other accounting policies that 
summarise the recognition and measurement 
bases relevant to an understanding of the financial 
statements are provided throughout the notes to the 
financial statements.

The notes to the financial statements

The notes include information required to understand 
the financial statements and is material and relevant 
to the operations, financial position and performance 
of the Group. Information is considered material and 
relevant if, for example:

•  the amount in question is significant because of its 

size or nature;

•  it is important for understanding the results of the 

Group;

•  it helps to explain the impact of significant 

changes in the Group’s business – for example, 
acquisitions and impairment write-downs; or

•  it relates to an aspect of the Group’s operations 

that is important to its future performance.

The notes are organised into the following sections:

Key numbers: provides a breakdown of individual 
line items in the financial statements that the 
Directors consider most relevant and summarises 
the accounting policies, judgements and estimates 
relevant to understanding these line items;

Capital: provides information about the capital 
management practices of the Group and shareholder 
returns for the year; 

Risk: details the Group’s exposure to various financial 
risks, explains how these affect the Group’s financial 
position and performance, and what the Group does 
to manage these risks; 

Group structure: explains the Group structure and 
how changes have affected the financial position and 
performance of the Group;

Unrecognised items: provides information regarding 
items not recognised in the financial statements 
but could potentially have an impact on the Group’s 
financial position and performance; and

Other: provides information on items which require 
disclosure to comply with AAS and other regulatory 

Resimac's mission 
is to be a customer 
focused organisation, 
leveraging 
technology and data 
analytics coupled 
with expansion of 
our sustainability and 
Environmental, Social 
and Governance 
(ESG) footprint.

48   |

|   49

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 

SEGMENT INFORMATION

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 

SEGMENT INFORMATION

Segment 
information.

For the year ended
30 June 2023

The Group has identified two reportable segments based on the nature of the products and services provided, the 
type of customers for those products and services, the geographies where the business operates and the existence 
of discrete and separate reporting and management teams. The internal reports of the reportable segments are 
regularly reviewed by the Board and executive management team (the Chief Operating Decision makers) in order to 
allocate resources to the segment and to assess its performance.

The following is an analysis of the Group’s revenue and results by reportable operating segments:

AUSTRALIAN LENDING

NEW ZEALAND LENDING

CONSOLIDATED

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

Revenue from external customers

860,250

489,688

50,766

37,747

911,016

527,435

Total segment revenue

860,250

489,688

50,766

37,747

911,016

527,435

Segment results before fair value 
(losses)/gains on derivatives, interest, 
tax, depreciation, amortisation, 
finance costs and impairment 

762,109

374,045

44,530

23,489

806,639

397,534

Fair value (losses)/gains on derivatives

(8,824)

17,836

(3,431)

8,246

(12,255)

26,082

Interest expense

(637,203)

(231,773)

(42,421)

(20,844)

(679,624)

(252,617)

The Group’s reportable segments under AASB 8 Operating Segments are therefore as follows:

Depreciation and amortisation 

(2,337)

(2,374)

1.  Australian Lending business

2.  New Zealand Lending business

Whilst the nature of the customers and products 
are similar to the Australian Lending segment, given 
the different jurisdiction and market conditions, 
management believe it is appropriate to distinguish 
the result of New Zealand from Australia.

Separating the Australian and New Zealand trading 
business is supported by the operation of a dedicated 
NZ Board, NZ segment monthly management 
reporting, separate regulatory requirements/oversight, 
and staff solely accountable for the NZ business 
including a locally based Head of NZ.

Represents the distribution and lending businesses 
currently captured under the Resimac, Resimac Asset 
Finance and homeloans.com.au brands. 

The segment contains the bulk of the Australian based 
income and expense. It incorporates the new business 
settled through the Australian distribution channels, 
the margin net of funding costs of the on balance 
sheet home loan portfolios, and the upfront and trail 
commission from funders on the non-principally 
funded loans (white label loan portfolio).

The Group’s fully owned subsidiary Resimac Asset 
Finance (RAF) specialises in Australian based secured 
commercial lending. Management have assessed 
the impact of the RAF business on its Group results 
as not material, and therefore does not represent 
a reportable segment for the year ended 30 June 
2023, notwithstanding RAF is considered a separate 
operating segment by Management. 

Loan impairment 

Financing costs 

(2,155)

(11,426)

(86)

(85)

(86)

(20)

(2,423)

(2,460)

(2,240)

(11,446)

(13,953)

(12,883)

(759)

(750)

(14,712)

(13,633)

Segment results before income tax

97,637

133,425

(2,252)

10,035

95,385

143,460

Income tax expense1

PROFIT AFTER TAX 

(28,926)

(41,313)

66,459

102,147

The following is an analysis of the Group’s assets and liabilities by reportable operating segment:

AUSTRALIAN LENDING

NEW ZEALAND LENDING

CONSOLIDATED

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

Segment assets excl. tax

14,094,234

15,889,429

839,655

847,743 14,933,889

16,737,172

14,094,234

15,889,429

839,655

847,743 14,933,889

16,737,172

Segment liabilities excl. tax

(13,736,229)

(15,548,901)

(790,426)

(806,623)

(14,526,655)

(16,355,524)

Net assets excl. tax

358,005

340,528

49,229

41,120

407,234

381,648

Tax assets2

Tax liabilities2

NET ASSETS

8,149

-

-

(3,580)

415,383

378,068

1   Income tax expense is disclosed on a consolidated basis, not by reportable operating segment.
2   Tax assets and liabilities are disclosed on a consolidated basis, not by reportable operating segment.

50   |

|   51

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

Key numbers 
& policies.

For the year ended
30 June 2023

1.  Revenue

1.1.  Revenue streams

The Group generates revenue primarily from interest income, annuity trail commission income on white label loans 
and other fee income. 

INTEREST INCOME

Loans and advances 

Bank deposits

Discount unwind on NPV of trail commission

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

881,006

488,570

19,994

1,131

450

1,675

902,131

490,695

Fee and commission income (Revenue from contracts with customers)

2,670

8,178

FAIR VALUE GAINS ON DERIVATIVES

Fair value gains on interest rate swaps

Fair value gains on overnight index swaps

OTHER INCOME

Dividend income

Other

-

-

-

5,401

814

6,215

25,749

333

26,082

800

1,680

2,480

Total revenue 

911,016

527,435

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT 

Interest income - loans and advances

Loans and advances are initially recognised at fair 
value. Subsequent to initial recognition, the loans 
are measured at amortised cost using the effective 
interest method over the estimated actual (but not 
contractual) life of the mortgage, taking into account 
all income and expenditure directly attributable to the 
loan.

Interest income on loans and advances is recognised 
as it accrues using the effective interest rate method. 
The rate at which revenue is recognised is referred to 
as the effective interest rate and is equivalent to the 
rate that effectively discounts estimated future cash 
flows throughout the estimated life. 

Acquisition costs representing mortgage insurance 
premiums and upfront broker commissions related to 
originating loans and advances are capitalised on the 
statement of financial position of the Group. These 
costs are amortised to the statement of profit or loss 
across the expected life of the loan in interest income 
as part of the effective interest rate. 

Loans and advances in arrears or hardship at 30 June 
2023 continue to accrue interest income.

Consideration for potential future credit losses on 
loans in arrears or hardship is reflected in Note 23.

Interest income - bank deposits

This comprises interest income on cash held with 
Australian ADIs predominantly in securitisation trusts. 
Interest income is recognised as it accrues, using the 
effective interest method.

Fee and commission income

Revenue is based on the consideration specified in 
a contract with a customer. The Group recognises 
revenue when it transfers control over a good or 
service to a customer. Fee and commission income 
include fees other than those that are an integral 
part of loans and advances measured using effective 
interest rate method, and which are accounted for 
in accordance with AASB 15 Revenue from contracts 
with customers.

The following table provides information about the 
nature and timing of the satisfaction of performance 
obligations in contracts with customers, and the 
related revenue recognition policies. 

Classification and measurement of revenue

TIMING

At a point 
in time

Type of 
service

Mortgage 
origination 
revenue

Nature, timing of satisfaction 
of performance obligations

Revenue recognition 
policy under AASB 15

Commission from originating white label loans.

The performance obligations are satisfied at the 
point in time the loan is settled. Non-ongoing 
performance conditions are attached to the 
upfront fee. 

Once the Group has referred a successful 
loan application to the lender, its performance 
obligations have been met. As such, revenue is 
recognised at the point in time the loan is settled. 
The expected value is estimated based on 
historic experience.

Provisions for clawback of the upfront fee 
are recognised within a period of time post-
settlement and is a variable consideration.

At a point 
in time

Loan 
management 
revenue 

Trail commission income on white label loans, 
based on the individual monthly loan balance 
outstanding each month. Trail ceases once the 
loan is discharged. 

Revenue is recognised at the point in time the 
loan is being settled and performance obligations 
are satisfied according to the contracts with the 
funders.

The contracts with the originators include 
performance obligations which must be satisfied 
in order to be paid trail commission (e.g. the loan 
not being in arrears).

The present value of the trailing commission 
receivable is recognised as a contract asset and 
measured using the expected value method with 
variable consideration at a point in time.

At a point 
in time

Lending fee 
income

Loan fees paid by the borrower such as 
application, discharge, settlement fees, dishonour 
fee, etc. The performance obligation for these fees 
is met at a point in time (settlement, discharge etc) 
when the fee is charged to the borrower.

Revenue is recognised when the transaction is 
completed and the performance obligations are 
met. 

52   |

|   53

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

Fair value gains on derivatives

Other income

1.3.  Assets related to contract with customers

The Group’s funding structures contractually require 
the Group to enter into interest rate swaps on the 
origination of fixed rate loans to customers, to 
ensure the Group’s special purpose vehicles maintain 
sufficient cash flows by eliminating interest rate risk 
exposure.

At 30 June 2023, the fair value of future cash flows 
of each swap that was not designated and qualified 
as a cash flow hedge was determined in line with 
AASB 9 Financial Instruments, and the resulting gain 
or loss is recognised in the statement of profit or loss. 
During the year, the 2-3 year curve flattened resulting 
in a material decrease in the fair value of the Group’s 
portfolio of interest rate swaps. 

Dividend income is recognised when the right to 
receive the payment is established.

Other income includes dividend income and various 
items including but not limited to payments received 
under operating leases as income on a straight-line 
basis over the lease (office sub-lease).

1.2.  Disaggregation of revenue from contracts with 
customers 

In the following table, revenue from contracts with 
customers is disaggregated by primary geographical 
market, major service lines and timing of revenue 
recognition. The table also includes a reconciliation of 
the disaggregated revenue with the Group’s reportable 
segments (See “Segment Information” on page 50).

AUSTRALIAN LENDING

NEW ZEALAND LENDING

CONSOLIDATED

FEE AND COMMISSION INCOME

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

Mortgage origination 

145

1,564

Loan management

Lending fee income

(4,531)

78

5,491

5,380

1,105

7,022

-

-

1,565

1,565

-

-

1,156

1,156

145

1,564

(4,531)

78

7,056

6,536

2,670

8,178

TIMING OF REVENUE RECOGNITION

Service transferred at a point in time

1,105

7,022

1,565

1,156

2,670

8,178

Revenue from contracts with 
customers

1,105

7,022

1,565

1,156

2,670

8,178

Interest income

853,136

462,442

48,995

28,253

902,131

490,695

The Group has recognised the following assets related to contracts with customers.  

CONTRACT ASSETS – PRESENT VALUE OF FUTURE TRAIL COMMISSION RECEIVABLE

Current

Non-current

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

4,724

9,153

7,763

16,314

13,877

24,077

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT 

Contract assets - present value of future trail 
commission receivable

The contract assets primarily relate to the Group’s 
rights to receive trail commissions from lenders on 
white label settled loans, over the life of the loan 
based on the monthly loan balance outstanding. The 
contract assets are transferred to receivables when 
the rights become unconditional. White label loans 
ceased origination in FY19, and the portfolio is in 
runoff.

Initial recognition 

Expected value of future trail commission receivable 
were recognised on the origination of white label 
settlements. This represents the NPV of the expected 
future trail commission receivable under the 
origination and management agreement, less ongoing 
servicing costs not covered by transaction fees.  

The initial expected value of trail commission 
receivable was determined by using the discounted 
cash flow valuation technique. 

income or expense in the statement of comprehensive 
income (disclosed as loan management under fee and 
commission income in Note 1.2).

A remeasurement of the underlying cash flows relating 
to the trail commission receivable occurs at each 
reporting date. 

The key estimates and assumptions underlying the 
remeasurement of the estimated future cash flows 
include the:

FY23

FY22

Annualised run-off

22.5%

22.9%

Prepayment rate (run-off buffer)

25%

25%

Annualised run-off

Run-off is a combination of discharges, prepayments 
and scheduled loan repayments. A three year rolling 
average is used in the valuation as the Group’s best 
estimate of future run-off to avoid potential year-on-
year volatility in run-off.

Prepayment rate

In order to manage the uncertainty associated with 
this modelling, a conservative run-off buffer of 25% is 
included in the valuation by management, and remains 
unchanged compared with FY22.

Fair value gains on derivatives

-

17,836

-

8,246

-

26,082

Subsequent measurement 

Other income

6,009

2,388

206

92

6,215

2,480

External revenue as reported in 
segment information

860,250

489,688

50,766

37,747

911,016

527,435

Subsequent to initial recognition, the future trail 
commission receivable is measured at expected value. 

The carrying amounts of the trail commissions 
receivable are adjusted to reflect actual and revised 
estimated cash flows by computing the present value 
of estimated future cash flows at the effective interest 
rates. The resulting adjustment is recognised as 

54   |

|   55

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

2.  Expenses

INTEREST

Bond and warehouse facilities

Amortisation – facility issuance costs

Discount unwind on NPV of trail commission

Corporate facility

Interest on lease liabilities

FEE & COMMISSION

Loan management 

Borrowing commitment costs

RMBS costs

Discharge fee refund provision (release)/charge1

EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

Remuneration, superannuation and on-costs

Share-based payments

FAIR VALUE LOSSES ON DERIVATIVES

Fair value losses on interest rate swaps

Fair value losses on overnight index swaps

Fair value write-down on unlisted equity investment

OTHER

Marketing

Technology expenses2

Audit and other professional fees

Rent and occupancy costs

Insurance

Depreciation and amortisation

Depreciation of right-of-use assets

Unrecoverable GST

Other

Loan impairment expense (see Note 6)

1   See Note 17 for details of the discharge fee refund provision (release)/charge.
2   Includes core banking IT project costs (FY23: $2.0 million; FY22: $5.1 million).

56   |

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

662,613

10,583

558

5,459

411

237,975

11,524

826

1,832

460

679,624

252,617

19,872

22,904

5,801

8,911

(529)

5,184

8,449

3,940

34,055

40,477

50,394

832

51,226

11,829

426

12,255

3,600

5,036

12,762

2,640

1,154

2,562

780

1,643

2,469

3,585

44,477

790

45,267

-

-

-

-

6,477

14,629

2,500

961

2,291

791

1,669

2,740

2,110

32,631

34,168

2,240

11,446

815,631

383,975

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT 

2.1.  Interest

Bond and warehouse facilities

Recognised in the profit or loss as its accrues 
using the effective interest rate method. Bond and 
warehouse facilities interest expense include coupon 
payments on notes issued, and interest paid on non-
securitised funding facilities. 

Amortisation - bond issue costs

Transaction costs incurred by the Group incremental 
to the issue of debt securities by the securitisation 
trusts, are capitalised on the statement of financial 
position of the parent entity as bond issue costs. 
These costs are amortised to the statement of profit 
or loss over the average expected life of the debt 
securities using the effective interest rate method. 

2.2.  Fee and commission

Loan management

Includes monthly trail commission and service 
provider fee payments to brokers for originating 
on balance sheet and white label loans based on 
individual loan balances outstanding and the loan 
continuing to perform. 

fees, liquidity fees, rating agency fees, and other fees 
related to the ongoing operation of the bond and 
warehouse facilities. 

2.3.  Employee benefits

Employee benefits expense includes fixed and variable 
remuneration, superannuation, and associated on-
costs.

The policy relating to share-based payments is set out 
in Note 31.

2.4.  Fair value losses on derivatives

The policy relating to fair value losses on derivatives is 
set out in Note 1.1.

2.5.  Other

This mainly comprises bank and regulatory fees, and 
general administration expenses. These items are 
expensed when incurred. 

2.6.  Loan impairment

Loan impairment expenses relates to the movement in 
the:

•  specific and collective provisions; 

Borrowing commitment costs

•  direct loan write-offs recognised during the year; 

Commitment fees directly related to the Group’s global 
funding program.

RMBS costs

Other financing costs include trustee and servicer 

and

•  recoveries of previously impaired loans.

See Note 6 for detail on impairment of loans and 
advances.

|   57

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

3.  Income tax
3.1.  Income tax recognised in profit or loss

CURRENT TAX

In respect of the current year

In respect of prior years

Translation loss on foreign currency assets and liabilities

DEFERRED TAX

In respect of the current year

In respect of prior years

Total income tax expense recognised in the current year

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

34,228

38,033

71

3

(9)

-

34,302

38,024

(5,380)

4

(5,376)

28,926

4,333

(1,044)

3,289

41,313

3.3.  Deferred tax balances

The following is the analysis of deferred tax assets (DTA) and deferred tax liabilities (DTL) presented in the 
consolidated statement of financial position:

Deferred tax assets

Deferred tax liabilities

Deferred tax assets/(liabilities)

FY23

Deferred tax assets/(liabilities)

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

34

-

34 

-

(2,116)

(2,116) 

Opening 
balance

$'000

Current year 
recognised in 
profit or loss

Previously 
unrecognised 
in profit or loss

Recognised 
directly in 
equity

$'000

$'000

$'000

Closing 
balance

$'000

The income tax expense for the year can be reconciled to the accounting profit as follows:

Plant, equipment and software

3,236

(1,860)

Profit before tax

Income tax expense calculated at 30% (FY22: 30%) 

Effect of expenses that are not deductible in determining taxable profit

Effect of different tax rates of subsidiaries operating in other jurisdictions

Employee share scheme

Other items

95,385

143,460

28,616

43,038

110

122

63

(60)

28

(144)

(342)

(214)

Deferred mortgage insurance

Employee entitlements

Net provision for lease make good

Provision for discharge fee refund

Other accrued expenses 

Blackhole expenditure  

91

1,649

59

1,182

3,410

-

(54)

(100)

-

-

(796)

13

28,851

42,366

Trail commission payable

3,613

1,564

Provision for expected credit loss

12,488

253

Lease liability

Financial assets

Shares

Share-based payments

592

380

(439)

(111)

Capitalised incentive commission  

(16,319)

Loans and advances 

Deferred bond issue cost 

476

(4,580)

35

(48)

1,080

(143)

1,302

(361)

1,374

Derivatives 

(614)

2,648

Trail commission receivable

Tax losses carried forward

(7,229)

-

-

473

(2,116)

5,380

(4)

(3,226)

-

-

-

(4)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

8

-

-

1

-

-

1

19

-

-

(421)

692

(35)

(14)

-

(2)

12,749

1,376

37

1,546

59

1,182

2,615

32

5,177

627

(89)

1,333

(289)

(15,031)

115

(3,208)

(3,475)

(1,441)

-

-

(7,229)

473

34

|   59

Adjustments recognised in the current year in relation to the deferred tax of prior years

Adjustments recognised in the current year in relation to the current tax of prior years

4

71

(1,044)

(9)

Income tax expense recognised in profit or loss

28,926

41,313

The tax rate used for FY23 and FY22 reconciliations is the corporate tax rate of 30% payable by corporate entities 
in Australia, and 28% in New Zealand.

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

Income tax expense represents the sum of the tax currently payable and deferred tax.

3.2.  Current tax balances

Current tax receivable

Current tax payable

58   |

FY23

$'000

8,115

-

           8,115

FY22

$'000

-

(1,464)

(1,464)

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

Opening 
balance

$'000

Current year 
recognised in 
profit or loss

Previously 
unrecognised 
in profit or loss

Recognised 
directly in 
equity

$'000

$'000

$'000

Closing 
balance

$'000

FY22

Deferred tax assets/(liabilities)

Provision for expected credit loss

Plant, equipment and software

Deferred mortgage insurance

Employee entitlements

Net provision for lease make good

Provision for discharge fee refund

Other accrued expenses 

Blackhole expenditure  

9,903

3,351

163

1,268

59

-

2,165

8

2,598

(113)

(72)

387

-

1,182

1,253

(7)

(680)

1,060

Trail commission payable

4,897

(1,284)

Lease liability

Financial assets

Shares

Share-based payments

Accrued income and other

516

-

(1,627)

1,802

70

76

-

(626)

(70)

Capitalised incentive commission  

(13,483)

(2,861)

Loans and advances 

Deferred bond issue cost 

Derivatives 

1,206

(3,786)

(730)

(802)

3,574

(5,351)

Trail commission receivable

(9,996)

2,767

-

(2)

-

(5)

-

-

(8)

(1)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

(13)

12,488

-

-

(1)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

1,188

(1,287)

-

25

-

8

3,236

91

1,649

59

1,182

3,410

-

3,613

592

380

(439)

(111)

-

(16,319)

476

(4,580)

1,163

(614)

-

(7,229)

90

(4,333)

1,044

1,083

(2,116)

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

Income tax expense represents the sum of the tax currently payable and deferred tax.

3.4.  Current tax

Tax payable is based on taxable profit for the year. Taxable profit differs from ‘profit before tax’ as reported in 
the consolidated statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive income due to a mix of timing and non-
assessable items. The Group's current tax is calculated using tax rates that have been enacted or substantively 
enacted by the end of the reporting period.

3.5.  Deferred tax

Deferred tax is recognised on temporary differences 
between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities 
in the consolidated financial statements and the 
corresponding tax base used in the computation of 
taxable profit.

Deferred tax liabilities (DTLs) are generally recognised 
for all taxable temporary differences. 

Deferred tax assets (DTAs) are generally recognised 
for all deductible temporary differences to the 
extent that it is probable that taxable profits will be 
available against which those deductible temporary 
differences can be utilised. Such DTAs and DTLs are 
not recognised if the temporary difference arises 
from the initial recognition (other than in a business 
combination) of assets and liabilities in a transaction 
that affects neither the taxable profit nor the 
accounting profit.

In addition, DTLs are not recognised if the temporary 
difference arises from the initial recognition of 
goodwill.

DTLs are recognised for taxable temporary differences 
associated with investments in subsidiaries and 
associates, and interests in joint ventures, except 
where the Group is able to control the reversal of 
the temporary difference and it is probable that 
the temporary difference will not reverse in the 
foreseeable future.

DTAs arising from deductible temporary differences 
associated with such investments and interests are 
only recognised to the extent that it is probable that 
there will be sufficient taxable profits against which to 
utilise the benefits of the temporary differences and 
they are expected to reverse in the foreseeable future.

The carrying amount of DTAs is reviewed at the end of 
each reporting period and reduced to the extent that 
it is no longer probable that sufficient taxable profits 
will be available to allow all or part of the asset to be 
recovered.

DTLs and DTAs are measured at the tax rates that are 
expected to apply in the period in which the liability is 
settled or the asset realised, based on tax rates (and 
tax laws) that have been enacted or substantively 
enacted by the end of the reporting period.

The measurement of DTLs and DTAs reflects the tax 
consequences that would follow from the manner in 
which the Group expects, at the end of the reporting 

period, to recover or settle the carrying amount of its 
assets and liabilities.

3.6.  Current and deferred tax for the year

Current and deferred tax are recognised in the 
statement of comprehensive income, except when 
they relate to items that are recognised in other 
comprehensive income or directly in equity, in which 
case, the current and deferred tax are also recognised 
in other comprehensive income or directly in equity 
respectively. Where current tax or deferred tax arises 
from the initial accounting for a business combination, 
the tax effect is included in the accounting for the 
business combination.

3.7.  Tax consolidation and tax effect accounting by 
members of the tax consolidated group

Resimac Group Ltd and its wholly-owned Australian 
controlled entities have implemented the tax 
consolidation legislation. The head entity Resimac 
Group Ltd, and the controlled entities in the tax 
consolidated group continue to account for their own 
current and deferred tax amounts. The Group has 
applied the group allocation approach in determining 
the appropriate amount of current taxes and deferred 
taxes to allocate to members of the tax consolidated 
group. The current and deferred tax amounts are 
measured in a systematic manner that is consistent 
with the broad principles in AASB 112 Income Taxes.  

In addition to its own current and deferred tax 
amounts, the head entity also recognised current 
tax liabilities (or assets) and the deferred tax assets 
arising from unused tax losses and unused tax credits 
assumed from controlled entities in the Resimac tax 
consolidated group. Unused tax losses at 30 June 
2023 is $0.9 million (FY22: $0.9 million).

3.8.  Nature of the tax funding agreement

Members of the Group have entered into a tax funding 
agreement. The tax funding agreement requires 
payments to/from the head entity to be recognised via 
an inter-entity receivable (payable) which is at call. 

The allocation of taxes under the tax funding 
agreement is recognised as an increase or decrease 
in the subsidiaries’ intercompany accounts with the 
tax consolidated group head company, Resimac Group 
Ltd. The amounts receivable or payable under the 
tax funding agreement are due upon receipt of the 
funding advice from the head entity, which is issued 
as soon as practical after the end of each financial 
year.

60   |

|   61

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

4.  Cash and cash equivalents

Reconciliation of liabilities arising from financing activities

Cash at bank and on hand

Cash collections accounts1

Restricted cash2

NOTE

FY23

$'000

22,732

1,062,685

-

FY22

$'000

18,996

912,283

1,502

Issued capital

Share-based 
payment 
reserve

Interest-
bearing 
liabilities

Lease 
liabilities

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

Total

$'000

Balance at 1 July 2022

176,476

494

16,288,455

11,097

16,476,522

22

1,085,417

932,781

Operating cashflows

-

-

17,665

-

17,665

Financing cashflows

(5,192)

675

(1,831,849)

(1,753)

(1,838,119)

Non-cash movements

2,247

(2,114)

(3,200)

25

(3,042)

Balance at 30 June 2023

173,531

(945)

14,471,070

9,369

14,653,026

Balance at 1 July 2021

181,675

2,201

14,701,651

12,482

14,367,009

Operating cashflows

-

-

(4,343)

-

(4,343)

Financing cashflows

(6,132)

165

2,034,839

(1,629)

2,027,243

Non-cash movements

933

(1,872)

87,308

244

86,613

Balance at 30 June 2022

176,476

494

16,288,455

11,097

16,476,522

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

Cash comprises cash deposits and cash equivalents that are short-term, liquid investments readily convertible to 
known amounts of cash, not subject to significant risk of changes in value, and have a maturity of three months or 
less.  

Cash at bank earns interest at floating rates based on daily bank deposit rates. Short-term deposits are made for 
varying periods of between one day and three months, depending on the immediate cash requirements of the 
Group, and earn interest at the respective short-term deposit rates.

Reconciliation of profit after tax to the net cash flows from operating activities

Profit after tax 

ADJUSTMENTS FOR

Depreciation and amortisation

Depreciation charge of right-of-use assets

Amortisation of bond issue costs

Fair value write-down on financial assets

Fair value movement on swaps

Loan impairment expense

Net (profit)/loss on disposal of non-current assets

Movement in present value of future trail commission income

Movement in present value of future trail commission expense

Share-based payments expense

Discount on mortgage

Dividend income from listed equity investments

2

2

2

2

2

(INCREASE)/DECREASE IN ASSETS

Trade and other receivables 

Loans and advances

Other assets

Impairment allowance account

Current tax receivable

Deferred tax assets

INCREASE/(DECREASE) IN LIABILITIES

Trade and other payables

Current tax payable

Interest-bearing liabilities

Provisions

Deferred tax liabilities

66,459

102,147

780

1,643

10,583

3,600

(1,333)

2,240

48

10,200

(4,900)

832

-

(3,780)

791

1,669

11,524

-

(22,593)

11,446

(272)

7,949

(4,039)

790

(232)

(800)

2,191

(1,112)

1,935,471

(1,682,234)

3

(3,437)

(11,499)

(2,791)

(3)

(1,970)

-

-

(2,946)

6,658

-

(12,693)

17,665

(3,661)

-

(4,343)

4,853

(2,970)

Net cash from / (used in) operating activities

2,017,368

(1,585,434)

1   Cash collections account includes monies in the Special Purpose Vehicles and securitisation trusts on behalf of members in those trusts and 

various clearing accounts. These funds are not available for operational use.

2   Cash held in trust as collateral. 

62   |

|   63

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

5.  Trade and other receivables

CURRENT

Fee and commission receivable

Prepayments

GST receivable

Sundry receivables

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

425

2,377

447

223

3,472

604

2,531

960

1,566

5,661

6.  Loans and advances

GROSS LOANS & ADVANCES

Loans and advances

Capitalised upfront commissions

Deferred mortgage fees

Unallocated customer repayments

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

13,750,051

15,684,500

50,238

54,564

(5,740)

(10,107)

(13,070)

(12,056)

13,781,479

15,716,901

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

Less: allowance for impairment

(45,844)

(47,041)

All receivables are derived in the ordinary course of business. No maturity dates are specified as they are normally 
settled within twelve months. There are no long term outstanding receivables as at the reporting date and no 
material impairment recognised.

Trade receivables are recognised initially at fair value and subsequently measured at amortised cost using the 
effective interest method, less an allowance for impairment. The credit risk of trade receivables is considered 
immaterial as they are due from Australian financial institutions with high credit ratings.

Fee and commission receivable

Comprises trail commission receivables on settlement terms of 30 days. This is initially recognised at the fair value 
of the consideration receivable. 

Prepayments

Prepayments are recognised when the costs are incurred and amortised over the period in which the economic 
benefits from these assets are received. 

Sundry receivables

Sundry receivables are receivables arising from various immaterial transactions in the ordinary course of business. 
The Group has assessed these receivables as fully recoverable at balance date. The FY22 comparative amount 
included receivables from Volt Bank for amounts collected on behalf of the Group.

Current 

Non-current

IMPAIRMENT ALLOWANCES 

Collective allowance 

Specific allowance 

22

     13,735,635

15,669,860

4,341,166

4,557,901

9,440,313

11,159,000

13,781,479

15,716,901

43,294

42,692

2,550

4,349

45,844

47,041

MOVEMENT IN IMPAIRMENT ALLOWANCES

Balance at 1 July 

47,041

37,565

Provided for during the year:

•  Specific

•  Collective

Write-offs

Balance at 30 June

1,660

580

(3,437)

45,844

842

10,604

(1,970)

47,041

64   |

|   65

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

Impairment and provisioning

Equity in Unlisted Companies

Loan to related entity

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

All loans and advances are initially recognised at fair 
value plus directly attributable transaction costs, and 
subsequently measured at amortised cost using the 
effective interest rate method.

The effective interest rate is the rate that discounts 
estimated future cash receipts (including all fees paid 
or received that form an integral part of the effective 
interest rate, transaction costs and other premiums or 
discounts) excluding expected credit losses, through 
the expected life of the loans and advances.

Gains and losses are recognised in the statement of 
comprehensive income when the loans and advances 
are derecognised or impaired.

Unallocated customer repayments

Relates to loan repayments received from borrowers 
that reside in clearing accounts not yet allocated to a 
trust at balance date.

7.  Other financial assets

Equity in ASX Listed Companies

Equity in Unlisted Companies

Loan to related entity

Short-term investment

Current 

Non-current

AASB 9 requires an Expected Credit Loss model (ECL) 
at each reporting date to reflect changes in credit risk 
since initial recognition of the loans and advances. 
Impairment policy of loans and advances are included 
in Note 22.

Security properties repossessed

As at 30 June 2023, the Group had exercised their 
right to foreclose on 13 residential properties (FY22: 
13) being the security for loans and advances. These 
loans and advances are security for the funding 
provided by warehouse facilities and securitisation 
trusts. The Group intends to sell these properties with 
the proceeds to go towards clearing the outstanding 
balance of the underlying loans. Mortgages in 
possession are held as part of loans and advances, 
until sold.

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

22

22

22

22

17,077

3,510

8,000

-

15,963

7,260

-

260

28,587

23,483

8,000

20,587

28,587

260

23,223

23,483

Equity in ASX Listed Companies

Equity investments in ASX listed companies are investments the Group intends to hold for long term strategic 
purposes. As permitted by AASB 9, the Group designated these investments at the date of initial application as 
measured at fair value through other comprehensive income. The accumulated fair value reserve related to these 
investments will not be reclassified to profit or loss. Dividends will be recognised in profit or loss as other income 
when the Group’s right to receive payment is established.  

Investments that are not traded in an active market, 
however classified as fair value through profit or 
loss (FVTPL) are disclosed at fair value at the end 
of each reporting period. The fair value assessment 
conducted on the unlisted shares, included assessing 
other market conditions on the current and future 
operating models. The fair value assessments 
include comparisons against forecasted operating 
performance at time of investment. The valuation 
methodology for these investments is disclosed in 
Note 22.

Resimac provided a short-term interest bearing 
loan to a related party. Interest is charged on arm’s 
length terms. Interest income of $0.8 million for the 
year ended 30 June 2023 was fully received and 
is presented within interest income on loans and 
advances in Note 1. 

Short-term investment

Term deposit with fixed or determinable payments and 
fixed maturity date which the Group has the intent and 
ability to hold to maturity.

8.  Right-of-use assets

LEASE - BUILDINGS

Balance at 1 July

Additions

Depreciation

Foreign exchange

Balance at 30 June 

LEASE - BUILDINGS

Right-of-use assets at cost

Less: accumulated depreciation

Total right-of-use assets

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

8,959

10,638

-

-

(1,643)

(1,669)

7

7,323

14,244

(6,921)

7,323

(10)

8,959

14,234

(5,275)

8,959

Right-of-use assets

The Group lease offices with lease terms between 3 
to 8 years. Right-of-use assets are initially measured 
at cost and comprise the following:

•  the amount of the initial measurement of lease 

liability;

•  any lease payments made at or before the 

commencement date less any lease incentives 
received;

•  any initial direct costs; and 

•  restoration costs.

The right-of-use asset is subsequently depreciated 
using the straight-line method from the 
commencement date to the end of the lease term, 
unless the lease transfers ownership of the underlying 
asset to the Group by the lease term or the cost of 
the right-of-use asset reflects that the Group will 
exercise a purchase option. In that case the right-
of-use asset will be depreciated over the useful life 
of the underlying asset, which is determined on the 
same basis as those of property and equipment. In 
addition, the right-of-use asset is periodically reduced 
by impairment losses, if any, and adjusted for certain 
remeasurements of the lease liability. Depreciation of 
right-of-use asset is recognised in the consolidated 
statement of profit or loss. 

66   |

|   67

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

9.  Plant and equipment

10.  Other assets

CARRYING AMOUNTS OF

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

Computer 
equipment

Office 
furniture

Operating lease 
equipment

Leasehold 
improvement

Total

$'000

701

1,928

Balance at 1 July 2022

Additions

Disposals

Depreciation expense

Foreign exchange

Balance at 30 June 2023

Balance at 1 July 2021

Additions

Disposals 

Depreciation expense

Foreign exchange

Balance at 30 June 2022

715

173

(24)

(285)

(18)

561

457

543

(15)

(267)

(3)

715

77

2

(2)

(17)

-

60

122

2

(30)

(17)

-

77

435

13

-

-

-

(190)

(260)

-

258

359

251

-

-

441

981

-

(20)

(175)

(260)

-

435

-

701

188

(26)

(752)

(18)

1,320

1,919

796

(65)

(719)

(3)

1,928

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

Plant and equipment stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment losses.

Depreciation and amortisation

Derecognition

Depreciation is recognised to write off the cost or 
valuation of assets less their residual values over 
their useful lives, using the straight-line method. 
The estimated useful lives, residual values and 
depreciation method are reviewed at the end of each 
reporting period, with the effect of any changes in 
estimate accounted for on a prospective basis.

The following useful lives are used in the calculation of 
depreciation:

Computer equipment

Office furniture

Operating lease equipment

Years

3-4

10

3-7

Leasehold improvement

For life of the lease

An item of plant and equipment is derecognised upon 
disposal or when no future economic benefits are 
expected to arise from the continued use of the asset. 
Any gain or loss arising on the disposal or retirement 
of an item of plant and equipment is determined as 
the difference between the sale proceeds and the 
carrying amount of the asset and is recognised in 
profit or loss.

Impairment

At each reporting date, the Group reviews the carrying 
amounts of plant and equipment to determine whether 
there is any indication that those assets have suffered 
an impairment loss. If any such indication exists, 
the recoverable amount of the asset is estimated to 
determine the extent of the impairment loss (if any). 

68   |

Reinsurance claim receivable

Other 

Current

Non-current

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

4,455

228

4,683

228

4,455

4,683

3,476

231

3,707

231

3,476

3,707

Reinsurance claim receivable

Prime Insurance Group Limited was purchased as part of the RHG Mortgage Corporation Limited (RHG) acquisition 
in 2014. Its sole purpose is to provide mortgage insurance and reinsurance facilities for the RHG mortgage assets 
and process any shortfall claims received. RHG loans ceased origination in FY14, and the portfolio is in run-off. 

The reinsurance claim receivable is available to utilise against the reinsurance claim reserve amount in Note 16.

11.  Goodwill and intangible assets

GOODWILL

Balance at 1 July 

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

27,430

27,430

Additional amount recognised from business combination (see Note 25)

949

-

Balance at 30 June 

28,379

27,430

OTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS

$'000

$'000

Software

Brand name

Total

Balance at 1 July 2022

Amortisation for the year

Write-off during the year

Balance at 30 June 2023

Balance at 1 July 2021

Amortisation for the year

Balance at 30 June 2022

66

(28)

(38)

-

110

(44)

66

-

-

-

-

26

(26)

-

66

(28)

(38)

-

136

(70)

66

|   69

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

11.1.  Goodwill

Goodwill arising on an acquisition of a business 
is carried at cost as established at the date of 
acquisition of the business (less accumulated 
impairment losses, if any). 

Impairment testing

At 30 June 2023, the Group has performed goodwill 
impairment testing, which included consideration 
of the impact of the macroeconomic environment. 
Goodwill of $21.7 million has been allocated for 
impairment assessment purposes to the Australian 
Lending Business (ALB) segment. This segment is 
considered to be the group of cash-generating units 
(CGU) that are expected to benefit from the synergies 
of the business combination to which that goodwill 
relates and is the lowest level at which goodwill is 
allocated. RAF goodwill of $6.7 million, including the 
goodwill recognised from RAF’s investment in 23 
Degrees Capital Partners Pty Ltd, is considered a 
separate CGU and has been separately assessed for 
impairment testing. 

A CGU to which goodwill has been allocated is tested 
for impairment annually, or more frequently when 
there is an indication that the unit may be impaired. 
If the recoverable amount of the CGU is less than 
its carrying amount, the impairment loss is allocated 
first to reduce the carrying amount of any goodwill 
allocated to the unit and then to the other assets 
of the unit pro rata based on the carrying amount 
of each asset in the unit. Any impairment loss for 
goodwill is recognised directly in profit or loss. 
An impairment loss recognised for goodwill is not 
reversed in subsequent periods.

Recoverable amount of the asset

The recoverable amount is equal to the greater of:

•  fair value less costs to sell; and
•  value in use (‘VIU’). 

It is not always necessary to determine both the fair 
value less cost to sell and its VIU. If either of these 
amounts exceed the carrying amount of the CGU, 
there is no impairment of the goodwill and it is not 
necessary to estimate the other amount.

As a result, the VIU methodology is considered to 
be most appropriate as there is no readily available 
market outside specific business sales of an 
equivalent sized business to the ALB and RAF CGUs. 

The VIU calculation requires management to estimate 
future cash flows expected to arrive from the CGU and 

a suitable discount rate in order to calculate present 
value.

Key judgements and assumptions
The key assumptions used for assessing the recoverable amount of the CGUs are as below:

Indicators of impairment

The minimum indicators of impairment have been 
considered by management. These include both 
internal and external sources of information such as:

•  significant changes (historical and future) in 
the market, economic, legal or technological 
environment which would have an adverse impact 
on the Group;

•  decline in market capitalisation below the carrying 

value of net assets;

•  interest rate changes which impact the discount 

rate used in modelling; 

•  evidence of a worsening financial position;

•  plans to discontinue operations; and

•  macro economic conditions.

Management have assessed at 30 June 2023, the 
market capitalisation of the Group was lower than 
the carrying amount of the Group’s net assets. Whilst 
this is considered an indicator of impairment, the 
impairment assessment performed by management 
indicates the recoverable amount of the CGU remains 
higher than the carrying amount resulting in no 
impairment in FY23. 

There were no other indicators of impairment as at 30 
June 2023. 

Inputs to impairment calculations

Cash flow projections
For VIU calculations, cash flow projections are based 
on strategic objectives and business forecasts 
prepared by management and approved by the Board. 
Cash flow projections are four years in length and a 
terminal growth rate beyond this has been applied.

Impairment assessment
In assessing VIU, the estimated future cash flows are 
discounted to their present value using a discount rate 
that reflects current market assessments of the time 
value of money and the risks specific to the CGU. 

Furthermore, each unit or group of units to which the 
goodwill is allocated shall:

•  represent the lowest level at which the goodwill is 
monitored for internal management purposes; and

•  not exceed the operating segments.

The allocation of goodwill to these CGU’s is 
considered appropriate. 

FY23

FY22

ALB

RAF

ALB

RAF

Growth rate for 4-year forecast period (p.a.) 

2.5%

10-25%

Discount rate (post-tax)

Terminal growth rate

11.5%

2.0%

11.5%

2.0%

2.5%

11.5%

2.0%

n/a1

n/a1

n/a1

1   VIU methodology was used for the RAF CGU with effect from FY23. In FY22, the fair value less cost to sell methodology was used.

The post-tax discount rate of 11.5% has been 
determined by estimating the cost of equity that 
applies to the ALB and RAF CGUs. 

Management conducted the following when testing 
the impairment of goodwill:

•  revised budgets, forecasts and other assumptions 

from previous impairment testing to reflect 
the economic conditions at the balance date, 
especially to address increased risk and 
uncertainty;

The volatility in financial markets and the current 
macro economic environment introduces challenges 
to impairment testing. A second layer of stress testing 
was added with discount rates ranging from 11-15% 
which were applied to the base case and stress 
scenarios. Management tested the stress scenario 
and applied a discount rate of 15%, the recoverable 
amount of the CGU exceeded the recorded carrying 
value for the ALB and RAF CGUs. The full sensitivity 
range is outlined as follows:

ALB Headroom ($ millions)

•  considered the impact of macroeconomic 

DISCOUNT RATE

11.0%

11.5%

12.0%

15.0%

conditions and considered outcomes where 
future cash flows are reduced or operating costs 
increase (including interest rate risk and loan book 
growth).

In assessing the VIU for goodwill impairment 
assessment, the potential impact of macroeconomic 
conditions including rising interest rates and inflation 
on cash flows and profit growth have been considered 
under different scenarios:

1)  Base case: Current management view of 

macroeconomic environment:

•  Loan volume: Growth trajectory in line with current 

market conditions

•  Margins: Conservative view declining to flat 

margin scenario

•  Costs: Growth based on CPI assumptions and 

investments required to support organic growth of 
the business

2)  Stress scenario: Assumes severe macroeconomic 
downturn resulting in a sustained downturn in 
Resimac profitability of no growth over a 4 year 
period. The stress scenario indicated sufficient 
headroom remains for goodwill impairment 
purposes. 

Base Case 

145

Stress Test Case 

94

117

70

93

48

(14)

(47)

DISCOUNT RATE

11.0%

11.5%

12.0%

15.0%

RAF Headroom ($ millions)

Base Case 

Stress Test Case 

24

8

22

7

21

7

14

3

The recoverable amount of the CGU would not be 
less than its carrying value in any scenario. Resimac 
management do not believe there are any other 
assumptions based on internal or external sources 
whereby the quantum of the change will eliminate the 
available headroom.

Impairment charge
Management believe potential impacts of the change 
in economic environment have been adequately 
considered for goodwill impairment testing purposes 
at 30 June 2023. Based upon the impairment testing 
performed, there is no impairment charge for FY23 
(FY22: Nil). 

70   |

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2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

11.2.  Other intangible assets 

Intangible assets with finite useful lives that 
are acquired separately are carried at cost less 
accumulated amortisation and accumulated 
impairment losses. Amortisation is recognised on a 
straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives. 

Recognise as an operating expense over the term of 
the service contract:

•  Fee for use of application software

Recognise as an operating expense as the service is 
received:

Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) arrangements

SaaS arrangements are service contracts providing 
the Group with the right to access the cloud provider’s 
application software over the contract period. As 
such, the Group does not recognise a software 
intangible asset at the contract commencement date.

The following outlines the accounting treatment of 
costs incurred in relation to SaaS arrangements:

•  Customisation costs 
•  Configuration costs
•  Data conversion and migration costs
•  Testing costs
•  Training costs

Costs incurred for the development of software code 
that enhances or modifies, or creates additional 
capability, to existing on-premise systems and 
meets the definition of and recognition criteria for an 
intangible asset are recognised as intangible software 
assets.

13.  Interest-bearing liabilities

Debt securities on issue 

Corporate debt facilities

Issuance facilities 

Current 

Non-current

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

14,125,154

15,840,773

50,000

70,000

295,916

377,682

22

14,471,070

16,288,455

4,558,387

4,723,652

9,912,683

11,564,803

14,471,070

16,288,455

12.  Trade and other payables

CURRENT

Revenue collected in advance

Commissions payable

Accruals

Other creditors

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

2,234

644

14,594

9,674

27,146

1,179

5,267

13,433

10,183

30,062

22

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

Trade creditors and other payables are generally settled within 30 day terms and are unsecured. Trade creditors 
and other payables are carried at amortised cost and represent liabilities for goods and services provided to the 
Group prior to the end of the financial year, are unpaid, and arise when the Group becomes obliged to make future 
payments in respect of the purchase of these goods and services.

Revenue collected in advance

Relates to interest income on loans and advances.

Commissions payable

Relates to upfront and trail commission payable to aggregators and brokers.

Accruals and other creditors

Accruals and other creditors are accrued fees and expenses and unsecured payables relating to expenses arising in 
the ordinary course of business. 

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

All borrowings are initially recognised at fair value of 
the consideration received less directly attributable 
transaction costs, and subsequently measured at 
amortised cost using the effective interest method.

Amortised cost is calculated by taking into account 
any fees paid or received between parties to the 
contract that are an integral part of the effective 
interest rate, transaction costs, and all other premiums 
or discounts on acquisition, over the period to 
maturity.

Gains or losses are recognised in the statement of 
profit or loss when the liabilities are derecognised.

For further detail on the amortised cost basis of 
accounting see Note 1 and 2. Details of the Group’s 
interest-bearing liabilities are set out in Note 22.

13.1.  Debt securities on issue

Warehouse facilities

The warehouse facilities in Special Purpose Vehicles 
(SPVs) provide the initial duration financing of 
loans and advances to customers. The security for 
advances under these facilities is a combination 
of fixed and floating charges over all assets of the 
warehouse SPVs, including the mortgage security. If 
the warehouse facility is not renewed or should there 
be a default under the existing terms and conditions, 
the warehouse facility funder will not have a right of 
recourse against the remainder of the Group. 

The total capacity for the 14 warehouse facilities at 30 
June 2023 was AUD 8.3 billion (equivalent) (FY22: 13 
warehouse facilities; AUD 8.2 billion (equivalent)).

During the financial year there were no material 
breaches to the warehouse agreements. All 
warehouse facilities were renewed, on or before their 
maturity date.

Bonds (RMBS and ABS)

Bonds issued by the securitisation trusts provide 
duration funding for loans and advances originated by 
the Group. The bond notes generally have a legal final 
maturity of 31 years from issue, and a call option of up 
to 5 years post issuance. 

The bond holders security is a combination of 
fixed and floating charges over all assets of the 
securitisation trust. Credit losses arising from the 
bonds will not result in the bondholders having a right 
of recourse against the Group (as Originator, Manager 
or Servicer). 

During the year ended 30 June 2023, AUD 2.5 billion 
(equivalent) of new bonds were issued (FY22: AUD 5.8 
billion (equivalent)). These bond issuances paid down 
warehouse facilities creating capacity to fund new 
mortgages. During the financial year, there were no 
breaches to the terms of the bonds. 

72   |

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2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

13.2.  Corporate debt facility 

As at 30 June 2023, the Company had a $30 million 
corporate facility maturing in September 2023. The 
Group had an undrawn balance of $30 million at 30 
June 2023 (FY22: $10 million). In accordance with 
the terms of the Group’s corporate debt facilities, the 
Group is required to comply with certain covenants. 
During the entire year and as at 30 June 2023, the 
Group was compliant with these covenants.

At 30 June 2023, the Group had $50 million in 
corporate debt securities (Secured Capital Note) with 
a 3 year tenor. The $50 million liability is disclosed 
under corporate debt facilities. 

The corporate debt facilities are secured by a first-
ranking charge over the beneficial rights to the trust’s 
residual income of the Group. See Note 23.7 for 
further detail.

13.3.  Issuance facilities

The Group maintains a series of subsidiary SPV’s for 
the purpose of raising financing for its RMBS-related 
credit risk retention (“CRR”) obligations. CRR is a 
mandatory requirement for the Group’s RMBS issuance 
activities in the U.S., European, Japanese and U.K. 
jurisdictions where, in general, the Group is required 
to hold an economic interest of at least 5% in value 
of an RMBS issuance. The subsidiary SPV’s hold a 5% 
vertical strip of bonds of an individual RMBS issuance 
and raises secured financing from banks and credit 
investors.

14.  Lease liabilities

Lease liabilities included in the Statement of Financial Position

Balance at 1 July 

Addition

Interest incurred

Payment of lease liabilities

Foreign exchange

Balance at 30 June 

Current

Non-current

Amounts recognised in Statement of Comprehensive Income

Depreciation charge of right-of-use assets

Interest expense on lease liabilities

Amounts recognised in Statement of Cash Flows

Interest paid

Payment of lease liabilities

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

11,097

12,482

12

411

251

460

(2,164)

(2,089)

13

(7)

9,369

11,097

1,703

7,666

9,369

1,643

411

1,700

9,397

11,097

1,669

460

(411)

(1,753)

(460)

(1,629)

14.1.  Leases

The Group assesses whether a contract is or contains 
a lease, at inception of the contract. The Group 
recognises a right-of-use asset and a corresponding 
lease liability with respect to all lease arrangements 
in which it is the lessee, except for short-term leases 
(defined as leases with a lease term of 12 months 
or less) and leases of low value assets. For these 
leases, the Group recognises the lease payments as 
an operating expense on a straight-line basis over 
the term of the lease unless another systematic 
basis is more representative of the time pattern in 
which economic benefits from the leased assets are 
consumed.

The lease liability is initially measured at the present 
value of the lease payments that are not paid at the 
commencement date, discounted by using the rate 
implicit in the lease. If the rate cannot be readily 
determined, the lessee uses its incremental borrowing 
rate.

Lease payments included in the measurement of the 
lease liability comprise:

•  Fixed lease payments (including in-substance 
fixed payments), less any lease incentives 
receivable;

•  Variable lease payments that depend on an index 

or rate, initially measured using the index or rate at 
the commencement date;

•  The amount expected to be payable by the lessee 

under residual value guarantees;

•  The exercise price of purchase options, if the 
lessee is reasonably certain to exercise the 
options; and

•  Payments to penalties for terminating the lease, if 
the lease term reflects the exercise of an option to 
terminate the lease.

The lease liability is presented as a separate line in the 
consolidated statement of financial position.

The lease liability is subsequently measured by 
increasing the carrying amount to reflect interest on 

the lease liability (using the effective interest method) 
and by reducing the carrying amount to reflect the 
lease payments made.

The Group remeasures the lease liability and makes a 
corresponding adjustment to the related right-of-use 
asset whenever:

•  The lease term has changed or there is a 

significant event or change in circumstances 
resulting in a change in the assessment of 
exercise of a purchase option, in which case the 
lease liability is remeasured by discounting the 
revised lease payments using a revised discount 
rate.

•  The lease payments change due to changes in an 
index or rate or a change in expected payment 
under a guaranteed residual value, in which cases 
the lease liability is remeasured by discounting 
the revised lease payments using an unchanged 
discount rate 

•  A lease contract is modified and the lease 

modification is not accounted for as a separate 
lease, in which case the lease liability is 
remeasured based on the lease term of the 
modified lease by discounting the revised lease 
payments using a revised discount rate at the 
effective date of the modification.

The Group did not make any such adjustments during 
the year presented.

Variable rents that do not depend on an index or 
rate are not included in the measurement of the 
lease liability and the right-of-use asset. The related 
payments are recognised as an expense in the period 
in which the event or condition that triggers those 
payments occurs and are included in “Other expenses” 
in profit or loss (see note 2).

The Group has applied judgement to determine the 
lease term for some lease contracts in which it is a 
lessee that include renewal options. The assessment 
of whether the Group is reasonably certain to 
exercise such options impacts the lease term, which 
significantly affects the amount of lease liabilities and 
right-of-use assets recognised.

74   |

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2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

KEY NUMBERS & POLICIES

15.  Other financial liabilities

16.  Other liabilities

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

NON-CURRENT

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

Present value of future trail 
commission payable

6,850

11,750

Reinsurance claim reserve

4,455

3,476

22

6,850

11,750

4,455

3,476

Current

Non-current

2,267

3,847

4,583

7,903

6,850

11,750

The reinsurance claim reserve offsets with the 
reinsurance claim receivable amount in Note 10.

17.  Provisions

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

The Group makes trail commission payments to 
mortgage originators based on monthly loan balances 
outstanding. No new originations are occurring and 
this portfolio is in run off.

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

Employee benefits

4,647

6,062

Initial Recognition

Office make good

447

447

Discharge fee refund

1,695

3,940

Fair value of future trail commission payable was 
recognised on the origination of white label loans. 
This represents the NPV of the expected future 
trail commission payable under the origination and 
management agreement, less ongoing servicing costs 
not covered by transaction fees.

Other

Subsequent payment

Subsequent to initial recognition, the future trail 
commission payable is measured at amortised cost.

Current

Non-current

The carrying amounts of the trail commissions payable 
are adjusted to reflect actual and revised estimated 
cash flows by calculating the present value of 
estimated future cash flows at the effective interest 
rates at each reporting date. The resulting adjustment 
is recognised as income or expense in the statement 
of comprehensive income.

Refer to Note 1.3 for the key estimates and 
judgements underlying the remeasurement of the 
estimated future cash flows.

550

-

7,339

10,449

6,415

9,493

924

956

Employee 
benefits

$'000

Make
good

$'000

Discharge fee 
refund

$'000

Other

$'000

Total

$'000

Balance at 1 July 2022

Provision recognised/(released)

Provision utilised

6,062

2,532

(3,947)

447

-

-

3,940

(629)

(1,616)

-

10,449

550

2,453

(5,563)

Balance at 30 June 2023

4,647

447

1,695

550

7,339

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT

Provisions are recognised when:

•  the Group has a present obligation (legal or 
constructive) as a result of a past event;

•  it is probable that the Group will be required to 

settle the obligation; and

•  a reliable estimate can be made of the amount of 

the obligation.

The amount recognised as a provision is the best 
estimate of the consideration required to settle the 
present obligation at the end of the reporting period, 
taking into account the risks and uncertainties 
surrounding the obligation. When a provision is 
measured using the cash flows estimated to settle the 
present obligation, its carrying amount is the present 
value of those cash flows (when the effect of the time 
value of money is material).

7,339

10,449

17.1.  Employee benefits

A liability is recognised for benefits accruing to 
employees where the liability can be measured reliably 
and payment is probable, in respect of:

•  wages and salaries; 

•  annual leave; 

•  long service leave; and

•  on-costs relating to the above.

Liabilities recognised in respect of employee 
benefits expected to be settled within 12 months, 
are measured at their nominal values using the 
remuneration rate expected to apply at the time of 
settlement.

Liabilities recognised in respect of employee benefits 
which are not expected to settle within 12 months are 
measured at the present value of the estimated future 
cash outflows to be made by the Group in respect of 
services provided by employees up to the reporting 
date.

The liability for long service leave is recognised in the 
provision for employee benefits. It is measured as the 
present value of expected future payments for the 
services provided by employees up to the reporting 
date. 

Expected future payments are discounted using 
market yields at the reporting date on high quality 
corporate bonds with terms to maturity that match, 
as closely as possible, the estimated future cash 
outflows.

17.2.  Office make good

Where a condition of the Group’s lease premises is to 
return the property in its original condition at the end 
of a lease term. The Group recognises a provision for 
the expected cost of the refurbishment at the end of 
the lease.

17.3.  Discharge fee refund

The Group conducted a governance review of loan 
agreements during FY22, where the Group identified it 
had potentially overcharged a segment of customers 
discharge fees from 2006 to 2017. A liability was 
recognised for the likely economic outflow to refund 
these discharge fees, accrued interest and associated 
cost involved in processing the refunds to the affected 
customers. Refunds to customers have occurred 
throughout FY23.

76   |

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2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

CAPITAL

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

CAPITAL

Capital.

For the year ended
30 June 2023

18.  Capital management

The Group’s capital management objectives

The Group manages its capital to ensure that entities in the Group will be able to continue as a going concern while 
maximising the return to stakeholders through the optimisation of the debt and equity balance.

The Group operates a warehouse for securitisation funding model for its lending business and as such makes 
decisions on the amount of capital invested in the notes or warehouses based on alternate sources of funding and 
the expected return on amounts invested and with regard to the company's cost of capital.

The capital structure of the Group consists of net debt (borrowings net of cash balances) and equity of the Group 
(comprising issued capital, reserves and retained earnings).

The Group is not subject to any externally imposed capital requirements.

19.  Dividends

Declared and paid during the period (fully-franked at 30 percent)

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

Final dividend for FY22: $0.04 (FY21: $0.04)

16,1161

16,336

Interim dividend for FY23: $0.04 (Interim FY22: $0.04)

           16,0572

           16,352

Proposed and unrecognised as a liability (fully-franked at 30 percent)

Final dividend for FY23: $0.04 (FY22: $0.04) 

           32,173

           32,679

16,065

16,065

16,277

16,277

The Board is responsible for monitoring and approving the capital management framework within which 
management operates. The purpose of the framework is to prudently manage capital whilst optimising the debt and 
equity structure.

Franking credit balance

EQUITY

Issued capital

Reserves

Retained earnings

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

20

20

20

111,990

114,935

(19,589)

(25,466)

322,872

288,599

415,273

378,068

Franking credits available for future years at 30% adjusted for the 
payment of income tax and dividends receivable or payable

118,068

95,073

Impact on the franking account of dividends proposed before the 
financial report was issued but not recognised as a distribution to equity 
holders during the period. 

(6,885)

(6,976)

1   The final FY22 dividend paid is net of dividend paid to treasury shares held by the Group ($122,286), eliminated on consolidation.
2   The interim FY23 dividend paid is net of dividend paid to treasury shares held by the Group ($110,864), eliminated on consolidation.

78   |

|   79

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

CAPITAL

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

CAPITAL

20.  Issued capital and reserves

20.2.  Treasury shares

Treasury shares held in Resimac Group Ltd by Resimac EST Pty Ltd as Trustee for the Resimac Group Limited 
Employee Share Trust, are for the benefit of eligible employees of the Resimac Group Employee Share Option and 
Rights Plan. Shares issued to employees are recognised on a first-in-first-out basis.

Issued capital

Treasury shares

Share capital

Reverse acquisition reserve1

Balance at 30 June 

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

175,806

180,998

(2,275)

(4,522)

173,531

176,476

(61,541)

(61,541)

111,990

114,935

1   As a result of reverse acquisition accounting in the Resimac/Homeloans merger, an account was created as a component of equity. This account 

called ‘Reverse acquisition reserve’ is similar in nature to share capital. The Reverse acquisition reserve is not available for distribution.

Balance at 1 July 2021                                                        

Allocation of shares under LTI#1 (Tranche 2)

Allocation of shares under Employee Share Plan

Acquisition of shares (average price: $1.48 per share)

Issued capital as at 30 June 2023 was $175,805,688 (401,622,340 ordinary shares). 

Balance at 30 June 2022                                                        

Allocation of shares under LTI#2 

Allocation of shares under Employee Share Plan

Allocation of shares under LTI#1 Tranche 3

Balance at 30 June 2023                                                        

Movements in issued capital during the year relate to the acquisition of 5,290,163 shares for $5,192,468 (average 
price of $0.98 per share) under the Group’s on market share buyback scheme. These shares were cancelled prior to 
30 June 2023.

20.1.  Issued capital

No. of shares - 
Thousands

$'000

Balance at 1 July 2021

408,404

183,011

Issue of shares under the DRP:

•  FY21 Dividend on 21 September 2021

•  HY22 Dividend on 24 March 2022

388

603

837

957

Share buyback cancelled shares (average price: $1.53 per share)

(2,483)

(3,807)

Balance at 30 June 2022

406,912

180,998

Share buyback cancelled shares (average price: $0.98 per share)

(5,290)

(5,192)

Balance at 30 June 2023

401,622

175,806

Fully paid ordinary shares, which have no par value, carry one vote per share and carry a right to dividends.

No. of shares - 
Thousands

$'000

540

(300)

(100)

2,785

2,925

(785)

(200)

(300)

1,640

1,336

(740)

(192)

4,118

4,522

(1,485)

(305)

(457)

2,275

80   |

|   81

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

CAPITAL

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

CAPITAL

20.3.  Reserves (net of income tax) and retained earnings

RESERVES

Retained 
earnings

Cash flow 
hedge 
reserve

Foreign 
currency 
translation 
reserve

Fair value 
reserve

Share-
based 
payment 
reserve

Other 
reserve

Non-
controlling 
interest

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

Balance at 1 July 2021

219,131

(9,917)

(55)

(2,373)

2,201

(7,982)

Profit after tax

102,147

-

Changes in fair value of cash flow 
hedges, net of tax

Currency translation differences

Fair value movement on investment 
through OCI, net of tax

Equity dividends

Share-based payments

-

-

-

(32,679)

-

(2,714)

-

-

-

-

-

-

(1,236)

-

-

-

-

-

-

(1,683)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

(1,707)

-

-

-

-

-

-

Balance at 30 June 2022

288,599

(12,631)

(1,291)

(4,056)

494

(7,982)

Balance at 1 July 2022

288,599

(12,631)

(1,291)

(4,056)

494

(7,982)

Acquisition of non-controlling interest

-

Profit after tax

66,446

Changes in fair value of cash flow 
hedges, net of tax

Currency translation differences

Fair value movement on investment 
through OCI, net of tax

Equity dividends

Share-based payments

-

-

-

(32,173)

-

-

-

8,1411

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

789

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

(1,614)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

(1,439)

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

97

13

-

-

-

-

-

20.4.  Nature and purpose of reserves 

Cash flow hedge reserve

The cash flow hedging reserve represents the 
cumulative effective portion of gains or losses arising 
on changes in fair value of hedging instruments 
entered into for cash flow hedges. The cumulative 
gain or loss arising on changes in fair value of the 
hedging instruments will be reclassified to profit or 
loss only when the hedged transaction affects the 
profit or loss, or included as a basis adjustment to the 
non-financial hedged item, consistent with the Group’s 
accounting policy. 

Foreign currency translation reserve

Exchange differences relating to the translation of the 
results and net assets of the Group's New Zealand 
operations from its functional currency to the Group's 

presentation currency are recognised directly in other 
comprehensive income and accumulated in the foreign 
currency translation reserve.

Share-based payment reserve

The share-based payments reserve is used to 
recognise the value of equity-settled share-based 
payments provided to employees, including KMP, as 
part of their remuneration. Refer to Note 31 for further 
details of these plans.

Other reserve

Other reserves represent the recognition made 
directly in equity for the difference between the 
amount by which the Non-Controlling Interest (NCI) 
was adjusted, and the fair value of consideration paid 
on Resimac’s acquisition of the remaining 40% shares 
of RAF on 1 February 2021. 

21.  Earnings per share

FY23

FY22

Profit attributable to ordinary equity holders of the parent ($'000) 

66,446

102,147

WANOS1 used in the calculation of basic EPS (shares, thousands) 

402,215

407,743

Dilutive effect of share options

1,054

2,498

WANOS1 used in the calculation of diluted EPS (shares, thousands) 

403,269

410,241

EARNINGS PER SHARE

Basic (cents per share)

Diluted (cents per share)

1   Weighted average number of shares.

Calculation of earnings per share

16.52

16.48

25.05

24.90

Balance at 30 June 2023

322,872

(4,490)

(502)

(5,670)

(945)

(7,982)

110

21.1.  Basic earnings per share 

21.2.  Diluted earnings per share

Basic earnings per share is calculated as net profit 
attributable to the ordinary equity holders of the 
parent, adjusted to exclude any costs of servicing 
equity (other than dividends), divided by the WANOS 
adjusted for any bonus element.

Diluted earnings per share is calculated by:

•  dividing the net profit attributable to ordinary 

equity holders of the parent; by the

•  WANOS outstanding during the year; plus

•  the WANOS that would be issued on the 

conversion of all the dilutive potential ordinary 
options or rights into ordinary shares.

1   The change in fair value of cash flow hedges (net of tax) includes: a) gross change in fair value of $69,421,000 b) reclassification from cash flow 

hedge reserve to profit or loss of $(57,803,000) and c) tax impact of $(3,477,000).

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Risk.

For the year ended
30 June 2023

22.  Financial assets and financial liabilities

The Group holds the following financial instruments:

Basis of 
measurement

NOTE

FINANCIAL ASSETS

Cash and cash equivalents

Amortised cost   

Trade and other receivables (excluding prepayments)

Amortised cost

Loans and advances

Short-term investment 

Equity in ASX Listed Companies

Equity in Unlisted Companies

Amortised cost

Amortised cost

FVOCI

FVTPL

Loans to related party

Amortised cost

Derivative financial assets – Cross currency swaps

Derivative financial assets – Interest rate swaps

Derivative financial assets – Interest rate swaps

Derivative financial assets – Overnight index swaps

FVCHR

FVCHR

FVTPL

FVTPL

FINANCIAL LIABILITIES

Trade and other payables

Interest-bearing liabilities

Lease liabilities

Amortised cost   

Amortised cost

Amortised cost

Present value of trail commission payable 

Amortised cost

Derivative financial Liabilities – Overnight index swaps

FVTPL

4

5

6

7

7

7

7

23

23

23

23

12

13

14

15

23

22.1.  Fair values measurements and valuation processes

22.1.1.  Fair value hierarchy

The different levels have been defined as follows: 

•  Level 1: quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or liabilities; 

•  Level 2: inputs other than quoted prices included within level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, 

either directly (i.e. as prices) or indirectly (i.e. derived from prices); and 

•  Level 3: inputs for the asset or liability that are not based on observable market data (unobservable inputs). 

The following assets and liabilities are measured at fair value by the Group for financial reporting purposes:

FINANCIAL ASSETS

Equity in ASX Listed 
Companies

Equity in Unlisted 
Companies

Fair value 
hierarchy

Valuation technique(s) 
and key input(s)

Level 1

Level 3

Most recent traded price and other available
market information.

Acquisition value, financial performance since 
acquisition.
Subsequent capital raise since acquisition 
adjusted for changes in market and 
macroeconomic factors.

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

17,077

15,963

3,510

7,260

Interest rate swaps

Level 2

Discounted cash flow.
Forward interest rates, contract interest rates.

20,722

27,252

Cross currency swaps

Level 2

Discounted cash flow.
Forward interest rates, contract interest rates.

4,474

11,400

Overnight index swaps

Level 2

Discounted cash flow.
Forward interest rates, contract interest rates.

-

568

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

1,085,417

932,781

1,095

3,130

13,735,635

15,669,860

-

17,077

3,510

8,000

4,474

4,760

260

15,963

7,260

-

11,400

-

15,962

27,252

FINANCIAL LIABILITIES

-

568

14,875,930

16,668,474

27,146

30,062

14,471,070

16,288,455

9,369

6,850

426

11,097

11,750

235

14,514,861

16,341,599

Overnight index swaps

Level 2

Discounted cash flow.
Forward interest rates, contract interest rates.

426

235

In the year to 30 June 2023 there has been no change in the fair value hierarchy or the valuation 
techniques applied to any of the balances above.

For further information on the use of derivatives refer to Note 23 Financial risk management.

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22.1.2.  Fair value of financial assets and liabilities 
that are not measured at fair value (but fair value 
disclosures are required)

•  its contractual terms give rise on specified dates 

to cash flows that are solely payments of principal 
and interest on the principal amount outstanding.

With the exception of the future trail commission 
receivable and payable that are initially recognised 
at fair value and subsequently carried at amortised 
cost, management consider that the carrying amounts 
of financial assets and liabilities recognised in the 
consolidated financial statements approximate their 
fair values.

22.2.  Financial assets and liabilities 

22.2.1.  Recognition and initial measurement

All financial assets and financial liabilities are initially 
recognised when the Group becomes a party to the 
contractual provisions of the instrument.

A financial asset (unless it is a trade receivable 
without a significant financing component) or finance 
liability is initially measured at fair value plus, for 
an item not at FVTPL, transaction costs that are 
directly attributable to its acquisition or issue. A trade 
receivable without a significant financing component 
is initially measured at the transaction price.

22.2.2.  Classification and subsequent measurement

22.2.2.1. Financial assets 

On initial recognition, a financial asset is classified as 
measured at:

•  amortised cost

•  fair value through other comprehensive income 

(FVOCI) – debt instrument

•  fair value through other comprehensive income 

(FVOCI) – equity instrument 

•  fair value through cash flow hedge reserve 

(FVCHR) – cash flow hedges

•  fair value through profit or loss (FVTPL)  

Financial assets are not reclassified subsequent to 
their initial recognition unless the Group changes its 
business model for managing financial assets, in which 
case all affected financial assets are reclassified on 
the first day of the first reporting period following the 
change in the business model.

A financial asset is measured at amortised cost if 
it meets both of the following conditions and is not 
designated as at FVTPL:

•  it is held within a business model whose objective 
is to hold assets to collect contractual cash flows; 
and

A debt investment is measured at FVOCI if it meets 
both of the following conditions and is not designated 
as at FVTPL:

•  it is held within a business model whose objective 
is achieved by both collecting contractual cash 
flows and selling financial assets; and

•  its contractual terms give rise on specified dates 

to cash flows that are solely payments of principal 
and interest on the principal amount outstanding.

On initial recognition of an equity investment that is 
not held for trading, the Group may irrevocably elect 
to present subsequent changes in the investment’s fair 
value in OCI. This election is made on an investment-
by-investment basis.

See Note 23.3 for recognition and measurement of 
derivatives designated as cash flow hedges.

All financial assets not classified as measured at 
amortised cost or FVOCI or FVCHR as described 
above are measured as FVTPL. This includes the 
Group’s overnight index swaps and majority of interest 
rate swaps derivative financial assets and investment 
securities. On initial recognition, the Group may 
irrevocably designate a financial asset that otherwise 
meets the requirements to be measured at amortised 
cost or at FVOCI or at FVCHR as at FVTPL if doing so 
eliminates or subsequently reduces an accounting 
mismatch that would otherwise arise. 

22.2.2.2. Financial assets – Business model 
assessment

The Group determines the business model at the 
level that reflects how groups of financial assets 
are managed. In determining the business model, 
all relevant evidence that is available at date of 
assessment is used including:

•  how the performance of the financial assets held 
within that business model are evaluated and 
reported to the Group’s KMP

•  the risks that affect the performance of the 

business model (and the financial assets held 
within that business model) and, in particular, the 
way in which those risks are managed; and

•  how managers of the business are compensated 
(for example, whether compensation is based on 
the fair value of the assets managed or on the 
contractual cash flows collected).

Financial assets that are held for trading or are 
managed and whose performance is evaluated on a 
fair value basis are measured at FVTPL. 

22.2.2.3. Financial assets – Assessment whether 
contractual cash flows are solely payments of 
principal and interest

For the purpose of this assessment, ‘principal’ is 
defined as the fair value of the financial asset on 
initial recognition. ‘Interest’ is defined as consideration 
for the time value of money and for the credit risk 
associated with the principal amount outstanding 
during a particular period of time and for other 
basic lending risks and costs (e.g. liquidity risk and 
administrative costs), as well as a profit margin.

In assessing whether the contractual cash flows are 
solely payments of principal and interest, the Group 
considers the contractual terms of the instrument. 
This includes assessing whether the financial asset 
contains a contractual term that could change the 
timing or amounts of contractual cash flows such 
that it would not meet this condition. In making this 
assessment, the Group considers:

•  contingent events that would change the amount 

or timing of cash flows;

•  terms that may adjust the contractual coupon rate, 

including variable-rate features;

•  prepayment and extension features; and

•  terms that limit the Group’s claim to cash flows 

from specified assets (e.g. non-recourse features).

A prepayment feature is consistent with the solely 
payments of principal and interest criterion if the 
prepayment amount substantially represents unpaid 
amounts of principal and interest on the principal 
amount outstanding, which may include reasonable 
additional compensation for early termination of the 
contract. Additionally, for a financial asset acquired at 
a discount or premium to its contractual par amount, 
a feature that permits or requires prepayment at an 
amount that substantially represents the contractual 
par amount plus accrued (but unpaid) contractual 
interest (which may also include reasonable additional 
compensation for early termination) is treated as 
consistent with this criterion if the fair value of 
the prepayment feature is insignificant at initial 
recognition.

22.2.2.4. Financial assets – Subsequent 
measurement and gains and losses

Financial assets 
at FVTPL

Financial assets 
at amortised 
cost

Debt 
investments at 
FVOCI

Equity 
investments at 
FVOCI

These assets are subsequently 
measured at fair value. Net 
gains and losses, including any 
interest or dividend income, are 
recognised in profit or loss. 

These assets are subsequently 
measured at amortised cost 
using the effective interest 
method. The amortised cost 
is reduced by expected 
impairment loss. Interest 
income, foreign exchange gains 
and losses and impairment are 
recognised in profit or loss. Any 
gain or loss on derecognition is 
recognised in profit or loss.

These assets are subsequently 
measured at fair value. 
Interest income is calculated 
using the effective interest 
method. Other net gains and 
losses are recognised in OCI. 
On derecognition, gains and 
losses accumulated in OCI are 
reclassified to profit or loss. 

These assets are subsequently 
measured at fair value. 
Dividends are recognised as 
income in profit or loss unless 
the dividend clearly represents 
a recovery of part of the cost of 
the investment. Other net gains 
and losses are recognised in 
OCI and are never reclassified 
to profit or loss. In disposal or 
derecognition of investment 
the cumulative gain or loss 
is not reclassified to profit or 
loss, instead it is transferred to 
retained earnings.

Derivatives at 
FVCHR

See Note 23.3 for derivatives 
designated as cash flow 
hedges.

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22.2.2.5. Financial liabilities – Classification, 
subsequent measurement and gains and losses

Financial liabilities are classified as either financial 
liabilities at FVPTL or other financial liabilities.

Financial liabilities at FVTPL

Financial liabilities are classified as at FVTPL where 
the liability is either held for trading or designated at 
fair value through profit or loss.

A financial liability is held for trading if:

•  it has been incurred principally for the purpose of 

repurchasing it in the near term; or

•  on initial recognition it is a part of a portfolio of 
identified financial instruments that the Group 
manages together and has a recent actual pattern 
of short-term profit-taking; or 

•  it is a derivative that is not designated and 

effective as a hedging instrument.

A financial liability other than a financial liability held 
for trading may be designated as at FVTPL upon initial 
recognition if:

•  such designation eliminates or significantly 

reduces a measurement or recognition 
inconsistency that would otherwise arise; or 

•  the financial liability forms part of a group of 
financial assets or financial liabilities or both, 
which is managed and its performance evaluated 
on a fair value basis, in accordance with the 
Group’s documented risk management or 
investment strategy, and  information about the 
grouping is provided internally on that basis; or  

•  it forms part of a contract containing one or more 
embedded derivatives, and AASB 9 permits the 
entire combined contract to be designated as at 
FVTPL. 

Financial liabilities at FVTPL are stated at fair value 
with any gains or losses arising on remeasurement 
recognised in profit or loss. The net gain or loss 
recognised in profit or loss incorporates any interest 
paid on the financial liability and is included in the 
‘other gains and losses' line item. 

Other financial liabilities

Other financial liabilities (including borrowings and 
trade and other payables) are subsequently measured 
at amortised cost using the effective interest method.

The effective interest method is a method of 
calculating the amortised cost of a financial liability 
and of allocating interest expense over the relevant 

period. The effective interest rate is the rate that 
exactly discounts estimated future cash payments 
(including all fees and points paid or received that 
form an integral part of the effective interest rate, 
transaction costs and other premiums or discounts) 
through the expected life of the financial liability, 
or (where appropriate) a shorter period, to the net 
carrying amount on initial recognition.

22.2.3.  Derecognition

22.2.3.1. Financial assets

The Group derecognises a financial asset when the 
contractual rights to the cash flows from the financial 
asset expire, or it transfers the rights to receive 
the contractual cash flows in a transaction in which 
substantively all of the risks and rewards of ownership 
of the financial asset are transferred or in which the 
Group neither transfers nor retains substantially all of 
the risks and rewards of ownership and it does not 
retain control of the financial asset. 

The Group enters into transactions whereby it 
transfers assets recognised in its statement of 
financial position, but retains either all or substantially 
all of the risks and rewards of the transferred assets. 
In these cases, the transferred assets are not 
derecognised. 

22.2.3.2. Financial liabilities

The Group derecognises a financial liability when its 
contractual obligations are discharged or cancelled, 
or expire. The Group also derecognises a financial 
liability when its terms are modified and the cash 
flows of the modified liability are substantially 
different, in which case a new financial liability based 
on the modified terms is recognised at fair value. 

On derecognition of a financial liability, the difference 
between the carrying amount extinguished and the 
consideration paid (including any non-cash assets 
transferred or liabilities assumed) is recognised in 
profit or loss

22.2.4.  Modification of financial instruments

A financial instrument is modified when its original 
contractual cash flows are renegotiated or modified. 
A financial asset that is renegotiated is derecognised 
if the rights to receive cash flows from the existing 
agreement have expired, either through replacement 
by a new agreement or the existing terms are modified 
to that effect. A financial liability that is renegotiated 
is derecognised if the existing agreement is cancelled 
and a new agreement is made on substantially 
different terms or if that existing terms are modified 
such that the renegotiated financial instrument is a 
substantially different financial instrument. 

Where the modification results in derecognition of 
the original  financial instrument, the new financial 
instrument is recorded initially at its fair value and the 
resulting difference is recognised in profit or loss in 
accordance with the nature of the financial instrument 
as described in the derecognition of financial assets 
and liabilities policy.

For financial instruments measured at amortised cost, 
and for debt financial assets measured at FVOCI, 
when modification does not result in derecognition, 
a gain or loss is recognised in profit or loss in 
accordance with the nature of the financial instrument 
as described in the derecognition of financial assets 
and liabilities policy. The gain or loss is measured 
as the adjustment of the gross carrying amount to 
reflect the renegotiated or modified contractual cash 
flows, discounted at the instrument’s original effective 
interest rate.

22.2.5.  Impairment of financial assets

The Group recognises loss allowances for expected 
credit loss (ECL) on:

•  Trade and other receivables

•  Loans and advances measured at amortised cost

•  Contract assets

•  Lease receivables

The Group applies the following approach for 
measuring credit provisions:

•  Specific Provisions (Stage 3); 

•  ECL modelled Collective Provision in line with 

AASB 9 requirements; and

•  Post model overlays including macroeconomic, 

model and management overlays.

ECL’s are monitored regularly in conjunction with 
monthly hardship and arrears metrics provided to 
the Group’s Asset and Liabilities Committee (ALCO).  
The Group takes a tailored loan by loan approach to 
managing credit risk.  

Measurement of ECLs

ECLs are a probability-weighted estimate of credit 
losses. Credit losses are measured as the present 
value of all cash shortfalls (i.e. the difference between 
the cash flows due to the entity in accordance with 
the contract and the cash flows that the Group 
expects to receive). The key inputs used in measuring 
ECL include:

(a)  probability of default: the PD is the likelihood 

of default, applied to each individual underlying 
exposure

(b)  loss given default: the LGD is an estimate of 
the severity of loss following a default event, 
taking into consideration the mitigating effect 
of mortgage insurance if applicable, collateral 
and time value of money. Mortgage insurance 
is reflected indirectly in the LGD, as mortgage 
insured loans are not expected to incur loss 
following default. 

(c)  exposure at default: the EAD represents the 
estimated exposure in the event of a default

(d)  Significant increase in credit risk: An asset moves 

to stage 2 when its credit risk has increased 
significantly since initial recognition. A significant 
increase in credit risk is identified before the 
exposure has defaulted and at the latest when 
exposure becomes 31 days past due. When 
determining whether the credit risk of a financial 
asset has increased significantly since the initial 
recognition and when estimating ECLs, the Group 
considers reasonable and supportable information 
that is relevant and readily available, including 
both quantitative and qualitative information 
and analysis, based on the Group’s historical 
experience. 

(e)  Post model overlays: Management apply various 

overlays to ensure the Group has sufficient 
Balance Sheet coverage for known and potential 
credit risk factors that are not modelled in the 
above assumptions including:

Model risk overlay – applied by management to the 
base ECL model for potential errors in development 
and implementation of any of the quantitative 
elements underpinning the model. Model risk overlay 
is applied at 20% of modelled ECL (base ECL and 
macroeconomic model overlay). 

Macroeconomic overlay – overlaid to the base 
ECL model to provide for potential macroeconomic 
factors not considered in the ECL model output (e.g. 
rising unemployment, house price decline, low wage 
growth). As part of the forward-looking assessment, 
the Group has considered factors including macro-
economic forecast and outlook, housing price index, 
GDP growth, unemployment rates and interest rates.

Management overlay – applied by management where 
higher Balance Sheet provision coverage is deemed 
appropriate.

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The collective provision coverage of the Group has 
been increased by modelling three hypothetical 
downside macroeconomic scenarios. These 
scenarios allow the Group to increase coverage for 
potential scenarios that may occur in the future, 
in addition to the base ECL model which uses the 
preceding 48 months of arrears and loss history. The 
macroeconomic scenarios are based on the following 
key levers:

•  Property prices – underlying securities are 

stressed by percentages based on their ranking 

on the CoreLogic Hedonic Index property value 
bands. These stress tests allow the Group to 
assess underlying credit risk on a loan by loan 
basis in each of the downside scenarios.  

•  Probability of default – stress each borrower with a 
multiple of their actual PD. The PD stress multiple 
increases as the underlying security stress 
increases, factoring in the likely macroeconomic 
impacts that would be experienced in a 
declining property market scenario (e.g. higher 
unemployment, lower GDP).

The table below summarises the macroeconomic assumptions used for each of the scenarios. Each scenario is 
applied a weighting to aggregate a macroeconomic overlay for inclusion in the Group’s total collective provision.

HOUSE PRICE IMPACT

Lower

Mid

Upper

PROBABILITY OF DEFAULT IMPACT

Prime

Near Prime

Specialist

PROBABILITY OF DEFAULT 

Prime

Near Prime

Specialist

Scenario

1

2

3

-5.00%

-10.00%

-15.00%

-7.50%

-15.00%

-20.00%

-10.00%

-20.00%

-25.00%

2.5

2.5

2.5

4.0

4.0

4.0

6.0

6.0

6.0

2.58%

4.28%

4.14%

6.84%

6.20%

10.27%

13.42%

21.48%

32.22%

PROBABILITY WEIGHTING

35.0%

35.0%

30.0%

The Group measures loss allowances at an amount 
equal to the lifetime ECL for stage 2 or stage 3 
assets if the credit risk on that financial instrument 
has increased significantly since recognition (stage 
2), or are credit impaired (stage 3), or if the financial 
instrument is a purchased or originated credit-
impaired financial asset (stage 3). If the credit risk on 
a financial instrument has not increased significantly 
since initial recognition (except for a purchased 
or originated credit-impaired financial asset), the 
Group measures the loss allowance for that financial 
instrument at an amount equal to a 12 month ECL for 
stage 1 assets. 

Credit-impaired financial assets

The movement between stage 2 and 3 will be based 
on whether financial assets are credit-impaired at the 
reporting date. A financial asset is credit-impaired 
when one or more events that have a detrimental 
impact on the estimated future cash flows of the 
financial assets have occurred. Evidence that a 
financial asset is credit-impaired includes observable 
data about the following events:

•  significant financial difficulty of the borrower; or

•  breach of contract, such as a default or 

delinquency in interest or principal payments; or

•  becoming apparent that the borrower will enter 

bankruptcy or financial re-organisation; or 

•  past experience of collecting payments; or

•  an increase in the number of delayed payments in 

the portfolio past the average credit period; or

•  observable changes in national or local economic 

conditions that correlate with default on 
receivables.

See Note 23.6 for further details on credit-impaired 
financial assets. 

Definition of default

The Group considers that default has occurred at 90 
days past due.

The Group aligns its approach to credit risk in line 
with the segmentation of AASB 9. As such, the ECL 
for financial assets measured at amortised cost is 
determined with reference to the following stages:

Stage 1: 12 month ECL

At initial recognition, for financial assets without a 
significant increase in credit risk (SICR), or for financial 
assets where an increase in credit risk is considered to 
be low, ECL is determined based on PD over the next 
12 months and the LGD, adjusted for forward looking 
estimates (FLE).

Stage 2: Lifetime ECL not credit impaired

Where there has been a SICR, the ECL is determined 
with reference to the financial asset’s lifetime PD, 
the lifetime losses associated with that PD and 
LGD, adjusted for FLE. The Group assesses whether 
there has been a SICR since initial recognition 
based on qualitative, quantitative, and reasonable 
and supportable FLE that includes management 
judgement. Use of more alternative criteria could 
result in significant changes to the timing and amount 
of ECL to be recognised. Lifetime ECL is generally 
determined based on the average maturity of the 
financial asset. The Group also classifies certain loans 
that have a resolved hardship status as stage 2 for an 
observation period after the cessation of the hardship 
arrangement.

Stage 3: Lifetime ECL credit impaired

Financial assets are classified as stage 3 where they 
are determined to be credit impaired, which generally 
matches the Group’s definition of default which 
includes exposures that are at least 90 days past 
due, and where the obligor is unlikely to pay without 
recourse against available collateral. 

The ECL for credit impaired financial assets is 
generally measured as the difference between the 
discounted contractual and discounted expected cash 
flows from the individual exposure. For credit impaired 
exposure that are modelled collectively, ECL is 
measured as the product of the lifetime PD, LGD, and 
EAD, adjusted for FLE. Interest income is determined 
with reference to the financial asset’s amortised cost 
carrying value, being the financial asset’s net carrying 
value after the ECL provision. 

Stage 3: Impaired assets (specific)

Outside of the ECL, where assets are more than 
90 days past due and a shortfall between the loan 
balance and the underlying security has been 
identified, a specific provision is raised for the 
shortfall.  

90   |

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2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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23.  Financial risk management

23.1.  Financial risk management objectives 

The Group's Corporate Treasury function:

•  implements and executes treasury and funding strategy; 

•  co-ordinates access to domestic and international financial markets; and 

•  monitors and manages the financial risks relating to the operations of the Group through internal monitoring 

tools which analyse exposures by degree and magnitude of risks. 

These risks include:

•  market risk (including currency risk and interest rate risk); 

•  economic risk;

•  interest rate risk;

•  credit risk; and

•  liquidity risk.

23.2.  Derivative financial instruments 

The Group seeks to minimise the effects of currency and interest rate risks by using derivative financial instruments 
to hedge risk exposures. 

The use of financial derivatives is governed by the Group's Interest Rate Risk Management Policy approved by the 
Board of Directors, which provide written principles on:

•  foreign exchange risk;

•  interest rate risk; 

•  credit risk;

•  the use of financial derivatives and non-derivative financial instruments; and

•  the investment of excess liquidity. 

Compliance with policies and exposure limits is reviewed by the Board on a continuous basis. The Group does not 
enter into or trade financial instruments, including derivative financial instruments, for speculative or proprietary 
purposes.

The table below summarises the Group’s exposure to financial risks and how these risks are managed.

RISK

Exposure arising from

Measurement

Management

Market risk - 
currency

Recognised financial assets and 
liabilities not denominated in Australian 
dollars.

Foreign currency denominated profit or 
losses.

Cash flow       
forecasting 
Sensitivity 
analysis

Cross currency interest rate 
swaps.

Cash flow management and 
matching.

Market risk - 
interest rate

Mismatch in interest rates between
assets and liabilities.

Investments in equity securities.

Sensitivity 
analysis

Sensitivity 
analysis

Interest rate swaps and 
overnight index swaps.

Equity investments not held for 
trading.

Market risk - 
equity 
investment 
valuation 

Credit risk

Loan portfolio and bond exposures, 
counterparty risk.

Credit risk 
analysis
Rating agency 
criteria and 
analyses

Diversification, adaptive capital 
structures, strong collections/
portfolio management, 
rating agency provisions in 
transactions documents.

Liquidity risk

Borrowings, derivative financial 
liabilities.

Rolling cash flow 
forecasts

Availability of committed credit 
lines and borrowing facilities, 
securitisation, capital relief 
transactions, structuring terms 
of obligations, diversification of 
funders.

RECOGNITION & MEASUREMENT 

Derivatives are initially recognised at fair value at the 
date the derivative contracts are entered into and are 
subsequently remeasured to their fair value at each 
reporting period. 

The resulting gain or loss is recognised in profit or loss 
immediately unless the derivative is designated and 
effective as a hedging instrument, in which event the 
timing of the recognition in profit or loss depends on 
the nature of the hedge relationship. 

23.3.  Hedge accounting

Furthermore, at the inception of the hedge and on 
an ongoing basis, the Group documents whether 
the hedging instrument that is used in a hedging 
relationship is effective in offsetting changes 
in fair values or cash flows of the hedged item 
attributable to the hedged risk, which is when the 
hedging relationships meet all of the following hedge 
effectiveness requirements:

•  there is an economic relationship between the 

hedged item and the hedging instrument;

The Group designates certain hedging instruments, 
which includes derivatives in respect of foreign 
currency and interest rate risks, as cash flow hedges. 

•  the effect of credit risk does not dominate the 
value changes that result from that economic 
relationship; and

At the inception of the hedge relationship the 
Group documents the relationship between the 
hedging instrument and hedged item, along with 
its risk management objectives and its strategy for 
undertaking various hedge transactions. 

•  the hedge value is largely reflective of the hedged 

item.

92   |

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|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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23.3.1.  Cash flow hedges

Hedge accounting is discontinued when:

•  the Group revokes the hedging relationship; 

30 JUNE 2022 (DISCLOSED IN AUD)

The effective portion of changes in the fair value of 
derivatives that are designated and qualify as cash 
flow hedges is recognised in other comprehensive 
income and accumulated under the heading of cash 
flow hedging reserve. The gain or loss relating to the 
ineffective portion is recognised immediately in profit 
or loss.

Amounts previously recognised in other 
comprehensive income and accumulated in equity are 
reclassified to profit or loss, in the same line as the 
recognised hedged item.

The majority of the Group’s interest rate swaps are 
not designated as hedging instruments for accounting 
purposes, the changes in the fair value are recognised 
immediately in profit or loss for these interest rate 
swaps.

•  the hedging instrument expires or is sold, 

terminated, or exercised; or

•  the Group no longer qualifies for hedge 

accounting. 

Any cumulative gain or loss recognised in other 
comprehensive income and accumulated in equity at 
that time remains in equity and is recognised when 
the forecast transaction is ultimately recognised in 
profit or loss. When a forecast transaction is no longer 
expected to occur, the gain or loss accumulated in 
equity is recognised immediately in profit or loss.

The following table details the amounts relating to 
items designated as cash flow hedges:

30 JUNE 2023 (DISCLOSED IN AUD)

USD CCS

JPY CCS

IRS

$'000

$'000

$'000

Notional amount

1,052,035

450,000

536,432

Average fixed contract rate (FX rate per AUD)

0.72

77.22

-

Average fixed interest rate

Carrying amount of the hedging instrument

•  Assets

•  Liabilities

-

102,769

-

-

3.95%

4,760

-

(98,295)

-

Total carrying amount of the hedging instrument

102,769

(98,295)

4,760

Change in value of hedging instrument

3,400

(10,326)

4,760

Change in value of hedged item

6,187

7,596

(4,760)

Change in value of hedging instrument recognised in cash flow hedge reserve

9,587

(2,730)

4,760

Hedge ineffectiveness recognised in profit or loss

-

-

Amount reclassified from hedge reserve to profit or loss due to:

•  FX spot movement 

103,264

(87,719)

-

-

•  Hedging gain/loss recognised on settlement

(55,688)

(17,362)

(299)

Notional amount

Average fixed contract rate (FX rate per AUD)

Carrying amount of the hedging instrument

•  Assets

•  Liabilities

USD CCS

JPY CCS

$'000

$'000

1,794,825

450,000

0.73

77.22

99,369

-

-

(87,969)

Total carrying amount of the hedging instrument

99,369

(87,969)

Change in value of hedging instrument

Change in value of hedged item

145,107

(73,202)

(131,617)

55,835

Change in value of hedging instrument recognised in cash flow hedge reserve

13,490

(17,367)

Hedge ineffectiveness recognised in profit or loss

-

-

Amount reclassified from hedge reserve to profit or loss

109,451

(80,122)

23.3.2.  Derivative financial assets and liabilities

The carrying values are as follows:

DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL ASSETS

Cross currency swaps

Interest rate swaps

Overnight index swaps

DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL LIABILITIES 

Overnight index swaps

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

4,474

11,400

20,722

27,252

-

568

25,196

39,220

426

426

235

235

94   |

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|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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The Group seeks to minimise the effects of foreign 
currency and some interest rate exposures by using 
derivative instruments to hedge these positions. 
Derivatives are initially recognised at fair value at 
the date derivative contracts are entered into, and 
subsequently measured at their fair value at each 
reporting period.

During the period, currency movements drove 
changes in valuation of the Groups’ cross currency 
swaps hedged to the Group’s US RMBS bonds. These 
movements in the derivative balances are matched 
with the USD bond liabilities, with the profit/(loss) on 
swaps recognised in Other Comprehensive Income.

23.4.  Market risk 

Market risk is the risk of an adverse impact on the 
Group’s earnings resulting from changes in market 
factors, such as interest rates, equity prices and 
foreign exchange rates.

10bps +/-

Cross currency swaps

Interest rate swaps

23.4.1.  Interest rate risk 

Interest rate risk is the risk that the Group will 
experience deterioration in its financial position as 
interest rates change over time.

Interest rate exposure is driven by interest rate 
mismatches between assets and liabilities (i.e. 
borrowing at floating interest rates and lending with 
fixed interest rates). Interest rate risk is managed 
by entering into interest rate and overnight index 
swaps subject to the Group’s hedging and derivatives 
policies. 

23.4.2.  Interest rate risk – Sensitivity analysis

The majority of the Group’s liabilities are issued 
through warehouse facilities and securitisation trusts. 
Under such arrangements, the repayment profile of 
the bonds is matched to the repayments collected 
from the loan assets.

The Group has calculated the impact of a potential 
increase or decrease in borrowing costs in limited 
recourse entities for the year in the event of a +/- 
10bps change in interest rates as shown in the table:

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

13,737

15,672

14,375

16,190

In relation to the Group’s interest rate swaps, if interest rates had been 10bps higher/lower and all other variables 
were held constant, the Groups:

•  profit for the year ended 30 June 2023 would decrease/increase by $0.4 million (FY22: $1.3 million)

•  cash flow hedge reserves would decrease/increase by $1.0 million (FY22: Nil).

23.4.3.  Interest rate swap contracts

Under interest rate swap contracts, the Group agrees 
to exchange the difference between fixed and floating 
rate interest amounts calculated on agreed notional 
principal amounts. Such contracts enable the Group 
to mitigate the risk of changing interest rates on the 

cash flow exposures on the issued variable rate debt. 
The fair value of interest rate swaps at the end of the 
reporting period is determined by discounting the 
future cash flows using the curves at the end of the 
reporting period and the credit risk inherent in the 
contract and is disclosed below:

FAIR VALUE ASSET

Derivative financial assets

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

20,722

27,252

The following table details the notional principal amounts outstanding at the end of the reporting period:

NOTIONAL PRINCIPAL VALUE

Less than 1 year

1 to 2 years

2 to 5 years

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

113,962

114,574

229,379

237,079

813,565

788,335

1,156,906

1,139,988

The interest rate swaps settle and reset on a monthly 
basis. The floating rate on the interest rate swaps is 
the Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW) local interbank rate. 
The Group will settle the difference between the fixed 
and floating interest rate on a net basis.

23.4.4.  Overnight index swap contracts

Under overnight index swap contracts, the Group 
agrees to exchange the difference between the 
overnight cash rate plus a margin and 1 month BBSW 

on agreed notional principal amounts. Such contracts 
enable the Group to mitigate the exposure of basis 
differentials in an increasing rates environment, of 
its loan and funding book. The fair value of overnight 
index swaps at the end of the reporting period is 
determined by discounting the future cash flows using 
the curves at the end of the reporting period and the 
credit risk inherent in the contract and is disclosed 
below.

FAIR VALUE ASSET

Derivative financial assets

FAIR VALUE LIABILITY

Derivative financial liabilities

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

-

568

426

235

96   |

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|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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The following table details the notional principal amounts outstanding at the end of the reporting period:

NOTIONAL PRINCIPAL VALUE

Less than 1 year

1 to 2 years

2 to 5 years

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

4,000,000

1,000,000

-

-

2,000,000

-

4,000,000

3,000,000

23.4.5.  Corporate interest – Sensitivity analysis

The remainder of the Group’s loan portfolio and liabilities are held in corporate entities. The impact of a potential +/- 
10bps change in interest rates on interest revenue and borrowing costs on balances held by the Group for the year 
is set out in the table below:

10bps +/-

Impact on corporate interest revenue

Interest rate + 10bps

Interest rate - 10bps

Impact on corporate funding costs

Interest rate + 10bps

Interest rate - 10bps

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

1,085

(1,085)

(50)

50

933

(933)

(70)

70

23.4.6.  Equity price risk

Equity investments in listed and unlisted shares are 
held for strategic rather than trading purposes. The 
Group does not actively trade these investments. 

23.4.7.  Equity investment valuation risk - sensitivity 
analysis

If equity prices on listed shares had been 10% higher 
/ lower:

•  Other comprehensive income would increase/

decrease by $1,708,000 as a result of the changes 
in fair value of investments in listed shares (FY22: 
$1,596,000).

If fair value assessments on unlisted shares had been 
10% higher / lower:

•  Net profit for the year ended 30 June 2023 would 
increase/decrease by $351,000 as a result of the 
changes in fair value of the investments in unlisted 
shares (FY22: $726,000); and

23.5.  Foreign currency risk 

23.5.1.  Accounting translation

As at reporting date the Group held cash assets and 
loans denominated in New Zealand dollars (NZD). 

Fluctuations in the NZD are not expected to have 
a material impact on the consolidated statement 
of profit or loss or the consolidated statement of 
comprehensive income and equity of the Group. 

23.5.2.  Market risk - foreign exchange on monetary 
items

The Group obtains funding denominated in foreign 
currencies, consequently, exposure to exchange rate 
fluctuations arise. These currencies include USD 
and JPY. The Group manages foreign currency risk 
through the use of currency derivatives.

The carrying amounts of the Group’s foreign currency 
denominated assets and liabilities and notional 
principal amounts outstanding at the end of the 
reporting period are set out in Note 23.3.1. 

activities is managed within its origination and funding 
programmes. The Group maintains separate credit 
policies for each programme and regularly reviews 
and amends policies in line with economic, operating 
and funding conditions.   

The Group’s approach to credit management utilises a 
conservative credit risk framework to ensure that the 
following principles are adhered to:

•  independence from brokers;

•  recognition of the different risks in the various 

Group businesses;

23.6.  Credit risk management

•  credit exposures are systematically controlled and 

Credit risk is the risk that a counterparty will fail 
to complete its contractual obligations when they 
fall due. The consequential loss is the amount of 
the financial obligation not paid back, or the loss 
incurred in replicating a trading contract with a new 
counterparty. 

The Group’s primary credit risk exposures relate 
to its lending activities in its principally funded 
mortgage portfolio and asset finance portfolio. The 
Group’s primary lending activities are concentrated 
in the Australian and New Zealand market. The 
underlying credit risk in the Group’s lending activities 
is commensurate with a geographically-diverse 
residential mortgage portfolio and asset finance 
portfolio.   

The Board of Directors is responsible for determining 
the Group’s overall appetite for credit risk and 
monitoring the quality and performance of the 
mortgage portfolio. The credit risk management 
operational framework and policy is governed and 
managed by the Credit Committee. 

The Group does not have any direct counterparty 
credit exposure arising from its financing and 
securitisation activities. Counterparty risk is governed, 
and mitigated where required, by ratings agency 
criteria within the securitisation trusts including 
exposures to banks, lender’s mortgage insurance 
providers and derivative counterparties.    

23.6.1.  Credit risk in lending

The Group has established lending policies and 
procedures to manage the credit risk inherent in 
lending. The extent of credit risk in the Group’s lending 

monitored;

•  credit exposures are regularly reviewed in 

accordance with up-to-date credit procedures; 
and

•  credit exposures include such exposures arising 

from derivative transactions.

Each of the Group’s business units are responsible 
for managing credit risks that arise in their own areas 
with oversight from a Group Credit Committee. It is 
the Credit Committee policy to monitor the policies 
of all divisions to ensure that the risk of the Group is 
monitored appropriately.

The Group Credit Committee will continually monitor 
the credit policy taking into account internal and 
external factors, to ensure credit policy aligns with the 
risk appetite of the Group.  

23.6.2.  Exposure to credit risk

Loans and advances consist of a large number of 
customers, spread across diverse demographic and 
geographical areas. Ongoing credit evaluation is 
performed on the financial condition of loans and 
advances, accounts receivable and other financial 
assets.

There is no significant concentration of risk to any 
single counterparty.

The credit risk on derivative financial instruments is 
limited because the counterparties are banks with 
high credit-ratings assigned by international credit-
rating agencies.

98   |

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|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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23.6.3.  Maximum exposure to credit risk

23.6.5.  Credit risk management

The carrying amount of the Group’s financial assets represents the maximum credit exposure. The Group’s exposure 
to credit risk at the reporting date was:

The following table summarises the loans and advances and the expected credit loss by stage and risk category:

NOTE

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

MAXIMUM EXPOSURE TO CREDIT RISK

$'000

$'000

$'000

Stage 1
Collective

Stage 2
Collective

Stage 3
Collective

Stage 3
Specific

$'000

Total

$'000

1,085,417

932,781

Balance as at 30 June 2023

Cash and cash equivalents

Trade and other receivables (excluding prepayments)

Contract assets

Other financial assets

4

5

1

7

1,095

3,130

13,877

24,077

28,587

23,483

Derivative financial assets

23

25,196

39,220

1,154,172

1,022,691

Loans and advances at amortised cost (subject to credit risk)

6

13,736,981

15,672,444

14,891,153

16,695,135

As at 30 June 2023, 100% of the Group’s cash and cash equivalents are held with banks or financial institutions with 
a credit rating of AA- or better (FY22: 100%).

23.6.3.1.  Loan borrowers

The Group manages credit risk by obtaining security over the loan asset and mortgage insurance for loans, where 
required. 

In monitoring the credit risk, loans are grouped according to their credit characteristics using credit risk 
classification systems. This includes the use of the Loan to Value Ratio (LVR) to assess its exposure to credit risk 
from loans originated through the securitisation programme. 

23.6.4.  Financial guarantees

The Group is exposed to credit risk in relation to financial guarantees given to banks. The Group's maximum 
exposure in this respect is the maximum amount the Group could have to pay if the guarantees are called on. Refer 
to Note 26.2 for the guarantees in respect of the leases. 

Loans and advances

•  Mortgage lending

12,614,816

365,141

126,574

6,084

13,112,615

•  Asset finance lending

629,738

6,106

•  Commercial lending

265

-

99

-

1,228

637,171

-

265

Total

13,244,819

371,247

126,673

7,312

13,750,051

Balance as at 30 June 2022

Loans and advances

•  Mortgage lending

14,923,300

318,070

39,547

6,000

15,286,917

•  Asset finance lending

395,159

1,435

•  Commercial lending

556

-

129

-

303

397,027

-

556

Total

15,319,015

319,505

39,676

6,304

15,684,500

EXPECTED CREDIT LOSS

Balance as at 30 June 2023

Loans and advances

•  Mortgage lending

•  Asset finance lending

•  Commercial lending

15,448

13,244

11,937

1,837

42,466

1,846

-

763

-

57

-

712

-

3,378

-

Total

17,294

14,007

11,994

2,549

45,844

Balance as at 30 June 2022

Loans and advances

•  Mortgage lending

•  Asset finance lending

•  Commercial lending

23,023

12,720

4,844

4,171

44,757

1,969

1

81

-

55

-

178

-

2,283

1

Total

24,992

12,801

4,899

4,349

47,041

100   |

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2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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(30 June 2022: $2.2 million).

23.6.7.  Analysis of loans and advances by past due status

The majority of the Group’s exposure to loans and 
advances is limited, as they are legally owned by 
securitisation trusts with limited recourse to the 
Group. Losses on mortgage loans in these entities are 
therefore limited to the Group’s investment in notes in 
these trusts and the residual income rights of trusts. 
The trust structures are designed such that losses 
are covered by the income generated from the assets 
within the trust before the investment notes are 
impaired. 

Collateral held

The value of the collateral held as security for loans 
in stage 2 and stage 3 collective at 30 June 2023 is 
$726.4 million (30 June 2022: $522.8 million).

The value of the collateral held as security for loans in 
stage 3 specific loans at 30 June 2023 is $5.1 million 

Loans are secured by the Group by having the 
property titles registered as a financial interest that 
provide the Group first priority over any proceeds 
becoming available from the sale of the property. For 
Prime insured loans, LMI policies exist to cover 100% 
of the principal amount at default plus interest. At 30 
June 2023, 97% of the Australian mortgage lending 
portfolio is either mortgage insured or originated at an 
LVR of below 80%.

23.6.6.  Credit risk concentrations

An analysis of the Group’s credit risk concentrations 
on loans and advances is provided in the following 
table. The amounts in the table represent gross 
carrying amounts:

LOANS & ADVANCES AT AMORTISED COST

FY23

FY22

Concentration by region

$'000

%1

$'000

%1

New South Wales

Victoria

Queensland

Western Australia 

South Australia

Tasmania

Northern Territory

New Zealand

Total

EXPECTED CREDIT LOSS

Concentration by region

New South Wales

Victoria

Queensland

Western Australia 

South Australia

Tasmania

Northern Territory

New Zealand

Total

1   Rounded to nearest 100bps.

102   |

4,985,022

3,567,529

2,470,642

922,251

894,862

92,180

59,912

757,653

36%

26%

18%

7%

7%

1%

0%

5%

5,781,932

4,069,813

2,844,067

1,101,971

948,254

103,147

61,760

773,556

37%

26%

18%

7%

6%

1%

0%

5%

13,750,051

100%

15,684,500

100%

$'000

%1

$'000

%1

16,374

13,141

7,797

4,059

2,085

232

827

1,329

45,844

36%

29%

17%

9%

5%

0%

1%

3%

15,173

11,202

9,728

5,811

2,856

243

1,410

618

32%

24%

21%

12%

6%

1%

3%

1%

100%

47,041

100%

Under the Group’s monitoring procedures, a significant increase in credit risk is identified at the latest when 
exposure becomes 30 days past due. The table below provides an analysis of the gross carrying amount of loans 
and advances by past due status that are over 30 days past due.

LOANS & ADVANCES AT AMORTISED COST1

0 days and less than 30 days

30 days and less than 60 days

60 days and less than 90 days

90 days and less than 180 days

180 days and less than 270 days 

270 days and less than 365 days

365 days and over

Total

1   Includes loans that are collectively and specifically provided for.

EXPECTED CREDIT LOSS

0 days and less than 30 days

30 days and less than 60 days

60 days and less than 90 days

90 days and less than 180 days

180 days and less than 270 days 

270 days and less than 365 days

365 days and over

Total

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

13,428,879

15,592,251

125,826

41,460

63,915

9,024

77,987

23,364

35,959

9,873

7,612

6,885

4,081

7,435

13,750,051

15,684,500

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

25,896

39,206

3,526

3,046

7,742

3,237

1,148

1,249

1,101

558

3,041

802

501

1,832

45,844

47,041

|   103

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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23.6.8.  Movement in credit exposures 

PROVISION FOR IMPAIRMENT LOSSES

$'000

$'000

$'000

Stage 1
Collective

Stage 2
Collective

Stage 3
Collective

Stage 3
Specific

$'000

Total

$'000

PROVISION FOR IMPAIRMENT LOSSES

$'000

$'000

$'000

Stage 1
Collective

Stage 2
Collective

Stage 3
Collective

Stage 3
Specific

$'000

Total

$'000

Balance as at 30 June 2022

24,992

12,801

4,899

4,349

47,041

Balance as at 30 June 2021

13,800

14,016

4,310

5,439

37,565

Net transfer between stages 

7,252

(5,137)

(978)

(1,137)

- 

Net transfer between stages 

5,783

(4,188)

- 

(5,125)

(1,410)

(7,252)

Stage 1 - Collective

- 

(4,414)

Stage 1 - Collective

Stage 2 - Collective

Stage 3 - Collective

Stage 3 - Impaired

(717)

(116)

- 

- 

116

(128)

(145)

5,125

717

1,410

128

145

- 

5,137

978

1,137

Net re-measurement on transfers 
between stages

Impact of transfers between stages 
and re-measurement

(20,204)

6,800

7,745

1,949

(3,710)

12,040

14,464

11,666

5,161

43,331

Stage 2 - Collective

Stage 3 - Collective

Stage 3 - Impaired

Net re-measurement on transfers 
between stages

Impact of transfers between stages 
and re-measurement

4,414

441

927

- 

178

48

(7,822)

2,608

11,761

12,436

4,627

4,215

33,039

(371)

(441)

(178)

(1,224)

- 

(927)

(5,782)

(48)

4,188

- 

(248)

248

688

- 

-

371

1,223

(4,526)

Net Financial Assets Originated

8,061

1,362

1,418

203

11,044

Net Financial Assets Originated

12,698

363

273

131

13,465

Movements in existing individually 
assessed provisions and write-backs

Write-offs

-

-

-

-

-

-

(49)

(49)

Movements in existing individually 
assessed provisions and write-backs

(3,437)

(3,437)

Write-offs

Discharges/Other

(2,807)

(1,819)

(1,091)

672

(5,045)

Discharges/Other

-

-

533

-

-

2

-

-

(1)

1,815

1,815

(1,970)

(1,970)

158

692

Balance as at 30 June 2023

17,294

14,007

11,993

2,550

45,844

Balance as at 30 June 2022

24,992

12,801

4,899

4,349

47,041

CREDIT EXPOSURE

CREDIT EXPOSURE

Balance as at 1 July 2022

15,319,015

319,505

39,676

6,304

15,684,500

Balance as at 1 July 2021

13,453,842

431,457

36,947

12,194

13,934,440

Net transfers between stages and 
financial assets originated

(2,074,196)

51,742

86,997

4,445

(1,931,012)

Net transfers between stages and 
financial assets originated

1,865,173

(111,952)

2,729

(5,890)

1,750,060

Write-offs

- 

- 

- 

(3,437)

(3,437)

Write-offs

- 

- 

- 

(1,970)

(1,970)

Balance as at 30 June 2023

13,244,819

371,247

126,673

7,312

13,750,051

Balance as at 30 June 2022

15,319,015

319,505

39,676

6,304

15,684,500

104   |

|   105

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

RISK

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

RISK

23.7.  Liquidity risk management

Ultimate responsibility for liquidity risk management rests with the Board of Directors, which has established an 
appropriate liquidity risk management framework for the management of the Group's short, medium and long-term 
funding and liquidity management requirements. 

The Group’s funding platform currently comprises a mix of:

•  warehouse facilities; 

•  securitisation trusts; 

•  secured corporate debt facilities; and

•  cash.

The majority of the Group’s liabilities represent bonds issued by SPVs through warehouse facilities and 
securitisation trusts. Under such arrangements, bondholder recourse is limited to the assets of the relevant SPVs 
to which the liability relates and the repayment profile of the bonds is matched to the repayments collected from 
the loan assets. Given the limited recourse nature of these borrowings, $14.1 billion at 30 June 2023 (FY22: $15.8 
billion), they have not all been included in the table below.

The Group manages liquidity risk by maintaining adequate reserves, banking facilities and reserve borrowing 
facilities, by continuously monitoring forecast and actual cash flows, and by matching the maturity profiles of 
financial assets and liabilities. 

Note 23.7.2 below sets out details of additional undrawn facilities that the Group has at its disposal to further 
reduce liquidity risk. 

23.7.1.  Liquidity risk tables

The following table shows the Group's remaining expected maturity for its non-derivative financial liabilities with 
agreed repayment periods. The tables have been drawn up based on the undiscounted cash flows of financial 
liabilities based on the earliest date on which the Group can be required to pay and hence will not necessarily 
reconcile with the amounts disclosed in the statement of financial position.

The tables include both interest and principal cash flows. To the extent that interest flows are floating rate, the 
undiscounted amount is derived from interest rate curves at the end of the reporting period. The contractual 
maturity is based on the earliest date on which the Group may be required to pay.

FINANCIAL LIABILITIES

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

$'000

<6 months or 
on demand

6-12
months

1-3
years

3-5
years

>5
years

Total 
cash flows

Carrying 
amount

FY23

Non-derivatives

Trade and other payables

27,146

Interest-bearing liabilities

•  Issuance facilities

•  Corporate debt 

21,110

50,000

-

-

-

-

-

143,289

131,517

-

-

-

-

-

27,146

27,146

295,916

295,916

50,000

50,000

Present value of future trail   
commissions payable

1,227

1,032

2,677

1,373

1,377

7,686

6,850

Lease liabilities

1,087

1,089

4,482

3,886

-

10,544

9,369

100,570

2,121

150,448

136,776

1,377

391,292

389,281

Derivatives

426

-

-

-

-

426

426

100,996

2,121

150,448

136,776

1,377

391,718

389,707

FY22

Non-derivatives

Trade and other payables

30,062

-

-

-

Interest-bearing liabilities

•  Issuance facilities

9,466

26,216

93,728

248,272

•  Corporate debt 

-

-

70,000

-

-

-

-

30,062

30,062

377,682

377,682

70,000

70,000

Present value of future trail   
commissions payable

2,126

1,721

4,240

1,917

1,746

11,750

11,750

Lease liabilities

1,083

1,105

4,326

4,665

1,535

12,714

11,097

42,737

29,042

172,294

254,854

3,281

502,208

500,591

Derivatives

235

-

-

-

-

235

235

42,972

29,042

172,294

254,854

3,281

502,443

500,826

23.7.2.  Financing facilities

Secured corporate debt facility which may be extended by mutual agreement

Amount used

Amount unused

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

-

30,000

30,000

20,000

10,000

30,000

106   |

|   107

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

GROUP STRUCTURE

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

GROUP STRUCTURE

Group 
structure.

For the year ended
30 June 2023

24.  Subsidiaries
Details of the Group’s subsidiaries at the end of the reporting period are as follows:

Name of subsidiary

Principal activity

CONTROLLED COMPANIES

Access Network Management Pty Ltd 

Mortgage manager

Auspak Financial Services Pty Ltd

Mortgage broker

Place of 
incorporation 
and operation

Australia

Australia

Clarence Street Finance Pty Ltd

Holder of commission agreements

Australia

Clarence Street Funding No.1 Pty Ltd

Special purpose vehicle

Clarence Street Funding No.2 Pty Ltd

Participation unit holder

Clarence Street Funding No.3 Pty Ltd

Special purpose vehicle 

Clarence Street Funding No.4 Pty Ltd

Special purpose vehicle

Clarence Street Funding No.6 Pty Ltd 

Special purpose vehicle

Clarence Street Funding No.7 Pty Ltd

Special purpose vehicle

Clarence Street Funding No.8 Pty Ltd

Special purpose vehicle

Clarence Street Funding No.9 Pty Ltd

Special purpose vehicle

Clarence Street Funding No.10 Pty Ltd

Special purpose vehicle

Clarence Street Funding No.11 Pty Ltd1

Special purpose vehicle

FAI First Mortgage Pty Ltd

Trust manager and servicer

Homeloans.com.au Pty Ltd

Mortgage lender

Housing Financial Services Pty Ltd

Mortgage originator

Independent Mortgage Corporation Pty Ltd

Mortgage broker

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Resimac Asset Finance Pty Ltd

Asset finance originator and manager

Australia

PROPORTION 
OF OWNERSHIP 
INTEREST HELD & 
VOTING POWER 
HELD BY THE 
GROUP 

FY23

FY22

%

%

100

100

100

100

100

100

99.9

99.9

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

100

-

100

100

100

100

100

1   Incorporated on 1 November 2022.

108   |

PROPORTION 
OF OWNERSHIP 
INTEREST HELD & 
VOTING POWER 
HELD BY THE 
GROUP 

FY23

FY22

%

%

Place of 
incorporation 
and operation

Name of subsidiary

Principal activity

CONTROLLED COMPANIES

Evergreen Finance Company Pty Ltd2

Lender of record

Australia

-

100

RAF Structured Finance Pty Ltd

Consumer and commercial lending

Australia

100

100

SF Mortgage Pty Ltd

Lender of record

Australia

100

100

Parnell Road Funding No.1 Limited

Special purpose vehicle

New Zealand

100

100

Parnell Road Funding No.2 Limited

Special purpose vehicle

New Zealand

100

100

Prime Insurance Group Limited

LMI captive insurer

Bermuda

100

100

RESIMAC Capital Markets Pty Ltd

Trust manager

Australia

100

100

RESIMAC Financial Services Limited

NZ Holding company

New Zealand

100

100

RESIMAC Financial Securities Limited

NZ Trust manager and servicer

New Zealand

100

100

RESIMAC Home Loans Limited

NZ Lender of record and trustee

New Zealand

100

100

RESIMAC Limited

Non-bank lender

Australia

100

100

RESIMAC NZ Home Loans Limited

NZ Holding company

New Zealand

100

100

RESIMAC Premier Warehouse No.1 Pty Ltd3

Unit Holder

RMC Fiduciary Services Pty Ltd4

Mortgage trustee

RHG Mortgage Corporation Pty Ltd3

Lender of record

RHG Mortgage Securities Pty Ltd3

Mortgage trustee

RHG Home Loan Pty Ltd

Mortgage Originator

The Servicing Company Pty Ltd

Trust servicer

RESIMAC EST PTY LTD

Initial Trustee

23 Degrees Capital Partners Pty Ltd5

Asset finance wholesaler

0508 Home Loans Limited

0800 Home Loans Limited

Clarence Street Funding No.5 Pty Ltd 

Fiduciary Services Pty Ltd

National Mutual Pty Ltd

Dormant

Dormant

Dormant

Dormant

Dormant

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

100

100

100

100

100

100

51

15

New Zealand 

100

100

New Zealand 

100

100

Australia

99.9

99.9

Australia

Australia

100

100

100

100

RESIMAC Financial Securitisation Limited

Dormant

New Zealand

100

100

RESIMAC Financial Services Pty Ltd

Dormant

Australia

100

100

2   Deregistered on 27 November 2022.
3   Ownership interest is 0% however the Group have Board control.   
4  Incorporated on 8 June 2022. Ownership interest is 0% however the Group have Board control.   
5  Ownership increased to 51% on 1 August 2022.

|   109

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

GROUP STRUCTURE

Name of subsidiary

Principal activity

CONTROLLED COMPANIES

RESIMAC Leasing Pty Ltd

Homeloans Pty Ltd

CONTROLLED TRUSTS

Dormant

Dormant

PROPORTION 
OF OWNERSHIP 
INTEREST HELD & 
VOTING POWER 
HELD BY THE 
GROUP 

FY23

FY22

%

%

100

100

100

100

Place of 
incorporation 
and operation

Australia

Australia

Avoca Master Trust

Issuer of RMBS

Australia

100

100

NZF Mortgages Warehouse A Trust

Warehouse mortgages

New Zealand

100

100

RESIMAC Bastille Master Trust6

Issuer of RMBS

RESIMAC Triomphe Master Trust6

Issuer of RMBS

Australia

Australia

100

100

100

100

RESIMAC Versailles Master Trust

Issuer of RMBS

New Zealand

100

100

RESIMAC Victoire Trust

Warehouse mortgages

New Zealand

100

100

RESIMAC Premier Series 2021-2

Issuer of RMBS

New Zealand

100

100

RMT Warehouse Trust No.26

Warehouse mortgages

RMT Securitisation Trust No.76

Issuer of RMBS

RMC Enhanced Income Fund7

Managed Investment Trust

Australia

Australia

Australia

100

100

100

100

100

100

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

GROUP STRUCTURE

25.  Acquisition of subsidiary

25.1.  Accounting for Business combinations

The Group accounts for business combinations using 
the acquisition method when control is transferred 
to the Group. The consideration transferred in the 
acquisition is generally measured at fair value, as are 
the identifiable net assets acquired. Any goodwill that 
arises is tested annually for impairment. Transaction 
costs incurred in connection with a business 
combination are expensed as incurred, except if 
related to the issue of debt or equity securities.

The consideration transferred does not include 
amounts related to the settlement of pre-existing 
relationships. Such amounts are generally recognised 
in profit or loss.

Any contingent consideration is measured at fair 
value at the date of acquisition. If an obligation to pay 
contingent consideration that meets the definition of 
a financial instrument is classified as equity, then it is 
not remeasured and settlement is accounted for within 
equity. Otherwise, other contingent consideration is 
remeasured at fair value at each reporting date and 
subsequent changes in the fair value of the contingent 
consideration are recognised in profit or loss.

RAF Trust8

Consumer and commercial lending

Australia

100

100

25.2.  Non-controlling interests (NCI)

International Acceptance Trust

Consumer and commercial lending

Australia

100

100

Resimac Group Limited Employee Share Trust9

Employee share trust

Australia

-

-

6   This does not represent holding in capital units, percentage ownership represents control of these Trusts.
7   Incorporated on 30 March 2022
8  Incorporated on 8 June 2022. 
9  Ownership interest is 0% however a 100% owned subsidiary (RESIMAC EST PTY LTD) acts as trustee.  

Special purpose entities - securitised trusts and funding warehouses

The Group has established special purpose entities to support the specific funding needs of the Group’s 
securitisation programme with the aim to: 

•  conduct securitisation activities funded by short term warehouse facilities provided by reputable lenders; and

•  hold securitised assets and issue bonds. 

The special purpose entities meet the criteria of being controlled entities under AASB 10 – Consolidated Financial 
Statements.

The Group recognises non-controlling interests 
in an acquired entity either at fair value or at the 
non-controlling interest’s proportionate share of the 
acquired entity’s net identifiable assets. This decision 
is made on an acquisition-by-acquisition basis. 

For the non-controlling interests in 23 Degrees Capital 
Partners Pty Ltd, the Group elected to recognise the 
non-controlling interests at its proportionate share of 
the acquired net identifiable assets.

25.3.  Details of acquisition 

On 1 August 2022 Resimac exercised the option to 
acquire a controlling stake in 23 Degrees Capital 
Partners Pty Ltd (operating as Sonder) for a purchase 
consideration of $0.9 million, increasing Resimac’s 
interest in 23 Degrees Capital Partners Pty Ltd from 
15% to 51%.

The total fair value of the purchase consideration for 
the 51% ownership in 23 Degrees Capital Partners Pty 
Ltd consists of the following:  

•  $150,000 paid for the acquisition of 15% on 10 

August 2021; and

•  $900,000 paid for the acquisition of an additional 

36% on 1 August 2022.

The assets and liabilities recognised as a result of the 
acquisition are as follows:

ASSETS  

Cash and cash equivalents

Other assets 

Total assets

LIABILITIES  

Other liabilities 

Total liabilities

Fair value of identified net assets

Less: Non-controlling interest

Add: Goodwill (Refer to Note 11)

Purchase consideration

Fair value

$'000

220

8

228

(29)           

(29)

199

(98)

949

1,050

Subsequent to the acquisition accounting, goodwill 
becomes subject to impairment tests which are 
undertaken at least annually, or if and when there are 
indicators that goodwill maybe impaired.

110   |

|   111

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

UNRECOGNISED ITEMS

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

OTHER

Unrecognised 
items.

For the year ended
30 June 2023

26.  Commitments and contingencies

26.1.  Commitments

On 20 June 2023 Resimac entered in a sale and purchase agreement to purchase a $150 million portfolio of 
commercial asset finance loan receivable from Thorn Group Limited (ASX: TGA). The purchase is subject to Thorn 
Group Limited shareholder approval and is expected to complete in September 2023.

The Directors were not aware of any other commitments (including capital commitments) as at the end of the 
financial year or arising since balance date.

26.2.  Contingent liabilities

Lease guarantees

The Group has provided guarantees in respect of the leases over its premises of $992,600 (FY22: $992,600). 
The Directors were not aware of any other contingent liabilities as at the end of the financial year or arising since 
balance date.

27.  Subsequent events 

27.1.  Final dividend declared

The Board of Resimac Group Ltd declared a fully-franked final dividend of $0.04 per share. The record date will be 
8 September 2023. The payment date will be 20 September 2023. The dividend has not been provided for in this 
financial report.

27.2.  Acquisition of Thorn Group Limited’s asset finance portfolio

Other than the sale and purchase commitment disclosed in Note 26.1, there have been no circumstances arising 
since 30 June 2023 that have significantly affected or may significantly affect:

(a) The operations;

(b) The results of those operations; or

(c) The state of affairs of the Group in future financial years. 

Other.

For the year ended
30 June 2023

28.  Auditor’s remuneration

DELOITTE TOUCHE TOHMATSU

Audit or review of financial reports

•  Group

•  Subsidiaries 

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

366,033

307,757

708,267

705,219

1,074,300

1,012,976

Statutory assurance services required by legislation to be provided by the auditor

95,498

95,120

Other assurance and agreed-upon procedures under other legislation or contractual 
arrangements

153,347

218,246

Other services - Tax consulting services

-

3,990

Total remuneration of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu

1,323,145

1,330,332

NON DELOITTE TOUCHE TOHMATSU AUDIT FIRMS

Other services

• Tax compliance services

• Tax consulting services

118,616

172,452

-

44,246

Total remuneration of Non Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu audit firms

118,616

216,698

112   |

|   113

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

OTHER

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

OTHER

28.1.  Non-audit services

The auditor of the Group is Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu (Deloitte). It is the Group’s policy to employ Deloitte on 
assignments additional to its statutory audit duties, in compliance with the Group’s independence policies, where 
Deloitte’s expertise and experience with the Group are important.

The total non-audit services fees of $153,347 represents 11.6% of the total fees paid or payable to Deloitte and 
related practices for the year ended 30 June 2023 (FY22: $222,236). 

29.  Related party transactions

Balances and transactions between the Company and its subsidiaries, which are related parties of the Company, 
have been eliminated on consolidation and are not disclosed in this note. Details of transactions between the Group 
and other related parties are disclosed below.

During the year, the Group entered into the following transaction with a related party that is not a member of the 
Group:

INCOME RECEIVED

EXPENSES PAID

Director’s related entity 

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

7601

760

-

-

2,0002

2,000

2,000

2,000

1   Interest received on related party loan to Somers Limited.
2   Professional Indemnity and Directors & Officers Liability insurance premiums paid to General Provincial Insurance Ltd. This insurance policy was 

entered into at commercial arms length terms.

Sales to related parties occur at arm’s length on commercial terms in the ordinary course of business in accordance 
with the terms and conditions outlined in the relevant commercial agreements with each party.

The following balances were outstanding at the end of the reporting period:

AMOUNTS OWED 
BY RELATED PARTIES

AMOUNTS OWED 
TO RELATED PARTIES

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

Director’s related entity3

8,000

-

Other related parties of Resimac Group Ltd4

15,905

17,806

23,905

17,806

-

-

-

-

-

-

3   Short-term interest bearing loan provided to Somers Limited. Interest is charged on arm’s length terms. 
4   Includes residential mortgages to KMP or related parties lent in ordinary course of business at arm’s lengths. 

Amounts owed by related parties are secured 
and will be settled in cash. No guarantees have 
been given or received. No expense has been 
recognised in the current or prior years for bad 
or doubtful debts in respect of the amount 
owed by related parties.

Compensation of KMP

The remuneration disclosures of Directors 
and other members of KMP during the 
year are provided in sections 1 to 10 of the 
remuneration report on pages 26 to 39 of this 
financial report designated as audited and 
forming part of the Directors’ report.

The remuneration disclosures are for Resimac 
KMP only as presented in the Remuneration 
report.

KMP COMPENSATION

$'000

FY23

FY22

$'000

Short-term benefits

2,859,007

3,248,560

Post-employment 
benefits

134,392

137,500

Long-term benefits

36,116

71,614

Termination 
benefits

Share-based 
payments

20,767

-

438,750

413,239

3,489,032

3,870,913

The remuneration of Directors and KMP 
is determined by the Remuneration and 
Nomination Committee having regard to the 
performance of individuals and market trends.

The Group manages 
liquidity risk by 
maintaining adequate 
reserves, banking 
facilities and reserve 
borrowing facilities, 
by continuously 
monitoring forecast 
and actual cash flows, 
and by matching the 
maturity profiles of 
financial assets and 
liabilities.

114   |

|   115

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

OTHER

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

OTHER

30.  Parent disclosures 

The parent company of the Group, as at and throughout the financial year ended 30 June 2023, was Resimac Group 
Ltd.

Presented below is supplementary information about the parent entity. 

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION

Assets

Current 

Non-current 

Liabilities

Current 

Non-current 

Net assets

Equity

Issued capital

Reserves

Accumulated losses

Attributable to members of the parent:

(Loss)/Profit after tax

Total comprehensive income for the period

FY23

$'000

FY22

$'000

18,333

14,837

416,330

456,856

434,663

471,693

14,510

9,027

31,169

37,309

45,679

46,336

388,984

425,357

185,646

185,646

2,214

1,347

201,124

238,364

388,984

425,357

(4,834)

180,658

(4,834)

180,658

30.1.  Guarantees, contingent liabilities and 
contingent assets 

At 30 June 2023, there are no financial guarantees, 
contingent assets or contingent liabilities with respect 
to the parent company. (FY22: Nil).

30.2.  Accounting policies

The accounting policies of the parent entity, which 
have been applied in determining the financial 
information shown above, are the same as those 
applied in the consolidated financial statements. 

31.  Share-based payments

31.1.  Employee share option plan of the Company

The Company has a share option scheme (pursuant 
to the Resimac Group Ltd Employee Share Option and 
Rights Plan) for senior employees of the Company. In 
accordance with the terms of the Plan, as approved 
by shareholders at the 2017 Annual General Meeting, 
senior employees may be granted options to purchase 
ordinary shares.

Each employee share option converts into one 
ordinary share of the Company on exercise. No 
amounts are paid or payable by the recipient on 
receipt of the option. The options carry neither 
rights to dividends nor voting rights. Options may be 
exercised at any time from the date of vesting to the 
date of their expiry.

Long-Term Incentive (LTI#1) Share Options - CEOs

Resimac offered the CEO Scott McWilliam the 
opportunity to purchase 900,000 share options 
vesting in three equal tranches on each anniversary 
of the grant date. The options were granted on 18 
August 2017 and all options vest within 12 months, 
24 months and 36 months of respective grant date 
associated with each tranche. The options expire 
within 36 months of their vesting, or one month 
after resignation, whichever is the earlier. The sole 
vesting condition of the options is to remain employed 
with the Company to the respective vesting date 
associated with each tranche. 

Tranche 1 and 2 of the share options were exercised 
in FY21 and FY22, respectively, and Tranche 3 was 
exercised in June 2023. 

Long-Term Incentive (LTI#2) Share Options – CEO 
and General Managers (GMs)

Under the Group’s LTI share options and rights plan, 
the CEO and GMs receive options over ordinary 
shares and a potential cash component of $2.4 million. 
The options were granted on 15 August 2019 and 
the vesting date for all options is 31 August 2022, 
subject to the Group achieving Net Profit After Tax 
(NPAT) growth hurdles, digital transformation hurdles, 
compliance hurdles and remaining employed with the 
Group until the vesting date. 

The LTI#1 and LTI#2 are administered by The Trustee 
for the Resimac Group Limited Employee Share Trust. 
The trust is consolidated in accordance with Note 24. 
The trustee subscribes for the shares issued by the 
Group and allocates to the employees on exercise of 

options. Shares held by the trust and not yet allocated 
to employees at the end of the reporting period are 
shown as treasury shares in the financial statements.  

The fair value of share options under LTI#1 and LTI#2 
was recognised as an employee benefits expense 
with a corresponding increase in equity. The total 
expense was recognised over the vesting period, 
which was the period over which all of the specified 
vesting conditions were to be satisfied. At the end of 
each period, the Group revises its estimates of the 
number of options that are expected to vest based 
on the non-market vesting and service conditions. 
It recognises the impact of the revision to original 
estimates, if any, in the consolidated statement of 
profit or loss with a corresponding adjustment to 
equity.  

The fair value of the amounts payable to the CEO and 
GMs in respect of cash component is recognised as 
an expense with a corresponding increase in liabilities, 
over the vesting period. The liabilities are remeasured 
to fair value at each reporting date and are presented 
as employee benefit obligations in the consolidated 
statement of financial position.

A cash component LTI of $1.7 million was paid to the 
CEO and senior management in September 2022. 
Furthermore 785,000 share options were exercised in 
September 2022. 

Employee Share Plan (ESP)

The Group commenced the Resimac Group Employee 
Share Scheme (ESS) in March 2021 whereby eligible 
employees are offered up to $1,000 worth of fully paid 
Resimac ordinary shares for no cash consideration.

Shares allocated under the ESS cannot be sold until 
the earlier of three years after allocation or the time 
when the participant is no longer employed by the 
Group. 

The ESS offer for FY23 was made on 10 October 
2022. A total of 195 (FY22: 190) staff participated in 
this offer. The participants were each allocated 1,025 
(FY22: 524) fully allocated shares based on the offer 
amount of $1,000 and the 5 day volume weighted 
average price (VWAP) of $0.9754 (FY22: $1.9065), 
resulting in a total of 199,875 (FY22: 99,560) shares 
being allocated. The shares were allocated to staff for 
no cash consideration. For the financial year ended 30 
June 2023, share-based payment expense relating to 
the ESS totalled $191,880 (FY22: $183,190). 

116   |

|   117

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

OTHER

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

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118   |

|   119

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

OTHER

|   NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  

OTHER

31.3.  Movements in share options during the period

The following reconciles the share options outstanding at the beginning and the end of the period:

Number of 
LTI options

Number of 
LTI options

Number of 
ESP options

Number 
of options 
total

Weighted 
average 
fair value 
($)

Weighted 
average 
fair value 
($)

Weighted 
average 
fair value 
($)

LTI #1

LTI #2

LTI #1

LTI #2

ESP

Unvested options at 1 July 2022

- 3,525,000

- 3,525,000

-

0.20

Vested options at 1 July 2022

300,000

-

-

300,000

0.09

-

Options held at 1 July 2022

300,000 3,525,000

- 3,825,000

0.09

0.20

-

-

-

Granted during the year

-

-

199,875

199,875

Exercised during the year

(300,000)

(785,000)

(199,875)

(1,284,875)

Unvested options at 30 June 2023

Vested options at 30 June 2023

-

-

-

2,740,000

-

-

-

2,740,000

Options held at 30 June 2023

- 2,740,000

- 2,740,000

-

-

-

-

-

-

1.27

0.96

0.96

-

-

-

0.20

0.20

31.4.  Share options exercised during the period

The Trustee for the Resimac Group Limited Employee Share Trust allocated 785,000 treasury shares to GMs and 
300,000 treasury shares to the CEO on their exercise of LTI#2 and LTI#1 share options on 6 September 2022 and 16 
June 2023, respectively. 199,875 shares are held in the Trust on behalf of the employees under the ESP.  

32.  Other accounting policies

32.1.  Application of new and revised accounting 
standards 

32.2.  New and revised accounting standards and 
interpretations on issue but not yet effective

The Group has applied the required amendments to 
Standards and Interpretations that are relevant to its 
operations and mandatorily effective for the first time 
for the financial year commencing 1 July 2022. These 
amendments did not have any material impact on 
the disclosures or on the amounts recognised in the 
consolidated financial statements.

Certain new accounting standards and interpretations 
have been published that are not mandatory for 30 
June 2023 reporting periods and have not been early 
adopted by the Group. The Group’s assessment of the 
impact of these new standards and interpretations is 
set out below. These standards are not expected to 
have a material impact on the financial statements of 
the Group in future periods. 

STANDARD / AMENDMENT

AASB 2021-2 
Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Disclosure of Accounting Policies 
and Definition of Accounting Estimates

AASB 2021-5 
Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Deferred Tax related to Assets and 
Liabilities arising from a Single Transaction

AASB 2022-1 
Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Initial Application of AASB 9 
Financial Instruments – Comparative Information

AASB 17 
Insurance Contracts

AASB 2020-1 
Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Classification of Liabilities as Current 
or Non-current; AASB 2020-6 Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – 
Classification of Liabilities as Current or Non-current – Deferral of effective date; and 
IASB Amendment Non-current Liabilities with Covenants

Effective for annual 
reporting periods 
beginning on or after:

1 July 2023

1 July 2023

1 July 2023

1 July 2023

1 July 2024

The standards and interpretations listed above are not 
expected to have a material impact on financial results 
or financial position on adoption.

32.3.  Goods and services tax (GST)

Revenues, expenses and assets are recognised net of 
the amount of GST except:

•  where the GST incurred on a purchase of goods 
and services is not recoverable from the taxation 
authority, in which case the GST is recognised as 
part of the costs of acquisition of the asset or as 
part of the expense item as applicable; and

•  receivables and payables which are stated with 

the amount of GST included.

The net amount of GST recoverable from, or payable 
to, the taxation authority is included as part of 
receivables or payables in the statement of financial 
position.

Cash flows are included in the statement of cash flows 
on a gross basis and the GST component of cash 
flows arising from investing and financing activities, 
which is recoverable from, or payable to, the taxation 
authority is classified as operating cash flows.

Commitments and contingencies are disclosed net of 
the amount of GST recoverable from, or payable to, 
the taxation authority.

120   |

|   121

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD|  DIRECTORS' DECLARATION

|   INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S DECLARATION 

Directors' 
declaration.

Resimac Group Ltd 
and its controlled entities

The Directors declare that:

Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu 
ABN 74 490 121 060 

Quay Quarter Tower 
Level 46, 50 Bridge St 
Sydney, NSW 
Australia, 2000 

Tel:  +61 2 9322 7000 
Fax:  +61 2 9322 7001 
www.deloitte.com.au 

28th August 2023 

The Board of Directors 
Resimac Group Limited 
Level 9, 45 Clarence Street 
Sydney, NSW, 2000 

Dear Board Members  

(a)    in the Directors’ opinion, there are reasonable grounds to believe that the company will be able to pay its 

debts as and when they become due and payable

(b)    in the Directors’ opinion, the attached financial statements are in compliance with Australian Accounting 

Standards as stated in the financial statements;

(c)    in the Directors’ opinion, the attached financial statements and notes thereto are in accordance with the 

Corporations Act 2001, including compliance with accounting standards and giving a true and fair view of the 
financial position and performance of the consolidated entity and the company; and

AAuuddiittoorr’’ss  IInnddeeppeennddeennccee  DDeeccllaarraattiioonn  ttoo  RReessiimmaacc  GGrroouupp  LLiimmiitteedd  

In accordance with section 307C of the Corporations Act 2001, I am pleased to provide the following declaration 
of independence to the directors of Resimac Group Limited and its controlled entities.  

As lead audit partner for the audit  of the financial report of Resimac Group Limited for the year ended 30 June 
2023, I declare that to the best of my knowledge and belief, there have been no contraventions of: 

(i) 

(ii) 

The auditor independence requirements of the Corporations Act 2001 in relation to the audit; and 

Any applicable code of professional conduct in relation to the audit.  

(d)    the Directors have been given the declarations required by s295.A of the Corporations Act 2001.

Yours faithfully 

Signed in accordance with a resolution of the Directors pursuant to s295(5) of the Corporations Act 2001.

On behalf of the Directors

Warren McLeland
Chairman 

Sydney
28 August 2023

DELOITTE TOUCHE TOHMATSU 

Heather Baister  
Partner  
Chartered Accountants 

Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation.  

Member of Deloitte Asia Pacific Limited and the Deloitte organisation. 

122   |

|   123

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD 
 
 
 
  
    
 
 
 
 
 
|   INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT 

|   INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT 

Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu 
ABN 74 490 121 060 

Quay Quarter Tower 
Level 46, 50 Bridge St 
Sydney, NSW 
Australia, 2000 

Tel:  +61 2 9322 7000 
Fax:  +61 2 9322 7001 
www.deloitte.com.au 

IInnddeeppeennddeenntt  AAuuddiittoorr’’ss  RReeppoorrtt  ttoo  tthhee  MMeemmbbeerrss  ooff  RReessiimmaacc  GGrroouupp  LLiimmiitteedd  

RReeppoorrtt  oonn  tthhee  AAuuddiitt  ooff  tthhee  FFiinnaanncciiaall  RReeppoorrtt  

Opinion  

We have audited the financial report of Resimac Group Limited (the “Company”) and its subsidiaries (the 
“Group”) which comprises the consolidated statement of financial position as at 30 June 2023, the consolidated 
statement of profit or loss, the consolidated statement of comprehensive income, the consolidated statement of 
changes in equity and the consolidated statement of cash flows for the year then ended, and notes to the 
financial statements, including a summary of significant accounting policies and other explanatory information, 
and the directors’ declaration.

In our opinion, the accompanying financial report of the Group is in accordance with the Corporations Act 

2001, including: 

• Giving  a  true  and  fair  view  of  the  Group’s  financial  position  as  at  30  June  2023  and  of  their  financial

performance for the year then ended; and

• Complying with Australian Accounting Standards and the Corporations Regulations 2001.

Basis for Opinion 

We  conducted  our  audit  in  accordance  with  Australian  Auditing  Standards.  Our  responsibilities  under  those 
standards are further described in the Auditor’s Responsibilities for the Audit of the Financial Report section of 
our report. We are independent of the Group in accordance with the auditor independence requirements of the 
Corporations Act 2001 and the ethical requirements of the Accounting Professional & Ethical Standards Board’s 
APES  110  Code  of  Ethics  for  Professional  Accountants  (including  Independence  Standards)  (the  Code)  that  are 
relevant to our audit of the financial report in Australia. We have also fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in 
accordance with the Code.  

We confirm that the independence declaration required by the Corporations Act 2001, which has been given to 
the directors of the Company, would be in the same terms if given to the directors as at the time of this auditor’s 
report. 

We  believe  that  the  audit  evidence  we  have  obtained  is  sufficient  and  appropriate  to  provide  a  basis  for  our 
opinion. 

Key Audit Matters 

Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance in our audit of 
the  financial  report  for  the  current  period.  These  matters  were  addressed  in  the  context  of  our  audit  of  the 
financial report as a whole, and in forming our opinion thereon, and we do not provide a separate opinion on 
these matters.  

Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation.

Member of Deloitte Asia Pacific Limited and the Deloitte organisation.

KKeeyy  AAuuddiitt  MMaatttteerr  

IImmppaaiirrmmeenntt  ooff  llooaannss  aanndd  aaddvvaanncceess  

As  at  30  June  2023,  the  Group  has  recognised 
provisions  amounting  to  $45.8m  for  impairment 
losses  on  loans  and  advances  held  at  amortised 
cost in accordance with the Expected Credit Loss 
(ECL)  approach  required  under  AASB  9  Financial 
Instruments as disclosed in Notes 6, 22 and 23. 

Loans and advances subject to provisioning using 
the  ECL  model  include  the  residential  lending 
portfolio,  asset 
loans 
approved but not yet advanced.  

finance  portfolio  and 

HHooww  tthhee  ssccooppee  ooff  oouurr  aauuddiitt  rreessppoonnddeedd  ttoo  tthhee  KKeeyy  AAuuddiitt  
MMaatttteerr  
Our audit procedures performed in conjunction with our 
specialists included, but were not limited to: 

Testing  the  design  and  implementation  of  relevant 
controls over the impairment provision including:  

•

•

•

The  accuracy  of  data  inputs  used  in  the  ECL
calculation;
The  selection  and  application  of  assumptions
used in the model; and
The  ongoing  monitoring  and  identification  of
loans  displaying  indicators  of  impairment  and
whether they are migrating on a timely basis to
appropriate stages in accordance with AASB 9.

Significant management judgement was necessary 
in determining expected credit losses, including: 

AAsssseessssiinngg  iimmppaaiirrmmeenntt  mmooddeell  aaddeeqquuaaccyy  

• The  application  of  the  requirements  of  the
Australian Accounting Standards as reflected in the
Group’s  ECL  model  particularly  in  light  of  the
current economic environment and the impacts of
increased  interest  rates  on  the  variable  loan
portfolio;
• The identification of exposures with a significant
movement in credit quality to determine whether
a 12-month or lifetime ECL should be recognised;
and
• Assumptions used in the ECL model such as the
financial condition of the counterparty, repayment
capacity  and  forward-looking  macroeconomic
factors as disclosed in Notes 6, 22 and 23.

We  assessed  the  adequacy  and  completeness  of 
management’s 
in 
determining 
loss  provision.  Our 
procedures included, but were not limited to: 

developed  model 

impairment 

internally 

the 

•

•

•

•

•

•

Assessing whether management’s model
adequately addresses the requirements of the
Australian Accounting Standards;
Evaluating  management’s  assessment  of  the
impact  of  the  changing  economic  environment
on the loan portfolio and as a result, the ECL;
Testing on a sample basis, individual exposures
to  assess  if  they  are  classified  into  appropriate
default stages and aging buckets for the purpose
of determining the impairment loss provision;
Assessing  assumptions  driving  Probabilities  of
Default  (PD),  Loss  Given  Default  (LGD)  and
Exposure at Default (EAD);
Assessing management overlays to the modelled
collective  provision  by 
the
coverage provided by the collective impairment
provision (including  overlays)  to  the  loan book,
taking into account recent history, performance
and  a  range  of  economic  factors  that  could
impact the relevant portfolios; and
Assessing  the  completeness  of  the  credit  loss
provision.

recalculating 

We  also  assessed  appropriateness  of  the  disclosures  in 
Notes 6,22 and 23 to the financial statements  

124   |

|   125

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD 
|   INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT 

|   INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT 

KKeeyy  AAuuddiitt  MMaatttteerr  

Reliance on automated processes and controls – 
system implementation and migration. 

The Group utilises loan management Information 
Technology (IT) infrastructure for the recording, 
processing, and presentation of loan level 
information for a high volume of transactions. 
The Group’s financial reporting is reliant upon the 
information within this IT infrastructure and the 
IT controls over business process which support 
financial reporting.  

We considered this to be a key audit matter due to 
data  migration  initiatives  undertaken  during  the 
financial year between loan management systems 
which impact the resultant loan level information 
presented in the financial report.  

HHooww  tthhee  ssccooppee  ooff  oouurr  aauuddiitt  rreessppoonnddeedd  ttoo  tthhee  KKeeyy  AAuuddiitt  
MMaatttteerr  
Our audit procedures performed in conjunction with our 
specialists included, but were not limited to: 

•

•

•

Assessing the governance and Group level controls
across the IT environment and assessing the design
and testing the implementation and operating
effectiveness of controls across:

o

o

o

The User Access Management Lifecycle,
including how users are on-boarded,
reviewed, and removed on a timely basis
for critical IT applications and supporting
infrastructure;
Change Management including how
changes are initiated, documented,
approved, tested, and authorised; and
Automated business process controls
including those relating to enforcing
segregation of duties.

Assessing the completeness and accuracy of the
data transferred as part of the system migration.
Assessing the consistency of the configuration
related to reports and automated controls between
the previous system and the new system including
the calculation of interest.

Other Information 

The directors are responsible for the other information. The other information comprises the information included 
in the Group’s annual report for the year ended 30 June 2023  but does not include the financial report and our 
auditor’s report thereon.  

Our  opinion  on  the  financial  report  does  not  cover  the  other  information  and  we  do  not  express  any  form  of 
assurance conclusion thereon.  

In connection with our audit of the financial report, our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing 
so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial report or our knowledge 
obtained in the audit, or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If, based on the work we have performed, 
we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact. 
We have nothing to report in this regard.  

Responsibilities of the Directors for the Financial Report 

The directors of the Company are responsible for the preparation of the financial report that gives a true and fair 
view in accordance with Australian Accounting Standards and the Corporations Act 2001 and for such internal 
control as the directors determine is necessary to enable the preparation of the financial report that gives a true 
and fair view and is free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error. 

In preparing the financial report, the directors are responsible for assessing the ability of the Group to continue as 
a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of 
accounting unless the directors either intend to liquidate the Group or to cease operations, or have no realistic 
alternative but to do so.  

Auditor’s Responsibilities for the Audit of the Financial Report 

Our  objectives are to  obtain  reasonable assurance about  whether the financial report  as a  whole  is free from 
material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. 
Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance 
with the Australian Auditing Standards will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements 
can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably 
be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of this financial report 

As part of an audit in accordance with the Australian Auditing Standards, we exercise professional judgement and 
maintain professional scepticism throughout the audit. We also: 

•

Identify and assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial report, whether due to fraud or error,
design and perform audit procedures responsive to those risks, and obtain audit evidence that is sufficient and
appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion. The risk of not detecting a material misstatement resulting from
fraud is higher than for one resulting from error, as fraud may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions,
misrepresentations, or the override of internal control.

• Obtain an understanding of internal control relevant to the audit in order to design audit procedures that are
appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the
Group internal control.

• Evaluate the appropriateness of accounting policies used and the reasonableness of accounting estimates and

related disclosures made by the directors.

• Conclude on the appropriateness of the directors’ use of the going concern basis of accounting and, based on
the audit evidence obtained, whether a material uncertainty exists related to events or conditions that may
cast significant doubt on the Group’s ability to continue as a going concern. If we conclude that a material
uncertainty exists, we are required to draw attention in our auditor’s report to the related disclosures in the
financial report or, if such disclosures are inadequate, to modify our opinion. Our conclusions are based on the
audit evidence obtained up to the date of our auditor’s report. However, future events or conditions may cause
the Group to cease to continue as a going concern.

• Evaluate the overall presentation, structure and content of the financial report, including the disclosures, and
whether the financial report represents the underlying transactions and events in a manner that achieves fair
presentation.

• Obtain  sufficient  appropriate  audit  evidence  regarding  the  financial  information  of  the  entities  or  business
activities within the Group to express an opinion on the financial report. We are responsible for the direction,
supervision and performance of the Group’s audit. We remain solely responsible for our audit opinion.

We communicate with the directors regarding, among other matters, the planned scope and timing of the audit 
and significant audit findings, including any significant deficiencies in internal control that we identify during our 
audit.  

126   |

|   127

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD 
|   INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT 

We  also  provide  the  directors  with  a  statement  that  we  have  complied  with  relevant  ethical  requirements 
regarding independence, and to communicate with them all relationships and other matters that may reasonably 
be thought to bear on our independence, and where applicable, actions taken to eliminate threats or safeguards 
applied.  

From the matters communicated with the directors, we determine those matters that were of most significance 
in the audit of the financial report of the current period and are therefore the key audit matters. We describe 
these matters in our auditor’s report unless law or regulation precludes public disclosure about the matter or 
when, in extremely rare circumstances, we determine that a matter should not be communicated in our report 
because the adverse consequences of doing so would reasonably be expected to outweigh the public interest 
benefits of such communication. 

RReeppoorrtt  oonn  tthhee  RReemmuunneerraattiioonn  RReeppoorrtt  

Opinion on the Remuneration Report 

We have audited the Remuneration Report included in pages 12 to 28 of the Directors’ Report for the year ended 
30 June 2023..  

In our opinion, the Remuneration Report of Resimac Group Limited, for the year ended 30 June 2023, complies 
with section 300A of the Corporations Act 2001.  

Responsibilities 

The directors of the Company are responsible for the preparation and presentation of the Remuneration Report 
in accordance with section 300A of the Corporations Act 2001. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the 
Remuneration Report, based on our audit conducted in accordance with Australian Auditing Standards.  

DELOITTE TOUCHE TOHMATSU 

Heather Baister  
Partner 
Chartered Accountants 

Sydney, 28th August 2023 

128   |

|   129

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTDShareholder 
information.

Additional information required by the ASX and not disclosed elsewhere in this report is set out below. The 
information is current as at 19 September 2023.

a) Number of holders of equity securities

Ordinary share capital: 401,622,340 paid ordinary shares are held by 2,770 individual shareholders.

b) Voting rights

All issued ordinary shares carry one vote for each member present at the meeting on a show of hands and on a poll 
each member is entitled to one vote for every ordinary share held.

c) Distribution of members and their holdings

The number of equity securities by size of holding is set out below:

Total holders

Units

% Units

RANGE

1 to 1,000

1,001 to 5,000

5,001 to 10,000

10,001 to 100,000

100,001 and over

TOTAL

729

964

350

611

116

378,229

2,559,768

2,729,348

19,646,818

376,308,177

2,770

401,622,340

0.09

0.64

0.68

4.89

93.70

100.00

Units

117,600

UNMARKETABLE PARCELS

Minimum parcel size

Holders

Minimum $500.00 parcel at $0.9500 per unit

527

421

130   |

d) Substantial shareholders

The names of the substantial shareholders of the Company and the number of equity securities in which they have 
a relevant interest as disclosed in substantial shareholding notices given to the Company are set out below:

SHAREHOLDER

Somers Limited, ICM Limited, UIL Limited, Permanent Investments Limited, 
Somers Isles Private Trustee Company Limited, and each other entity 
controlled by Duncan Saville

No. of shares

254,468,487

%

62.48

e) Twenty largest shareholders

The 20 largest shareholders of ordinary shares on the Company's register at 19 September 2023 were:

SHAREHOLDER

JP Morgan Nominees Australia Pty Limited

HSBC Custody Nominees (Australia) Limited

Redbrook Nominees Pty Ltd

Motrose Pty Ltd

Warren John McLeland

National Nominees Limited

Hartley Phillips Securities Pty Ltd (Hartley Phillips Inv Tst A/C)

Moat Investments Pty Ltd (Moat Investment A/C)

Westpac Banking Corporation

Citicorp Nominees Pty Limited

Scanlon Capital Investments Pty Ltd

Acres Holdings Pty Ltd

Mr Scott Bruce Charles McWilliam

RSJSDS Pty Ltd (Salmon Super Fund A/C)

Resimac EST Pty Ltd (Resimac Group EST A/C)

High Pass Holdings Pty Ltd (High Pass Hldgs P/L Sup A/C)

Ralph Lauren 57 Pty Ltd (John James No 2 A/C)

Esselmont Pty Ltd (The Esselmont A/C)

Torryburn Pty Ltd (Torryburn Super Fund A/C)

TICO Pty Ltd

TOTAL

No. of shares

188,364,267

83,708,354

15,793,019

14,500,000

11,920,138

9,657,767

5,031,373

3,427,545

2,493,130

1,893,492

1,791,131

1,496,881

1,446,831

1,323,500

1,265,125

1,191,687

1,073,600

989,749

982,619

903,960

%

46.90

20.84

3.93

3.61

2.97

2.40

1.25

0.85

0.62

0.47

0.45

0.37

0.36

0.33

0.32

0.30

0.27

0.25

0.24

0.23

349,254,168

86.96

|   131

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTD2023 ANNUAL REPORT

Managing your 
shareholding.

The Company's share registry is managed by 
Computershare Investor Services Pty Limited 
(Computershare).

The Investor Centre website is the fastest, easiest 
and most convenient way to view and manage your 
shareholding. Investor Centre enables a shareholder 
to:

  View the Company share price;

  Change your banking details;

When communicating with Computershare or 
accessing your holding online you will need your 
Securityholder Reference Number (SRN) or Holder 
Identification Number (HIN) as shown on your Issuer 
Sponsored / CHESS statements.

You can also contact Computershare by:

Address

Level 3, 60 Carrington Street, Sydney NSW 2000

P. 1300 850 505

  Change your address (for non-CHESS sponsored 

E. web.queries@computershare.com.au

holdings);

  Update your dividend instruction;

  Update your Tax File Number (TFN), Australian 

Business Number (ABN) or exemption;

  Select your email and communication 

preferences; and

  View your transaction history.

W. investorcentre.com.au

Tax File Number

While it is not compulsory to provide a Tax File 
Number ('TFN'), if shareholders have not provided 
a TFN and Resimac pays and unfranked or partly 
franked dividend, the Company will be required to 
deduct tax from the unfranked portion of the dividend 
at the top marginal rate plus the Medicare Levy.

Information on Resimac Group

Resimac Group website

Up to date information on the Company can be obtained from the Company's website: 
resimac.com.au

Securities exchange listing

The Company's shares are listed on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) and the Home Exchange is Sydney. 
Ordinary shares are traded under the code, ASX:RMC.

Share prices can be accessed from major Australian newspapers, the Resimac Group website or at: asx.com.au

Corporate 
information.

Registered office and Corporate office

Level 9, 45 Clarence Street, Sydney NSW 2000

P. +61 2 9248 0300

E. info@resimac.com.au

W. resimac.com.au

Customer enquiries: 13 38 39

ABN 55 095 034 003

Australian Credit Licence 247829

ASX:RMC

Share registry

Computershare Investor Services Pty Limited

Non-Executive Directors

Warren McLeland, Chairman

Susan Hansen

Duncan Saville

Wayne Spanner

Caroline Waldron

Company Secretary

Peter Fitzpatrick

132   |

|   133
|   133

To view the 2023 Annual Report, Shareholder and Company information, new announcements, background 
information on Resimac Group businesses and historical information, visit the Resimac website at resimac.com.au

2023 ANNUAL REPORTRESIMAC GROUP LTDRESIMAC GROUP LTD
2023 ANNUAL REPORT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2023

Level 9, 45 Clarence Street

Sydney NSW 2000 Australia