(Reuters) - National Australia Bank Ltd on Tuesday said it will hike its standard variable home loan interest rate by 25 basis points (bps) per annum .
By Reuters Staff
(Adds background, details)
May 26 (Reuters) - National Australia Bank Ltd on Wednesday said issues related to underpayment of staff for part-time work had impacted 3,200 current and former employees.
The country’s third-largest bank also noted a local media report that said the Finance Sector Union was looking to lodge Federal Court proceedings against the bank for alleged underpayment of staff.
The bank denied allegations that the underpayment issues impacted full-time employees, adding that it had already paid all current employees affected by the problem and was contacting former employees for payment.
NAB said employees who worked in full-time capacities were unaffected by payment complications as “hours of work are not used to formulate their salary”.
By Reuters Staff
1 Min Read
May 26 (Reuters) - National Australia Bank Ltd on Wednesday said issues related to underpayment of staff for part time work had impacted 3,200 current and former employees.
The country s third-largest bank also noted a local media report here that said the Finance Sector Union was looking to lodge Federal Court proceedings against the bank for alleged underpayment of staff. (Reporting by Soumyajit Saha in Bengaluru; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
UPDATE 3-National Australia Bank doubles dividend, shakes off COVID profit hit Reuters 5/5/2021 Doubles interim dividend of 60 cents/share, beating expectations
Popular Searches H1 cash profit soars nearly 95% to A$3.3 bln (Updates with CEO comments to reporters)
By Paulina Duran and Shashwat Awasthi
SYDNEY/BENGALURU, May 6 (Reuters) - National Australia Bank Ltd on Thursday doubled its dividend and promised higher capital returns to come as Australia s rapid economic recovery enabled it to move funds set aside for potential COVID-19 losses back into profit.
Australia s third-largest bank, which this time last year was raising billions in new shares, promised to give capital back and reduce share count as the country s lenders benefit from low COVID-19 case numbers and massive government stimulus.