PLAY PODCASTS
Can Anthony Miller steady Westpac?

Can Anthony Miller steady Westpac?

More rate rises. A possible recession. And fresh pressure on households and business. So how is one of Australia’s biggest banks preparing for what comes next? Anthony Miller took over Westpac after a bruising era for the bank, following a two-decade investment banking career with major institutions including Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank. He joins Alan Kohler on That's Business to talk mortgage stress, recession risk, cyber threats, AI, housing affordability, and how Westpac is trying to move on from years of scandal. Got a burning business question? Send a short voice recording to the ABC Business Daily team at [email protected]

ABC Business Daily · Australian Broadcasting Corporation

April 3, 202628m 0s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (mediacore-live-production.akamaized.net) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

More rate rises. A possible recession. And fresh pressure on households and business.

So how is one of Australia’s biggest banks preparing for what comes next?

Anthony Miller took over Westpac after a bruising era for the bank, following a two-decade investment banking career with major institutions including Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank.

He joins Alan Kohler on That's Business to talk mortgage stress, recession risk, cyber threats, AI, housing affordability, and how Westpac is trying to move on from years of scandal.

Got a burning business question?

Send a short voice recording to the ABC Business Daily team at [email protected]

Topics

ABC Business Dailypodcastbusiness newsdaily podcastfinancemarketseconomymarket analysiscorporate newsbusiness trendsfinancial headlineshosts (ABC presenters)presentersdaily updatesstock marketeconomic policyurban developmentcityscape imagerydata visualizationABC listenAlan KohlerWestpacAnthony MillerGoldman SachsDeutsche BankAIhousinginterest ratesRBArecession