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Mike's Minute: Reality vs ideology re: asset sales

Author
Mike Hosking ,
Publish Date
Thu, 14 May 2026, 10:44am

Mike's Minute: Reality vs ideology re: asset sales

Author
Mike Hosking ,
Publish Date
Thu, 14 May 2026, 10:44am

Bit of buzz around Kiwibank as it potentially looks to have another crack at getting bigger, and by getting bigger, then becomes better able to take on the so-called "big four". 

This is business and it's politics. 

Asset sales are back on the agenda, especially for the National and ACT parties. 

NZ First, not so much. So it may well be one of those things that gets tossed around as an idea, but in the reality of an MMP environment, it goes nowhere. 

Making the Kiwibank story slightly unique is its role in the overall banking atmosphere of New Zealand and whether a bigger bank would solve any of the perceived competition problems we have. 

People we know are prepared to change banks. Last year when there was a free for all on cashbacks for borrowing, people were moving freely like the wind. So the idea that there isn't competition doesn’t appear to be true. 

But I'm in a minority given everyone from the Commerce Commission to the Finance Minister argues otherwise. 

I also detect more broadly that asset sales are not, as a topic, as edgy as they once were. 

If you go back to the 80's and Labour under Douglas and Prebble, asset sales were dynamite and not all of them went well, which didn’t help the pro-sales argument. 

But the cold hard-ish reality here, 40 years on, is there isn't a lot left to sell. 

Some chunks of power companies are worth serious money. 

We have an airline, a TV network, a radio network, some farms – it's all got a moderately piecemeal vibe to it. 

Kiwibank should be able to raise the sort of money it needs, and it should be allowed to grow. Is the counter to a partial sale that we like a small, restricted bank that hasn’t been allowed to be all it could be just so we can say we are anti-asset sales? 

In Kiwibank's case you are holding back growth. 

In TVNZ's case it's about ideology, i.e. should the state run a TV station given the place isn't worth anything to sell? 

And in say the case of Genesis, it's about serious coin we could badly use elsewhere. 

If this idea goes anywhere this election year, you would hope we are less hung up on ideology and more attuned to the nuances of the debate than we have been in the past. 

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