THE chief executive of ANZ says he was “appalled” to learn through the banking royal commission what impact the institution has had on some Australians.

Shayne Elliott has made the admission while being grilled by Federal politicians at a parliamentary hearing in Canberra, adding he was saddened to read the inquiry’s interim report.

“It was embarrassing and shocking,” Mr Elliott told the House of Representatives economics committee hearing on Friday.

Mr Elliot said the bank had broken the trust of many of its customers.

He lamented that accountability for misconduct at the bank had been limited and insufficient.

ANZ has made changes to turn this around, he said, with each of its senior executives now aware of exactly what they are liable for.

“There’s much greater transparency, but there’s still an enormous amount of work to do there,” Mr Elliot said.

He said about a handful of ANZ’s top brass have been sacked over misconduct in the past year.

“My commitment is to ensure that I do hold people to account.”

Mr Elliott is the third banking head to be grilled by the MPs this week, after the Commonwealth Bank’s Matt Comyn and Westpac’s Brian Hartzer fronted the committee on Thursday.

Both acknowledged their institutions took too long to address misconduct that was eventually uncovered by a royal commission.

They also admitted they have their work cut out for them to regain the public’s trust.

“From an overall reputation point of view, this is obviously going to take years to restore,” Mr Hartzer said.

The hearings come two weeks after banking royal commissioner Kenneth Hayne QC delivered an interim report, blaming greed and the pursuit of profit for the widespread misconduct in the banking and financial services industries.

National Australia Bank boss Andrew Thorburn will appear next Friday.