CBA share price charges higher after FY24 $9.8b profit impresses

Australia's largest bank delivered the good again in FY 2024.

| More on:
A woman presenting company news to investors looks back at the camera and smiles.

Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

The Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA) share price is charging higher on Wednesday morning.

At the time of writing, the big four bank's shares are up 1.5% to $134.59.

Why is the CBA share price charging higher?

Investors have been bidding the company's shares higher this morning after it released its FY 2024 results and revealed better than expected number.

For the 12 months ended 30 June, Australia's largest bank reported flat operating income of $27.174 billion and a 2% decline in cash net profit after tax to $9.836 billion.

As a comparison, Goldman Sachs was forecasting the bank to post a 3.5% decline in cash earnings from continued operations to $9.716 billion, whereas the consensus estimate stood at $9.783 billion. CBA's profit has comfortably beaten both estimates.

Also getting investors excited and boosting the CBA share price was its dividend. The bank's board declared a fully franked final dividend of $2.50 per share, which brought its total dividends for FY 2024 to $4.65 per share. This represents a 3% year on year increase and is ahead of the consensus estimate of $4.55 per share.

CBA's full year dividend represents a payout ratio of 79% of cash NPAT, which is at the upper end of its target range.

CBA's CEO Matt Comyn commented:

We have retained strong loan loss provision coverage, with surplus capital and conservative funding metrics. Our disciplined approach to managing our balance sheet settings positions us with flexibility and capacity for a range of economic scenarios, while continuing to deliver sustainable returns. We have declared a final dividend of $2.50 per share, fully franked, resulting in a full year dividend of $4.65.

Broker response

Analysts at Goldman Sachs have been running the rule over the result and have seen positives and negatives. They commented:

CBA's FY24 cash earnings (company basis) from continued operations fell by -2% yoy to A$9,836 mn, and was +1% higher versus GSe and Visible Alpha consensus expectations (VAe). PPOP was +1%/in line vs. GSe/VAe, largely on account of higher NIM. Versus GSe, the BDD charge was broadly in line but -11% lower than VAe, and while balance sheet settings remain conservative, there were some early signs of asset quality deterioration, which we explore in more detail within the note.

In respect to the asset quality deterioration, the broker adds:

Troublesome and impaired assets came in at A$8.7 bn, vs A$7.1/6.9 bn in Jun-23/Dec-23, representing 63 bp of total committed exposures, albeit this remains well below the 91 bp average since Aug-08 and the 72 bp in Jun-19 (pre-Covid). The increase appears largely due to a small number of single names in Commercial Property, Wholesale Trade and Manufacturing.

Goldman also highlights that the bank's dividend was larger than expected, which is likely to have been a boost to the CBA share price today. It said:

The final ordinary DPS of A250¢ was higher than GSe/VAe (A240¢), and implies a 2H24 payout ratio of 87% (GSe: 86%). We note that the DRP will be done with no discount, with new shares to be neutralized by an on-market buyback. CBA's FY24 CET1 ratio of 12.3% (19.1% on an internationally comparable basis) came in 20 bp better than our expectations.

Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Goldman Sachs Group. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Bank Shares

Man pointing at a blue rising share price graph.
52-Week Highs

Up 52% in a year, the Westpac share price just jumped to near 7-year highs!

ASX 200 investors just sent Westpac share to almost seven-year highs. But why?

Read more »

A human-like robot checks out market performance on a laptop, indicating the rise of AI shares.
Bank Shares

CBA share price marching higher amid 'monumental step' in AI revolution

CBA shares could get ongoing support from the bank’s AI transformation plan.

Read more »

A woman holds up hands to compare two things with question marks above her hands.
Bank Shares

Better buy: ASX bank or mining shares?

Which sector could make a smarter pick at the current valuations?

Read more »

A man looking at his laptop and thinking.
Bank Shares

Would you be crazy to buy CBA shares at $143?

Can CBA really keep rising?

Read more »

Happy man at an ATM.
Bank Shares

$10,000 invested in NAB shares 12 months ago is now worth…

Did the big four bank deliver the goods for investors? Let's find out.

Read more »

A female investor sits at her messy desk and marks dates in her diary for Zip announcements in 2022
Bank Shares

Own CBA shares? Here are the dates to watch in 2025

Put these important dates in your investment calendar.

Read more »

A man sitting at a computer is blown away by what he's seeing on the screen, hair and tie whooshing back as he screams argh in panic.
Bank Shares

Warning! Why CBA shares could crash 30%

Goldman Sachs is warning investors to be careful with this bank's shares.

Read more »

ASX expensive defensive shares man carrying large dollar sign on his back representing high P/E ratio or dividend
Bank Shares

Here's why the dividend yield tells us CBA shares are too expensive

I'm using a simple metric to determine if CBA is too expensive...

Read more »