Australia’s largest bank has surpassed expectations by growing its profit by five percent, sending its shares soaring, and prompting one bank watcher to brand it a “stonking result.”
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) on Feb. 11 delivered a record cash net profit of $5.45 billion (US$3.88 billion) for the six months to Dec. 31, 2025, up six percent from the same period in 2024 and beating expectations of $5.19 billion.
Revenue rose six percent to $15 billion, beating expectations of $14.81 billion, leaving the statutory net profit result sitting at $5.37 billion.
It will pay a fully franked dividend of $2.35 a share, up four per cent from a year prior - and again beating expectations. Analysts had forecast a dividend in the $2.26 to $2.34 range.
“Congratulations on a stonking result,” one analyst told CBA chief executive Matt Comyn on a conference call on Feb. 11.
“I thought it was a really clean set of numbers from CBA, and that should be, in my view, probably an inflection point for the stock,” said James Gerrish, lead portfolio manager at Market Partners.
CBA shares were on track for their biggest one-day gain since March 2020 around noon, rising 7.9 percent to a three-month high of $171.26.
The stock had struggled the past few months after a stellar run in 2024 and much of 2025.
Moomoo dealing manager Chris Strazzeri said the bank’s profit boost had set the tone for a big day in the broader stock market.
CBA’s results are closely watched as the bank is seen as a bellwether for the health of the overall banking sector, as well as the national economy.
The other Big Four banks won’t report their half-year results until May.
Comyn told analysts the strength of the result had been driven by CBA’s ability to grow lending and deposit volume while remaining disciplined.
Home lending grew seven percent year-on-year to $622 billion, business lending rose 12 percent to $168 billion, and interest-bearing deposits held for customers grew nine percent to $861 billion.
Credit quality also remained strong, with loan impairment expenses falling to $319 million, from $406 million six months ago.
There was one blemish on the figures: CBA’s net interest margin dropped slightly, falling to 2.04 percent from 2.08 percent.
The metric is used to gauge the profitability of banks and measures the difference between the income generated from loans and the interest expenses paid to depositors.
CBA said the slightly lower outcome was due to competition in home lending—where Macquarie has emerged as a fierce rival to the big four banks—as well as lower income from its treasury and markets arm.
The bank had overall shown disciplined lending and deposit volume growth across retail and business segments, as well as strong credit quality, Totality market strategist Aaron Zanchetta said.
“Underlying margins were slightly compressed amid competitive pressures, but the bank’s raised interim dividend reflects confidence in earnings resilience and capital strength,” he said.







