Office building with the Commonwealth Bank logo
Source: Adobe Stock
The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

Commonwealth Bank (ASX:CBA) has reported a cash NPAT (net profit after tax) of approximately $2.5 billion in the first quarter of the 2025 fiscal year, with this being a 5% rise on the 2H24 quarterly average, although flat compared to prior comparative quarter.

Operating income also rose during the quarter – by 3.5% – while inflation pushed operating costs up 3% for the period, and operating performance being up 5% on the 2H24 quarterly average.

The bank said that volume growth was seen in home lending and household deposits during the period, with retail bank transactions also on the increase – as an additional 121,000 accounts were added during the quarter, based on continued non-migrant and migrant account openings.

Household deposits grew $14.9 billion in the quarter.

CBA was also experiencing positive movement when it came to home loans – which grew $8.6 billion at 1.3x system for the three months to September 2024, as the bank focused on retention of current clients and improved acquisition volumes.

Looking at business flow for the quarter, 66% of this came from proprietary mix for home loans.

CEO Matt Comyn said the cost-of-living crisis faced by Australian consumers was a factor the bank was aware of in its delivery to customers.

“These results demonstrate ongoing focus on delivering for our customers, and disciplined operational and strategic execution,” he said.

“Many Australians continue to be challenged by cost-of-living pressures. We have continued to support our customers, invest in our franchise, and provide strength and stability for the broader economy.”

Mr Comyn added that he was ultimately optimistic on the health of the Australian economy, and its overall outlook, but headwinds were still present.

“Inflation is moderating, but at a slowing pace, and global geopolitical tensions are creating uncertainty,” he said.

“Growth in the Australian economy remains slow, as higher rates continue to weigh on consumer demand and bring inflation back to the target range.”

CBA has been trading at $150.25.

Join the discussion: See what HotCopper users are saying about CBA and be part of the conversations that move the markets.

CBA by the numbers
More From The Market Online
The Market Online Video

HotCopper Highlights, Week 49: ASX Ltd shoots itself in foot again, NextDC-OpenAI & more

Good afternoon and welcome to HotCopper Highlights, I’m Jon Davidson, in this segment we go through the most viewed and most discussed stocks
ASX concept

ASX announcement outage issue all sorted on Tuesday, but reputational damages remain

More pain for the listed equities in ASX Ltd (ASX:ASX), the share market operator itself, after a Monday morning
A HotCopper-branded graphic image which reads "Insider Trades: Key director trades to watch" in front of an ASX-themed image which has been faded.

Pantoro, WEB, Energy One: All the biggest ASX director trades from the last week

Welcome to HotCopper’s Director Trades column, where we take a look at all the most interesting director transactions from across the past week and break