Melbourne, May 4, 2026, 00:01 AEST
National Australia Bank Limited is set to report its first-half numbers Monday, and investors have had plenty of warning: higher bad-loan charges, a capital increase, and a major software write-down are all on the table. The bank’s 2026 half-year results briefing is slated for 10:30 a.m. AEST.
Awkward timing for NAB. According to a Reuters poll out Friday, 30 out of 33 economists now expect the Reserve Bank of Australia to lift the cash rate by 25 basis points—pushing it up to 4.35%—on May 5, just one day after NAB reports. More than a third of those surveyed think rates could get to at least 4.60% before the year is out.
That’s a key point for NAB, the nation’s top business lender. While higher rates tend to boost lending margins, they also put extra strain on borrowers dealing with rising costs in fuel, transport, and construction.
NAB now expects first-half credit impairment charges to climb to A$706 million, setting aside more for loans that could go bad. According to Reuters, that number lands about twice as high as a year ago and notably above the A$485 million booked in the previous half. Michael Bell of Solaris Investment Management, which holds NAB shares, pointed out that banks are “proactively building buffers” in sectors exposed to the cycle. Reuters
NAB’s filing revealed plans for a 1.5% discount on its dividend reinvestment plan, letting shareholders opt for shares rather than a cash payout. The bank will partially underwrite the plan, targeting up to A$1.8 billion. According to NAB, this could boost its Common Equity Tier 1 ratio by around 40 basis points. It’s expecting a pro forma CET1 ratio north of 12.0% as of March 31.
Another blow for NAB: the bank flagged a A$1.347 billion pre-tax accelerated amortisation charge—A$949 million after tax—tied to a shift in its software asset accounting. Full-year guidance on cash operating expense growth remains under 4.6%, large notable items not included.
NAB shares finished at A$39.83 on May 1, off 0.13% for the day. That’s a far cry from February’s all-time high of A$47.96, which came as first-quarter cash earnings jumped 16% to A$2.02 billion. The price now leaves little buffer for any earnings stumble.
Peer results haven’t offered a clear trend. On May 1, ANZ Group posted a first-half cash profit of A$3.78 billion, with statutory profit at A$3.65 billion. The bank also took a A$175 million collective provision charge tied to possible fallout from Middle East conflict. “The longer oil flows stay restricted, the more likely we move from an inflation headache to a supply and growth issue,” ANZ CEO Nuno Matos said. ANZ
The real danger? Margins might get a boost from rate hikes, yet steeper borrowing costs and inflation—thanks in part to energy prices—start weighing on business clients. “Necessarily less certain” is how Westpac chief economist Luci Ellis described the interest rate path past May to Reuters. For AMP’s My Bui, inflation is “basically too high in Australia.” Reuters
Monday’s numbers might not tell the whole tale. Investors want to know if NAB’s provisions are a one-time buffer—or the first hints of a bigger credit cycle—and if the capital raise signals prudence or sets off alarms.