Sydney, June 15, 2026, 01:03 (AEST)
- National Australia Bank finished at A$36.50 on June 12, a gain of 2.30%. The ASX 200 climbed 1.98%.
- The Reserve Bank of Australia’s cash-rate call on June 16 is up next. Most economists expect the central bank to keep the rate on hold at 4.35%.
- NAB bulls are focused on the bank’s business-lending and dividends. Bears point to valuation risk, higher credit provisions and strain from borrowers feeling the pressure of rate moves.
National Australia Bank Limited shares rallied with other major banks as the ASX bounced back. NAB finished at A$36.50 on June 12, adding A$0.82, or 2.30%. Shares traded in a range between A$36.00 and A$36.50, coming back from Tuesday’s A$35.68 close. The S&P/ASX 200 climbed 1.98% to 8,804, with Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, NAB and ANZ all up for the day.
NAB shares are moving with the rest of the bank sector, which is closely tied to rate moves in Australia. Higher rates help net interest income but can also cool credit demand and push up bad-loan risks. The Reserve Bank of Australia will announce its next decision on June 16 at 2:30 p.m. AEST. According to a Reuters poll, 42 of 45 economists see the RBA holding the cash rate at 4.35%.
NAB’s May half-year results leave investors split. The bank posted cash earnings of A$2.639 billion. Strip out large notable items, and cash earnings were A$3.588 billion, up 2.3% on the last half. NAB calls cash earnings its underlying, non-IFRS metric. It’s used inside the bank and by investors to judge the operating result.
NAB’s core business still has momentum, bulls say. Net interest margin edged up by 3 basis points to 1.81%. One basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point. Gross loans and advances rose 2.9% in the half, NAB said, with deposits up 2.3%. CEO Andrew Irvine said the bank is “well placed to navigate a period of increased volatility.” NAB
The bear case is getting harder to shrug off as credit risk and valuations move back into focus. NAB’s credit impairment charge jumped to A$706 million from A$485 million in the last half, with A$300 million of that from new forward-looking provisions linked to potential Middle East conflict stress. Its CET1 ratio, which tracks high-quality capital to risk-weighted assets, was 11.65% as of March 31. That’s down 5 basis points from September. NAB said its dividend reinvestment plan aims to push the pro forma CET1 ratio to 12.05%.
Income still draws investors. NAB’s interim dividend is set at 85 Australian cents per ordinary share, with payment due July 2. The shareholder calendar has an August 17 date for the third-quarter trading update and November 5 for full-year results. Those are the next scheduled points to watch capital, margins and credit quality after the RBA move.
NAB shares are trading more to the risky side than cheap on valuation, analysts say. Morningstar’s Nathan Zaia kept his A$34 fair value call after the bank’s half-year report, calling the stock overvalued. He pointed to a high forward P/E and forecasts for just mid-single-digit EPS growth out to 2030. The shares are at A$36.50, about 7% over his fair value, but still well off their 12-month peak.
Investors are focused on the RBA’s message from June 16, watching to see if the central bank hints that rates have reached their peak and does not warn of bigger trouble for borrowers. If rates stay steady and the RBA’s tone is calm, bulls could get more confident on margins, dividends, and business lending. Signs of inflation pushing rates higher, or more credit stress, would support the bear case for higher provisions and weaker valuation multiples.