Australia's biggest bank made $5.02 billion in cash profit after tax in the six months to December 31, down three per cent from the same time in 2022.
"Our lower cash profit reflects cost inflation and a competitive operating environment," CBA chief executive Matt Comyn said in a letter to shareholders.
The bank's net interest margin, a key measure of profitability, dropped 11 basis points to 1.99 per cent, as customers switched to higher yielding deposits, wholesale funding costs increased and CBA's New Zealand subsidiary ASB delivered a smaller contribution.
Operating expenses were up four per cent to $4 billion due to inflation and additional spending on technology, while loan impairment expenses dipped by $96 million to $415 million.
Moomoo analyst Jessica Amir tweeted that the results were "lukewarm" and showed the average consumer is in pain.
CBA results — Jessica Amir (@JessicaDAmir) $CBA for half year are lukewarm & show the Av' consumer is in pain - Net interest margin from cont ops 1.99% vs. 2.1% y/y. But beat 1.66% Estimate- Cash profit from continuing operations A$5.02 billion, -4.3% y/y, estimate A$4.92 billion -Interim dividend per share… pic.twitter.com/nQkCkFrMJ7February 13, 2024
Customer arrears in mortgages and credit cards ticked up but remain at historically low levels.
Just 0.52 per cent of customers were more than 90 days behind on their mortgage payments as of December, compared to the historical average of 0.65 per cent.
CBA's tier one capital ratio stood at 12.3 per cent at year end, up from 12.2 per cent six months ago and well above regulatory requirements.
"Our balance sheet remains strong with high levels of provision coverage, surplus capital and conservative funding metrics," Mr Comyn said.
CBA announced an interim dividend of $2.15 a share, fully franked, up from a $2.10 a share a year ago.