How does the CBA dividend yield compare to other ASX 200 bank shares right now?

Why does the ASX’s largest bank pay the smallest dividends?

| More on:
A young woman sits at her desk in deep contemplation with her hand to her chin while seriously considering information she is reading on her laptop

Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

Key points

  • For decades, ASX investors have bought the big four bank shares for dividends
  • CBA is by far the largest ASX bank share, but many investors might be wondering why it offers the smallest dividend yield
  • CBA's relative lack of income comes down to the high share price investors are willing to put on it, rather than the dividends themselves

As any seasoned Australian investor would know, most investors who buy ASX bank shares do so in the hopes of receiving oversized dividend income. ASX bank shares like Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA) have been paying hefty, fully-franked dividends for decades.

The past few years haven’t done much to dent that reputation. But today, let’s analyse the CBA dividend yield and how it compares to other ASX bank shares.

Right off the bat, it’s worth pointing out that CBA has been dialling up its dividends in recent years. In 2020, CBA investors received an annual total of $2.98 per share in dividend income. In 2021, this rose to $3.50 per share, and again in 2022 to 43.85 per share.

The interim dividend that CommBank has paid out so far in 2023 – $2.10 per share – also represented a healthy year-on-year increase compared to the same dividend of $1.75 per share paid in 2022.

However, we are still not quite back to pre-COVID levels, and the days when Commonwealth Bank was forking out $4.31 in dividends per share annually.

But things are certainly appearing to be heading in the right direction for CBA’s income investors.

How does the CBA dividend yield compare to the other ASX 200 bank shares?

But an ASX’s share’s raw dividend payments form only one-half of the dividend yield equation. The other half comes from the company’s share price itself. 

In CBA’s case, this has been working against the bank’s dividend yield. So while CBA has been ratcheting up its dividends over the past three years, its share price has also been rising to match it. Today, CBA shares are sitting at more than 15% above where the bank was just before the 2020 COVID crash, as you can see below:

This has had a mollifying effect on the CBA dividend yield. Today, the $4.20 per share that CBA has paid out in dividends over the past 12 months gives this ASX 200 bank share a trailing dividend yield of 3.98%.

While that is objectively still a strong yield, it does pale in comparison against some of CBA’s banking peers. In fact, CBA today offers the lowest dividend yield out of any major ASX bank share.

Why is Commonwealth Bank last when it comes to income?

To illustrate, here’s where the other ASX banks currently stand in terms of dividend yield:

ASX bank share Current dividend yield (trailing)
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA) 3.98%
National Australia Bank Ltd (ASX: NAB) 5.71%
Westpac Banking Corp (ASX: WBC) 6.03%
ANZ Group Holdings Ltd (ASX: ANZ) 6.04%
Bank of Queensland Ltd (ASX: BOQ) 7.35%
Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Ltd (ASX: BEN) 5.99%
Macquarie Group Ltd (ASX: MQG) 4.31%

So CBA is the clear laggard here.

Shareholders might be asking CBA to show them the money right now. However, there is a pretty straightforward reason why this is the case. Put simply, CBA shares command a bit of a premium against all other ASX bank shares in terms of the market valuation investors are willing to assign it.

To illustrate, consider CBA shares’ current price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 18.05. That is significantly higher than Westpac’s 12.45 P/E ratio at present, NAB’s 12.18 and ANZ’s 10.91.

As we established earlier, a company’s share price impacts its dividend yield just as much as its raw dividend payments. And because CBA is more expensive on a P/E ratio basis, the dividend yield it can offer investors is proportionately lower.

Motley Fool contributor Sebastian Bowen has positions in National Australia Bank. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Macquarie Group. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Bendigo And Adelaide Bank and Macquarie Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Bank Shares

A young woman sits with her hand to her chin staring off to the side thinking about her investments.
Bank Shares

What can owners of Westpac shares learn from the CBA result?

How are arrears and margins going?

Read more »

A woman sits at a table with notebook on lap and pen in hand as she gazes off to the side with the pen resting on the side of her face as though she is thinking and contemplating while a glass of orange juice and a pair of red sunglasses rests on the table beside her.
Bank Shares

Is now the time to buy NAB shares for passive income?

Goldman Sachs predicts NAB shares will pay a fully franked annual dividend of $1.66 per share in FY23 and FY24.

Read more »

A woman sits on her lounge in front of her laptop looking concerned.
Bank Shares

Own CBA shares? Broker warns that profits won’t reach FY23 levels again until 2028

Are the next few years going to be tough for Australia's largest bank?

Read more »

A man sits in deep thought with a pen held to his lips as he ponders his computer screen with a laptop open next to him on his desk in a home office environment.
Bank Shares

Why is the ANZ share price trailing the other ASX big four banks today?

ANZ investors are getting important insights into Suncorp Bank today.

Read more »

A Chinese investor sits in front of his laptop looking pensive and concerned about pandemic lockdowns which may impact ASX 200 iron ore share prices
Bank Shares

Own NAB shares? Here’s what to expect from the bank’s Q3 update

This banking giant will be releasing its third-quarter update next week.

Read more »

A couple working on a laptop laugh as they discuss their ASX share portfolio.
Dividend Investing

Everything you need to know about the FY23 CBA dividend

It’s getting close to payday for CBA shareholders.

Read more »

A female financial services professional with a manicured black afro hairstyle turns an ipad screen to show a client across the table a set of ASX shares figures in graph format
Bank Shares

Bendigo Bank share price lower despite APRA boost

APRA has given this regional bank a boost.

Read more »

A woman in a bright yellow jumper looks happily at her yellow piggy bank representing bank dividends and in particular the CBA dividend
Earnings Results

CBA shares charge higher on ‘earnings beat’

Here's what analysts are saying about the CBA result.

Read more »