
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA) remains the undisputed heavyweight of the Australian financial system, dominant in retail banking, advantaged by scale, and well-positioned to monetise the next phase of household re-leveraging as rates peak and credit growth stabilises. Our view is simple: CBA’s franchise resilience is undervalued. While the macro backdrop remains mixed and competition in mortgages remains intense, the bank continues to deliver sector-leading returns, defend margin leadership, and maintain one of the strongest balance sheets globally.

We believe National Australia Bank (ASX: NAB) is entering a structurally more attractive phase of its earnings cycle, one that the market is only partially pricing. FY25 confirms that NAB has completed a difficult multi-year transition from remediation-heavy execution towards balance-sheet-led growth, operational leverage, and disciplined capital deployment. In our view, National Australia Bank is no longer just a “solid major bank.” It is increasingly a business-banking-centric compounder, with improving margin resilience, strengthening deposit mix, stabilising asset quality, and credible technology-driven productivity optionality.
What are Bank Stocks? Bank stocks are shares of publicly traded banking institutions, representing ownership in those banks and a claim on their profits and assets. These stocks fall under the broader financial sector, which also includes insurers, asset managers, payment firms, and real estate trusts.
Within the banking sector itself, subsectors include retail or commercial banks that accept deposits and issue loans; investment banks that underwrite securities and advise on mergers and trading; regional banks serving smaller areas; and diversified banks combining multiple services in one firm. Each subsector has different risk profiles, revenue models, and sensitivities to economic cycles.

Bank stocks may perform well when interest rates support lending margins, economic conditions boost credit demand, capital returns stay strong, and valuations remain prudent. Combined with easing regulation, merger activity, and solid fundamentals, these drivers position bank stocks for future potential upside.
Here are some clear reasons why investing in ASX bank stocks can be attractive:
Banks earn most of their money from the difference between what they pay for deposits and what they charge for loans. When central banks raise interest rates, this gap, called the net interest margin, widens. As a result, many banks see stronger earnings and profits. In 2025, banks gained from improving margins as central banks kept rates high.
Central bank decisions on rates and reserve requirements hugely influence banks. A steepening yield curve, where long term rates rise more than short term rates, benefits banks by increasing margins while encouraging lending.
As economies grow, demand for loans, like mortgages, corporate credit, and business lines, increases. That boosts banks' revenues and asset quality. In 2025, many banks reported rising credit activity and stronger financial results, especially after earlier periods of caution.
Banks have returned capital to investors through growing dividends and buyback programs. These actions support share price strength and yield appeal.
Financial stocks are trading at valuations that many analysts consider reasonable. For instance, regional banks are priced attractively versus earnings growth potential, suggesting they may be undervalued. This gap may offer upside if markets re-rate these stocks favorably.
Relaxation of rules and easier capital requirements increase flexibility. This encourages bank mergers and acquisitions, yielding cost savings and higher scale. Many mid size banks are pursuing consolidation to stay competitive, potentially enhancing shareholder value.
Individual bank strength, measured by return on equity (ROE), cost control, loan loss provision management, asset quality, and capital ratios, makes a difference. Banks with efficient operations and low credit risk reward shareholders over time.
Market sentiment toward financials has improved in 2025, with strong ETF performance and earnings upgrades. Analysts remain generally bullish, forecasting EPS growth of around 15% through 2026. Crowds often follow momentum, amplifying gains.

The big banks offer predictable income and defensive appeal, but limited upside. Meanwhile, genuine opportunities in emerging technology themes are better pursued through dedicated tech or fintech investments rather than core ASX listed bank shares.
Bank of Queensland (ASX: BOQ): Bank of Queensland is an Australian regional bank transforming its business model. In its first-half FY2025, the bank posted a $183 million cash profit, driven by strategic shifts from home lending toward higher margin business sectors like healthcare, agriculture, and commercial property. They also streamlined operations by completing the acquisition and closure of franchised branches, and integrating their three brands (BOQ, ME Bank, and Virgin Money) into one digital platform. Parallel to this, BOQ has been aggressively cutting costs. In 2025 alone, they closed 14 branches nationwide, including nine more announced recently, several in Queensland, and reduced over 600 staff positions since 2023. While the bank pledges redeployment where possible, community access to face‑to face banking services is declining, raising concerns among critics and unions.
Bendigo and Adelaide Bank (ASX: BEN): Bendigo and Adelaide Bank is a diversified Australian bank offering consumer, business and agribusiness banking, financial planning, investments, insurance, and superannuation services. As of early August 2025, its share price is A$12.84, up about 2.6% in the past week, trading approximately 5.6% below its 52‑week high of A$13.60. In FY2025, BEN reported a 23% drop in half year net profit to A$216.8 million, resulting in an immediate market reaction with shares falling over 15%. Their latest announcements include a trading update and Basel III disclosures in May 2025, alongside the annual report expected on 25 August 2025.
Judo Capital Holdings (ASX: JDO): Judo Capital is an Australian bank established in 2016, focusing on small to medium enterprise (SME) finance. They provide business and agribusiness loans, lines of credit, home loans, equipment finance, asset financing, residential mortgages, and term deposits to support funding needs. As of mid‑2025, JDO shares trade around A$1.73–1.75, roughly 29% above their 52‑week low of A$1.35 (May 2025), though still significantly below a 52‑week high of A$2.22 (February 2025). Analysts see growth potential: Simply Wall St estimates earnings could grow 25% annually and suggests the stock might be 17% undervalued. Major recent updates include trading updates, an ASX aware-letter response, and a temporary trading pause in early May 2025.
While the big four banks offer yield stability through franked dividends and strong franchise positions, future investment gains may be limited, given valuations appear stretched and earnings growth is muted. Brokers commonly see these stocks as fully priced or slightly overvalued, with CBA flagged as trading significantly above consensus targets.
That said, some areas could provide growth potential beyond traditional banking. Fintech, digital banking platforms, and AI-powered services like innovative credit underwriting, fraud detection, or customer analytics may drive differentiation within the broader financial sector. Banks making strategic investments or partnerships in advanced analytics, machine learning, or automation could improve cost efficiency and customer engagement.
However, sectors like AI or semiconductors fall outside traditional bank stocks. To access those opportunities, investors usually look at tech or industrial stocks, rather than bank shares. Among Australian banks, exposure to high tech innovation is indirect unless the bank is involved in financial technology ventures or spin offs. Therefore, for growth focused investors wanting exposure to AI or semiconductors, diversifying into ASX-listed tech companies such as software, AI startups, or hardware firms may offer a more direct route.

When selecting top performing bank stocks listed on the ASX, consider these key factors, which provide objective criteria to compare and evaluate opportunities clearly and help in investment decisions:
Evaluate return on equity (ROE), net profit after tax (NPAT), and capital ratios such as Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1). Banks with consistently high ROE and strong capital adequacy tend to deliver more reliable earnings and can better weather economic pressures.
Compare banks using price to earnings (P/E) and price to book (P/B) ratios relative to peers and historical averages. This shows whether a bank is overvalued or potentially undervalued. For example, the banking sector trades at nearly 20× earnings, well above its three year average of around 15×.
Look at the current dividend yield, the schedule of franking credits, and the payout history. Banks that offer stable and fully franked dividends appeal to income seeking investors, but yields should be supported by underlying profit capacity.
Examine expected earnings per share (EPS) growth. Some brokers highlight banks projected to grow EPS at more than 30% per year over several years, trading at modest P/E multiples.
Banks depend heavily on Australian economic conditions, including loan demand, interest rate cycles, and regulatory changes. When the economy slows or rates compress, profitability may suffer. While they offer stability, their defensive narrative is tied to the economic cycle.
Strong governance, cost control, digital transformation efforts, and risk management are crucial. Banks investing in tech, such as digital lending platforms and analytics, often gain operational efficiencies and customer loyalty.
A bank's size, brand strength, and institutional support matter. For example, CBA's exceptional share price gains have been linked to passive investor inflows via ETFs. But beware that such momentum may not reflect fundamentals and can reverse sharply.
Investing in bank stocks holds potential, but comes with important risks you should know:
During recessions, banks suffer from more loan defaults, weaker demand for loans, and lower interest income. This can shrink their earnings significantly. Bank stocks are notoriously sensitive to economic downturns.
Banks make money from the difference between lending and deposit rates. When interest rates fall, their profits shrink. When rates rise rapidly, banks may face losses on long term bond holdings.
If borrowers cannot repay loans, especially during downturns, banks face losses. Regional banks with concentrated loan exposure can be at higher risk.
Banks often operate on thin equity, making them vulnerable to downturns or shocks. A small loss can wipe out much of their capital.
New regulations can increase compliance costs or limit profitable activities. Deregulation, on the other hand, might expose banks to risky practices or fraud.
Trade tensions, tariffs or political moves can damage banks' profitability by reducing loan demand and increasing market volatility.
Banks are interconnected. The failure of one can trigger widespread panic, leading to mass withdrawals and potential collapse. The 2023 U.S. banking crisis and Silicon Valley Bank collapse are vivid examples.
Bank earnings can swing widely, making traditional valuation measures like P/E less reliable. Investors often rely on price-to-book ratios, but these don’t capture all risks like derivatives exposure.
Putting a large portion of your savings into one bank stock or the banking sector limits diversification and raises loss potential if something goes wrong in that sector.

Commonwealth Bank, or CommBank, is Australia's largest bank in retail, business, institutional services, insurance, wealth management, trading, and superannuation. It serves over 17 million customers in Australia and international markets, including New Zealand, Asia, Europe, and North America. Its operations span mortgage lending, credit cards, investment services, and digital platforms, including CommSec and Bankwest. CBA's strengths include its dominant market share, strong capital buffers (with a CET1 ratio of around 12% as of March 2025), and solid asset quality, which drives modest but consistent earnings growth. Its scale provides cost efficiencies and broad digital reach, supported by investments in tech infrastructure like blockchain projects (e.g., Project Acacia) to modernise trading settlements. While its valuation is high, its share price rose nearly 47% year on year to exceed the A$300 billion market cap. CBA remains popular among institutional investors seeking yield and stability. Its AA rating and broad franchise offer defensive appeal, though caution is advised given concerns over overstretched valuation considering limited growth prospects.
ANZ is Australia's second-largest bank by assets. It provides retail and business banking, institutional finance, wealth and asset management across Australia, New Zealand and Asia-Pacific. With a presence in around 34 countries, it serves over 10 million customers globally through divisions like ANZ Bank NZ, Suncorp Bank and institutional banking. ANZ is executing strategic digital transformation and expansion: integrating AI tools across operations, modernising its systems, and investing AUD 50 million to enhance Pacific-region services. It also benefits from a multi-year A$2 billion government loan guarantee to support its Pacific footprint, boosting operational stability. CEO Shayne Elliott is optimistic about improving economic conditions in 2025 and sees opportunity in consumption recovery and falling interest rates. While recent regulatory scrutiny has raised non-financial risk concerns, management is taking steps to resolve them, supported by a history of institutional investment and efficiency initiatives.
National Australia Bank is a significant financial institution offering consumer, business and institutional banking, wealth management, insurance, and direct banking services via UBank and the former 86 400 hybrid platforms. Its footprint includes operations in Australia and New Zealand and global corporate banking services. In early 2025, NAB reported interim cash earnings of A$3.58 billion, a 1% increase year over year, despite margin pressure. With the Reserve Bank expected to cut cash rates later in the year, households and businesses may benefit, potentially boosting loan activity and economic growth. NAB forecasts relief combined with improving asset performance and strong deposit inflows, notably in business banking, where it holds a leading position in lending and deposits. Its approach focuses on higher-return segments, prudent business lending and cost discipline, underpinned by dividend continuity (interim payout of 85 cents per share).
Expert Note: These banks offer clear scale, market leadership, and financial resilience. They benefit from macro tailwinds like expected rate cuts and steady deposit bases. At Proactive Equities, our analysis of "The Big Four" focuses on valuation relative to these tailwinds. While CBA offers unmatched franchise strength, our analysts note that its high valuation may already price in much of the good news. We constantly evaluate whether ANZ and NAB offer a better risk/reward balance based on improving economic conditions and their own operational enhancements.
Investing in ASX bank stocks provides a solid foundation for many portfolios, offering strong dividends and a defensive narrative tied to Australia's stable economy. However, as this guide has shown, they are not without risk. Investors must weigh the attractive yields against cyclical economic risks, interest rate sensitivity, and high valuations. A successful strategy in this sector often involves balancing the stability of the "Big Four" with the growth potential of smaller, niche players, all while keeping a close eye on the economic outlook.
Which stocks are referred to as Bank Stocks?
Bank stocks are shares of companies that offer banking services such as loans, deposits, and financial products to consumers, businesses, or institutions.
What makes investment in the Bank Stocks attractive?
Bank stocks are attractive for their reliable income, solid market positions, and positive leverage to interest rate movements and loan growth.
What are some of the high-risk factors associated with investing in the Bank Stocks?
Economic cycles and recessions, interest rate risks, credit & loan defaults, high leverage & thin capital buffers, regulatory & policy changes, political and trade-related instability, systemic risk & bank runs, valuation volatility and concentration risk in your portfolio are key risks for investors.
Which are the best Bank Stocks to buy now?
While Commonwealth Bank (ASX: CBA), ANZ (ASX: ANZ), and NAB (ASX: NAB) are strong performers, valuation concerns make careful timing essential.