National Australia Bank (ASX:NAB) Share Price on 5 December 2025: Dividend Yield, FY25 Results and Stock Forecast

National Australia Bank (ASX:NAB) Share Price on 5 December 2025: Dividend Yield, FY25 Results and Stock Forecast

National Australia Bank Limited (ASX:NAB) shares are trading around A$40.6–A$40.7 on Friday, 5 December 2025, nudging higher after a volatile November as investors weigh a solid dividend stream against slower profit growth and a richer valuation multiple. [1]

According to live market data, NAB was recently quoted at A$40.64, up about 0.3–0.4% on the day, with an intraday range of A$40.28 to A$40.77 and a 52‑week range of A$31.13 to A$45.25. [2] On a trailing 12‑month basis, the bank has generated roughly 14% year‑to‑date and about 9% one‑year total return including dividends, based on Yahoo Finance figures. [3]

At current prices, NAB offers a cash dividend yield of about 4.2%, fully franked, underpinned by FY25 dividends of A$1.70 per share and a common‑equity tier 1 (CET1) capital ratio of 11.7%, comfortably above regulatory minimums. [4] That mix of income and capital strength is appealing to many long‑term investors – but the stock also trades on about 18–19 times trailing earnings, a premium to both its historical average and the broader banking sector, which is why analyst views are sharply divided. [5]


NAB share price on 5 December 2025: stabilising after a sharp November pullback

NAB’s share price has been on a mild recovery path in early December after a rough November. The stock hit a recent high near A$45.25 in early November before sliding to just under A$40 following the bank’s full‑year FY25 results, a fall of a little over 10%. [6]

Price data from StockAnalysis and Investing.com show NAB changing hands around A$40.6–A$40.7 today, up roughly 2% from Monday’s close of A$39.85, but still well below its early‑November peak. [7] Over the last 12 months, the stock has oscillated between the low A$30s and mid‑A$40s, tracking shifts in interest‑rate expectations and sentiment towards the Australian housing and business credit cycle. [8]

Sector‑wide moves have amplified that volatility. In early December, financials – including the big four banks – dragged on the ASX 200 during a broad‑based pullback, before rebounding later in the week as markets digested GDP data and rate expectations. [9] NAB has generally moved with the sector, though some commentators note that its November decline of around 8–10% was steeper than peers such as Commonwealth Bank (ASX:CBA). [10]


FY25 results: flat cash profit, higher provisions and more capital to shareholders

The key fundamental backdrop to today’s trading is NAB’s full‑year FY25 result, released on 6 November 2025.

Headline numbers

From NAB’s own results summary and market data providers:

  • Cash earnings: A$7.09 billion – essentially flat year on year and slightly below consensus expectations of around A$7.17 billion. [11]
  • Statutory net profit: A$6.76 billion, down about 2.9% year on year. [12]
  • Revenue (TTM): A$20.0 billion, up around 0.7% on the prior year. [13]
  • Cash EPS: up roughly 1%, with cash ROE at 11.4%. [14]
  • Net interest margin (NIM): improved by about 3 basis points to 1.74%, though underlying margin excluding treasury and liquidity tailwinds was slightly lower, reflecting higher deposit and wholesale funding costs. [15]

On the asset side, NAB continues to lean into its historical strengths:

  • Business lending balances rose around 9%,
  • Customer deposits grew about 7%, including a 9%+ rise in personal deposits and strong growth in transaction accounts,
  • Home lending grew roughly in line with the system, with a higher share of proprietary (direct‑to‑customer) mortgages. [16]

Credit quality and expenses

The main “worry point” in the FY25 numbers was credit and costs:

  • Credit impairment charges climbed about 14% to roughly A$833 million, driven largely by a small number of business banking exposures and some stress in unsecured retail lending. [17]
  • Non‑performing loans edged up to 1.55% of the book, though management and external commentators emphasise that arrears appear to be stabilising and collective provisions remain conservative at about 1.42% of credit risk‑weighted assets. [18]
  • Operating expenses rose about 4.6% to just under A$9.9 billion, reflecting higher personnel and technology spend plus around A$130 million related to payroll remediation. [19]

Despite these headwinds, NAB’s CET1 capital ratio of 11.7% (slightly higher on a post‑asset‑sale basis) remains comfortably above “unquestionably strong” benchmarks and supports ongoing dividends and share buybacks. [20]


Dividends: fully franked 4.2% yield with steady growth

Income is still a central part of the investment case for NAB shares.

For FY25, the bank declared:

  • An interim dividend of A$0.85 per share (paid 2 July 2025), and
  • A final dividend of A$0.85 per share, fully franked, with an ex‑dividend date of 11 November 2025 and payment due 12 December 2025. [21]

That brings total FY25 dividends to A$1.70 per share, up one cent from FY24 and continuing a gradual post‑pandemic rebuild of payouts. [22]

Based on today’s share price around A$40.6–A$40.7, the trailing cash dividend yield is approximately 4.2%, with several data services quoting a forward yield in the 4.2–4.3% range. [23] For Australian investors eligible for franking credits, the grossed‑up yield is closer to 6%, depending on individual tax circumstances.

Dividend‑focused platforms such as Digrin and DividendMax also highlight a three‑year dividend growth rate of around 10% per year, reflecting the rebound from temporarily reduced payouts in 2020–2021. [24] However, with payout ratios hovering around 70% of cash earnings, there is limited scope for rapidly accelerating dividends without stronger profit growth. [25]


How the market is valuing NAB stock now

Earnings and book multiples

On the numbers, NAB looks like a premium‑valued bank:

  • Trailing P/E: around 18.3–18.5x based on a share price near A$40.6 and trailing EPS of about A$2.20. [26]
  • Forward P/E: roughly 17x, reflecting modest expected earnings growth. [27]
  • Price‑to‑book: about 2.0x on reported equity and roughly 2.1x on tangible book according to various data and fund manager estimates. [28]

TradingEconomics and GuruFocus estimates suggest that NAB’s P/E multiple is meaningfully higher than the median for global and local banks, where sector averages cluster around 9–13x earnings. [29]

The upshot: the market is willing to pay up for NAB’s relatively stable earnings, strong capital position and dominant business‑banking franchise – but that premium leaves less room for error if the economic cycle or credit costs deteriorate.

Street price targets and rating consensus

Analyst target prices and recommendations underline how contentious that valuation is:

  • Investing.com’s consensus (14 analysts) shows an average 12‑month price target of about A$38.0, with estimates ranging from roughly A$29 to A$46, and an overall “Sell” recommendation (2 Buys, 5 Holds, 7 Sells). [30]
  • Simply Wall St quotes a very similar average target near A$37.99, implying around 6% downside from current levels and rating the stock as modestly overvalued on its discounted‑cash‑flow framework. [31]
  • Stockopedia data points to a consensus target of about A$38.38, again below the current share price, alongside forecast FY26 EPS of roughly A$2.36. [32]

Taken together, mainstream broker models tend to see limited upside and some valuation risk at today’s price, despite acknowledging NAB’s robust balance sheet and income profile.

By contrast, some active managers are more bullish. A recent note from Montgomery Investment Management, for example, argues that NAB’s strategic repositioning and business‑banking strength justify a premium multiple and sets a fair value estimate around A$54.26 per share, implying 20–25% upside over a 2–3 year horizon from recent levels. [33]


Fresh commentary on 5 December 2025: what are analysts and media focusing on?

Short‑term valuation debates

On 5 December, Rask Media published a new piece, “2 easy ways to value the NAB share price”, revisiting valuation at roughly today’s levels. While the full article is paywalled, the teaser makes clear it walks through two simple approaches – typically relative P/E and a dividend discount model – to help investors decide whether NAB offers good value around A$40 per share. [34]

Earlier in November, Rask also modelled a “sector‑adjusted” P/E valuation and derived a fair value of about A$42.27, modestly above where shares currently trade, and complemented that with a dividend‑discount estimate. [35] Their conclusion: NAB is not a screaming bargain, but can be reasonable value if you’re comfortable with slower growth and rely heavily on dividends for returns.

Broader bank‑sector pieces

Motley Fool Australia has published multiple bank‑sector articles in the past 48 hours that reference NAB:

  • A 4 December wire titled “Buying NAB shares? Here’s how the bank aims to cement its market leading business” notes that, including recent intraday moves, NAB shares are up about 8.2% in 2025, and highlights management’s focus on business banking, deposits and direct‑to‑customer mortgages as key growth pillars. [36]
  • Fresh 5 December pieces on ASX 200 large caps and bank stocks discuss how the big four – including NAB – are being reassessed as investors pivot from growth to value and increasingly scrutinise valuations after a multi‑year run‑up. [37]

Meanwhile, an International Business Times article, “NAB Just Posted $7.1 Billion Profit — But Here’s Why Investors Should Be Worried”, underscores rising credit impairment charges, slower profit growth and higher expenses as reasons for near‑term caution despite the headline profit and dividend stability. [38]

Long‑term assessments

For investors looking further out, a recent Motley Fool analysis combined broker forecasts through 2030 to outline an earnings trajectory characterised by modest, mid‑single‑digit growth and relatively stable return on equity – a profile more “bond‑like” than high‑growth. [39] Montgomery’s Livewire note similarly frames FY25 as a “steady in a tough environment” result and maintains a constructive multi‑year view based on business‑banking strength, digital transformation and AI‑driven productivity gains. [40]

The net picture from today’s commentary:

  • Income‑oriented and long‑term value investors generally see NAB as a solid, if unexciting, compounder at current prices.
  • Shorter‑term or valuation‑sensitive analysts are more cautious, arguing that a near‑20x earnings multiple leaves little margin of safety if credit costs rise further or the RBA’s rate path surprises.

Macro and regulatory backdrop: housing, rates and technology

NAB’s fortunes are tied closely to Australia’s housing market and the interest‑rate cycle.

In its November results coverage, Reuters highlighted CEO Andrew Irvine’s description of housing as Australia’s “biggest societal and policy challenge”, citing a decade‑low in new housing supply and a national goal to build 1.2 million homes by 2029. [41] NAB, with its large mortgage book, is heavily exposed to how that challenge is managed.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) kept the cash rate steady at 3.6% at its latest meeting, and many economists now expect no cut until at least mid‑2026, balancing persistent inflation against signs of a slowing but still resilient economy. [42] For NAB, higher rates have supported net interest margins but also pressure borrowers, particularly business clients and leveraged households. The FY25 uptick in impairments, especially in business banking, reflects that tension. [43]

On the operational side, Reuters reported in September that NAB is cutting about 410 jobs in its technology and enterprise operations in Australia while creating 127 roles in India and Vietnam, part of a broader push to modernise systems and control costs. [44] The bank has also set aside roughly A$130 million for payroll remediation after discovering underpayments, and paid a A$751,200 penalty over alleged breaches of consumer data right rules, underscoring ongoing regulatory and reputational risk. [45]

Balancing that, NAB has trumpeted heavy investment in digital and artificial intelligence, with FY25 investment spending stepping up to around A$1.8 billion, much of it directed toward digital platforms, AI and front‑line bankers. [46] The bank also secured a high‑profile contract to provide whole‑of‑government banking and payment services for the New South Wales Government, reinforcing its role as a key institutional provider. [47]


Key risks and opportunities for NAB shareholders into 2026

Looking beyond today’s price moves, several themes will likely drive NAB’s share price over the next 12–24 months:

  • Interest‑rate trajectory: Faster‑than‑expected RBA cuts could squeeze margins but support credit quality; prolonged higher rates would do the opposite. [48]
  • Business‑banking cycle: NAB’s out‑sized exposure to SMEs and mid‑market corporates is a major profit driver – and a key credit‑risk lever if economic conditions deteriorate. [49]
  • Housing affordability and supply: Under‑supply of housing supports collateral values but can also draw political and regulatory scrutiny, influencing risk weights and lending rules. [50]
  • Execution on digital and AI investment: The bank is spending heavily to modernise its tech stack and shift more origination to direct channels; whether that translates into better cost‑to‑income ratios and higher ROE is still to be proven. [51]
  • Regulatory and conduct matters: Payroll remediation, data‑rights issues and prior fines show conduct risk is not trivial; further mis‑steps could impact costs and reputation. [52]
  • Potential acquisitions or disposals: Media reports that HSBC’s Australian retail operations are “NAB’s to lose” keep alive the possibility of inorganic growth, though such deals would be closely scrutinised for capital impact and competition concerns. [53]

Bottom line: income strength vs valuation tension

As of 5 December 2025, National Australia Bank remains a classic income‑oriented blue‑chip:

  • A fully franked ~4.2% dividend yield on a well‑capitalised balance sheet,
  • Stable (if unspectacular) earnings of about A$7.1 billion,
  • A strong franchise in business banking and growing digital capabilities,

but also:

  • A premium valuation around 18–19x earnings and ~2x book,
  • Rising impairment charges and higher costs, and
  • A macro backdrop where housing, wages and rates are all finely balanced. [54]

Current commentary and broker forecasts reflect that tension. Some long‑term managers argue NAB can still deliver attractive double‑digit total returns from today’s levels through a mix of dividends and modest growth, while many sell‑side analysts see limited upside and recommend caution until valuations or the macro picture improve. [55]

For investors, NAB stock in December 2025 is less a speculative trade and more a trade‑off: a relatively predictable income stream and strong capital base on one side, versus higher‑than‑average multiples and cyclical credit risks on the other.

References

1. stockanalysis.com, 2. stockanalysis.com, 3. finance.yahoo.com, 4. stockanalysis.com, 5. stockanalysis.com, 6. stockinvest.us, 7. stockanalysis.com, 8. stockanalysis.com, 9. www.news.com.au, 10. www.fool.com.au, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. stockanalysis.com, 13. stockanalysis.com, 14. www.nab.com.au, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.livewiremarkets.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.nab.com.au, 21. www.nab.com.au, 22. www.nab.com.au, 23. stockanalysis.com, 24. www.digrin.com, 25. stockanalysis.com, 26. stockanalysis.com, 27. stockanalysis.com, 28. www.investing.com, 29. tradingeconomics.com, 30. au.investing.com, 31. simplywall.st, 32. www.stockopedia.com, 33. www.livewiremarkets.com, 34. www.raskmedia.com.au, 35. www.raskmedia.com.au, 36. www.fool.com.au, 37. www.fool.com.au, 38. stockanalysis.com, 39. www.fool.com.au, 40. www.livewiremarkets.com, 41. www.reuters.com, 42. www.reuters.com, 43. www.reuters.com, 44. stockanalysis.com, 45. stockanalysis.com, 46. www.livewiremarkets.com, 47. news.nab.com.au, 48. www.reuters.com, 49. www.reuters.com, 50. www.reuters.com, 51. www.livewiremarkets.com, 52. stockanalysis.com, 53. stockanalysis.com, 54. stockanalysis.com, 55. www.livewiremarkets.com

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