With its 11% yield, is the NAB share price a buy?

The National Australia Bank Ltd (ASX:NAB) share price offers a grossed-up dividend yield of 11%, is it a buy?

| More on:
a woman

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

The National Australia Bank Ltd (ASX: NAB) share price currently offers a grossed-up dividend yield of 11.4%.

That's certainly an enticing yield isn't it? You could get a market-beating return from the yield alone if NAB keeps paying the same $1.98 per share annual dividend year after year.

In FY18 its dividend payout ratio was 94.1%, or 82.6% excluding the restructuring-related costs and customer-related remediation. Either way it's a high dividend payout ratio, but it is under 100% which is a good sign it could be sustainable.

The Royal Commission has unearthed a lot of aspects to the banking world of NAB, Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA), Westpac Banking Corp (ASX: WBC) and Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (ASX: ANZ) that were unsavoury. It has been a painful lesson for NAB, which cost $360 million in FY18.

However, despite all that, NAB reached a 10.2% CET1 ratio and the bank said it has a clear path to achieving APRA's unquestionably strong CET1 target of 10.5% by January 2020.

NAB revenue continues to grow, it was up 0.5% in FY18, which was important to offset a flat net interest margin (NIM) of 1.85%, the bank levy and growing home lending competition.

A key part to NAB's short-term profit plans is the reduction of its workforce which recognises the lessening need of bank branches. In FY18 NAB let go of 1,900 full time employees and it has an overall reduction target of 6,000 employees by FY20, which largely explains the $755 million restructuring costs NAB incurred last year.

The reduction of the workforce was probably needed, I can't remember the last time I stepped into a branch of my bank, but it's painful for the employees losing their jobs. NAB is expecting cumulative cost savings of at least $1 billion by 30 September 2020, it achieved $320 million of cost savings in FY18 alone.

Foolish takeaway

It's trading at under 11x FY19's estimated earnings, so it certainly looks attractive on paper. Whilst I'm not going to buy NAB shares yet I can understand why retiree or value investors would be interested at this price level. It all depends on how Australia's economy does over the next couple of years.

Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of National Australia Bank Limited. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. 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

Modern accountant woman in a light business suit in modern green office with documents and laptop.
Bank Shares

Why is Westpac stock beating the other ASX 200 banks today?

Why is this bank outperforming the others?

Read more »

A man in a suit smiles at the yellow piggy bank he holds in his hand.
Dividend Investing

NAB stock: Should you buy the 4.7% yield?

Do analysts think this banking giant is a buy for income investors?

Read more »

Three colleagues stare at a computer screen with serious looks on their faces.
Bank Shares

Westpac shares charge higher despite $164m profit hit

What's impacting the bank's profits in FY 2024?

Read more »

A man holds his hand under his chin as he concentrates on his laptop screen and reads about the ANZ share price
Bank Shares

Are ANZ shares a top buy for dividend income?

Can we bank on ANZ shares for passive income payments?

Read more »

Accountant woman counting an Australian money and using calculator for calculating dividend yield.
Bank Shares

How much do you need to invest in NAB shares for $12,000 in annual dividends?

Enjoying $12,000 in annual dividend income is no easy feat...

Read more »

A man thinks very carefully about his money and investments.
Bank Shares

Is the CBA share price heading for a fall?

Experts are still saying CBA shares are a sell.

Read more »

A man holds his head in his hands, despairing at the bad result he's reading on his computer.
Bank Shares

Sell Bank of Queensland shares before they crash

Now is not the time to buy this bank's shares according to a leading broker.

Read more »

A man holds his hand under his chin as he concentrates on his laptop screen and reads about the ANZ share price
Bank Shares

Westpac stock: Should you buy the 5.5% yield?

Is Westpac an easy buy today for that 5.5% yield?

Read more »