The pros and cons of buying CBA shares in 2026

Is this a good time to look at the bank?

| More on:

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
  • The Commonwealth Bank of Australia shares have dropped over 10% in six months, offering a potential value buy.
  • Despite solid loan growth and a competitive edge in new business flows, challenges like high P/E ratio, minimal profit growth, and competitive pressures persist.
  • Analysts currently advise caution with many available ratings suggesting a sell, predicting a further decline of the CBA share price. 

Whenever a blue-chip falls heavily, I get excited because of how much better value it may be after the valuation decline. At the time of writing, the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA) share price has dropped by more than 10% in the last six months, as the chart below shows.

For a business the size of CBA, we're talking about a decline of the market capitalisation that's in the tens of billions of dollars.

This is a good time to ask whether it's a good time to invest in the ASX bank share for 2026 and beyond.

Man holding different Australian dollar notes.

Image source: Getty Images

Positives about the CBA share price

There are two main inputs that decide what a valuation is for a blue-chip. There's how much earnings per share (EPS) it generates and what price/earnings (P/E) ratio it trades at.

Analysts are usually fairly good at estimating what earnings a business is going to achieve in the next financial year, but it's much harder to know what the P/E ratio the market will be willing to pay. Market confidence about a business or the whole market can change quite substantially.

From an outside perspective, the CBA share price reduction has moved the bank's valuation towards a healthier and more sustainable footing.

The loan growth of the bank is impressive, considering the huge loan balance CBA already has. In the three months to 30 September 2025, the ASX bank share reported year-over-year balance growth of 10.4% for business lending, 9.5% growth for household deposits and 6.1% growth for home lending.

I think it's impressive that the bank reported proprietary home loans accounted for 68% of new business flows for the quarter. That's stronger than its main banking competitors, giving the bank a competitive advantage (economic moat) of winning new loans rather than just competing on price via brokers.

The final positive I'll highlight is the bank's payout, CBA's dividend has been resilient since 2020 and it's widely predicted by analysts to continue seeing payout growth in FY26.

Negatives

While the bank has noticeably fallen, it's still trading on a forward P/E ratio that's in the mid-20s. That seems high considering its quarterly cash profit in the first quarter of FY26 was around $2.6 billion, only 1% higher than the quarterly average of the second half of FY25.

While lending growth was strong, as I mentioned above, there were headwinds that limited profit growth, including wages and IT vendor inflation. Additionally, lending margins came under pressure from deposit switching, competition and the lower cash rate environment, with three RBA rate cuts in 2025.

Also, competition is a strong headwind against faster profit growth. Businesses like Macquarie Group Ltd (ASX: MQG) and ANZ Group Holdings Ltd (ASX: ANZ) would love to grow their market share at the expense of CBA.

The final negative I'll note is that CBA's dividend yield is not exactly huge. Its FY25 payout translates into a grossed-up dividend yield of 4.3%, including franking credits, at the time of writing. There are plenty of other names with a better yield.

Is the CBA share price a buy?

Analysts are not convinced about the bank right now. According to CMC Markets, out of nine ratings on the ASX bank share, all nine are a sell. The average price target suggests a possible fall of more than 20% over the next year, which doesn't bode well.

It's a strong bank, but it doesn't have the earnings growth potential to justify investing for capital growth, while the passive income isn't groundbreaking. Other ASX shares may be capable of stronger returns, in my view.

Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. 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 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 man wearing a bright yellow jumper and glasses purses his lips together and moves them to the side of his face as he wonders about something.
Bank Shares

NAB and ANZ shares: One I'd hold and one I'd sell

ASX banking giants' shares have been under huge pressure this year.

Read more »

Time to sell written on a clock.
Broker Notes

Sell alert! Why this expert is calling time on NAB and Westpac shares

A leading analyst foresees looming storm clouds over NAB and Westpac shares.

Read more »

Young woman thinking with laptop open.
Bank Shares

Hedge funds are shorting the big four bank shares. Should investors be worried?

Hedge funds have amassed a record $11 billion short position against Australia's big four bank shares. Here's whether investors should…

Read more »

A toy house sits on a pile of Australian $100 notes.
Bank Shares

What are the big 4 banks worth as the housing market falters?

Not all of the banks are ranked equally.

Read more »

Buy and sell on yellow paper with pins on them and several share price lines.
Broker Notes

Sell alert! Why this expert is calling time on Westpac and CBA shares

A leading analyst forecasts growing headwinds for Westpac and CBA shares.

Read more »

A young man clasps his hand to his head with a pained expression on his face and a laptop in front of him.
Bank Shares

Why Morgan Stanley expects CBA shares to plunge another 22%

Morgan Stanley expects CBA shares have a lot further to fall. But why?

Read more »

A man sitting at a computer is blown away by what he's seeing on the screen, hair and tie whooshing back as he screams argh in panic.
Bank Shares

NAB shares sink to 52-week low, are they in the buy zone?

This big four bank's shares are hitting a new low on Tuesday.

Read more »

a man weraing a suit sits nervously at his laptop computer biting into his clenched hand with nerves, and perhaps fear.
Bank Shares

Bank of Queensland shares slump to a multi-year low. Buy, sell or hold?

The shares are now also 10% lower year to date.

Read more »