1H24 Financial Results

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#1Results Presentation and Investor Discussion Pack For the half year ended 31 December 2023 Commonwealth Bank of Australia#2Important information The material in this presentation is general background information about the Group and its activities current as at the date of the presentation, 14 February 2024. It is information given in summary form and does not purport to be complete. Information in this presentation is not intended to be relied upon as advice to investors or potential investors and does not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation or needs of any particular investor. Investors should consider these factors, and consult with their own legal, tax, business and/or financial advisors in connection with any investment decision. This presentation contains certain forward-looking statements with respect to the financial condition, capital adequacy, operations and business of the Group and certain plans and objectives of the management of the Group. Such forward-looking statements speak only as at the date of this presentation and undue reliance should not be placed upon such statements. Although the Group currently believes the forward-looking statements have a reasonable basis, they are not certain and involve known and unknown risks and assumptions, many of which are beyond the control of the Group, which may cause actual results, conditions or circumstances to differ materially from those expressed or implied in such statements. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements particularly in light of: current economic conditions, geopolitical events, and global banking uncertainty including recent examples of instability in the banking system and regulatory, government and central bank responses. Forward-looking statements can generally be identified by the use of forward-looking words such as "may", "will", "would", "could", "expect", "intend", "plan", "aim", "estimate", "target", "anticipate", "believe", "continue", "objectives", "outlook", "guidance" or other similar words, and include statements regarding the Group's intent, belief or current expectations with respect to the Group's business and operations, market conditions, results of operations and financial condition, capital adequacy and risk management. To the maximum extent permitted by law, responsibility for the accuracy or completeness of any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or results or otherwise, is disclaimed. The Group is under no obligation to update any of the forward-looking statements contained within this presentation, subject to applicable disclosure requirements. The material in this presentation does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any securities in the United States or in any other jurisdiction in which such an offer would be illegal. Any securities of the Group to be offered and sold have not been, and will not be, registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (U.S. Securities Act), or the securities laws of any state or other jurisdiction of the United States. Accordingly, any securities of the Group may not be offered or sold, directly or indirectly, in the United States unless they have been registered under the U.S. Securities Act or are offered and sold pursuant to an exemption from, or in a transaction not subject to, the registration requirements of the U.S. Securities Act and any other applicable U.S. state securities laws. Readers should also be aware that certain financial data in this presentation may be considered "non-Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) financial measures" under Regulation G of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and "non-International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) financial measures" under Regulatory Guide 230 'disclosing non-IFRS financial information' published by ASIC, including Net Profit After Tax ("statutory basis"), Net Profit After Tax ("cash basis"), earnings per share ("cash basis"), dividend payout ratio ("statutory basis"), dividend payout ratio ("cash basis"), dividend cover ("statutory basis") and dividend cover ("cash basis"). The disclosure of such "non-GAAP and non-IFRS❞ financial measures in the manner included in this presentation may not be permissible in a registration statement under the U.S. Securities Act. Although the Group believes that these "non-GAAP and non-IFRS" financial measures provide a useful means through which to examine the underlying performance of the business, such "non-GAAP and non-IFRS" financial measures do not have a standardised meaning prescribed by Australian Accounting Standards or IFRS and therefore may not be comparable to similarly titled measures presented by other entities. They should be considered as supplements to the financial statement measures that have been presented in accordance with the Australian Accounting Standards or IFRS and not as a replacement or alternative for them. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any such measures. This presentation includes credit ratings and is only for distribution to persons who are entitled to receive such a presentation and anyone who receives this presentation must not distribute it to any person who is not entitled to receive it. A credit rating is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any securities and may be changed at any time by the applicable credit ratings agency. Each credit rating should be evaluated independently of any other credit rating. Credit ratings are for distribution only to a person (a) who is not a “retail client" within the meaning of section 761G of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) and is also a sophisticated investor, professional investor or other investor in respect of whom disclosure is not required under Part 6D.2 or 7.9 of the Corporations Act, and (b) who is otherwise permitted to receive credit ratings in accordance with applicable law in any jurisdiction in which the person may be located. The release of this announcement was authorised by the Board. Commonwealth Bank of Australia | Media Release 012/2024 | ACN 123 123 124 | Commonwealth Bank Place South, Level 1, 11 Harbour Street, Sydney NSW 2000. 2#3Contents CEO & CFO presentations 4 Overview & strategy 41 Financial overview 62 Home & consumer lending 85 Business & corporate lending 103 Funding, liquidity & capital 111 Economic overview 131 Sources, glossary & notes 142#4Results presentation Matt Comyn, Chief Executive Officer#5Building a brighter future for all Supporting our customers and communities Helping customers today Investing for tomorrow Supporting Australia • Focused on proactively supporting customers with higher cost of living • Engaged 3 million 1 customers each month with money management tools • Prevented and recovered over $100 million in scams² in 1H24 • • • • Helped more than 60,000 customers buy a new home³ Invested over $750 million 4 to protect our customers against fraud, scams, financial and cyber crime Lent $18 billion 5 to businesses to help them grow Record volume of institutional sustainable lending in 1H24 Cumulative $4.1 billion investment in improving risk? Further strengthened our balance sheet to help support customers and financial stability Largest branch and ATM network, Australian based call centres • Returned ~$4 billion to shareholders, benefitting over 12 million Australians⁹ 3 year commitment to keep all CBA regional branches open, innovating to support regional jobs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 5#6Higher rates unevenly felt Many households cutting back to adjust to higher cost of living Salary and wages 1,2 Year on year change, per customer Dec quarter, 2023 Spending 1,3,4 Year on year change, per customer 13 weeks to 7 Jan 2024 Savings 1,5 Year on year change trimmed, per customer 31 Dec 2023 Age, years □ Essential Discretionary 0.0% -1.5% 5.5% -1.1% 20-24 4.3% 25-34 35-44 5.2% 45-54 5.2% 55-64 4.8% 65+ 2.7% -1.1% 2.4% -2.4% 2.4% -2.1% 0.4% 3.1% 1.0% 3.4% 2.8% 4.0% 3.7% -0.7% 2.3% 6.5% 1. Consistently active card customers and CBA brand products only. 2. Paid into CBA transaction accounts, represents customers with payments identified as salary and wages after PAYG but before net tax return, excludes government benefits, excludes gig economy. 3. Spending based on consumer debit and credit card transactions data (excluding StepPay). 4. Essential includes communication, education, food goods, household services, insurance and other financial, medical and health, transport, and utilities. Discretionary includes alcohol, clothing and footwear, food services, general retail, household furnishings and equipment, personal care, recreation, and other miscellaneous goods and services. 5. Average savings balances for MFI customers. Includes all forms of deposit accounts (transaction, savings and term), home loan offset and redraw balances. Trimmed mean excluding top and bottom 5% of customers within each age band. 00 6#7% Supporting our customers Customers are feeling the impact of the economic environment Annual change in real household disposable income¹ 100 Jun 22 8 (6) (3) (2) 0 96 Wages earned and other income Prices Taxes 2 Household net deposit vs borrowing mortgage³ Rates: Jun 23 Net interest paid by households Supporting our customers • Contacted customers rolling off fixed rates; arrears below portfolio • Engaging 3m4 customers monthly via money management tools • Option to suspend mortgage repayments5 • • Benefits finder to open to all Australians, ~$1.2bn identified to date 2m7 cashbacks to customers through CommBank Yello • Expanded and easier to access hardship support • Interest only, payment arrangements and other options • Supporting >7,000 home loan customers in hardship • Prevented and recovered >$100m³ in customer scams in 1H24 1. Source: CBA, RBA and ABS. Rounded to the nearest percentage point. 2. Represents the impact of household leverage. 3. Represents the impact of the change in average rate paid by households on loans versus received on deposits. 4. Average monthly unique customers who engaged with one of our money management features in the CommBank app between July to December 2023. Money management features include Money Plan, Spend Tracker, Bill Sense, Category Budgets, Cash Flow View, Goal Tracker, Credit Score, Carbon Tracker, CommSec Pocket and Smart Savings. 5. Option to suspend mortgage repayments (known as a repayment holiday) is available to eligible customers who are ahead of their scheduled monthly repayments. A repayment holiday reflects a break from home loan direct debit request repayments for a set period of between three to twelve months for eligible CommBank home loans and allows customers to use the additional available repayments made to put future repayments on hold during this period. 6. Estimated value of retail and business benefits connected to customers since inception (2019). 7. Since launch in November 2023. 8. From July to December 2023. 7#8Impact of higher rates Higher rates flowing through the economy Change 1H24 vs 1H23 1.4x 1.5x 2.6x Change 1H24 vs 1H23 1.9x Flat +4% +14% (19%) (3%) Change in average customer rates 1.55% 1.76% 4.8 Home loans Deposits 3 0.4 4.1 0.0 0.2 $bn $bn 3.0 6.9 Mortgage customers Other borrowers1 Depositors Wholesale funding providers² Customer interest received Interest paid (0.1) (0.2) Operating income Operating Government expenses4 payments5 LIE Shareholder profit 1. Includes consumer finance, business and corporate lending and other activities with other Financial institutions and Government agencies. 2. Includes loan capital. 3. Excludes the impact of hedge accounting. 4. Includes underlying costs incurred and payments made to our employees, suppliers and partners. 5. Includes payment of corporate tax, employee related taxes and Major Bank Levy. 8#9Sustainable returns Balance sheet strength, supporting customers Deposits International banks pass-through¹ Home loans International banks pass-through² Capital International CET1 ratio4 Banks in: Banks in: Australia Canada Europe ☐ UK US Australia Canada Europe ☐ UK US3 Banks in: ☐ Australia Canada ☐ Europe ☐ UK US 75% 71% 60% 35% Total outstanding deposits New household term deposits² 98% 94% 85% 87% 79% 75% 16% New variable home loans 98% 33% 71% 116% 19% 15% 14% 14% 13% International CET1 ratio 1. Cumulative change in average outstanding deposit rate divided by the cumulative change in policy rates from the start of each country's post-pandemic hiking phased until end of August 2023 (Source: ECB for Europe, RBA for all other countries). 2. Cumulative change in average rates divided by the cumulative change in policy rates from September 2021 to November 2023 (Source: Central Banks). 3. 30-year fixed mortgages used as a proxy of new home loan rates. 4. Average of peer banks included for International CET1 ratios in the 'Capital overview' section of this presentation. 9#10CBA profitability Larger, safer, lower profitability Loans to customers Government bonds and other liquid assets² Customer deposits Wholesale funding Shareholders' equity Size Dec 231 Assets Capital (CET1) Change over time Dec 23 vs Dec 13 Customer deposits Loans to +57% customers Liabilities and equity Shareholders' +55% equity Liquid assets +37% Shareholder profit (Cash NPAT)³ +18% + Banks in: Comparables Return on equity4 ☐ Australia Canada +101% Europe ☐ UK US 17% 13% 14% 111% 11% 11% 11% +93% 8% 3% -1% 2013 Current5 Return on equity ASX200 Australian banks 14% 9% 12% 11% Shareholder profit 2013 Current 1. Represents select component parts of CBA's balance sheet as at December 2023, for illustrative purposes only. Shareholder profit for the six months to December 2023. 2. Represents High Quality Liquid Assets. 3. Represents 1H24 vs 1H14. 4. Australia: Based on data published in APRA's quarterly ADI performance statistics as at September 2023; Europe: ROE for the eight largest countries by credit volume, sourced from European Central Bank; US: 2013 based on the ROE for the top six banks, current includes data for other financial institutions sourced from the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council; UK: ROE for the top four commercial banks; Canada: ROE for the top five banks. 5. Represents data for calendar year-to-date up to September 2023 except Canada, which is for the financial year ended 31 October 2023. 6. ASX200 ROE return on equity represents 2023 calendar year. Source: Bloomberg. 10#11This result¹ Helping customers today, investing for tomorrow, supporting Australia ↓ 8% Statutory NPAT → 3% Cash NPAT 6c Cash EPS 5c DPS 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. NPS2,3 MFI Share³ Reputation Score4 #1 Consumer #1 Business #1 Institutional #1 Digital #1 Consumer & business 65.6 +12.6 vs Jun 18 CET1 Level 2 12.3% ~$10bn in surplus capital Dividend per share $2.15 +5c vs 1H23 Shareholder returns ~$4bn Benefitting over 12m Australians7 6 11#12Financials1 Revenue flat, higher expenses, lower loan impairment expense Operating income Operating expenses Disciplined approach to volume/margin Inflation and higher amortisation Pre-provision profit Flat revenue and higher operating expenses Flat 13,623 13,512 13,649 +4% (3%) Cash NPAT Lower loan impairment expense (3%) 7,850 6,085 6,011 7,427 7,638 5,773 5,180 4,892 5,019 $m $m $m $m 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 12#13Strength - balance sheet Long-term conservative balance sheet settings 55% Deposit funding Long-term funding % of total funding Weighted average maturity, yrs 71% 75% 3.5 5.4 5.3yrs (ex. TFF) Liquid assets¹ Average, $bn 140 $187bn Capital CET1 ratio, Level 2 5.0%2 12.3%* 11.7%3 GFC Pre- COVID GFC Pre- COVID 50 GFC Pre- COVID GFC Pre- COVID Jun 08 Dec 19 Dec 23 Jun 08 Dec 19 Dec 23 Jun 08 Dec 19 Dec 23 Jun 08 Dec 19 Dec 23 1. Six month average balance as at June 2008, quarterly average balance as at December 2019 and December 2023. 2. Pro-forma CET1 under the capital framework effective up until 31 December 2022. 3. Capital framework effective up until 31 December 2022. 4. APRA's revised capital framework effective from 1 January 2023. 13#14Strength - credit quality Sound portfolio quality - lower TIAs, modest increase in arrears - well provisioned TIA Troublesome & Impaired Assets (TIA) $7.8bn $6.9bn 0.61% $7.1bn Dec 19 Jun 23 Dec 23 Home loan arrears¹ 90+ days, % 0.47% Provisioning² Total provisions vs Central ECL³ Dec 23 $6.06bn 0.52% $2.2bn Dec 19 Jun 23 Dec 23 $3.85bn Central scenario ECL Total provisions 1. Group including New Zealand. 2. The Group uses four alternative macroeconomic scenarios to reflect a range of possible future outcomes in estimating the Expected Credit Loss (ECL) for significant portfolios. Scenarios are updated based on changes in both the macroeconomic and geopolitical environment. 3. Central scenario is based on the Group's internal economic forecasts and market consensus as well as other assumptions used in business planning and forecasting. Assumes 100% weighting holding all assumptions including forward-looking adjustments constant and includes individually assessed provisions. 14#15Strength - core franchise Extending leadership through strong customer relationships 1 Stronger customer relationships and frequency of engagement • Strongest financial services brand¹ • Leading MFI share² • Superior deposits and data franchise . Focus on NPS2 improvement Value creation Better understanding of 2 customer needs and risk • Technology leader, history of innovation • Leading decisioning technology • Higher quality, lower risk lending . Personalisation and machine learning at scale . 3 Superior customer experience Disciplined operational execution Leading physical and digital distribution Distinctive products and services More rewarding loyalty proposition Favourable business mix + Sector leading ROE, organic capital generation Strong balance sheet and + risk management 1. Sources: Brand Finance Australia 100 2024, January 2024. Based on brand value. 2. Refer to the glossary for source information. 15#16Customer engagement Leading Net Promotor Score¹ in all key segments Dec 22 Retail NPS Business NPS 14 consecutive months 23 consecutive months #1 CBA Peers Dec 23 Dec 22 1. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 2. Turnover +$300 million per annum. #1 CBA Peers Institutional NPS2 13 consecutive months #1 Dec 23 Dec 22 Dec 23 CBA Peers 16#17| Key Key highlights By division RBS Retail MFI Share1 BB Business MFI Share1 IB&M Funding contribution5 ASB Net Promoter Score6 Gap to nearest peer 35.0% +18.5pp Gap to nearest peer +7.4pp Cumulative, 26.3% +$8bn #1 #3 Jun 18 to Dec 23 34.7% 23.2% 24.7% $64bn $72bn 34.2% Dec 17 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 17 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 22 Dec 23 Business Retail Retail transaction accounts² Volumes Credit RWA Volume growth? 12 months to Dec 23 +6% Total Dec 23 1.2m Growth³ vs Jun 20 Growth4 vs Dec 22 Reduction in CRWA over 7 yrs ~($50bn) ~+$60bn System ASB 6.6% 10,288 10,677 10,949 +10% vs Dec 22 ~+40% vs Jun 20 1.3x system $102bn 2.6% 3.0% 2.8% $53bn '000 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 0.2% 0.2% Transaction Business Business accounts deposits lending Dec 16 Dec 23 Business Home Deposits lending lending 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 17#18Australian retail banking Disciplined execution RBS Cash NPAT1 Leading deposit franchise Household deposits to home loans² Dec 23 (8%) +1% CBA share of Retail NII³ Four largest Australian banks 71% 2.9 2.7 2.7 65% 63% 59% 34% $bn 1H23 2H23 1H24 CBA Peer 3 Peer 2 Peer 1 +4% 38% Sep 21 Sep 23 1. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. Presented on a continuing operations basis. Includes Bankwest Retail, excludes General Insurance. 2. Source: APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS). 3. Share of annual net interest income from the four largest Australian banks. Net interest income for peers as externally reported. 18#19Home - ra Home loans - fixed rate maturities Ongoing resilience across the portfolio Fixed rate expiry schedule¹ Expired 13 11 $bn 41 34 28 14 24 224 2% 29 Arrears 90+ day arrears Dec 2023 Savings 2,3 Year on year change, per customer 31 Dec 2023 Spending2,4 Year on year change, per customer 13 weeks to 7 Jan 2024 0.52% 16.2% 23 23 0.50% 17 20 20 21 20 6 6m to 6m to 6m to Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 6m to 6m to Dec 23 Jun 24 6m to 6m to After Dec 24 Jun 25 Jun 25 Customer rate >= 3% Customer rate < 3% Rolled off Portfolio to CBA 5.7% 1.5% 1.2% Rolled off Portfolio to CBA Rolled off to CBA Portfolio 1. CBA including Bankwest, excluding ASB. 2. Consistently active card customers that held a CBA home loan as at 31 Dec 2023. Excluding Bankwest and ASB. 3. Savings includes all forms of deposit accounts (transaction, savings and term), home loan offset and redraw balances. 4. Spending based on consumer debit and credit card transactions data (excluding StepPay). 19#20Business Banking Australia's leading business banking franchise Business MFI Share1 Business deposits² Change in share since Mar 20 Change in share since Mar 20 272 bpts 13 bpts (22) (108) CBA Peer 2 Peer 1 Peer 3 Dec 23 MFI share 26% 18% 17% 19% 282 165 (85) (199) CBA Peer 2 Peer 1 Peer 3 Dec 23 market share 23% 21% 16% 18% Business loans² Change in share since Mar 20 172 bpts 42 (73) (115) CBA Peer 2 Peer 1 Peer 3 Dec 23 market share 18% 22% 14% 15% 1. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 2. Source: APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS). 20 20#21Deposits Core franchise strength - strong customer engagement driving deeper relationships Transaction accounts1 Retail (#) Stable deposits Retail & SME deposits in NSFR2 ($bn) +6% 10.9 10.3 9.6 300 m 250 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 200 Business (#) 150 +10% 100 1.2 50 1.1 1.0 m Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 0 Dec 18 CBA Peer 3 Peer 1 Peer 2 Peer 4 Dec 23 1. Total retail transaction accounts, excluding offset accounts. 2. Represents 31 December stable deposits per NSFR disclosures. Excludes operational deposits, other deposits and wholesale funding. CBA as at 31 December 2023. Peers source: 30 September 2023 Pillar 3 Regulatory Disclosures. 21 24#22Global best digital experiences Extending our market leading digital offering with CommBank app 5.0 and CommBank Yello Australia's most popular banking app¹ Active app users² > 8 million Daily app logins3 up 28% CommBank Yello engagement4 > 3m customers Visits to CommBank Yello Hub5 ~100,000 daily Net Promoter Score6 Consumer mobile app Dec 23 Digital transactions via app7 #1 82.7 68.1 25.7 53.4 17.2 19.0 12.9 $bn Peer 1 Peer 2 Peer 3 CBA Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Net Promoter Score6 Business digital Dec 23 #1 Monthly digital logins per active customer⁹ 43.5 38.6 12.4 36.3 8.7 # (6.6) Peer 1 (0.5) Peer 2 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Peer 3 CBA BANK OF THE YEAR Bank of the Year Digital Banking (14 years in a row 11) DIGITAL BANKING CANSTAR 2010-2023 DBM Digitally active customers8 9.0 8.3 7.7 m Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 CommBank app active customers 10 8.2 7.3 6.6 m Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 AUSTRALIAN Best Major Digital Bank (5 years in a row) 12 FINANCIAL Most Innovative Major Bank (5 years in a row) 12 AWARDS 23 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 22#23Supporting our customers Keeping our customers safe CommBank Safe Ongoing awareness and education Identity Verification Identity verification using facial recognition Scam Indicator Real-time phone scam detection and prevention NameCheck Notification of account name mismatches CustomerCheck Fast and secure identification in branch CallerCheck Verification of calls from CommBank Q Log on Cyber security, scams & fraud Securing your accounts is our top priority. That's why we provide a range of security features and services, including fraud prevention technology and secure banking, to keep you safe. CommBank Safe How we protect you Protecting you is our priority AA commbank.com.au c M 6 Capturing selfie... Take a selfie Place your face within the frame. Scanning will. start automatically. < New payee search We've searched our records to find the most commonly used account details for this payee Notification Are you with a Commbank specialist in-person? For security reasons, we need to know. Choose yes if you're currently with a Commbank specialist. X Notification Verify call from Commbank Let us know if you got our call at 4:18pm (Syd/Melb time) BSB and account number not found What does this mean? .The account could be new and we haven't. seen it used yet - only continue if you're sure it's safe .Scammers sometimes use new accounts to avoid detection-speak to the payee to check it's really them requesting the payment and confirm the BSB and account number .There could be a typo - check the BSB and account number you've entered are correct Yes, I'm with a Commbank specialist No Verify now Account name David O'Reilly BSB 062-948 Account number 12345678 ~8 million In pilot Launched ~$200 million customers contacted¹ to launch in mid 2024 Oct 2023 payments prevented² 1.7 million verifications completed³ 2 million calls verified4 1. Unique reach for the scams awareness communications, January 2023 to December 2023. 2. Includes $180 million being lost to mistaken payments via CommBank app and NetBank and ~$20m of scams prevented. July to December 2023. 3. July 2023 to December 2023. 4. July 2023 to December 2023. 23#24Results presentation Alan Docherty, Chief Financial Officer#25| Results overview Responsive to changes in our operating context, strengthening franchise Operating context Management response • Lower per capita disposable incomes • Supporting our customers, new offerings • • • Resilient economy, strong fundamentals Increased deposit competition Uncertain macroeconomic outlook • Strategic capital allocation & execution efficacy • Disciplined approach to volume/margin Strengthened balance sheet settings Strong organic capital generation Organic capital generated 1H24 vs 5yr avg² 1H24 financial outcomes Continued DPS growth Dividends Dividend per share (cents) 210 • Long-term franchise implications Leading customer NPS1 Extending leadership in Retail & Business MFI1 Increased share of industry NII, sector leading ROE Earnings stability under broad range of scenarios Strengthened balance sheet settings Balance sheet 215 Funding Provisioning ~$40bn ~$2bn Capital +200bpts ~$4.0bn $5.6bn 175 Average of last 1H24 10 halves 1H22 1H23 1H24 Short-term capacity Above central CET1 above & excess liquidity³ scenario4 reg. minimum 5 1. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 2. Average of the last 10 halves represents the average of organic capital generated in each half year period between FY19 to FY23. 3. Additional short-term wholesale funding capacity compared to historical average; plus excess liquidity invested in investment grade non-HQLA assets. 4. Represents the difference between total actual provisions held and the expected credit loss in the central scenario. 5. Surplus CET1 capital ratio in excess of APRA regulatory minimum of 10.25% under the revised capital framework effective from 1 January 2023. 25#26Statutory vs Cash NPAT1 Statutory NPAT of $4.8 billion, includes loss on PTBC Indonesian divestment $m 1H23 2H23 1H24 Statutory NPAT - continuing operations 5,243 4,853 4,837 Non-cash items: - Transaction costs and gains and (losses) on disposals² 51 (19) (210) Includes PT Bank Commonwealth, Commlnsure General Insurance, Count Financial and other previously announced divestments and closures - Hedging & IFRS volatility³ Cash NPAT - continuing operations 12 (20) 28 Primarily related to gains and (losses) on economic hedges³ from interest rate and FX volatility 5,180 4,892 5,019 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Includes gains and losses net of transaction costs associated with the disposal of previously announced divestments. 3. Includes unrealised accounting gains and losses arising from the application of "AASB 139 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement". 26#271H24 result¹ Cash NPAT 3% higher vs 2H23 1H24 vs 1H24 vs $m 1H24 1H23 2H23 Operating income 13,649 ↑ 0.2% → 1.0% Operating expenses 6,011 ↑ 4.1% ↓ (1.2%) Operating performance 7,638 ↓ (2.7%) ↑ 2.8% Loan impairment expense 415 ↓ (18.8%) ✓ (30.5%) Cash NPAT 5,019 ↓ (3.1%) ↑ 2.6% 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 27#28Operating income¹ Volume growth and higher other operating income offset by margin compression 13,623 $m 1H23 • Volume driven growth in retail, business and institutional fee income . Volume growth² Margin compression +4.2% (11bpts) • • Higher Markets trading and sales income (233) 259 Avg. volume growth Home loans Business loans³ 3% 10% Insto. loans (1%) Deposits 4% Net interest income Other operating income 2H23: +1.0% +0.2% 13,649 1H24 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Excluding liquids. 3. Includes New Zealand and other business loans. 4. Excluding Cash Management Pooling Facilities. 28#29Group margin Increased deposit price competition bpts 205 Deposit price competition (3) Deposit switching Wholesale funding costs 3333 (7) Replicating portfolio 2 (1) Lower consumer finance and home lending margins Capital hedge 2 New Zealand (1) (2) 3 (6bpts) 199 2H23 Funding costs Asset pricing Other incl. replicating portfolio, capital and NZ 1H24 29#30Disciplined approach to volume and rate trade off CBA gaining share of NII, generating long-term sustainable returns Change in share of NII +$390m Four largest banks 1,2 FY Sep 23 vs PCP +$70m ($160m) ($300m) Share of NII Four largest banks 1,2 Sep 23 Share of home loan NII Four largest banks2,3 FY Sep 23 0.5% 0.1% 31% Share of home loan NII4 25% 22% 22% (0.2%) (0.4%) CBA Peer 2 Peer 1 Peer 3 CBA Peer 2 Peer 1 Peer 3 Mar 22 FY Sep 23: 35.1% +0.5% gain vs PCP (+$80m) Share of home loan balances4 1. Defined as Net Interest Income excluding notable items as reported. Peer data as derived from publicly available disclosures. Represents financial years ending 30 September 2023. 2. Largest banks as defined by market capitalisation. 3. Major bank estimates derived from home loan customer rates per RBA statistics, minus indicative marginal wholesale funding costs (refer slide 112), multiplied by total home loan balances. 4. 6-months rolling share of NII and balances. Sep 23 30#31Operating expenses¹ Inflation driving cost growth - technology and other costs more than offset by productivity Cost to Income 42.4% 44.0% Contribution to mvt: +4.8% +1.4% +0.7% (2.8%) 43 (164) +4.1% 80 279 6,011 5,773 $m 1H23 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis. • Insourcing of engineering and technology capabilities • Higher software license and cloud computing volumes • Increased capitalised software amortisation Cumulative cost savings realised (last 5 yrs): 1H24: $761m 1H23: $597m Inflation Technology related uplifts Other Productivity 1H24 31#32| Credit risk Sound credit quality - modest uptick in arrears - TIA stable Loan impairment expense Loan loss rate, bpts1 Arrears² 90+ days 1H23 2H23 1H24 Personal loans Credit cards Home loans Consumer 11 12 7 Corporate 13 17 13 Total 11 13 9 Troublesome and impaired assets $bn TIA % of TCE (bpts) Historic avg³: 0.91% 0.72 0.70 0.53 0.46 0.49 Historic avg³: Dec 19 Dec 23 1.25% 1.19% 1.14% 0.95% 597 0.97% 7.1 6.9 511 6.3 0.94% 415 3.3 0.55% 0.60% Gross 3.2 3.0 0.65% impaired 0.52% 0.46% 0.52% 0.49% 0.43% 0.47% Corporate troublesome 3.3 3.8 3.7 $m 1H23 2H23 1H24 Dec 21 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 1. Loan impairment expense as a percentage of average Gross loans and acceptances (bpts) annualised. 2. Group consumer arrears including New Zealand. 3. Historic average from Aug 2008 to Jun 2023. 32#33Provisioning¹ Strong provision coverage maintained at 1.64% of Credit RWA Total credit provisions $bn TP/CRWA: 1.29% 1.64%² 1.64%² $6.06bn 5.95 4.80 2.92 2.94 Corporate 3.8 Provisions and scenarios Dec 23 8.0 $6.1bn $bn Pre- COVID 3.03 3.12 Consumer $bn Jun 19 Jun 23 Dec 23 Central scenario3, 3,4 Recognised provisions Downside scenario3,5 1. The Group uses four alternative macroeconomic scenarios to reflect a range of possible future outcomes in estimating the Expected Credit Loss (ECL) for significant portfolios, scenarios are updated based on changes in both the macroeconomic and geopolitical environment. 2. Revised APRA capital framework effective from 1 January 2023. 3. Assuming 100% weighting holding all assumptions including forward- looking adjustments constant and includes individually assessed provisions. 4. Central scenario is based on the Group's internal economic forecasts and market consensus as well as other assumptions used in business planning and forecasting. 5. The downside scenario contemplates the potential impact of possible, but less likely, adverse macroeconomic conditions, resulting from significant inflationary pressures exacerbated by supply chain disruptions, shortages of goods and labour, and heightened energy prices compounded by geopolitical risks. 33#34Provisioning through the cycle Forward-looking approach - customer, macroeconomic and sectoral considerations Forward- looking components Late expansion Economic cycle GDP Contraction Early expansion Higher Lower Lower CP - Base Higher CP - FLAS Higher Lower CP - MES IAPS² Likely lower¹ Higher Total provisions³ Higher Likely lower • AASB 9 requires a forward-looking approach to loan loss provisioning to dampen • • pro-cyclical provisioning behaviour through forward-looking adjustments (FLAs) and multiple economic scenarios (MES) in determining collective provisions (CP). Total provisions will likely be lower following an economic contraction (despite higher base provisions) as we adopt a forward-looking view of an economic expansion. Sectoral considerations (last 6 months): - - - - Consumer: little change to modelled provisions as actual customer losses remained well below long-run averages. Slight increase in FLAs for higher risk occupations (exposed to slower discretionary spending) and home loan customers under the greatest cost of living pressure. Construction: slight reduction in FLAs for sub-segments related to non-building, site preparation and trade services. Number of dwellings under construction is high, but new commencements are low, pointing to constrained future activity. Retail trade: non-material change in provisioning coverage. Anticipated slowdown in discretionary spending per capita due to cost of living pressures is materialising, though non-discretionary spending remains resilient. Entertainment, leisure and tourism: increased FLAs, driven by higher cost of living impacts on discretionary spending. Cafes and restaurants remain sub-sector of greatest concern. Commercial property: non-material change in provisioning coverage. Sales remain low, though prices starting to reflect impact of higher rates and vacancies. Agriculture: increased FLAs for potential impacts of climate-related events. Livestock prices improving from recent lows and a solid harvest expected across most crops from higher than average rainfall. 1. If economic conditions are expected to recover following a recession, then the MES overlay would reduce as economic variables improve and/or the probability weighting towards more benign scenarios increases. This may not be the case where further deterioration in economic conditions is expected (e.g. a double-dip recession). 2. Individually assessed provisions (IAPS) are raised for non-performing exposures. 3. This refers to expectations before and after an economic slowdown. How total provisions change during a contraction is uncertain: If FLAs and MES under-predict actual losses, then total provisions will increase. If they over-predict losses (as was the case during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic) then total provisions will decrease. 34#35Funding Conservative settings providing flexibility - repaid $19 billion of Term Funding Facility 1 Long-term funding² % of total funding Deposit funding % of total funding 55% 75% 75% 19% 18% Short-term funding4 % of total funding 18% 26% 819 825 197 190 WAM³ 3.5yrs 5.3yrs 5.2yrs 96 96 7% 7% LCR & NSFR Liquid assets NSFR HQLA5 $180bn 121% Non-HQLA excess liquids $20bn Liquidity Coverage Ratio7 Net Stable Funding Ratio (ex. TFF)8 16 81 76 136% 118% 221 $bn $bn 75 $bn Jun 08 Jun 23 Dec 23 Jun 08 Jun 23 Dec 23 Jun 08 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 23 Dec 23 1. In 2023 CBA repaid $19 billion of the RBA Term Funding Facility (TFF) of which $18 billion occurred in the December 2023 half. 2. Long-term wholesale funding balances with a residual maturity greater than 12 months as at reporting date including TFF and RBNZ Term lending facilities with a residual maturity less than 12 months as at reporting date. 3. Represents the Weighted Average Maturity (WAM) of outstanding long-term wholesale debt with a residual maturity greater than 12 months as at reporting date including TFF and RBNZ term lending facilities. 4. Figures include 'other short-term liabilities'. 5. Spot as at 31 December 2023 (quarterly average $187 billion). 6. Investment grade liquid assets that do not qualify as High Quality Liquid Assets as defined in APS210. 7. Quarterly average. 8. NSFR numerator (Available Stable Funding) excludes the size of CBA's TFF drawdowns. Denominator (Required Stable Funding) increases weighting for TFF collateral by 55%, such that it receives the 65% RSF weighting applicable to unencumbered residential mortgages. 35#36Capital Strong capital position maintained Movements in bpts 32 32 (3) (11) Level 1 12.5% Level 1 ~12.3% 12.3% ~12.2% 12.2% Cash NPAT 107 ~$10bn surplus ~$9bn surplus 10.25% RWA 11 APRA minimum³ 2H23 dividend (DRP neutralised) (86) Jun 23 Level 2 Organic capital generation (net of dividend) On-market share buy-back2 Other Dec 23 Level 2 Dec 23 Pro-forma4 1. Due to rounding, numbers presented may not sum precisely to the totals provided. 2. $154m of the previously announced $1bn on-market share buy-back has been completed as at 31 December 2023 (1,517,388 shares acquired at an average price of $101.49). 3. Inclusive of 1% default countercyclical capital buffer which may be varied by APRA in the range of 0% to 3.5%. 4. Pro-forma ratio allows for the completion of the remaining $846m of the $1bn on-market share buy-back (impact ~18bpts). 36#37Dividends Long-term sustainable returns Sustainable returns Dividend per share (cents) • Interim dividend of $2.15, 2% increase on 1H23 dividend 210 215 • DRP with no discount and expected to be fully neutralised 175 68%1 72% 62% • Half year payout ratio of 72% • The Bank will continue to target a full year payout ratio of 70-80% Cash NPAT 1H22 1H23 1H24 Cash NPAT2 half year payout ratio 1. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Cash NPAT inclusive of discontinued operations. 37#38Strong settings - supporting sustainable returns Resilient under a broad range of scenarios Strong settings Loan loss provisions well above central + Conservative funding profile + Significant surplus capital scenario $6.06bn 100% $2.21bn 93% Deposits $3.85bn Central scenario and long- term wholesale After $1bn buy-back ~12.2% Surplus ~$9bn 10.25% Regulatory minimum Net interest earnings supported by reinvestment of ~$3bn each month at higher long-term rates $159bn $51bn Investment term of capital $108bn Replicating portfolio 3 year investment term 5 year investment term Short-term wholesale, 7% CET1 Pro-forma Level 2 Loan loss provisions Funding Supporting sustainable returns Strong organic Strong ROE supports + further franchise growth and capital generation capital generation +funding dividends and + growth; divestments funding buy-backs FY19 to 1H24 Healthy franking account surplus - dividend the only distribution mechanism 13.8% $61bn $61bn $1.7bn $11bn Divestments $7bn² Higher surplus $9bn³ Buy-backs $8bn Growth $50bn Earnings $37bn Dividend Franking neutral payout ratio -80% Structural deposits and equity hedges 1H24 Capital Capital Return on equity1 sources uses Franking account balance 1. Return on equity (ROE) is on a cash and continuing operations basis. 2. Increase in capital surplus against a minimum of 9.5% in June 2018 (as per APRA's announcement, 19 July 2017) and 10.25% in December 2023. 3. Excludes the completion of the remaining $846 million of the $1 billion on-market share buy-back. 38#39• • • Economic outlook Downside risks remain, Australian economy resilient Solid fundamentals for the Australian economy - Low unemployment, low underemployment, high participation rates Strong non-mining investment Immigration providing a structural tailwind Inflation and economy moderating due to higher interest rates - - - Economic growth slowing, inflation falling Real household disposable incomes decreasing Many households finding it harder, impacts unevenly felt Downside risks remain for the economy - Households and businesses continuing to adjust to the economic conditions Unit labour costs rising, productivity is weak - Continued global uncertainty – Australia well positioned 39#40Summary Customer focus, consistent execution, strength and stability Customers Net Promoter Score1 Rank Market share Rank Consumer #1 Household deposits #1 #1 Home lending #1 Consumer digital #1 Business deposits #1 Business digital #1 Business lending #2 • Supporting our customers and communities Capital and balance sheet strength, critical to support Australia • Consistent, disciplined execution Business Balance sheet Shareholders Total Shareholder Return4 Customer focus - building deeper, stronger relationships 1.64% 93% 12.3% $10bn surplus capital³ Period Rank Deposits + long-term wholesale funding 10yr #1 5yr #1 . Franchise strength - differentiation, extending leadership 3yr #2 Provision coverage² Funding profile CET1 1yr #2 Level 2 1. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 2. Total provisions divided by credit risk weighted assets. 3. Surplus CET1 capital in excess of APRA regulatory minimum of 10.25% under the revised capital framework effective from 1 January 2023. 4. Source: Bloomberg. Total Shareholder Return as at 29 December 2023, compared to major peer banks. 40#41Overview & strategy#42Why CBA? Leading franchise - strong balance sheet settings - supporting sustainable returns Consumer MFI share¹ (%) Home lending share² (%) Household deposits share³ (%) 35.0% Deposit funding Peers as at September 20234 75% 71% 68% 66% Business MFI share1 (%) Business deposits market share 23% 21% 18% 16% 24.5% CBA Peer 3 Peer 1 Peer 2 CBA Peer 2 Peer 3 Peer 1 26.6% 26.3% 20.5% 16.5% 20.6% 18.9% 14.0% 17.7% 12.0% 11.9% 12.9% 16.5% 13.8% 11.8% CBA Peer 3 Peer 2 Peer 1 CBA Peer 3 Peer 2 Peer 1 CBA Peer 3 Peer 2 Peer 1 CBA Peer 3 Peer 2 Peer 1 Provisioning (%) Total provision coverage to Credit RWA5 Peers as at September 2023 CET1 capital (%) Capital binding constraint Peers as at September 2023 ROE (cash)7 (%) Peers as at September 2023 Est. ROE (cash incl. franking)8 Shareholder returns (%) Total Shareholder Return⁹ 10 year 3 year 134% 17% 65% 42% 23% 59% 54% 40% 38% 15% 1.64% 1.58% 13.2% 12% CBA Peer 2 Peer 1 Peer 3 Peer 2 CBA Peer 3 Peer 1 1.45% 1.26% (L1) 12.4% (L2) 12.3% (L2) 12.1% (L1) 11% 5 year ROE 13.8% 91% 21% (cash)7 12.0% 64% 1 year 16% 10.5% 40% 11% 8% 8.7% 17% CBA Peer 2 Peer 1 Peer 3 Peer 1 CBA Peer 2 Peer 3 CBA Peer 2 Peer 3 Peer 1 Peer 1 Peer 3 CBA Peer 2 CBA Peer 2 Peer 1 Peer 3 1. Refer to the glossary for source information. 2. CBA source: RBA Lending and Credit Aggregates. Peer source: Peer APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS) balance divided by RBA Lending and Credit Aggregates system balance. 3. Source: APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS). 4. Calculated as total customer deposits divided by total funding excluding equity. Peer data as derived from publicly available disclosures. 5. Total provisions divided by credit risk weighted assets. Peer 2 excludes estimated impairment provisions for derivatives at fair value for consistency. 6. Binding constraint is the lower of Level 1 and Level 2 CET1 capital ratio. 7. Return on equity on a cash or cash equivalent continuing operations basis over average ordinary equity. 8. Estimated Return on equity (cash) including the benefit from franking credits which is recognised as 70% of the Australian tax generated in FY23 for peer banks and in 2H23 and 1H24 for CBA, relative to the average shareholders' equity in the period. 9. Source: Bloomberg. Total Shareholder Return as at 29 December 2023. 42#43Delivering Balanced outcomes - delivering for all stakeholders Customer People ⑧Community Shareholders Net Promoter Score1 People engagement² Reputation score³ Total Shareholder Return4 Rank Period % Rank Consumer #1 10yr 134% #1 76% 65.6 67% 53.0 Consumer digital #1 5yr 91% #1 Business #1 3yr 54% #2 #2 Business digital #1 1yr 16% #2 2018 Sep 23 Jun 18 Dec 23 1. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 2. Represents results from employees who undertook the 'CBA Your Voice' engagement survey. 3. CBA and major peer bank reputation scores. Source: RepTrak, The RepTrak Company. Data is collected throughout the quarter and reported at quarter end from July 2020. 4. Source: Bloomberg. Total Shareholder Return as at 29 December 2023, compared to major peer banks. 43#44How we contribute to Australia¹ Supporting our customers, the community and the economy Customers & domestic debt investors² • Leading retail bank with >25% share of market³ Includes $9bn interest paid to Australian savers (up $6bn on 1H23) Government4 . • One of Australia's largest corporate tax payers Includes $1.8bn in Australian income tax paid in 1H24 • Signatory of the Voluntary Tax Transparency Code Offshore investors5 Accessing offshore wholesale funding to help our customers buy a home and invest for their future, supporting domestic economic growth 10% 41% 12% • How our income is distributed • 7% 20% 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 10% Our people • Over 53,000 people employed, predominantly in Australia and New Zealand • Over 50% of the workforce is female • 37% cultural diversity in Executive Manager and above roles Suppliers and partners6 Supporting domestic small and medium sized businesses Lent $18bn to help businesses grow Domestic shareholders • ~$3bn in dividends paid to shareholders Average interim dividend of $1,680 to be paid to shareholders8 Returns to more than 12 million Australians • through superannuation 44#45Our strategy Building tomorrow's bank today for our customers Our purpose Our priorities Building a brighter future for all Leadership in Australia's recovery and transition Extend retail and business banking leadership Help build Australia's future economy Lead in the support we provide to customers and communities Reimagined products and services Reimagine priority customer journeys Differentiate our customer proposition Connect to external services and build new ventures Global best digital experiences and technology Deliver the best integrated digital experiences Build world-class engineering capability Modernise systems and digitise end-to-end Simpler, better foundations Fix customer breakpoints Deliver better customer outcomes through leading risk management Reduce operating costs and manage capital with discipline Our values Care We care about our customers and each other - we serve with humility and transparency Courage We have the courage to step in, speak up and lead by example Commitment We are unwavering in our commitment - we do what's right and we work together to get things done 45#46Reimagining banking Franchise strength supporting our customers across the lifecycle CBA Retail MFI share¹ 44.9% 45.9% 42.3% CBA 34.2% 34.6% 35.0% Peers 16.5% 12.0% 11.9% Dec 17 Jun 23 Dec 23 Peer 3 Peer 2 Peer 1 Dec 23 New transaction accounts - migrants² 1H20 1H24 33.6% 29.1% 28.5% Jun 23 Dec 23 Aged 14-17 Aged 18-24 Aged 25-34 Aged 35-49 Aged 50-64 Aged +65 1. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 2. Number of new migrant transaction accounts, RBS excluding Bankwest. 46#47Engaged customers Strong customer engagement creates deeper relationships – key driver of growth - Retail Dec 23 MFI share¹ 16.5% 12.0% 11.9% Peer 3 Peer 2 Peer 1 34.4% 34.7% 35.0% ↑ Retail transaction accounts² Home loan balances³ Home loans linked vs Dec 22 +6% to a transaction account >97% 10,949 10,288 541 552 9,578 515 '000 $bn Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 MFI share¹ Dec 23 26.3% 18.9% 17.7% 16.5% Peer 3 Peer 2 Peer 1 Business Business transaction accounts Business loan balances Business loans linked vs Dec 22 +10% to a transaction account -90% 135 24.7% 23.2% 1,003 1,088 1,197 122 109 '000 $bn Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 1. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 2. Total retail transaction accounts, excluding offset accounts. Includes Bankwest. 3. Source: RBA Lending and Credit Aggregates. 47#48Reimagining banking Reinforcing our core proposition - example initiatives¹ unloan BUILT BY Green loans a amber CommSec ■ Home-in more Home Invest CommSec Pocket Kit Built by S creditsavvy CommBank app CommBank Yello Everyday Carbon cogo Business Greening Australia Connecting business & retail customers WOLLEMİ™ Xpansiv CommBank iQ Powered by quantium Stream Working Capital CommBank Smart Health doshii 1. Includes CBA owned, minority investments, joint ventures and contractual strategic relationships. CommBank AdvancePay StepPay and CommBank Neo Benefits finder Bill Sense Klarna. Smart Terminals 48#49Reimagining banking Extending our market leading digital assets. CommBank app Personal Hi Sam Q Search Statements" 1 DO Inwriting Re Home hob Money Plan View all Smart Access Goal Saver NetBank Saver $2,000.00 Balance $2,000.00 Get more from CommBank Move your $12,000.00 $23,000.00 180 回 ☆ Accounts CommBank Yello CommBank Yello Q © Your partner for the best Black Friday deals and offers. View top deals Keep your benefits Transactions More info 15 out of 30 Kit Built by Hey Riley 00 SMART goals Jokes & stories Avatar @ 20 Easy Quiz Hard Quiz DIS Australia's most popular banking app1 Simpler, better, easier to use > 8 million active app users² Rewards & recognition for customers Tailored benefits and offers > 3 million engaged customers³ Kids pocket money app & prepaid card Accelerate financial capability of youth > 41,000 customers4 1. Based on most active app users. 2. Based on the number of monthly active app users as at December 2023. 3. Customers who have engaged with a CommBank Yello location (CommBank Yello hub, Offer hub or CommBank Yello offer Next Best Conversation) since launch in 1H24. 4. Since pilot in May 2022. 49#50Reimagining banking Making home buying faster and easier unloan BUILT BY unloan Refinance Now Unda your home loan PEXAExchange ||'||| |'|||| ЖРЕХА Matter SVJG-TFR 330295 c Accepted Accepted Simple, fast, digital home loans Apply in as little as 10 minutes > $5 billion in lending balances¹ Property settlement leader Digital settlements platform 95% of CBA settlements² > Home-in 122 John Street Auction on 24 November, 2004 You've found a property! Now it's time to make an offer Contract review 1/5 Request contract review > Prepare leagl advice > Review advice Request contract changes > A RE Guidance Get in touch Profile > 10% of pre-approved customers³ 98% take up a CBA home loan > $5 billion homes settled5 1. Spot balance as at 31 December 2023. 2. July 2023 to December 2023. 3. Proprietary CBA customers in 1H24. 4. Since inception to 31 December 2023. 5. Since public launch in November 2020. 50 50#51Reimagining banking Payments PowerBoard. PowerBoard MOONN Ch $1,200 be cw Bob's Burgers doshii Smart Smart Terminals Smart Integrated Burger Menu TA + Burgers of the Day Look at these punderful burgers! Original The classic Apps Double Trouble 1695-450 Comes with twice the fan New Baconings Eggers Cant Be Cheesers Single platform eCommerce solution Payment choice, efficiency and security Launched September 20231 Hospitality POS integration technology Covers 84% of serviceable market > 11 million orders through Doshii² 704 $10.00 Smart Mini POS integration via Smart Sync Customer insights and reporting > 90,000 terminals in market³ 1. PowerBoard entered into a pilot with selected customers in December 2022 and was launched to all customers on September 2023. 2. Since acquisition: 1 January 2021 to 31 December 2023. 3. As at 31 December 2023. 51 51#52Reimagining banking Business Banking - differentiating through industry verticals Smart Health = Commonwealth Bank Smiley Health Medical Centre 16 Мамала дов Mark NSW 2100 Tuesday 21 June 8 Claim Patent History Verifone Private health & Medicare claiming Payments partner for NDIS1 > 3,000 providers enrolled² PAIRTREE THINK ONE, POWERED BY MANY Par 28.26 da Streamlined agri data aggregation tool Reporting & insights to agribusinesses > 100 aggregated data sources 1. National Disability Insurance Scheme. 2. Number of providers enrolled since inception to 31 January 2024. 3. To launch in 2024. Smart Real Estate Payments ← Helios Real Estate New payment request You have a new payment request to review. Agreement with Agreement details Helios Real Estate Request sent 24 Sept 26 Leicester St, Van Guard, NSW 2066 This Agreement is for the term of the lease. $600.00 every week for 24 months Weekly rent Total agreement amount $62,400.00 Get Started About this payment request Making rental payments easy & safe Collect & reconcile payments Announced November 20233 52 52#53Supporting our customers 3 million customers engaging monthly with our money management tools¹ Money Plan Money management tools in one place Bill Sense Predict and prepare for upcoming bills Benefits finder Easier access to a range of benefits Spend Tracker Easily view and categorise spending Cash Flow View Track income, spending, saving & investments Goal Tracker Set and track a savings goal Money plan Spend Weekly Budget 4 days to go Eating out $280 spent Shopping $800 spent Set a budget Japan holiday 6 days. Scheduled → $400.00 < Monthly Spend Log off Done commbank.com.au AA Master $400.00 6 days Scheduled Save See bills and payments Bill calendar $250 left. September has extra bills. Aim to set aside $2,996 for the month today Bills and payments TV subscription Tomorrow Card debit Predicted Phone Bill 5 Feb Check your bill Janan trin $1,000 left. Your benefits Start categorising benefits to make it easier for you to claim 365 -$370 -$980 -$1,320 -$1,100 Mar May Junt Jul Aug Sep Personal Business Track $6,532 $5,672 $5,672 Show All Recommended for you Dec Jan Feb Based on your answers See all month $14.99 September spending -$500.00 Eating out. -$800.00 9 transaction Monthly cash flow < $2,600 -$1,300 $750 $1,000 Income Savings Spending Investing Apri May Jun 0 Income $2,600 > Savings. $750 > Spending -$1,300 > Transport 1 transaction -$100.00 Investing $1,000 > Entertainment -$150.00 1 transaction PayTo Utility Relief Grant Scheme to Health. -$50.00 $59.95 Get up to $475 3 transactions Manage your payment agreements in the PayTo hub Save money on your electricity bill $100.00 340,000 customers engaging monthly² 1.5 million customers engaging monthly2 ~$1.2 billion benefits identified³ Account GoalSaver Goal Saving for something? Let's set a goal to help you stay on track Set a goal 回 Cards E = Home Accounts Pirk * ☆ For you 980,000 950,000 customers engaging monthly2 customers engaging monthly² 670,000 goals in progress4 1. Average monthly unique customers who engaged with one of our money management features in the CommBank app between July 2023 to December 2023. Money management features include Money Plan, Spend Tracker, Bill Sense, Category Budgets, Cash Flow View, Goal Tracker, Credit Score, Carbon Tracker, CommSec Pocket and Smart Savings. 2. Average monthly unique customers who visited the respective Money Plan, Bill Sense, Spend Tracker and Cash Flow View features in their CommBank app between July 2023 to December 2023. 3. Estimated value of retail and business benefits connected to customers since inception (2019). 4. Number of active goals in the month of December 2023. 53#54Global best digital experiences Building on a history of innovation Strong foundations Establishing leadership Reimagining banking NetBank Q Full functionality 24-hour online banking service CommSee Proprietary customer relationship system 1997 - 2009 24/7 Core banking Real-time banking and settlement CommBank app #1 mobile banking app (Net Promoter Score) Customer Engagement Engine Learns from customer interactions to drive relevant personalised banking services 6 26 1 CommSec Pocket Make investing affordable and approachable for more Australians 2010-2019 x15 CommBank app 4.0 Simple, smart and secure Launch of x15ventures Building a pipeline of new digital businesses Market first offerings First major bank to offer: Open Banking • data sharing • Carbon tracking PayTo Partnering with industry leaders Providing more value in banking and beyond 2020 & beyond CommBank app 5.0 Making Australia's most popular banking app1 even better CommBank Yello One of Australia's largest customer recognition programs 1. Based on most active app users. Examples unloan BUILT BY I Home-in doshii creditsavvy Kit Examples more Klarna. CommBank iQ H2O.ai Powered by → quantium Xpansiv a amber cogo 54#55Global best digital experiences Global CommBank app 5.0 - a simpler, more personalised experience with seamless business integration Business profile switching Separate business and personal accounts and toggle seamlessly between profiles Quick links Personalised navigation tiles based on customer's in-app behaviour (e.g. frequently visited) New investing functionality Native in-app investing experience allowing customers to buy, sell and hold Australian shares and ETFs 8 Personal v Hi Sam هههه 8 Business v Search "Statements" Village Produce Investing Rewards Home hub Money Search transactions, help & more 00 00 Smart Access Business $2, Balanc cash flow Benefits finder Business insights Products & View all services Goal Saver Business Trans Acct $1 NetBank Saver $2 Get more from CommBank Business Online Saver Business Visa Automatic login Faster experience by securely logging in as soon as the app opens Move your Enhanced search App-wide search for features, products, transactions and more, including real time suggestions App library Simplified catalogue of app features, products and services $20,154.23 Account Balance: $20,154.23 $12,009.12 -$3,211.84 Expanded simple balance Ability to see current balance of up to three accounts on homepage Get more from CommBank 10 Home Accounts Pay Car Smart = ($+ ☆ Home Accounts Pay Cards For you Get more from CommBank Surfaces personalised discovery content including tips and promotion of features, tools and products > 8 million active app users¹ ~4 billion app logins per year² +28% daily app logins³ ~3 million using money mgt tools4 29% of CommSec accounts opened via app5 1. The total number of customers that have logged into the CommBank app at least once in the month of December 2023. 2. Logins into the CommBank app for the 12 months ended December 2023. 3. Uplift in the number of daily logins for the month of December year on year. 4. Average monthly unique customers who engaged with one of our money management features in the CommBank app between July 2023 to December 2023. Money management features include Money Plan, Spend Tracker, Bill Sense, Category Budgets, Cash Flow View, Goal Tracker, Credit Score, Carbon Tracker, CommSec Pocket and Smart Savings. 5. Percentage of CommSec accounts opened in CommBank app as a proportion of total CommSec accounts opened (including accounts opened via the CommSec website or paper application), based on the month of December 2023. 55#56Global best digital experiences Focus on security and innovation Group priority Tech focus Recent developments / highlights . Build world-class engineering capability Deliver faster for customers • Delivering faster and more safely through optimising delivery and DevSecOps¹ • 927 engineers hired in 1H24, +2.5% YoY (~5,000 in total), to increase the technology skills of our people • Launched female cloud skills program with ~1,300 participants, building an inclusive and future ready workforce • • Deliver the best integrated digital experiences World-class data and AI Utilising Al to deliver personalised customer experiences, +66% customer engagement via the CommBank app² Responsible scaling of Al resulted in 50+ Generative Al use cases to simplify operational processes and support our frontline to serve our customers Upskilled over 500 staff on Al tools to democratise the responsible use of Al • • • Modernise systems and digitise end-to-end Simpler, better foundations Modern tech estate Continuing to simplify and modernise our technology platforms to deliver exceptional customer experiences Delivered API infrastructure to drive consistency, reusability and efficient use of our APIs across the Group Continuing to leverage cloud platform flexibly to enable faster customer outcomes • Operational excellence Launched Scam Indicator, helping to safeguard customers from high-risk scam situations in real time Extended NameCheck technology which has prevented ~$200 million in mistaken payments and scams³ • Enhancing resilience capabilities to meet growing customer expectations and regulatory requirements 1. DevSecOps represents a software development lifecycle (SDLC) methodology which involves bringing together development, security and operations throughout the entire SDLC. 2. Unique users interacting with the Quick Links bar in the app from 1 July 2023 to 20 November 2023. 3. Data as of 31 December 2023, based on payments made via the CommBank app and NetBank between March 2023 and December 2023. 56#57Global best digital experiences Reimagining data and analytics Fairness & transparency . • Responsible Al toolkit providing comprehensive coverage across Al development lifecycle Appointed to National Al Centre Responsible Al think tank on Responsible Al solutions for Australia #1 Asia Pacific Bank (6th globally) for Al maturity¹ Scale • 50m responses generated daily leveraging the Bank's Generative Al capability² Technology is processing 2,000 transactions per second at peak³ Real time 田 Customer Engagement Engine powered by • ~1,000 Adaptive models live across the Customer Engagement Engine available to serve our customers4 360,000 interactions screened every second, CommBank.ai $ 200 billion each week via CommBank Safe Intelligent automation CommBank Gen.ai Studio delivering highly accurate and usable responses to our staff to serve customers better and faster (50+ generative Al use cases across the bank5) 30x increase in experimentation capability within an NBC compared to current CEE A/B Testing Framework with GenAl 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. о World class partnerships • • • Access to world-leading talent through strategic partnership with H2O.ai Collaboration with CSIRO National Al Centre to explore and boost adoption of Al in Australia Hyperpersonalised customer experiences Delivering personalised experiences through GenAl with Benefits finder, More x CommBank Yello and Fuel Finder NBCs in app to ~1.1 million 2 customers ~1.9 million notifications per day? Fraud & scams • New intelligence sharing pilot with Vodafone allowing CBA to implement proactive blocks on suspected fraudulent payments Connect retail & business customers • 66% increase in discoverability within the CommBank App driven by Al models 57#58Global best digital experiences Faster digital processing Property transactions settled digitally1 New credit card accounts via digital² Consumer ~95% Loan documents executed digitally5 Business > 95% 91% Small business loans via BizExpress6 65% Digital documents and signing³ Proprietary applications auto-decisioned4 ~90% Digital sales? 43% ~70% Straight through digital on-boarding³ -40% 1. Home loans settled digitally via PEXA in 1H24. 2. RBS only, excludes Bankwest and StepPay. Metric relates to the 1H24 proportion of new credit card accounts originated through the bank's digital channels. 3. Home loan digital document and signing utilisation for eligible customers in 1H24. 4. Proprietary home loan applications auto approved using an automated credit rules engine in 1H24. 5. Average percentage of loans processed through DocuSign from July to December 2023. 6. Average percentage of loans (Better Business Loan, Business Overdrafts) funded through BizExpress, for Small Business Banking customers from July to December 2023. 7. Average percentage of business deposits, business lending and merchants opened through digital channels from July to December 2023. 8. Average percentage of new to bank customers onboarded for deposit applications, completed via straight through processing with no manual intervention from July to December 2023. 58#59| Home loans Home loans - experience1 Enhancing customer experience through simple, scalable and digitised processes Application experience – simple online applications with fast initial approval Pre-populated inputs - to make it easy for customers and lenders to progress at first attempt × Home hub Simple and seamless application experience - Status tracking digital application status tracking through CBA Home Hub and CommBroker Search & apply My p < My property • Largest national lending network - supporting customers (simple to complex) over the phone and in person Application status • • Digital ID verification – safely identifying customers digitally with ability to use multiple forms of ID Income verification – using Al tools to verify customer income more quickly Conditionally eligible Conditionally pre-approved Conditionally approved Fast verification and credit assessment • Automated title and valuations - digitally order and verify title and property valuation information Automatic first credit decision (auto-decisioning) – simplified process to increase speed to decision Digital loan documents - digital documents including ability to support digital signatures • Digital settlement and self-serve tools Fast settlements - digital and on-time settlements • In-life activities - greater ability to self-serve digitally (including Home Hub), phone or in branch support Fast mortgage release – streamlined discharge process to ensure release as scheduled Financial tools Repayment calculator Estimate your repayments. based on your loan settings Home loan breakdown 2 accounts. Variable Rate loan 6.02% p.a. You're fully approved We're preparing for settleme Amount approved Loan term Your letter is being generated O Settlement 30 Marrickville Rd, Marrickville Owner occupied Total loan balance $900,877 Total minimum repayments $4,000 monthly My home My loan Manage Calculate Applications auto decisioned same day² (proprietary) Time to first decision³ (proprietary & broker) Digital loan document usage4 (proprietary & broker) Applications settled digitally5 (proprietary & broker) ~70% ~3 days ~90% ~95% Customers using app Balance Min. repayments Current repayments -$580,000 $1,873 fortnightly $1,873 fortnightly to manage their loan6 >1m 1. Information relates to new home loan applications unless noted otherwise. 2. Proprietary home loan applications auto approved using an automated credit rules engine in 1H24. 3. 'Days' relates to business days. Application times relate to average first decisions for the 6 months (July to December 2023) for both simple and complex. 4. Home loan digital document and signing utilisation for eligible customers in 1H24. 5. Home loans settled digitally via PEXA in 1H24. 6. Number of unique customers using home loan features in the CommBank app (July 2023 to December 2023). 59#60Cost of providing cash services Challenging commercial model ATM withdrawals¹ Digital payments² m Monthly average 13.6 (51%) 6.7 FY18 FY23 m Revenue and costs from cash services Monthly average Annual $m • Consumer ~20 Business ~50 • +80% Total revenue ~70 36 36 65 FY18 FY23 Total costs ~(410) Free ATM withdrawals at major banks since 2017 Monthly cash withdrawal volumes halved³ • Unit cost of providing cash up ~50%4 . > 1,850 CBA ATMs5, more than 2x next peer Net cost of providing cash ~$340m • ~25% of ATM withdrawals from non-customers 1. CBA excluding Bankwest. 2. CBA including Bankwest. Includes outward Direct Credit and New Payments Platform payments, of which vast majority are initiated through digital channels. FY18 Direct Credit volume annualised from February to June data. 3. Between FY18 and FY23. 4. FY19 to FY23. All cash transactions (including deposits). 5. ATMs and Intelligent Deposit Machines (IDM) as at December 2023, including in branches and off-premise, excludes Bankwest. 00 60#61Our commitment Our commitment to sustainability Building a brighter future for all Climate strategy • Set financed emissions targets for nine sectors1, representing • • 65% of in-scope drawn lending² Funded 46 Sustainable Finance³ transactions in 1H24 across BB and IB&M, totalling $5.9bn in new and re-financed funding Partnered with Tesla Australia to help customers switch to electric vehicles • Refreshed our Green, Social & Sustainability Funding Framework supporting Sustainable Funding Instrument issuance • Engaging our people New Enterprise Agreement with 90% of respondents voting 'yes' • $1,000 once-off cost of living payment and up to 13% pay rise over 3 years for eligible employees • 76% employee engagement, Your Voice Survey5 • New cultural diversity goal for Executive Manager and above roles6 472 leaders through 'Leading Tomorrow' Supporting our customers Over $750m7 spent to prevent fraud, scams, financial and cyber crime NameCheck prevented an estimated $20m of scams against 8,600 customer payments and ~$180m in mistaken payments8 CallerCheck verified ~2m calls to and from CommBank⁹ • ~8m customers contacted on • scam awareness and education Largest ATM and branch network with -40% of branches based in regional Australia • . • . • Strengthening our communities Over $2m in grants made to 201 community organisations by CommBank Staff Foundation $2.5m raised by over 7,600 participants for Can4Cancer Emergency assistance provided to customers and communities impacted by Cyclone Jasper Partner of the CommBank Matildas and Australian Women's International Cricket team Super Sponsor of SXSW Sydney • • • Conducting business responsibly Partnership with Supply Nation to support the growth of Indigenous businesses • $7.8m Australian Indigenous supplier direct spend, 47% increase on 2H23 Published our 2023 Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement in accordance with the Australian Modern Slavery Act 2018 (Cth) and UK Modern Slavery Act 201511 $6.1bn in total renewable energy exposure, up 30% compared to Jun 23 37% Cultural diversity in Executive Manager and above roles (Goal: 40%, 2028) #1 NPS10 Retail, Business and Institutional Banking 6,910 participants supported through the Financial Independence Hub since inception (1 July 2020) 65.6 RepTrak reputation score 12 +12.6 vs Jun 18 1. Since June 2022. 2. Drawn lending as at 30 June 2022. In-scope portfolio excludes exposures to finance and insurance, and government administration and defence ANZSICS. 3. Sustainable Finance transactions include Green, Social, Sustainability and Sustainability-Linked Loans and Trade Finance products. 4. Group total committed exposure as at 31 December 2023. Renewable energy exposures includes pure-play renewables companies and diversified power generation customers where at least 90% of electricity generated is from renewable sources. 5. 'CBA Your Voice' employee survey as at September 2023. 6. CBA's aspiration is for Executive Manager and above roles to match the cultural diversity of our Australian-based workforce. 7. Includes expenditure on operational processes and upgrading functionalities spent in FY23. 8. Includes preventing ~$180m of mistaken payments by customers and an estimated $20m of scams across 8,600 customer payments via the CommBank app and NetBank from July to December 2023. 9. From July 2023 to December 2023. 10. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 11. Statement available at commbank.com.au/sustainabilityreporting. 12. CBA and major bank peer reputation scores. Source: RepTrak, The RepTrak Company. Data is collected throughout the quarter and reported at quarter end from July 2020. 61#62Financial overview#63Overview - 1H24 result1 Key outcomes summary Financial Balance sheet, capital & funding Statutory NPAT ($m) 4,837 (7.7%) - Capital CET12,5 (Int'l) 19.0% +50bpts Cash NPAT ($m) ROE % (cash) 5,019 13.8% (3.1%) Capital - CET12,6 (APRA) 12.3% +20bpts (40bpts) Total assets ($bn) 1,276 +3.6% EPS cents (cash) DPS² ($) 300 (6c) Total liabilities ($bn) 1,203 +3.7% Cost-to-income (%) NIM (%) 2.15 44.0% 1.99% +5c Deposit funding 75% Flat +160bpts LT wholesale funding WAM7 5.2yrs +0.4yrs (11bpts) Liquidity coverage ratio 8 136% +500bpts Operating income ($m) 13,649 +0.2% Operating expenses ($m) 6,011 +4.1% Leverage ratio (APRA)² 5.0% (10bpts) Profit after capital charge (PACC)³ ($m) LIE to GLAA4 (bpts) 2,925 (5.2%) 9 (2bpts) Net stable funding ratio Credit ratings⁹ 121% (800bpts) AA-/Aa3/A+ Refer footnote 9 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis, all movements on the prior comparative period unless otherwise stated. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Includes discontinued operations. 3. The Group uses PACC as a key measure of risk-adjusted profitability. It takes into account the profit achieved, the risk to capital that was taken to achieve it, and other adjustments. 4. Loan impairment expense as a percentage of average Gross Loans and Acceptances (GLAA) annualised. 5. International capital, refer to glossary for definition. 6. Movement based on the CET1 ratio under APRA's revised framework effective from 1 January 2023. 7. As at 31 December 2023, Weighted Average Maturity (WAM) includes TFF and RBNZ term lending facilities drawdowns. WAM excluding TFF and RBNZ term lending facilities drawdowns is 5.3 years (-0.5yrs from 31 December 2022). 8. Quarterly average. 9. S&P, Moody's and Fitch. S&P affirmed CBA's ratings and stable outlook on 9 February 2023. Moody's affirmed CBA's ratings and stable outlook on 29 March 2023. Fitch affirmed CBA's ratings and stable outlook on 21 March 2023. 63#64Overview - 1H24 result Key financial outcomes Cash NPAT 1,2 ($m) NIM1 (%) Cost-to-income 1,2,3 Cash ROE1,2 (3%) (11bpts) 160bpts (40bpts) 3% (6bpts) 50bpts 10bpts 5,180 4,892 5,019 2.10 2.05 42.4% 43.5% 44.0% 1.99 14.2% 13.7% 13.8% 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 Cash EPS1 (cents) DPS (cents) CET1 (APRA)4 CET1 (International)5 (6c) +10c +5c (25c) 20bpts 10bpts 50bpts (10bpts) 12.3% 240 12.1% 12.2% 19.1% 19.0% 306 290 300 210 215 18.5% 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1 Jan 23 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis. 2. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 3. On an underlying basis. 4. CET1 ratio under APRA's revised framework effective from 1 January 2023. 5. International capital, refer to glossary for definition. 64#65Cash NPAT By division1 By RBS2 vs PCP BB vs PCP IB&M NZ (NZD)³ vs PCP vs PCP • Income (4%) • Income +4% Income +14% Income (8%) • Costs +3% • Costs . • Impairment expense -$24m • Impairment expense +3% -$53m • Costs +2% Costs +6% • Impairment benefit -$2m Impairment expense -$39m (8%) +6% +28% (13%) 2,915 2,666 2,687 1,846 1,893 768 1,778 589 589 677 672 459 $m 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 Cost-to- income 34.6% 35.5% 37.1% 31.9% 31.1% 31.7% 47.3% 40.3% 42.2% 35.4% 40.5% 40.8% 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Includes Bankwest Retail, excludes General Insurance. 3. New Zealand result incorporates ASB, and CBA cost allocations including capital charges and funding costs. The CBA Branch results relating to the Institutional Banking and Markets business in New Zealand are not included. 65 55#66Balance sheet¹ Lending flat vs 2H23, growth in higher yielding deposits. Dec 23 vs Dec 23 vs $bn Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Jun 23 Dec 22 Group lending Home loans 639.3 652.2 650.5 (0.3%) 1.7% +1.8% (0.5%) Consumer finance 17.0 17.0 17.5 2.6% 3.0% Business loans² 156.1 164.7 169.2 2.7% 8.4% 930.8 910.5 926.6 Institutional loans 98.1 96.8 89.4 (7.6%) (8.9%) Total Group lending 910.5 930.8 926.6 (0.5%) 1.8% $bn Non-lending interest earning assets 267.1 272.0 289.3 6.4% 8.3% Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Other assets (including held for sale) Total assets 54.5 49.6 60.1 21.0% 10.2% 1,232.2 1,252.4 1,276.0 1.9% 3.6% Group deposits Total interest bearing deposits 719.2 744.8 761.1 2.2% 5.8% +2.6% Non-interest bearing trans. deposits 130.5 118.5 110.8 (6.5%) (15.1%) +1.0% Total Group deposits 849.7 863.3 872.0 1.0% 2.6% 849.7 863.3 872.0 Debt issues 118.8 122.3 139.3 13.9% 17.2% Term funding from central banks 56.0 54.2 36.6 (32.5%) (34.7%) $bn Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Other interest bearing liabilities (incl. loan capital) Other liabilities (including held for sale) Total liabilities 86.6 97.8 102.0 4.4% 17.9% 48.7 43.2 53.3 23.2% 9.3% 1,159.9 1,180.8 1,203.1 1.9% 3.7% 1. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. Due to rounding, numbers presented in this section may not sum precisely to the totals provided. 2. Business loans growth of +2.7% (vs June 2023) driven by Business Banking growth of +3.9%, and NZ Business and Rural lending growth of +0.2% (excl. FX, NZ Business and Rural lending declined -0.8%). 66#67Dec 22 CBA System Volume growth Disciplined approach, targeted growth - focus on sustainable returns Home lending1,2 Business lending 1,2,3 Household deposits 1,4 CBA (excl. IB&M) CBA (incl. IB&M) System (incl. Institutional lending) 9.6% 4.2% 6.7% 6.4% 2.0% 2.0% 3.0% 3.5% 3.4% (0.3%) 6 months 12 months 6 months Dec 23 Dec 23 Dec 23 12 months Dec 23 6 months Dec 23 12 months Dec 23 Jan 23 Feb 23 Mar 23 Apr 23 May 23 Jun 23 Jul 23 Aug 23 Sep 23 Oct 23 Nov 23 Dec 23 [ཚ] 55 56 56 56 56 55 53 54 54 54 55 55 55 CBA ☐ System 7.4% 5.5% 6.1% 4.2% Business deposits 1,5 CBA ☐ System Balances by month6 $bn 541 544 546 548 550 552 554 552 550 550 549 551 552 Balances by month6 CBA (excl. IB&M) ☐ IB&M $bn 189 190 191 192 193 193 195 195 196 199 199 200 201 Balances by month6 $bn 363 363 364 369 370 372 369 374 377 379 381 383 385 Balances by month6 $bn 178 178 177 178 178 179 182 177 179 177 179 179 181 134 134 135 136 137 139 142 142 143 144 144 145 146 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. Dec 22 Jan 23 Feb 23 Mar 23 Apr 23 222 May 23 Jun 23 Jul 23 Aug 23 Sep 23 Oct 23 Nov 23 Dec 23 Dec 22 Jan 23 Feb 23 Mar 23 Apr 23 May 23 Jun 23 Jul 23 Aug 23 Sep 23 Oct 23 Nov 23 Dec 23 Dec 22 1.9% 0.3% (0.6%) (0.4%) 6 months Dec 23 12 months Dec 23 Jan 23 Feb 23 Mar 23 Apr 23 May 23 Jun 23 Jul 23 Aug 23 Sep 23 Oct 23 Nov 23 Dec 23 2222 67#68Market share¹ | moth Disciplined approach to growth % Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Home lending 2,9 CBA Peers Household deposits 3,9 CBA Peers Home loans RBA² 25.1 25.1 24.5 40% Home loans - APRA³ Break in series from Jun 21 25.8 25.8 25.3 30% Break in series from Jul 19 Credit cards - APRA³ 28.8 28.9 29.0 20% Other household lending - APRA³,4 19.5 20.5 21.3 10% Household deposits - APRA 3 26.9 26.9 26.6 0% Jun 07 40% 30% 25% 21% 20% 14% 13% 10% 5% 0% Dec 23 Jun 07 Break in series from Jun 21 Break in series from Mar 19 27% 21% 14% 12% 4% Dec 23 Business lending - RBA5 17.0 17.1 17.1 Business lending - APRA³,6 17.8 18.0 18.2 Business lending5 Business deposits 3,6 30% Business deposits - APRA 3,6 22.4 22.8 22.8 CBA CBA Peers 30% Equities trading 3.7 3.5 3.3 20% NZ home loans 21.6 21.5 21.0 17% 20% Peers unavailable Includes IB&M 10% 23% 21% 18% 16% NZ business lendingⓇ 16.8 17.3 17.2 NZ customer deposits 18.0 18.5 18.6 0% Jun 19 10% Dec 23 Jun 19 Dec 23 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 68#69Group margin - 12 months Continued competitive pressures and higher funding costs, partly offset by hedging returns 210 Continued competitive pressures . Benefit of rising rates more than offset by: • Increased deposit price competition Deposit switching Higher earnings on replicating portfolio • Increased wholesale funding costs and capital (7) (10) (11bpts) 6 199 bpts 1H23 Asset pricing Funding costs Other incl. replicating 1H24 portfolio, capital and NZ 69#70Deposit switching Rate of switching has slowed Domestic retail deposits 1,2 Non-interest bearing mvt %4 3Q23 4Q23 1Q24 2Q24 (7.5%) (4.1%) (4.3%) (3.3%) 129 153 $bn Domestic business deposits 1,2,3 Non-interest bearing mvt %4 $bn 172 177 177 177 181 185 188 193 196 3Q23 (8.5%) 1.0% 4Q23 1Q24 2Q24 (8.5%) 2.1% 174 177 170 189 183 176 178 185 174 167 118 94 57 49 83 82 82 86 66 67 65 69 70 71 63 67 68 95 98 102 105 107 121 73 75 69 89 89 94 100 82 78 47 67 63 59 56 54 52 54 58 58 62 46 34 62 59 22 48 50 57 52 53 48 49 36 Dec 21 Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 19 Dec 20 Term deposits Dec 21 Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 At-call interest bearing5 Dec 19 Dec 20 Offsets5 Non-interest bearing 1. CBA Group, excludes ASB. Reflects retail and business deposits distributed to RBS, BB and IB&M customers. 2. Excludes other demand deposits. 3. Includes IB&M. 4. Percentage change in spot balances on an unrounded basis versus the prior quarter. 5. At-call interest bearing deposits excluding offsets. Offsets are included in At-call interest bearing deposits on the balance sheet. 70#71Deposit composition Increasing term deposit mix. Domestic retail deposits 1,2 $bn Domestic business deposits 1,2,3 $bn $430bn $409bn $384bn 12% $351bn 15% $330bn 16% 17% 13% 10% 17% 17% 15% 16% $315bn $316bn $280bn 18% 15% $252bn 21% 14% $197bn 11% 53% 46% 56% 39% 45% 44% 45% 68% 62% 62% 36% 27% 22% 23% 25% 32% 26% 27% 18% 17% Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Term deposits At-call interest bearing4 Offsets4 Non-interest bearing 1. CBA Group, excludes ASB. Reflects retail and business deposits distributed to RBS, BB and IB&M customers. 2. Excludes other demand deposits. 3. Includes IB&M. 4. At-call interest bearing deposits excluding offsets. Offsets are included in At-call interest bearing deposits on the Balance Sheet. 71#72Group margin Group • Increased hedge earnings from higher rates Replicated portfolio (RP) & equity hedge In 1H24, RP and equity hedge earnings benefitted from higher rates • Earnings outlook continues to improve with higher exit tractor rates Domestic equity hedge Deposit hedge Liquidity & basis risk Liquidity • Every additional $10bn of liquid assets is expected to reduce Group NIM by ~2bpts Basis risk Increased sensitivity to basis risk in 1H24 with mix reversion back to variable rate home loans and term deposits driving higher exposure to basis risk • Dec 23 average BBSW/OIS spread = 1bpt . Dec 23 balance $bn 1H24 Avg. tractor¹ Exit tractor¹ rate Investment term 51 2.25% 2.52% 3 years 108 1.95% 2.05% 5 years • As at Dec 232, every 9bpts = ~1bpt of Group NIM, this ratio will reduce as exposure to basis risk increases 8.00% 4.00% 0.00% Jun 08 RP hedge rate 1.0% Equity hedge rate 3M BBSW RBA official cash rate 0.6% 0.2% -0.2% Dec 23 Jun 08 3 months BBSW/OIS spread Long Term Basis Risk Avg: 22bpts Dec 23 1. Tractor is the moving average hedge rate on equity and rate insensitive deposits. Exit tractor rate represents average rate for December 2023. 2. Based on average exposure to basis risk in December 2023. 72#73Margins by division¹ Ongoing competitive pressures and deposit mix RBS2 Lower margins due to increased competition and unfavourable deposit mix as customers switch to higher yielding savings and term deposits BB Lower lending margins reflecting increased competition and unfavourable deposit mix as customers switch to higher yielding deposits, partly offset by higher deposit margins IB&M (ex Markets)³ Increase on prior half reflecting favourable portfolio mix and higher earnings on equity, partly offset by lower lending margins NZ (ASB)4 Lower lending margins reflecting increased competition, and unfavourable deposit mix as customers switch to higher yielding deposits 279 262 355 352 344 254 247 232 221 155 147 137 bpts bpts bpts bpts 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Includes Bankwest Retail, excludes General Insurance. 3. IB&M NIM including Markets is 1H23: 87 bpts, 2H23: 91 bpts, 1H24: 82 bpts. 4. NIM is ASB Bank only and calculated in NZD. 73#74Other operating income¹ Higher trading income and fees Other operating income • 2,245, 2,093 1H24 vs 1H23 Non-recurrence of losses on assets held at fair value in 1H23 Non-recurrence of weather event related 185 1,986 insurance losses in 1H23 148 Other² 103 • Higher Structured Asset Finance rental income, partly offset by 609 • Trading 513 582 Reduced gains from Treasury liquid asset sales • Higher trading gains in Markets 404 Lending fees 357 396 Favourable XVA, partly offset by Lower Treasury earnings Higher retail and business lending fees • Higher institutional lending and loan syndication fees Trading income 609 582 513 234 239 Trading 221 • • Commissions 1,013 967 1,047 Increased volume driven FX, cards and deposit income Sales 322 352 381 • Higher volume driven institutional fees, partly offset by $m 1H23 2H23 1H24 Lower CommSec equities trading and merchants income $m Derivative (30) (9) (6) valuation 1H23 adjustment 2H23 1H24 • • 1H24 vs 1H23 Higher Markets trading gains from Commodities and Carbon portfolios, partly offset by lower trading income from Rates and Fixed Income, and lower gains from Treasury activities Higher volumes across a number of Markets desks Favourable XVA 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Includes funds management and insurance income. 74#75Sequential half operating income¹ Volume growth, higher other operating income and 3 more days, partly offset by margin compression • Margin compression (6bpts) 3 more days • +$189m • Volume growth² +1.9% • • Higher Markets trading and sales income Higher Retail FX, cards, deposit and lending fee income • Timing of dividend income from minority investments 13,512 $m 2H23 (15) Avg. Volume Growth Home loans Business loans 3 Insto. loans (3%) Deposits 0.2% 5% Net interest income 2% 152 Other operating income +1.0% 13,649 1H24 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Excluding liquids. 3. Includes New Zealand and other business loans. 4. Excluding Cash Management Pooling Facilities. 75#76Sequential half operating expenses¹ Inflation driving cost growth Cost to Income¹ 43.5% Contribution to mvt: +4.7% (0.9%) (1.5%) 282 (56) (88) 5,873 $m 2H23 Wage inflation including higher Super guarantee • Inflation related to software and IT vendors Inflation Other 44.0% +2.3% 6,011 Cumulative cost savings realised (last 5 years): • 1H24: $761m • 2H23: $673m Productivity 1H24 1. Presented on a continuing operations basis excluding $212m relating to restructuring and one-off regulatory provisions in 2H23. Headline operating expenses (1.2%) including this item. 76#77Customer remediation Committed to making things right for customers Remediation & program costs Cumulative spend and provisions ($m)1 3,535 3,210 2,653 2,174 3,974 4,055 Customer refunds Cumulative customer refunds ($m)¹ • 2,601 • • $2,503m returned to customers $98m remaining 2,503 Refunds made Salaried Aligned Advice ...Wealth (Aligned Advice)² 1,181 Period Estimated fees received by advisors Refund rate excluding interest ~$0.5bn FY09 FY18 FY09-FY19 ~$1.2bn 22% 48%5 98 Refunds remaining Wealth (other)³ 707 1,454 Program costs FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 FY23 1H24 Banking4 713 1H24 1. Relates to remediation programs in domestic divisions including those related to divested entities. 2. Includes historical Aligned Advice remediation primarily associated with ongoing service fees charged where no service was provided. 3. Includes an estimate of customer refunds (including interest) relating to advice quality, the Consumer Credit Insurance products, certain superannuation and other products. 4. Includes Retail and Business Banking, package fees, interest and fee remediation. 5. As at 31 December 2023, the Group had materially completed all case assessments and therefore does not expect the refund rate to change. 77#78Cost approach Ongoing productivity savings creating capacity for long-term investment Investment spend 597 Cumulative savings (last 5 years) Cost reduction 673 761 $m 1H23 2H23 1H24 Cost approach Continued focus on productivity & growth Capitalised software ($bn) 1.9 1.8 1.7 1.9 2.0 1.3 1.4 1.4 • Simpler, more efficient business for our customers and people FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 FY23 1H24 1,035 988 Continue to invest in the business 963 1,035 988 963 47% 45% 46% . Strengthen our digital and technology capability for future growth Productivity & growth 529 479 496 Capitalised Infrastructure 23% 22% 23% & branches Deliver long-term sustainable 484 506 492 Expensed shareholder returns 32% 31% 31% $m Risk & compliance $m 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 78#7941 Loan losses Loan impairment expense remains low Loan loss rate¹ bpts 13 11 13 17 Consumer Corporate 11 12 1H23 2H23 33 25 76 21 20 19 50 16 16 43 15 15 16 12 10 7 9 9 24 23 13 11 20 8 10 14 15 26 26 16 4 13 17 19 17 18 18 18 18 18 17 11 FY10 FY11 FY12 FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 FY23 1H24 Loan loss rate by business unit 1,2 bpts 1H23 1H24 24 18 11 9 9 2 (8) (8) RBS BB IB&M ASB Group 1. Loan impairment expense as a percentage of average Gross loans and acceptances annualised. 2. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 79#80Provisions1 Peer leading provision coverage of 1.64% Provision coverage²/CRWA % 1.64 1.58 Total provision 1.45 coverage 1.26 Collective provision coverage 1.45 1.43 1.35 1.16 CBA Dec 23 Peer 2 Sep 23 Peer 3 Sep 23 Peer 1 Sep 23 Individually Collectively assessed assessed Provisions by stage Credit exposures Credit provisions Dec 23 Stage 2 exposures by credit grade³ $m Jun 23 Dec 23 Jun 23 Stage 1 921,565 913,693 1,709 1,752 $198bn $188bn Weak Stage 24 187,874 198,203 2,889 2,929 Stage 3 6,210 6,648 598 649 159 Pass 156 Stage 3 1,567 1,383 754 733 Total 1,117,216 1,119,927 5,950 6,063 24 32 Investment Jun 23 Dec 23 1. AASB 9 classifies loans into stages; Stage 1 - Performing, Stage 2 – Performing but significantly increased credit risk, Stage 3 – Non-performing. Performing relates to Stage 1 and Stage 2. Non-performing relates to Stage 3. Stage 2 is defined based on a significant deterioration in internal credit risk ratings, as well as other indicators such as arrears. Assessment of Stage 2 includes the impact of forward-looking adjustments for emerging risk. 2. Excludes estimated impairment provisions for derivatives at fair value. 3. Segmentation of loans in retail and risk rated portfolios is based on the mapping of a counterparty's internally assessed PD to S&P Global ratings (refer Pillar 3), reflecting a counterparty's ability to meet their credit obligations. 4. The assessment of significant increase in credit risk includes the impact of forward looking multiple economic scenarios in addition to adjustments for emerging risks at an industry, geographic location or particular portfolio segment level, which are calculated by stressing an exposure's internal credit rating grade at the reporting date. This accounts for approximately 62% of Stage 2 exposures as at 31 December 2023 (30 June 2023: 62%, 31 December 2022: 59%). In 1H24, the Group recalibrated the capital model for the large corporate portfolio which resulted in a higher proportion of exposures allocated to Stage 2 as at 31 December 2023. This change did not have an impact on provisioning coverage as the Group recognised an increase in provisions for the expected impact of the new model in the prior period. 80#81Retail Banking Services (RBS)¹ Consistent and disciplined execution Net Promoter Score² Dec 23 #1 MFI share² 34.7% 35.0% Dec 22 Dec 23 Volume growth³ 12 months to Dec 23 System CBA 35.0% 7.4% 6.1% 4.4 4.2% 16.5% 12.0% 11.9% 2.0% 1.7 0.2 CBA Peer 3 Peer 2 Peer 1 Home loans4 Household deposits5 (1.5) Peer 3 Peer 1 Peer 2 CBA Margin Lower margins due to increased competition and unfavourable deposit mix as customers switch to higher yielding savings and term deposits Cost-to-income Financials Increase driven by lower operating income due to lower margins and higher operating expenses % Group NPAT $m 1H24 vs 1H23 Income 6,465 (4%) 54% Expense Impairment NPAT (2,401) +3% (216) (10%) 2,687 (8%) 279 262 254 34.6% 35.5% 37.1% bpts 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. Income - Lower lending and deposit margins Expense - Inflation, higher staff costs, amortisation and IT spend, scam management resources, fraud and operational losses, partly offset by productivity initiatives Impairment - Lower collective provisions reflecting higher house prices, partly offset by ongoing cost of living pressures and rising interest rates 81#82Business Banking (BB) 1 Continued investment in franchise build, leveraging digital assets for strong volume growth Transaction account growth ~59k increase in total accounts Performance Business lending Gap to Dec 23 Rank Actual nearest peer Spot balances ($bn) in 1H24, 38% via digital? Business NPS² #1 3.1 +8.0 +11% Business digital NPS2 #1 12.4 +3.7 +10% ~1.2m accounts MFI share² #1 26.3% +7.4 ppts 135 130 1.20 Business lending share³ #2 18.2% (3.6%) 122 1.14 1.09 BB major bank segment share4 #2 31.5% (1.9%) Diversified +12% Comm. prop +8% m Business deposits share5 #1 22.8% +2.1% Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Merchant acquiring share2,6 #1 19.3% N/A Margin Lower lending margins reflecting increased competition and unfavourable deposit mix as customers switch to higher yielding deposits, partly offset by higher deposit margins 355 352 Cost-to-income Financials Decrease vs 1H23 driven by higher operating income % Group NPAT 38% $m Income Expense Impairment NPAT 1H24 vs 1H23 4,267 +4% (1,354) +3% (207) (20%) 1,893 +6% 344 31.9% 31.1% 31.7% bpts 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. Income - Volume growth, partly offset by lower margins Expense - Inflation, increased IT and remediation costs Impairment Decrease driven by lower individually assessed provisions - 82 32#83| Institutional Banking Institutional Banking and Markets (IB&M)1 Strong performance, supporting clients in a challenging macro environment IB&M lending 80 40 0 Dec 22 Net Promoter Score² (Turnover $300M+ p.a.) Peers CBA #1 # Lower balances in pooled facilities and the funds finance portfolio Credit RWAS Increase in Dec 23 over the prior half primarily driven by higher derivative exposures Spot $bn (9%) 98 97 67 20 90 51 53 $bn Dec 23 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Margin (ex Markets)³ Increase on prior half reflecting favourable portfolio mix and higher earnings on equity, partly offset by lower lending margins 147 137 Cost-to-income Financials Decrease vs 1H23 driven by higher operating income % Group NPAT $m 1H24 vs 1H23 12% Income 1,286 +14% Expense (543) +2% Impairment NPAT 37 +5% 589 +28% 155 47.3% 40.3% 42.2% bpts 1H23 2H23 1H24 - Income Higher Markets revenue, earnings on equity and favourable derivative valuation adjustments, partly offset by higher funding costs Expense - Driven by inflation and amortisation, IT and regulatory costs, partly offset by productivity initiatives 1H23 2H23 1H24 Impairment benefit - Lower collective provision releases in the current period, partly offset by lower individually assessed provisions 1, 2, 3. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 83#84ASB1 Balancing sustainable margins and growth in a competitive environment 35 Consumer Net Promoter Score² Peers ASB Business Net Promoter Score³ Peers ASB #1 Volume growth4 12 months to Dec 23 System ASB 25 15 5 Dec 22 10 0 #3 -10 -20 -30 Dec 23 Dec 22 6.6% 2.6% 3.0% 2.8% 0.2% 0.2% Dec 23 Business lending Home lending Deposits Margin6 Lower lending margins reflecting increased competition, and unfavourable deposit mix as customers switch to higher yielding deposits Cost-to-income Financials Increase vs 1H23 driven by lower operating income and higher operating expenses % of Group NPAT7 12% $NZDm Income 1H24 vs 1H23 1,640 (8%) Expense (648) +6% Impairment NPAT (10) (80%) 707 (12%) 247 232 39.4% 39.5% 221 34.4% bpts 1H23 2H23 1H24 Income - Lower lending margins, and deposit margins mainly due to unfavourable deposit mix, partly offset by volume growth Expense - Increased investment spend, software amortisation and licensing, and staff costs 1H23 2H23 1H24 Impairment - Lower home lending provisioning, partly offset by higher individually assessed provisions in the business portfolio 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 84#85Home & consumer lending#86Home loans - CBA¹ A disciplined approach to portfolio quality, growth and sustainable returns Portfolio1 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 New business¹ Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Total balances - spot ($bn) 570 584 582 Total funding ($bn) 77 72 67 Total balances average ($bn) 562 577 580 Average funding size ($'000)9 425 431 453 Serviceability buffer (%) 10 3.0 3.0 3.0 Total accounts (m) 2.0 2.0 1.9 Variable rate (%) 93 Variable rate (%) 66 72 81 Owner occupied (%) 72 Owner occupied (%) Investment (%) Line of credit (%) 71 71 28 1 Proprietary (%)² Broker (%)² 53 47 Interest only (%) 2,3 Lenders' mortgage insurance (%) 2 Mortgagee in possession (bpts)² 9 18 22-40621-5201 2371720-5020 25 0.5 20 70 Investment (%) Line of credit (%) 28 0 28 29 Proprietary (%)² Broker (%)² Interest only (%) 11 51 49 19 47 Negative equity (%) 2,4 Annualised loss rate (bpts)² 1 Portfolio dynamic LVR (%) 2,5 44 45 Customers in advance (%) 2,6 78 78 79 7. Average number of monthly payments ahead of scheduled repayments. Payments in advance incl. offset 2,7 32 29 30 Offset balances - spot ($bn)² 70 69 75 Lenders' mortgage insurance (%)² 1. All portfolio and new business metrics are based on balances and funding respectively, unless stated otherwise. All new business metrics are based on 6 months to December 2022, June 2023 and December 2023. CBA including Bankwest. Excludes ASB. 2. Excludes Residential Mortgage Group. 3. Excludes Viridian Line of Credit. 4. Negative equity arises when the outstanding loan balance (less offset balances) exceeds updated house value. Based on outstanding balances, taking into account both cross-collateralisation and offset balances. Excludes Line of Credit, Reverse Mortgage, Commonwealth Portfolio Loans, Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. 5. Dynamic LVR defined as current balance/current valuation. 6. Any amount ahead of monthly minimum repayment; includes offset facilities. 8. Gross funding includes internal refinancing and top-ups, Viridian Line of Credit and Residential Mortgage Group. 9. Average funding size defined as funded amount/number of funded accounts. Excludes Residential Mortgage Group. 10. Serviceability test based on the higher of the customer rate plus an interest rate buffer or minimum floor rate. 11. Based on the APRA definition of Interest Only reporting, inclusive of construction loans. 10 5820578 95 97 68 63 32 37 0 53 57 47 43 21 24 8 86#87Home loans - CBA ex BWA¹ A disciplined approach to portfolio quality, growth and sustainable returns Portfolio1 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 New business1 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Total balances - spot ($bn) 483 494 491 Total funding ($bn) 65 60 55 Average funding size ($'000)8 418 427 447 Total balances average ($bn) 477 489 490 Serviceability buffer (%)⁹ 3.0 3.0 3.0 Total accounts (m) 1.7 1.7 1.6 Variable rate (%) Variable rate (%) 65 71 79 Owner occupied (%) Owner occupied (%) Investment (%) Line of credit (%) 71 70 70 28 29 29 1 1 Proprietary (%)² 60 60 61 Broker (%)² 40 40 Interest only (%) 2,3 9 10 Lenders' mortgage insurance (%) 2 17 16 First home buyers (%)² 10 9 Mortgagee in possession (bpts)2 2 1 Annualised loss rate (bpts)² 1 1 Portfolio dynamic LVR (%) 2,4 44 44 Customers in advance (%) 2,5 75 76 Payments in advance incl. offset2,6 33 30 Offset balances - spot ($bn)² 59 58 22-52150 2-77586 Proprietary (%)² Investment (%) Line of credit (%) Broker (%)² Interest only (%) 10 39 Lenders' mortgage insurance (%)² 21208222 92 94 71 68 29 32 0 58 61 42 39 19 20 21 8 First home buyers (%)² 11 11 2430 438 = 96 64 36 67 33 11 9 1. All portfolio and new business metrics are based on balances and funding respectively, unless stated otherwise. All new business metrics are based on 6 months to December 2022, June 2023 and December 2023. CBA excluding Bankwest and ASB. 2. Excludes Residential Mortgage Group. 3. Excludes Viridian Line of Credit. 4. Dynamic LVR defined as current balance/current valuation. 1 5. Any amount ahead of monthly minimum repayment; includes offset facilities. 44 6. Average number of monthly payments ahead of scheduled repayments. 7. Gross funding includes internal refinancing and top-ups, Viridian Line of Credit and Residential Mortgage Group. 31 8. Average funding size defined as funded amount/number of funded accounts. Excludes Residential Mortgage Group. 9. Serviceability test based on the higher of the customer rate plus an interest rate buffer or minimum floor rate. 10. Based on the APRA definition of Interest Only reporting, inclusive of construction loans. 63 87#88| Home loans Home loans - growth Consistent and disciplined execution in a highly competitive market Consistent market share performance¹ 24% 23% 21% 15% 14% CBA Group CBA (ex Bankwest) Dec 18 Peer 1 Peer 2 Peer 3 Disciplined approach to balance growth² New fundings³ 94 $bn 65 76 76 77 72 67 1H212H21 1H222H22 1H23 2H23 1H24 Internal Refinance 67 7 60 (7) (16) (46) 25% 584 582 $bn Jun 23 New Fundings Internal Refinance Repayments Property Sales / External Refinance / Other Dec 23 21% 21% Fundings weighted towards proprietary distribution, reduction in owner occupied and fixed rate lending Fundings mix³ 14% 13% IHL 28% 32% 37% Fundings mix4 Broker 42% 39% 33% Fundings mix³ Fixed OO 72% 68% 63% Variable 93% 95% 97% Prop. 58% 61% 67% Dec 23 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1H23 2H23 1H24 1. CBA source: RBA Lending and Credit Aggregates, Peer source: Peer APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS) balance divided by RBA Lending and Credit Aggregates system balance. Series break due to new regulatory definitions set by APRA from 1 July 2019. As a result of this change, market share is not comparable to previous reporting periods. Additional series break from June 21 relating to restatements. 2. CBA including Bankwest. 3. Includes internal refinancing, Unloan, Residential Mortgage Group and Bankwest and excludes Viridian Line of Credit (VLOC). 4. Excludes Bankwest and Residential Mortgage Group. 88#89Home loans - mix¹ Peak of fixed rate expiries in 1H24 Fixed vs variable rate stock and flow² Fixed rate expiry schedule³ Variable Fixed Previously expired • 30+ arrears: segment 1.11% vs portfolio 1.06% • 90+ arrears: segment 0.50% vs portfolio 0.52% Future expiries 62% 62% 66% 72% 81% 95% 97% 41 44 34 38% $206bn 38% $209bn 28 29 34% $192bn 28% $160bn 24 24 23 19% $111bn 5% $4bn 13 3% $2bn 11 $bn Dec 21 Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 2H23 1H24 6 mths to Jun 22 6 mths to Dec 22 6 mths to Jun 23 6 mths to Dec 23 6 mths to Jun 24 6 mths to Dec 24 6 mths to After Jun 25 Jun 25 Stock Flow 1. CBA including Bankwest. Excludes Lines of Credit, Reverse Mortgages, Commonwealth Portfolio Loans, Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan, unless otherwise stated. 2. Includes Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. Flow metrics are based on 6 months to June 2023 and December 2023. 3. CBA including Bankwest, excludes ASB. 89#90Home loans credit quality Home loans - Credit quality remains sound - majority of interest rate rises passed through Buffers¹, $bn Offset and redraw balances, spot Home loan arrears³ % $133bn $127bn $120bn 20% Impact of cash rate changes on mortgage repayments4 -80% Not yet felt by customers Experienced already by customers Historic avg5 58 57 1.34% Credit cards Redraw² 54 1.15% 1.04% 1.09% and personal loans 0.87% 0.79% Offset 66 70 75 0.61% 0.57% 0.52% 0.52% 0.43% Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 30+ days Dec 22 Dec 23 90+ days 0.65% Home loans Hardship6 Number of cases +9% Jun 23 Dec 23 1. CBA including Bankwest. Excludes ASB. 2. Redraw balances represents the value of all payments in advance (payments ahead of scheduled repayments), excluding offset facilities. 3. Group including New Zealand. 4. Due to the impact of fixed rates and 3-4 month lag between cash rate increases and repayments increasing. Impact of November 2023 cash rate increase on repayments still to be realised. Estimated for CBA excluding Bankwest. 5. Historic average represents the average 30+ home loan arrears from Dec 2008 to Jun 2023. 6. Number of cases in hardship includes customers restructured on non-commercial terms. 90#91Home - Home loans - resilience Strong repayment and savings buffers Repayment buffers (Payments in advance 1, % of accounts) 34%33% 34% Repayment buffers Payments on time 1, % of accounts) Structural: e.g. fixed rate loans New Accounts: <1 year on book Investment loans: negative gearing/tax benefits □ Dec 22 Jun 23 □ Dec 23 22% 22% 20% Residual 4% 5% 22%22% 20% 6% 4% 15%16%16% 5% 3% 12% 5% 3% 11%11% 2% 6% 6% 7% 6% 6% 6% 5% 6% 6% 9% 9% 9% > 2 years 1-2 years 6-12 months 3-6 months 1-3 months < 1 month On Time Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Application gross income band 6 months to Dec 23 - Funding $ Application gross income band 6 months to Dec 23 - Funding # 60% 60% Owner occupied (OO) Investor home loans (IHL) ☐ Owner occupied (OO) Investor home loans (IHL) 50% 50% 40% 40% 30% 30% 20% 20% 10% 10% 0% 0% Ok to 75k 75k to 100k 100k to 125k 125k to 150k 150k to 200k 200k to 500k > 500k Ok to 75k 75k to 100k 100k to 125k 125k to 150k 150k to 200k 200k to 500k > 500k 1. CBA including Bankwest. Excludes Line of Credit, Reverse Mortgage, Commonwealth Portfolio Loan, Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. Includes offset facilities, excludes loans in arrears. 91#92Home loans - resilience¹ Home loans 88% of the book originated under tightened standards since FY16 Key serviceability changes by year² FY16-19 Increased serviceability buffer and buffers on existing debts • Removed Low doc and EQFS products Tightened lending requirements for non-residents and use of foreign currency Tightened lending requirements in high risk areas New loan assessment (from FY16)³ • Income • • All income used in application to assess serviceability is verified • FY20 FY21 • Reduced IO maximum term limits Changes to serviceability buffer and floor assessment rate • Removed LMI/LDP waivers for construction, land loans Temporary COVID-19 tightening on verification • Restrictions on family guarantor arrangements Living expenses • • Rental expense capture (net rental income) • • Expenses excluded from HEM added to higher of declared expenses or HEM Increased serviceability floor rate • Reduced max LVR for construction and bridging loans Interest rates FY22 FY23 Enhanced self employed and investment income calculations • Increased serviceability buffer • Tightened LVR limits for high value properties Updated post code level appetite to current economic cycle Updated rental income shading and maximum yield to market cycle Existing debt • Allowed latest year financials for high quality self employed segments Increased serviceability floor rate Mortgage portfolio by year of origination 88% ΠΠΠ Pre FY11 FY12 FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 FY23 1H24 FY11 • • • 80% or lower cap on less stable income sources (e.g. bonus, overtime) Applicants reliant on less stable sources of income manually decisioned 90% cap on tax free income, including Government benefits • Limits on investor income allowances • Rental income net of rental expenses used for servicing Living expenses captured for all customers Servicing calculations use the higher of declared expenses or HEM adjusted by income and household size Expenses excluded from HEM are added to the higher of the declared expenses or HEM Assess customer ability to pay based on the higher of the customer rate plus serviceability buffer or minimum floor rate Interest Only (IO) loans assessed on principal and interest basis over the residual term of the loan Existing customer commitments are verified through Comprehensive Credit Reporting (CCR) or CBA transaction accounts data CBA transaction accounts and CCR data used to identify undisclosed customer obligations • For repayments on existing debt: CBA and OFI repayments recalculated using the higher of the actual rate plus a buffer or minimum floor over remaining principal and interest loan term - Credit card repayments calculated at an assessment rate of 3.8% - Other debt repayments calculated based on actual rate + buffer 1. CBA excluding Bankwest unless stated otherwise. Excludes Line of Credit, Reverse Mortgage, Commonwealth Portfolio Loan and Residential Mortgage Group. 2. Serviceability changes are reflective of changes made within the financial year and may have changed since implementation or may not be in currently in place. 3. Indicative loan assessment and is subject to change. 92#93Home loans - resilience 1,2 Median minimum repayments represent 22% of pre-tax income Average minimum monthly repayment³ $491bn 76% Variable rate loans 6% Fixed rate loans scheduled to roll-off by Jun 24 Fixed rate loans scheduled 14% to roll-off after Jun 24 Other² 4% Dec 23 $1,850 $1,250 0.10% $1,900 $1,950 4.35% 4.60% 4.85% Cash rate Median monthly repayment as % of pre-tax income³ 15% 22% 23% 23% 0.10% 4.35% 4.60% 4.85% Cash rate 1. CBA excluding Bankwest unless otherwise stated. 2. Includes Line of Credit, Reverse Mortgage, Commonwealth Portfolio Loan, Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. 3. For cash rates 4.60% and higher, fixed rate accounts expiring by June 2024 have had their repayment forecast based on a projected variable rate. 93#94Home loans - resilience1 Savings and repayment buffers lessen potential negative cash flow outcomes. Proportion of variable rate owner occupier loans originated in the past 5 years estimated with negative cash flow at different cash rates Negative cash flow profile at 4.35% cash rate 3.7% 1.1% 5.2% 4.4% 3.7% 3.1% 2.2% 1.0% 500000 1.0% 0.6% 0.1% 0.9% 0.10% 3.60% 4.10% 4.35% 4.60% 4.85% Negative Cash Flow Cash rate More than 12 months of new repayments as buffer More than 12 times monthly cash flow deficit as buffer Positive cash flow with 10% expenses reduction Positive cash flow if IO Residual • Loans are limited to originations in the past 5 years • Income at origination is scaled by Wage Price Index . Assumes no changes to household composition and financial circumstances • Customer declared expenses² are scaled by Consumer Price Index and benchmarked against latest HEM • Assumes no other monthly debt commitments aside from repayments on home loans held with CBA and Bankwest 1. CBA including Bankwest. Excludes Line of Credit, Reverse Mortgage, Commonwealth Portfolio Loan, Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. Originations limited to within the past 5 years. 2. Includes basic and discretionary expenses. 94#95Home loans - resilience 1,2 Targeted support for customers in the highest risk segment (~0.4% of book) Exposures with the capacity to deleverage or reduce expenditure³ Exposures largely consisting of loans that originated prior to July 2019, have strong repayment buffers (>12 months), or low debt servicing and debt to income ratios لها Portfolio $491bn 5% 8% 83% Other² 4% Dec 23 Risk profile $26.5bn4 $1.9bn (0.4%) 5 DLVR > 90%, no LMI Higher risk $3.2bn (0.7%) 5 DLVR 80-90%, no LMI $2.5bn (0.5%)5 LMI $18.9bn (3.8%)5 DLVR <80% at 4.35% cash rate 1. CBA excluding Bankwest. Unless otherwise stated. 2. Includes Line of Credit, Reverse Mortgage, Commonwealth Portfolio Loan, Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. 3. Predominantly investors or have lower repayments. 4. Monthly repayments have been estimated at 4.35% cash rate for variable rate loans and fixed rate loans scheduled to roll-off by June 2024. 5. Proportion of overall portfolio of $491bn. 95#96Home loans - resilience¹ Portfolio DLVR strong and stable at 45% Negative equity² Proportion of balances in negative equity • 59% of customers ahead of repayments Dynamic LVR bands³ % of total portfolio balances . • 20% of home loans in negative equity have Lenders Mortgage Insurance 70% Negative Equity □ Negative Equity >$50k 60% 50% Average dynamic LVR4 Dec 22 Dec 22 44% Jun 23 Jun 23 45% ☐ Dec 23 Dec 23 45% -73% NSW & VIC 40% 30% 1.0% 1.1% 0.5% 0.7% 0.8% 20% 0.3% 10% 0% Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 LVR ≤ 60% LVR 60%-70% LVR 70%-80% LVR LVR LVR 80%-90% 90%-95% 95%-100% LVR > 100% House price movements by state5 Dynamic LVR bands³ Dec 22 Jun 23 % of total portfolio accounts Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 23 70% 5% 0% 6% 4% 2% 1% 6% 3% في العالمي ميرفي (5%) (8%) (7%) NSW VIC QLD 9% 60% 50% 4% 4% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% LVR WA Australia ≤ 60% LVR 60%-70% LVR 70%-80% LVR 80%-90% 90%-95% LVR LVR 95%-100% LVR > 100% 1. CBA including Bankwest. Excludes Line of Credit, Reverse Mortgage, Commonwealth Portfolio Loan, Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. 2. Negative equity arises when the outstanding loan (less offsets) exceeds house value. Based on outstanding balances, taking into account cross-collateralisation and offset balances. CBA updates house prices monthly using internal and external valuation data. 3. Taking into account cross-collateralisation. Offset balances not considered. 4. CBA including Bankwest, Line of Credit & Reverse Mortgages. Excludes Commonwealth Portfolio Loans and Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. Average calculations based on collateral grouping. 5. Six month change sourced from CoreLogic Home Value Index released 1 January 2024. 96#97Home loans - resilience1 - Portfolio remains resilient – modest uptick in arrears, remain low Customers in advance² % of customers Average payments in advance2,3 Dynamic LVR4 Portfolio averages # of payments 78% 78% 78% 79% 38 32 29 29 30 46% 44% 45% 45% Dec 21 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 21 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 21 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Offset and redraw balances $bn Home loan arrears6 90+ days, % 0.87% 30+ days, % 0.79% 0.92% 1.09% Dec 21 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 $120bn $127bn $126bn $133bn Redraw5 54 57 58 0.52% 0.52% 57 0.47% 0.43% Offset 66 70 69 75 Dec 21 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 21 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Mortgagee in possession (%) % of accounts 0.02% 0.02% 0.02% 0.02% Dec 21 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 1. CBA including Bankwest. Excludes Line of Credit, Reverse Mortgage, Commonwealth Portfolio Loans, and Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan, unless otherwise stated. 2. Any amount ahead of monthly minimum repayment; includes offset balances. 3. Average number of monthly payments ahead of scheduled repayments. 4. Taking into account cross-collateralisation. Offset balances not considered. 5. Redraw balances represent the value of all payments in advance (payments ahead of scheduled repayments), excluding offset facilities. 6. Group including New Zealand. 97#98Home loans – capacity¹ - Higher interest rates continue to impact borrowing capacity Borrowing capacity reducing² Change in maximum borrowing capacity 2 - Indexed Dec 16 120.0% 100.0% 80.0% 60.0% 2016 Driven by increase in serviceability buffer and interest rates (Loans assessed based on the higher of the customer rate³ + buffer, or minimum floor rate) 11.55 11.80 10.55 8.30 3.00 3.00 7.55 3.00 7.05 7.05 3.00 5.40% 5.10% 2.50 5.25% 2.50 3.00 7.55 8.55 8.80 4.55 4.55 4.55 5.30 2017 2018 2019 2020 Joint Owner Occupier 2021 Single Investor 2022 2023 Dec 20 Jun 21 Joint Investor Dec 21 SVR (OO P&I)4 Jun 22 ☐ Buffer Dec 22 Jun 23 Minimum floor rate Dec 23 Single Owner Occupier Borrowing capacity5 % of applicants with additional capacity to borrow With average loan size 6 increasing Indexed 1.20 500 90% 92% 89% 89% 1.00 450 0.80 447 400 418 427 0.60 379 387 350 0.40 340 352 344 356 300 325 317 0.20 250 0.00 200 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 18 Jun 19 Dec 19 Jun 20 Dec 20 Jun 21 Dec 21 Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Approval rate (Indexed to Dec 16) Average funding size ($000's, RHS) 1. CBA excluding Bankwest and Unloan, unless noted otherwise. 2. Scenarios based on differing assumptions with respect to family types, number of dependents, loan size, income sources and existing liabilities/commitments. 3. Customer rate includes any customer discounts that may apply. 4. SVR (OO P&I) reflects the advertised reference rate and does not include any customer pricing concessions. 5. Applications that have passed system serviceability test; borrowed with excess capacity reflects applicants above minimal net income surplus. 6. Based on fundings 6 months ending. Average funding size defined as funded amount/number of funded accounts. Includes Unloan. 98#99Home loans - resilience1 Impaired loans and portfolio losses remain low Impaired home loans² Modest increase in Australian home loan impairments as higher interest rates continue to provide upward pressure on households Impaired home loans – by State³ - 1.2 1.1 1.2 $bn Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Other 8% NSW 26% 22% WA 14% QLD 30% VIC Losses to average gross loans and acceptances (GLAA)4 2.5% 2.0% 1.5% 1.0% 0.5% 0.0% 1983 1993 2003 Group total loans CBA home loans CBA home loans annualised loss rate1 0.01% 0.01% 0.01% 0.00% Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 2013 2023 Portfolio insurance profile5 % of home loan portfolio 80% Insurance not required - lower risk profile e.g. low LVR O 16% Insurance with Helia or QBE for higher risk loans above 80% LVR -4% Low deposit premium segment 1. CBA including Bankwest. 2. Process for identification of impairments: impairment assessments are carried out at 90 days past due for not well secured loans or at observed events e.g. bankruptcy, and takes into account cross-collateralisation, impairment is triggered where refreshed security valuation, minus 4% transaction cost and expected next 12 months interests, is less than the loan balance by ≥ $1, impaired accounts 90+ days past due are included in 90+ arrears reporting and where the shortfall is greater than or equal to $20,000 an Individually Assessed Provision (IAP) is raised. 3. Excludes ASB. 4. Bankwest included from FY09. 5. Excludes Line of Credit, Reverse Mortgage, Commonwealth Portfolio Loan, Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. 99#100Home loans - resilience | Home Modest uptick in arrears, however remain low Arrears by portfolio Group 90+ days Bankwest CBA Arrears by product 90+ days1 Owner Occupied Investment Loans Group ASB 1.0% 1.0% 0.8% 0.8% 0.8% Arrears by repayment and interest type 90+ days1 Principal & Interest Interest Only Fixed Variable Portfolio 0.6% 0.6% 0.6% 0.4% 0.4% 0.4% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% Dec 21 Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 21 Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 21 Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Arrears by year Group 90+ days 2019 Arrears by state NT WA Arrears by vintage 2020 90+ days1 QLD 90+ days1 2021 SA 2022 AUS TAS 0.8% 2023 2.00% 1.0% FY17 VIC NSW 0.8% 0.6% 1.50% ACT 0.6% FY19 FY18 0.4% 1.00% FY22 FY16 0.4% FY23 FY20 0.2% 0.50% 0.2% FY24 FY21 0.0% 0.00% 0.0% Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Dec 21 Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54 60 66 72 Months on Book 1. CBA including Bankwest. Excludes Lines of Credit, Reverse Mortgages, Commonwealth Portfolio Loan, Residential Mortgage Group and Unloan. 100#101Consumer arrears¹ Increase in arrears influenced by borrowers susceptible to higher cost of living - young, low income 1.4% 0.8% 0.46% |9,648 Credit cards Group 90+ days 0.55% 9,560 0.60% 9,915 44 52 59 $m Arrears Portfolio balance balance Dec 22 Arrears Portfolio balance balance Jun 23 Arrears Portfolio balance balance Dec 23 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 1.8% 1.2% 0.95% Personal loans Group 90+ days 1.19% 1.14% 4,987 5,279 5,531 48 63 63 $m Arrears Portfolio balance balance Dec 22 Arrears Portfolio balance balance Jun 23 Arrears Portfolio balance balance Dec 23 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 0.2% 0.6% Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 1. Group consumer arrears including New Zealand. 101#102Consumer arrears¹ Arrears increasing modestly from historic lows. 6.0% 4.0% 2.0% Credit cards Group 30+ days Personal loans Group 30+ days 6.0% 4.0% 2.0% 0.0% 0.0% Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 19 Dec 20 Credit cards 1.5% Group 90+ days 1.0% 0.5% 0.0% Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 1. ASB write-off credit card and personal loans typically around 110 days past due if no agreed repayment plan. Dec 21 Personal loans Group 90+ days ASB CBA Group Bankwest Dec 22 Dec 23 2.0% 1.5% 1.0% 0.5% 0.0% Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 102#103Business & corporate lending#104Portfolio quality¹ Portfolio quality metrics sound Exposures by industry¹ Corporate portfolio quality Investment grade Group TCE by geography AAA A+ BBB+ TCE $bn to AA- to to Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 A- BBB- Other Dec 23 Australia 81.9% 82.2% 80.6% Gov. admin & defence 187.2 18.6 0.6 0.5 206.9 New Zealand 10.0% 9.7% 9.8% Finance & insurance 53.9 48.6 7.2 3.6 113.3 Americas 3.4% 3.5% 3.4% Com. property 1.9 10.1 Agriculture & forestry 0.4 23.3 58.8 94.0 4.6 26.3 31.2 71.0% 69.3% 67.7% Europe 2.6% 2.2% 3.2% Asia 2.1% 2.4% 3.0% Transport & storage 0.3 3.3 11.5 11.0 26.1 Manufacturing 0.0 1.7 6.3 12.4 Wholesale trade 0.0 5.1 11.8 Ent. leisure & tourism 0.0 0.0 0.8 20.4 17.0 15.7 16.6 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Top 10 commercial exposures Troublesome & impaired assets TCE $bn Retail trade 0.0 0.9 2.9 12.3 16.1 % of TCE 0.46% 0.51% 0.49% Elect. gas & water 0.4 3.1 9.7 2.8 15.9 AA+ BBB+ Health & community services 0.0 0.7 3.3 11.3 15.4 AA Business services 0.2 0.4 3.8 11.1 15.4 A- Construction 0.0 - 0.8 11.7 12.5 A Mining, oil & gas 0.0 0.7 3.6 2.4 6.8 A AAA Media & communications 1.4 1.0 1.8 1.3 5.5 BBB+ All other ex consumer Total 0.4 1.3 1.6 8.9 12.2 BBB+ 246.0 90.7 86.8 201.9 625.4 A- 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 1. CBA grades in S&P equivalents. 7.1 6.9 6.3 Gross 3.3 3.2 impaired 3.0 Corporate troublesome 3.3 3.8 3.7 $bn Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 104#105Total committed exposure1 Close monitoring of key sectors Group TCE ($bn) TIA ($bn) TIA % of TCE Provisions to total committed exposure % Jun 23 Dec 23 Jun 23 Dec 23 Jun 23 Dec 23 Jun 23 Dec 23 Commercial property Consumer Government administration & defence Finance & insurance Agriculture & forestry Transport & storage 776.8 776.2 2.0 2.0 0.3% 0.3% 0.4% 0.4% 231.3 206.9 0.0 0.0 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 97.9 113.3 0.1 0.1 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 91.9 94.0 0.9 0.6 1.0% 0.7% 0.5% 0.5% 30.0 31.2 0.6 0.8 2.1% 2.5% 0.5% 0.7% 24.7 26.1 0.2 0.2 0.8% 0.8% 0.6% 0.6% Manufacturing 19.3 20.4 0.4 0.4 1.9% 2.0% 1.4% 1.4% Wholesale trade 15.9 17.0 0.4 0.4 2.5% 2.3% 2.0% 1.8% Entertainment, leisure & tourism 16.1 16.6 0.4 0.4 2.3% 2.2% 1.2% 1.5% Retail trade 15.4 16.1 0.4 0.3 2.7% 1.9% 1.2% 1.2% Electricity, gas & water 13.7 15.9 0.1 0.0 0.9% 0.1% 0.6% 0.3% Health & community services 14.7 15.4 0.3 0.4 2.3% 2.4% 1.1% 1.2% Business services 14.6 15.4 0.2 0.2 1.6% 1.5% 0.9% 0.8% Construction 11.8 12.5 0.6 0.7 5.5% 5.8% 3.9% 3.4% Mining, oil & gas 7.4 6.8 0.1 0.0 0.9% 0.5% 0.7% 0.8% Media & communications 5.7 5.5 0.1 0.1 1.0% 1.3% 0.6% 0.5% Education 3.7 3.6 0.0 0.0 0.5% 1.3% 0.3% 0.3% Personal & other services 3.3 3.3 0.0 0.1 1.0% 2.0% 0.6% 0.8% Other 5.9 5.4 0.3 0.2 3.2% 3.0% n/a n/a Total 1,400.1 1,401.6 7.1 6.9 0.5% 0.5% 0.4% 0.4% Refer separate slides following 1. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 105#106| • Commercial property Well diversified, moderately leveraged portfolio There have been moderate declines in property values, although some assets with more challenging tenancy profiles, higher vacancies, location or significant capex for refurbishing are experiencing larger declines in value. • Valuation sensitivities demonstrate that the portfolio remains well secured under downside scenarios. A result of active management of Loan to Valuation (LVR), and Interest Coverage origination thresholds which are assessed against future cash flows and interest rate settings. • Tighter origination LVRs are in place for Office properties in high vacancy precincts. Over the half year Office exposure increased in Premium/A grade and decreased in B grade and below. • Office exposures weighted toward Premium/A Grade property with weighted average LVR maintaining a buffer to the Bank's minimum requirements. • • • . • • Retail origination criteria actively managed with tighter criteria for assets with predominantly discretionary retailers as tenants. Portfolio remains well secured. Fully secured 1 exposure has increased from 80% in June 2022 to 82% as at December 2023. Of the 14% that is Unsecured, 95% is to investment grade customers. Exposure is diversified across sectors and by counterparty, with the top 20 counterparties representing 14% of the portfolio. Growth primarily concentrated in sectors with better credit quality or market conditions with exposure to REITS, Industrial and Premium/A grade office increasing and exposure to Secondary Office decreasing. Commercial property exposures outside Australia and New Zealand comprise less than 0.5% of the portfolio. Maintaining close portfolio oversight with serviceability criteria continuing to factor in forecast interest rate changes. 21% of total residential exposure related to apartment development >$20m 89.9 91.9 94.0 6.5 6.6 6.7 TCE ($bn) % of Group TCE Sector Retail Property 25% Industrial Property 13% Residential Property 13% Other Group exposure 43.4 Dec 22 38.1 37.5 Jun 23 Dec 23 % of portfolio investment grade Profile Geography Other Aus & NZ Overseas 13% 3% WA Office 10% Property 23% VIC 17% SA QLD 3% 9% Real Estate Commercial Investment Property Trusts 12% 14% 1. Fully secured is where the exposure is less than 100% of the Bank extended value of the security, which is a discount to the market value of the security. 0.8 1.0 0.7 0.5 0.5 0.5 % of portfolio % of provisions graded TIA to TCE NSW 45% Security1 Unsecured 14% Partially Secured 4% Fully Secured 82% 106#107Entertainment, leisure & tourism Performance steady despite cost of living challenges • • • Recent portfolio growth has focused on higher quality and diversified operators with strong LVRs. Pubs and clubs have traded well, though operators are cautious about consumer spending, particularly in relation to food and beverage. Accommodation has benefitted from heightened domestic travel and improving business demand. LVRs across the portfolio remain well positioned and typically lower than 55%, assisted by improved net operating income. The CommBank Household Spending Insights (HSI) Index saw Hospitality growth of 3.2% in the year to December 2023. Group exposure 16.6 16.1 Dec 22 14.8 Jun 23 Dec 23 6.4 5.4 5.1 2.7 2.3 2.2 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.4 1.2 1.5 TCE ($bn) % of Group TCE % of portfolio investment grade % of portfolio % of provisions graded TIA to TCE Pubs, Clubs & Casinos 42% Sector Profile Geography Other Aus & Overseas 6% NZ Accommodation 35% WA6% 4% VIC 19% Cafes SA Other Restaurants 5% Cultural && Catering QLD Recreational 10% 10% Services 13% Security Unsecured 11% Partially Secured 14% NSW 50% Fully Secured 75% 107#108Retail trade Household spending moderating 14.7 16.1 15.4 • • • • Growth in Retail Trade was predominantly within non-discretionary sectors with caution exercised due to emerging cost of living challenges. • The CommBank Household Spending Insights (HSI) Index declined by 3.9% in the month of December 2023. There were falls in 8 of the 12 HSI categories, with the largest falls in Household Goods (-16.0%/mth) and Recreation (-6.5%/mth). Annual Household Spending growth has reduced from the peak of 18.1% in August 2022 to 3.1% in December 2023 (in nominal dollars). Labour availability pressures have eased, influenced by migration into Australia. TCE ($bn) 1.1 1.1 1.1 Group exposure 32.0 29.6 23.7 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 2.7 1.8 1.9 1.1 1.2 1.2 % of Group TCE % of portfolio investment grade % of portfolio % of provisions graded TIA to TCE Sector Personal Retailing 18% Food Retailing 34% Profile Geography Other Aus & NZ Overseas 15% NSW 30% Security Unsecured 26% Fully එහිදී WA 13% Motor Vehicle Retailing & QLD Services 24% Household Good Retailing 10% VIC SA Partially Secured 21% 8% 30% 24% Secured 44% 108#109Construction Sector remains challenged, growth directed to well-performing counterparties and sub-sectors 12.5 • Growth directed to sub-sectors less exposed to high risk, fixed price contracts. 11.8 11.8 • • For the half year to December 2023, Non-Building Construction, Civils, Installation Trade Services and Other Construction Services represented more than half of the sector growth, in line with portfolio weighting of 58%. Low dwelling approvals and commencements point to a constrained longer-term outlook. • Industry surveys suggest building material cost inflation is easing. Labour shortages remain an issue across specific skilled trades. • Loss making fixed price dwelling contracts are increasingly being worked through, with many operators returning to profitability. Group exposure Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 5.9 6.4 6.3 5.5 5.8 4.0 3.6 3.9 3.4 0.9 0.8 0.9 TCE ($bn) % of Group TCE % of portfolio investment grade % of portfolio % of provisions graded TIA to TCE Sector • Performance in Non-Building Construction and Civils has been stable, and pipelines remain robust. Building Structural & Building Completion Non- Building Construction Services Construction 11% 31% WA 12% Profile Geography Other Aus & NZ Overseas 11% 5% NSW 35% Security Unsecured 20% 12% Site Preparation Services 14% Partially Secured Fully Secured 55% Other 25% Installation Construction Trade Services Services 17% 15% VIC QLD 20% SA 12% 5% 109#110• Mining, oil & gas Managing sub-sector exposures in line with strategy, stable portfolio performance Overall decrease in Oil and Gas extraction sub-sector. Stable performance over the past 6 months: - Investment grade largely stable at 64% of portfolio. - Diversified by commodity/customer/region. - Focus on quality, low cost projects with strong fundamentals and sponsors. Oil & Gas Extraction is the largest sub-sector (30% of total), 86% investment grade. Troublesome and impaired level reduced to 0.5%. 7.5 7.4 6.8 Group exposure Dec 22 Jun 23 68.0 66.3 64.1 Dec 23 0.7 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.9 0.5 0.7 0.7 0.8 TCE ($bn) % of Group TCE % of portfolio investment grade % of portfolio graded TIA % of provisions to TCE Group exposure by sector¹ Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 3.1 2.6 2.0 1.9 1.9 1.9 1.4 1.0 1.0 1.2 1.3 0.8 0.5 0.5 0.6 $bn Oil & Gas Extraction² Metals Mining Coal Mining³ Mining Services Other Mining 1. Please see our Environmental and Social Framework commbank.com.au/policies and our 2023 Climate Report commbank.com.au/Climate Report2023 to learn more about our sector-level commitments and 2030 sector-level targets. 2. Includes LNG terminals. 3. Includes all exposure with black coal mining as per the ANZSIC classification. 110#111Funding, liquidity & capital#112Funding overview Conservative funding settings maintained, flexibility through tighter financial conditions Funding composition Deposit growth supporting 75% of funding Wholesale funding Weighted to long-term Funding profile TFF refinance to be managed across FY24 - FY25 period Maturity³ 74% 70% % of total funding Short-term wholesale1 7% 7% 7% 26% 18% 18% 18% 44% Long-term 19% wholesale 75% 75% 75% Deposits 55% Jun 08 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Jun 08 Jun 23 Dec 23 1H24 issuance 74 5.3 WAM² (5.5yrs ex. TFF) 5.2 WAM² (5.3yrs ex. TFF) 43 25 27 26 17 $bn Dec 23 Jun 24 □ Senior Debt4 Covered Bond Jun 25 Jun 26 Securitisation Jun 27 AT1/T25 > Jun 27 TFF/FLP Liquidity metrics Indicative wholesale funding costs³ Liquid assets NSFR LCR7 bpts Qtr. Avg. ($bn) 167 $180bn spot 118% ex.TFF6 123 155 109 117 150 136% 96 105 121% 189 187 Excess $151bn Excess $50bn 72 77 93 115 72 104 100% Cash 112 91 Regulatory minimum Gov, semi 5559 93 50 64 36 77 96 & other Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 23 Dec 23 1 year 2 year 3 year 4 year 5 year 10 year Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. Sources and uses of funds 6 months to Dec 23 $bn 17 (18) 10 5 (10) 6 Equity Long term issuance maturities9 Long TFF Short Other Customer Lending term maturities term short deposits wholesale term funding funding Other incl. trading & liquid assets 112#113Deposit funding Highest share of stable customer deposits in Australia Customer deposits vs peers¹ ($bn) % of total funding 68% Customer deposits by segment4 ($bn) 75% 68% 71% 66% 800 819 825 825 ASB & Other 76 80 10% CAGR 182 659 641 IB&M 155 164 153 19% 570 2% 587 Other deposits 82 22% 239 159 167 163 BB 213 215 216 26% 10% 73 Operational deposits¹ 93 82 561 Retail/SME deposits¹ 370 327 409 342 RBS 356 363 376 45% FY17-19 avg. Dec 23 Peer 1 Peer 3 Peer 2 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Retail transaction accounts² (#, '000) Retail deposit mix3 ($bn) Customer deposits by product4 ($bn) +6% 356 363 376 800 819 825 10,949 Online Savings 109 121 130 Investments 207 225 244 30% 10,677 10,288 Savings 267 277 Savings & 284 34% 134 135 138 Investments Transactions5 326 317 Transactions 113 107 108 297 36% Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Refer to sources, glossary and notes at the back of this presentation for further details. 113#114Balance sheet composition1 CBA has stable, high quality assets and conservative funding settings. Europe Assets CBA has a stable, high quality asset profile: • US CBA • Assets Liab + Equity 6% Assets Liab + Equity Assets Liab + Equity 5% 6% 10% 16% 16% 31% 12% 23% . 30% 20% 22% 1% 24% 25% 7% 78% 71% 18% 64% 20% 56% 22% Illustrative bank as at 30 June 2023 17% Illustrative bank as at CBA 30 June 2023 31 December 2023 Personal & other lending² Net other assets³ Customer deposits Business and corporate lending² Wholesale funding HQLA Equity Home lending² High proportion of well secured home lending assets Very low proportion of higher risk unsecured consumer finance/personal lending HQLA primarily consists of cash and deposits with central banks, government and semi-government securities; all bonds held are fully hedged for interest rate risk Funding - CBA has proactively maintained conservative funding settings: • • Low proportion of short-term funding which provides flexibility through tighter financial conditions and to manage TFF maturities Long-term wholesale funding has a weighted average maturity of 5.2 years and is diversified by product and currency; track record of good access to global funding markets Large proportion of customer deposits funding including highest proportion of stable household deposits 1. Based on published peer bank Balance Sheet disclosures, with the exception of other assets, which are presented net of other liabilities, and HQLA which is based on Pillar 3 LCR disclosures. 2. Lending includes net loans and advances. 3. Include unencumbered marketable securities that do not qualify as HQLA, pledged securities and other assets net of trading and other liabilities. 114#115Liquidity Disciplined approach to liquidity risk management Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR)1 Dec 2023 (Qtr avg) Liquid assets¹ Dec 2023 (Qtr avg) ($bn) Cash Govt, semi & other 187 268 140% 210 91 136% 182 350 134% 133% 96 Peer 2 CBA Peer 3 Peer 1 Peer 1 Peer 2 CBA 300 Peer 3 250 LCR is to ensure banks hold sufficient liquidity (HQLA) to meet the projected outflows over a 30 day period during a stress scenario. Interest rate risk management IRRBB RWA³ ($bn) as at Dec 2023 Liquid assets primarily consists of cash and deposits with central banks, Australian semi-government and Commonwealth government securities. 200 150 Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR)1 Dec 2023 100 121% 40.3 40.1 50 116% 116% 31.7 115% 29.5 CBA Peer 3 Peer 1 Peer 2 CBA APRA requires ADIs to hold capital for the risk of loss due to adverse movements in interest rates, including those from liquidity and capital management activities. Retail and SME deposits Deposits in NSFR² ($bn) As at December 2023 Peers as at September 20231 0 Peer 1 Peer 2 Peer 3 Stable deposits NSFR is to ensure banks maintain a sufficient profile of stable funding to meet their assets and off-balance sheet activities. □ CBA □ Peer 3 □ Peer 1 □ Peer 2 Less stable deposits CBA has a significant share of stable household deposits with over 42% of CBA's deposits protected under the Financial Claims Scheme as at Dec 23. 1. Peer Source: 30 September 2023 Pillar 3 Regulatory Disclosures. 2. Stable and less stable deposits in NSFR calculation. Excludes operational deposits, other deposits and wholesale funding. 3. Based on IRRBB risk weighted assets as per publicly available disclosures. CBA data as at 31 December 2023. Peer data as at 30 September 2023. 115#116| Wholesale Wholesale funding Wholesale funding is diversified across differing products, currencies and tenor Portfolio mix Short-term funding by product $bn Long-term funding¹ Short-term funding² Term Funding Facility (TFF) 32 12% 81 30% Long-term funding by currency Dec 23 Certificates of deposits 158 58% Central bank deposits 57% 20% Commercial paper MTN 14% 9% Other 0% Jun 23 Dec 22 Jun 22 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Long-term funding by product Senior bonds 32% Covered bonds 19% 3 □AUD AT1/T24 19% □ USD TFF 16% □ EUR Structured MTN 8% □ Other Securitisation 4% Other 2% 1. Represents the carrying value of long-term funding inclusive of hedges. 2. Excludes short-term collateral deposits (-$0.6bn). 3. Includes TFF drawdowns. 4. Additional Tier 1 and Tier 2 Capital. 116#117Funding and liquidity metrics¹ Conservative funding and liquidity metrics maintained NSFR Dec 23 LCR6 Dec 23 121% 874 723 Residential Mortgages ≤ 80% LVR² Retail/SME Deposits NSFR (%) 1.2 (4.2) 2.9 0.3 (1.3) (2.0) 124 121 Other loans $bn Liquids & other assets³ Wholesale funding & other Capital Jun 23 Required Stable Funding Available Stable Funding Capital Retail/SME deposits Wholesale funding and other LCR (%) 5,6,7 $bn 137 Customer deposits Other Wholesale funding Net cash outflows 136% 187 Cash, Gov, Semis Liquid assets Term Residential Other Loans Liquids and Dec 23 Funding Mortgages 2 Other Assets Facility (TFF)4 4.7 (1.3) (1.9) 3.7 136 131 Jun 23 Liquid Assets Customer Deposits Wholesale Funding Other Net Cash Outflows Dec 23 1. All figures shown on a Level 2 basis. 2. Primarily relates to residential mortgages that are subject to application of the 65% RSF factor when calculating NSFR. 3. 'Other assets' includes non-performing loans, off-balance sheet items, net derivatives and other assets. 4. For the purpose of calculating NSFR, the residential mortgages that have been pledged as collateral for the TFF received a lower RSF factor. The repayment of the initial allowance resulted in an increased RSF factor for these mortgages (as they are no longer pledged as collateral) and therefore increased the RSF, reducing NSFR. 5. Calculation reflects movements in both the numerator and denominator. 6. Quarterly average. 7. Liquid assets includes High Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA) of $186.7bn (June 2023: $189.4bn) and RBNZ eligible securities of $0.1bn (June 2023: $0.8bn). 117#118ANZ CBA WBC NAB UniCredit 3 HSBC 3,4 ING 3 Capital overview Strong capital position maintained CET1 APRA Level 2 Level 1 International 19.0% 12.3% 12.5% Dec 23 Dec 23 Dec 23 2007 JP Morgan 4 Lloyds 3,4 UBS 3 Intesa Sanpaolo 3 RBC CET1 CET1 +536% International CET1 ratios² 19.7 19.0 18.7 17.8 17.6 G-SIBS in dark grey 15.5 15.5 15.0 14.9 14.7 14.7 14.5 14.4 14.2 14.1 14.1 14.1 14.0 13.4 13.4 13.4 13.3 13.0 13.0 12.9 12.7 12.6 12.5 11.8 11.4 11.4 10.9 10.6 10.4 10.0 10.0 Toronto Dominion Barclays 3,4 BNP Paribas 3, 4 NatWest Group 3,4 Standard Chartered 3 Deutsche 3 SocGen 3,4 1. Cash NPAT inclusive of discontinued operations. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Source: Morgan Stanley and CBA. CBA as at 31 December 2023. Peers based on last reported CET1 ratios up to 8 February 2024. Peer group comprises: (i) Domestic peers: disclosed September 2023 International CET1 ratios based on Australian Banking Association publication 'Basel 3.1 Capital Comparison Study' (March 2023); and (ii) listed commercial banks with total assets in excess of A$1,200bn which have disclosed fully implemented Basel III ratios or provided sufficient disclosure for a Morgan Stanley estimate. 3. Deduction for accrued expected future dividends added back for comparability. 4. CET1 includes benefit of COVID-19 transitional arrangements for expected credit loss provisioning to be phased-out over 3 years to 2024. ICBC China Merchants Bank Citi 4 BBVA 3 Dividend per share (cents) Payout Ratio (cash NPAT basis)1 Assets 200 +190% 74% 200 79% 210 215 175 150 67% 62% 68% 72% 1H24 1H19 1H20 1H21 1H22 1H23 1H24 Scotiabank China Construct. Bank Santander 3, 4 Credit Agricole SA3 Bank of Montreal Bank of America 4 Wells Fargo 4 Bank of China Mitsubishi UFJ Sumitomo Mitsui Agric. Bank of China 118 Mizuho Bank of Comm.#119CET1 - International | CET1 APRA's revised capital framework remains more conservative than Basel framework CET1 Level 2 1.7% Definition of Capital 19.0% 1.4% IRRBB RWA International adjustments¹ Risk weighting equity investments, deferred tax assets, capitalised expenses which are fully deducted from CET1 under APRA rules Removal of IRRBB RWA from APRA's minimum Pillar 1 capital requirements International adjustments¹ 6.7% 1.5% 12.3% 1.1% Residential Mortgages IRB Scalar Removal of APRA's risk weight floors and multipliers (e.g. 1.4 owner-occupier, 1.7 interest-only) Removal of APRA's scaling factor of 1.1 for all internal ratings-based (IRB) asset classes 12.3% 0.5% RBNZ rules APRA requires application of RBNZ capital rules for credit exposures in NZ including banking subsidiaries². There are a number of differences between RBNZ and Basel including mortgages, specialised lending and farm lending 0.3% Income Producing Real Estate Multiplier Removal of APRA's multiplier of 1.5 for IPRE exposure 0.2% Non-retail LGD APRA rules are more conservative for certain exposure types under the Foundation and Advanced IRB approaches Dec 23 APRA Dec 23 Int'l 6.7% 1. Methodology based on the Australian Banking Association publication 'Basel 3.1 Capital Comparison Study' (March 2023), which compares APRA's revised capital framework, including RBNZ prudential requirements, with the finalised post-crisis Basel III reforms. 2. Except in respect of the overall scaling factor and Standardised floor, where APRA's rules must be applied. 119#120Capital management Disciplined & balanced approach to optimise growth, reinvestment, shareholder returns & flexibility Capital generation Reinvested in the Group Franchise growth Investment1 Credit RWA volume growth Investment Distributed to shareholders Dividends Dividends ($bn) Capital return Number of shares (bn) $3.5 $3.6 $1,027m 64 $1,074m 86 Equity DPS (cents) +$10bn +$8bn 215 963 988 Spend 210 $m 1H24 1H23 1H24 1H23 Invest in selected new services & digital experience CBA 1H23 Reinvest up to 20-30% Target NPAT in accretive growth Capital flexibility Retained Surplus retained CET1 Level 2 (%) Peers 3.5 13.1 12.2 12.3 3.1 11.5 3.0 Excess 10.25%3 1.8 1.5 1.5 1.3 8 553 CBA 1.7 1H24 FYOO 1H242 FY21 FY22 FY23 1H24 Lower share count to support ROE and DPS Continuing capital returns while retaining flexibility Sustainable dividends 1. Investment spend in the franchise and capital injected in minority equity investments. 2. CBA and peers shares on issue as at 31 December 2023. 3. APRA regulatory minimum of 8% under the previous framework up until 31 December 2022 and 10.25% under the revised framework effective from 1 January 2023 (inclusive of 1% default countercyclical capital buffer which may be varied by APRA in the range of 0% to 3.5%). 120#121| - Capital summary Strong capital position maintained in 1H24 Key capital ratios (%) Dec 22² Jun 233 Dec 233 • CET1 ratio of 12.3% • 2023 final dividend and 2024 interim dividend - DRP neutralised • Commencement of the previously announced $1bn on-market share buy-back CET1 capital ratio movements 1 CET1 capital ratio 11.4 12.2 12.3 Additional Tier 1 capital 1.9 2.3 2.4 Tier 1 capital ratio 13.3 14.5 14.7 Tier 2 capital 4.5 5.5 5.8 107 11 12.2% (3) (11) 12.3% (86) Total capital ratio 17.8 20.0 20.5 Risk weighted assets (RWA) ($bn) 504 468 464 Credit Risk6 (15) IRRBB 16 Market Risk 15 Operational Risk (5) 5055 Leverage ratio 5.1 5.1 5.0 Level 1 CET1 ratio 11.7 12.5 12.5 International ratios Leverage ratio 5.7 5.7 5.6 Jun 23 Level 2 Actual 2H23 Dividend (DRP neutralised)* Cash NPAT5 RWA On-market share buy-back Other8 Dec 23 Level 2 CET1 capital ratio 18.5 19.1 19.0 1. Due to rounding, numbers presented may not sum precisely to the totals provided. 2. Under APRA's capital framework effective up until 31 December 2022. 3. Under APRA's revised capital framework effective from 1 January 2023. 4. Includes the on-market purchase of shares in respect of the DRP. 5. Excludes equity accounted profits/losses from investments, which are neutral from a regulatory capital perspective due to the offsetting increase in capital deductions. 6. Excludes impact of foreign exchange movements on Credit RWA, which is included in 'Other'. 7. $154m of the previously announced $1bn on-market share buy-back has been completed as at 31 December 2023 (1,517,388 shares acquired at an average price of $101.49). 8. Other includes the impact of intangibles, FX impact on Credit RWA, equity accounted profits/losses from associates, movements in reserves and other regulatory adjustments. 121#122Capital - RWA drivers Capital Lower RWA driven by lower IRRBB and Traded Market Risk RWA, partly offset by CRWA growth CET1 (Level 2)1 bpts Total Risk Weighted Assets (RWA)1 $bn (86) 107 11 (3) (11) 468 5.9 (5.8) 12.2% 12.3% (6.3) 1.8 464 Market Risk Credit Risk² (15) IRRBB 47 40 IRRBB 16 Market Risk 15 Op Risk 43 45 Operational Risk (5) 369 Credit Risk 363 Jun 23 2H23 Dividend Cash NPAT RWA Buy-back³ Other Dec 23 Jun 23 Credit risk Traded market risk IRRBB Operational risk Dec 23 Credit RWA¹ $bn Interest Rate Risk in Banking Book (IRRBB) $bn 48 48 47 40 40 8.1 (1.8) 0.1 (0.5) 363 369 Jun 23 Volume Quality4 FX Data & methodology Dec 23 Optionality risk Basis risk Repricing & yield curve risk Embedded loss/gain (gain is offset to capital) bpts5 24 64 121 120 134 Dec 21 Jun 22 Dec 22 Jun 23 118 Dec 23 1. Due to rounding, numbers presented may not sum precisely to the totals provided. 2. Excludes impact of foreign exchange movements on Credit RWA, which is included in 'Other'. 3. $154m of the previously announced $1bn on-market share buy-back has been completed as at 31 December 2023 (1,517,388 shares acquired at an average price of $101.49). 4. Credit quality includes portfolio mix. 5. Basis points impact on CET1 ratio. 122#123Capital - share count Capital Lower share count supports higher shareholder returns and dividends Number of shares (m)1 1,776 CBA Peers Capital raisings for strengthening during GFC- 3,502 3,120 3,008 Dividend per share ($) CBA Peers 1,516 1,506 1,260 FYOO 0.59 0.58 1,675 0.29 .... Increase due to acquisitions 0.26 1H242 1H00 Net tangible assets per share ($)4 CBA Peers 9.18 7.46 5.49 3.96 FYOO Adoption of AIFRS accounting standards 2.15 0.83 0.81 0.70 1H243 Total shareholder return (%) 5 CBA Peer Average 1,408% 39.01 21.78 17.96 17.58 1H242 FYOO 1. Historical share count data sourced from Bloomberg, using the last trading day in September of each year. 2. CBA and peers shares on issue as at 31 December 2023. 3. Reflects 1H23 interim dividend for peers and 1H24 interim dividend for CBA. 4. Net tangible assets per share as reported. FY00 - FY04 net tangible assets have not been normalised for the impact of the transition to AIFRS in 2005. 5. Source: Bloomberg. Peer average is the average of our major bank peers. 665% 1H24 123#124Capital - divestments/buy-backs Announced divestment program - $9.2bn returned to shareholders to date Divestments Completed Associated buy-back PT Bank Commonwealth Mid CY24 General Insurance Sep 22 Bank of Hangzhou (HZB)1 Jun 22 Colonial First State (CFS) 1 Dec 21 Aussie Home Loans (AHL)1 May 21 Completed: $3bn on-market buy-back and AUSIEX May 21 $6bn off-market buy-back. CommInsure Life Apr 21 In progress: $1bn BoCommLife Dec 20 PT Commonwealth Life Jun 20 on-market buy-back announced Aug 23, $154m completed as at Dec 23. Financial Wisdom Jun 20 CFP Pathways Mar 20 Count Financial CFSGAM Oct 19 Aug 19 TymeDigital Sovereign Completed Nov 18 Jul 18 1. Represents partial divestments. CBA's retained shareholdings are ~5.6% of HZB, 45% of CFS and -42% of Lendi (merged with AHL). -$11bn CET1 $10bn On-market $1bn (in progress) $3bn On-market (completed) $6bn Off-market (completed) Divestments Buy-backs 124#125CET1 - Level 1 vs Level 2 CET1 Level 1 of 12.5%, 20bpts above Level 2 Commonwealth Bank of Australia Level 1 RWA of Level 2 banking subsidiaries 12.5% (170) Offshore Branches and Extended Licensed Entities Level 1 Higher reserves and retained earnings at Level 2 110 ASB Bank Ltd (ASB) Elimination of investments in regulated banking subsidiaries at Level 2 60 Goodwill & Intangibles (20) Other Banking Entities Level 2 12.3% Level 2 125#126CET1 - Level 1 CET1 CET1 Level 1 of 12.5%, 20bpts above Level 2 CET1 (Level 1)1 bpts L1 vs L2: +20bpts (96) 112 10 (4) (15) 12.5% 12.5% 12.3% Level 1 vs Level 2 CBA vs Peers 20bpts 20bpts (10bpts) (10bpts) CBA Dec 23 Peer 3 Sep 23 Peer 2 Peer 1 Sep 23 Sep 23 10.25% 1.00% CCYB4 1.00% D-SIB Capital 3.75% conservation buffer 4.50% Minimum prudential capital requirement Jun 23 Level 1 2H23 Dividend (DRP neutralised)² NPAT Underlying RWA On-market share buy-back³ Other Dec 23 Level 1 Dec 23 Level 2 APRA minimum 1. Due to rounding, numbers presented may not sum precisely to the total provided. 2. Includes the on-market purchase of shares in respect of the DRP. 3. $154m of the previously announced $1bn on-market share buy-back has been completed as at 31 December 2023 (1,517,388 shares acquired at an average price of $101.49). 4. Inclusive of 1% default countercyclical capital buffer which may be varied by APRA in the range of 0% to 3.5%. 126#127Leverage ratio Well in excess of regulatory minimum Leverage ratio¹ bpts 5.1% (30) 37 (1) (10) (6) 5.0% Jun 23 2H23 Dividend (DRP neutralised) Cash NPAT On-market Exposures share buy-back Other Dec 23 The ratio reduced by 10 basis points on the prior half with an increase in exposures and payment of the 2H23 dividend, partly offset by capital generated from earnings. 1. Leverage ratio is defined as Tier 1 Capital as a percentage of total exposures (total on-balance sheet assets and off-balance sheet exposures). 127#128Capital - regulatory changes Basel III reforms in Australia finalised and a number of regulatory changes in progress Change Revision to Capital Framework (including Operational Risk) ADI Liquidity and Capital Standards Market Risk Implementation APS 110, 111, 112, 113, 115 (Implemented) Minor amendments to APS 112, 113 (30 Jun 2024) APS 330 (1 Jan 2025) APS 210 and APS111 (1 Jan 2025) APS 117 (1 Oct 2025) APS 116 (2026) Details • Implemented on 1 Jan 2023 with the aim to increase the risk sensitivity within the capital framework, enhance the ability of ADIs to respond flexibly to future stress events, and improve the comparability with international standards. • • Minimum CET1 Capital ratio of 10.25% for IRB ADIS such as CBA, including a baseline countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) of 1% which may be varied by APRA in the range of 0%-3.50% and releasable in times of systemic stress and post-stress recovery. Revised APS 330 on public disclosure requirements which aligns with both APRA's new capital framework and the Basel Committee's internationally agreed minimum requirements effective from 1 Jan 2025, replacing the existing transitional APS 330. APRA further consulted on minor amendments impacting APS 112 and APS 113 to address specific implementation issues raised by the industry, which are expected to have an immaterial impact for CBA with a number of the revisions already implemented. • Targeted revisions to ensure ADIs have strong crisis preparedness, prudently value their liquid assets and minimise potential contagion risks. • 1 Jan 2024 and • Loss Absorbing Capital (LAC) RBNZ Capital Review 1 Jan 2026 Phased implementation from Oct 2021 to 1 Jul 2028 Additional Tier 1 Capital Discussion paper released on 21 Sep 23 with formal consultation in 2024 • APRA commenced consultation on 15 Nov 2023 and intends to finalise the consultation in the first half of 2024. • Non-traded: Updated draft APS 117 released by APRA on 12 Dec 2023 in response to the Nov 2022 consultation, which aims to standardise aspects of the calculation of IRRBB capital to reduce volatility over time and variations between ADIs. APRA intends to finalise the consultation by mid-2024 ahead of implementation on 1 October 2025. • • • • • Traded: APRA is yet to commence consultation on Fundamental Review of the Trading Book. Increase of 3% to Total Capital on 1 Jan 2024, and a further 1.5% to 4.5% by 1 Jan 2026. Can be met via any form of capital (CET1, Tier 1 or Tier 2). • By the end of the transition period, the minimum Tier 1 and Total capital requirements for Domestic-Systemically Important Banks (D-SIBS), including ASB, will increase to 16% and 18% of RWA respectively, of which 13.5% must be in the form of CET1 capital. Tier 2 capital can contribute up to a maximum of 2% of the Total capital requirement. Considers the effectiveness of AT1 Capital as a 'going concern' instrument to stabilise a bank in stress, and support an orderly resolution to avoid the use of public money and safeguard depositor funds. • The discussion paper outlines a number of potential options centred around 3 key themes, being the design, role and participation in AT1. • Response to discussion paper submitted on 15 Nov 2023 and APRA expects to undertake a formal consultation process in CY2024. 128#129Capital - total capital Capital Well placed to meet APRA requirements for loss-absorbing capacity (LAC) • Total capital at Dec 2023 of 20.5%, $10.6bn above 1 Jan 2026 requirement of 18.25%. • With 5.8% of Tier 2 at Dec 2023 CBA is well positioned to meet the 1 Jan 2026 LAC requirement of 6.5%. $bn 20.5% Jan 2024 Req. of 5% Jan 2026 Req. of 6.5% 18.25% 16.75% Risk Weighted Assets at 31 December 2023 Tier 2 Requirement 464 464 23.2 30.1 Tier 2 5.8% LAC 4.50% 3.00% AT1 2.4% 2.00% Tier 2 1.50% 2.00% 1.50% Existing Tier 2 at 31 December 2023 (5.8%) 1 Excess (Shortfall) (excluding Tier 1 capital excess) Maturities by 1 Jan 2026 27.1 27.1 3.9 (3.0) N/A 3.4 T2 Capital Profile2,3 CET1 12.3% 10.25% 10.25% Issuances ($bn) Maturities ($bn) Bullet 45% Callable 55% 22.0 CBA 31 Dec 2023 APRA requirement Jan 2024 APRA requirement Jan 2026 4.5 1.6 1.8 0.0 1.6 FY23 1H24 2H24 FY25 FY26 FY27+ 1. Inclusive of provisions eligible for inclusion in Tier 2 and Tier 2 regulatory adjustments. 2. Represents AUD equivalent notional amount using spot FX translation at date of issue for issuance and spot FX translation at 31 December 2023 for maturities. 3. Securities in callable format profiled to first call date. Securities in bullet format profiled based on capital treatment (including amortisation period). 129#130Regulatory expected loss1 For non-defaulted exposures, eligible provisions in excess of regulated expected losses added back to Tier 2 capital $m Dec 22 Jun 23 Dec 23 Defaulted Non-defaulted Defaulted Non-defaulted Defaulted Non-defaulted 1,361 3,122 1,253 2,377 1,506 2,399 Regulatory expected loss (EL) Eligible provisions (EP) Collective and specific provisions² 1,481 4,249 1,466 4,598 1,623 4,681 Less: ineligible provisions (standardised portfolio) (126) (159) (118) (145) (87) (119) Total eligible provisions 1,355 4,090 1,348 4,453 1,536 4,563 Shortfall (excess) of regulatory EL to EP (968) (95) (2,076) (30) (2,164) Common equity tier 1 deduction 6 Tier 2 capital add-back N/A 968 N/A 2,011 N/A 2,043 1. Represents the shortfall between the calculated Regulatory EL and Eligible Provisions (EP) with respect to credit portfolios which are subject to the AIRB approach. The adjustment is assessed separately for both defaulted and non-defaulted exposures. Where there is an excess of EL over EP in either assessments, the difference must be deducted from CET1. For non-defaulted exposures where the EL is lower than the EP, this may be included in Tier 2 capital up to a maximum of 0.6% of total Credit RWA. 2. Defaulted provisions comprises of specific provisions, including accounting collective provisions relating to defaulted exposures, and partial write offs. 130#131Economic overview#132Key Australian economic indicators 1 (June FY) GDP % Financial year average GDP Nominal GDP 4.3 11.8 3.1 9.7 2.1 1.9 5.3 1.3 3.9 4.2 Cash rate % 0.85 0.10 2024 2025 4.10 4.35 3.10 Dec Jun Dec Jun 22 22 21 2021 2022 2023 4.35 3.60 2024 2.85 2.85 2025 Headline CPI % Year on year, June quarter 6.1 3.8 6.0 3.4 2.9 Unemployment rate % June quarter average 5.2 4.3 4.6 3.8 3.6 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 Total credit growth % Selected credit growth % 12 months to June 12 months to June Housing credit Business credit (excl. fin ins.) 8.6 4.5-6.5 7.9 5.5 4.0-6.0 4.0- 5.0- 6.0 7.0 5.4 3.1 4.5 12.0 8.3 5.0- 7.0 4.0- 6.0 Dec 23 23 Jun Dec 24 24 Jun Dec 25 25 Actual 1. Source: ABS, RBA and CBA Global Economic and Markets Research. 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 Forecast, CBA Global Economic & Markets Research 0.1 132#133Key Australian economic indicators¹ (December CY) GDP % Calendar year average GDP 5.6 3.9 2.0 1.2 Cash rate % 2.5 2024 2025 Headline CPI % Year on year, December quarter Nominal GDP 11.5 12.5 3.5 5.5 5.4 3.4 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 7.8 4.1 3.0 2.6 Unemployment rate % December quarter average 4.7 4.5 4.5 3.5 3.8 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 Total credit growth % 12 months to December Selected credit growth % 12 months to December 4.35 4.35 4.10 Housing credit Business credit 3.60 7.8 3.10 2.85 2.85 6.8 5.0-7.0 5.5- 4.0-6.0 7.4 4.0- 11.9 4.8 6.5 7.5 6.0 4.1 7.3 4.1 5.0- 4.0- 7.0 6.0 0.85 0.10 21 Dec Jun Dec Jun 22 22 23 Dec 23 Jun Dec Jun Dec 24 24 25 25 Actual 1. Source: ABS, RBA and CBA Global Economic and Markets Research. 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 Forecast, CBA Global Economic & Markets Research 133#134The global economy Economic growth to slow before easing cycle commences Lower inflation opens the door to interest rate cuts¹ Core inflation (annual change) Official interest rates at peak, rate cuts middle 20241 Official interest rates World economic growth to expand modestly² World economic growth estimates (annual change) % % % 10 0 8 6 4 202 4 NZ International Monetary Fund Australia 6 US Consensus UK NZ 5 UK 3 CBA 4 Eurozone US Japan 3 2 2 Australia 1 1 -2 0 Japan 0 -4 -1 Eurozone 2024 2025 Dec 18 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 18 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Labour markets resilient¹ Unemployment rate Freight costs, supply chains lower but risks linger³ Supply chains pressures and freight costs Fiscal policy impacting economic outcomes¹ Budget position as a % GDP % st dev $40ft box % 14 5 12 4 World container freight benchmark (RHS) 12000 New York Fed global 10000 10 5 10 3 Australia US 8 supply chain pressure index (LHS) Germany Australia 8000 0 2 6 UK 6000 -5 1 4000 -10 UK US 42 NZ 0 -1 2000 -15 Japan 0 -2 0 -20 Dec 15 Dec 17 Dec 19 Dec 21 Dec 23 Dec 18 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 00 Dec 05 Dec 10 Dec 15 Dec 20 1. Source: Bloomberg, CBA. 2. Source: CBA, Bloomberg, BoJ. 3. Source: NY Fed, Bloomberg. 134#135The Australian economy Cost of living challenges, inflation moderating Inflation moderating¹ Inflation (annual change) Goods prices lower, services prices sticky² Inflation (annual change) Real household disposable income falling² Household incomes (annual change) % % 10 9 % Goods 13 Quarterly CPI Wages & salaries 8 7 6 5 Monthly CPI 4 8 3 3 2 Services -3 1 0 Real household disposable income -1 -2 -8 Dec 16 Dec 18 Dec 20 Dec 22 Dec 16 Dec 18 Dec 20 Dec 22 Dec 10 Dec 12 Dec 14 Dec 16 Dec 18 Dec 20 Dec 22 Due to higher tax take² Household taxes (share of household gross income) And higher housing debt payments¹ Housing debt servicing costs (share of disposable income) Rising rents also a challenge for many households³ Rent (annual change) % 19 % 10 % Record high since May 2023 12 18 10 17 CoreLogic advertised rents 16 15 Total 5 8 6 Rent in monthly CPI 4 14 13 12 Interest Principal 2 0 11 -2 10 0 -4 Dec 03 Dec 06 Dec 09 Dec 12 Dec 15 Dec 18 Dec 21 Dec 09 Dec 12 Dec 15 Dec 18 Dec 21 Dec 18 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 1. Source: RBA, ABS. 2. ABS. 3. Source: ABS, CoreLogic. 135#136The Australian economy Economic growth moderating Momentum in the economy slowing late 20231 GDP growth A GDP per capita in recession¹ GDP index Population growth has been a tailwind¹ Population growth (annual change) % Index 15 112.5 Aggregate % 3 10 Annual change 110.0 Population growth 107.5 5 105.0 0 102.5 2 Per capita 1 100.0 -5 Quarterly change 97.5 -10 95.0 0 Dec 10 Dec 12 Dec 14 Dec 16 Dec 18 Dec 20 Dec 22 Dec 18 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 90 Dec 95 Dec 00 Dec 05 Dec 10 Dec 15 Dec 20 Labour market resilient but loosening¹ Employment growth and unemployment rate More people want and need to work¹ Participation rate % Wages growth has risen, but annual growth still negative in real terms¹ Wage price index (annual change) 000s % 68 % 600 400 200 0 -200 Employment -400 change (LHS) -600 Unemployment rate (RHS) -800 8765432T0 5 66 4 Wage Price Index 3 64 Participation rate 2 62 62 1 1 60 0 Dec 16 Dec 18 Dec 20 Dec 22 Dec 16 Dec 18 Dec 20 Dec 22 Dec 14 Dec 16 Dec 18 Dec 20 Dec 22 1. Source: ABS. 136#137The Australian economy Higher cost of living impacting consumers The cash rate hiking cycle has been large¹ RBA cash rate Consumer sentiment weak, consumption slowing² Consumer sentiment % Index % 450 May 2022 110 Consumer spend patterns shifting³ Household spending per capita (index = 100, Q1 19) Discretionary consumption 20 140 Per capita annual consumption (LHS) 105 400 Aug 350 May 2002 15 130 100 120 10 95 1994 300 110 250 Oct 5 90 Essential consumption Nov 100 85 200 2009 0 1999 90 80 150 -5 80 100 75 -10 Consumer sentiment (RHS) 50 70 70 0 -15 60 65 1 256 511 766 1,021 1,276 1,531 1,786 2,041 Days since first rate hike -20 50 60 Dec 00 Dec 05 Dec 10 Dec 15 Dec 20 Dec 18 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 More recent data showing continued softening4 CBA Household Spending Intentions Savings rate fallen but stock remains high5 Household savings (rate and deviation from average $bn) % % % 40 20 24 $Abn 70 Annual (LHS) 30 15 20 10 0 پہلہ 10 12 Savings rate (LHS) 35 5 0 0 -10 -5 Monthly (RHS) -20 -10 Deviation from average savings (RHS) 2 4 3 3 22170 RBA policy transmission more direct in Australia6 Outstanding mortgage rates lift ppt Australia Canada NZ UK US -12 -35 13 5 Dec 18 Dec 19 Dec 20 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23 Dec 07 Dec 12 Dec 17 Dec 22 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 No. of months since rate rise 25 1. Source: RBA, CBA. 2. Source: Westpac / Melbourne Institute, ABS. 3. Source: ABS. 4. Source: CBA. 5. Source ABS, CBA. 6. Source: Bloomberg, RBNZ, RBA, BOE, BOC, CBA. 137#138The Australian economy Slowing growth, remains resilient Labour demand weakening¹ Labour demand Index Unemployment to rise from here² Unemployment rate (with CBA forecast) Government investment and spending supporting the economy² % Index 100 in 2015 8 170 Public investment 250 Applicants per ad 160 7 200 Job advertisement index Unemployment rate 150 150 100 585 6 140 CBA 130 5 forecast Public consumption 120 110 GDP 4 100 0 3 Dec 08 Dec 13 Dec 18 Dec 23 Dec 10 Dec 15 Dec 20 Dec 25 90 Dec 14 Dec 16 Dec 18 Dec 20 Dec 22 Private business investment due to lift² CAPEX $Abn 240 External sector performing well³ Quarterly trade balance Leading to a better budget balance4 Federal budget balance Implied Intentions $Abn $Abn 50 50 Non-mining 180 Mining 120 40 0 30 -50 20 -100 10 60 -150 60 0 -10 -200 0 -20 -250 Dec 02 Dec 07 Dec 12 Dec 17 Dec 22 Dec 09 Dec 11 Dec 13 Dec 15 Dec 17 Dec 19 Dec 21 Dec 23 Dec 15 Dec 17 Dec 19 Dec 21 Dec 23 1. Source: Seek. 2. Source: ABS, CBA. 3. Source: ABS. 4. Federal Government. 138#139Housing sector Strong house price recovery Home prices rose over the past year¹ Dwelling prices (8 capital cities) % Driven by low stock on the market, now rising¹ CoreLogic total listings (rolling 4 weeks, combined capitals) Home lending has risen modestly² Housing loan approvals (excluding refinancing) 000s $bn % 120 Previous five year average 20 6 20 100 15 Monthly change (LHS) 80 Owner-occupier (ex FHB) Investor 3 10 2022 60 10 2023 0 0 40 5 -3 Annual growth (RHS) First home buyers (FHB) 20 -10 0 0 Dec 15 Dec 17 Dec 19 Dec 21 Dec 23 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Dec 10 Dec 12 Dec 14 Dec 16 Dec 18 Dec 20 Dec 22 Very low rental vacancy rates¹ Rental vacancy rate (8 capital city average) Weak housing construction² Private residential approvals and commencements Housing debt off its peak, but still high³ Housing debt to income % 000s % 6.0 80 Commencements 150 Total 5.5 70 Building approvals 140 5.0 60 4.5 130 4.0 50 120 3.5 40 3.0 110 Net of offset balances 30 2.5 2.0 20 100 Dec 08 Dec 11 Dec 14 Dec 17 Dec 20 Dec 23 Dec 05 Dec 11 Dec 17 Dec 23 Dec 05 Dec 10 Dec 15 Dec 20 1. Source: CoreLogic. 2. Source: ABS. 3. Source: RBA, ABS, APRA and CBA. 139#140GDP % Key New Zealand economic indicators (June FY) Financial year average GDP 6.1 3.0 Nominal GDP 8.0 8.6 6.1 4.4 0.7 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 Cash rate % 0.5 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 CPI % Year on year, June quarter Unemployment rate % June quarter average 3.0 3.3 7.3 6.0 3.6 2.3 5.2 4.7 4.0 3.6 3.3 alte till 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 5.50 5.50 5.50 6.4 6.1 4.75 4.25 4.00 Total credit growth % 12 months to June 2.00 0.75 0.25 21 Jun Dec Jun 21 22 Dec 22 Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun 25 23 23 24 24 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 Actual Forecast, ASB Economics Housing and business credit growth % 12 months to June Housing credit Business credit 4-6 2-4 11.9 8.9 3.0 2.5-5-7 6.9 4.5 3.1 3.1 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2021 2022 2023 2.5- 0.5-4.5 2024 ☑G 2025 140#141New Zealand Slowing economy, headwinds impacting USD Dairy prices undergone a modest recovery Global dairy trade auction results¹ (USD/tonne) Growth is softening as headwinds bite NZ GDP growth (annual average)² % Slowing growth likely to generate labour market slack NZ unemployment rate³ 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 سماء GDT overall price Whole Milk Powder -1 -2 1,000 6543210123 % 8 7 6 5 4 3 -3 2 2008 2011 2014 2017 2020 2023 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2020 2023 2026 (f) 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 2025 2027 House prices are on the rise, worsening affordability NZ median house price7 (3 month moving average) OCR increases have likely finished OCR Forecasts (ASB forecast and implied market pricing) Mortgage lending conditions remain tight NZ household lending growth (annual change) % % $ 000's 8.0 20 1400 7.0 OCR implied by current market pricing5 Mortgage lending 15 1200 6.0 10 1000 5.0 5 4.0 800 0 3.0 600 -5 2.0 1.0 ASB Forecast Consumer credit -10 400 -0.1 -15 200 Jun 14 Jun 16 Jun 18 Jun 20 Jun 22 Jun 24 Jun 26 Jun 11 Jun 14 Jun 17 Jun 20 Jun 23 Auckland Wellington NZ Canterbury/Westland Jun 09 Jun 11 Jun 13 Jun 15 Jun 17 Jun 19 Jun 21 Jun 23 1. Source: GlobalDairyTrade. 2. Source: Statistics NZ/ASB. 3. Source: Statistics NZ/ASB. 4. Source: ASB. 5. Bloomberg, as at 5 February 2024. 6. Source: RBNZ. 7. Source: REINZ. 141#142Sources, glossary & notes#143Sources and notes Slide 5 1. Average monthly unique customers who engaged with one of our money management features in the CommBank app between July to December 2023. Money management features include Money Plan, Spend Tracker, Bill Sense, Category Budgets, Cash Flow View, Goal Tracker, Credit Score, Carbon Tracker, CommSec Pocket and Smart Savings. 2. From July to December 2023. 3. Represents the six months to 31 December 2023. 4. Invested over $750 million in the past year, includes expenditure on operational processes and upgrading functionalities. 5. Represents Business Bank business lending, new funding and drawdowns for the six months to 31 December 2023. 6. By number of transactions. 7. Cumulative investment spend since FY19. 8. CBA commitment to keep all CBA regional branches open until at least the end of 2026. 9. Includes dividend and buy-back. CBA generates returns to over 850,000 direct shareholders and indirectly for over 12 million Australians through their superannuation. Slide 11 1. Variances to prior comparative period unless otherwise stated. 2. Net Promoter Score®. For the major banks, NPS is reported for main bank (MFI) only. Net PromoterⓇ, NPS®, NPS PrismⓇ, and the NPS-related emoticons are registered trademarks of Bain & Company, Inc., NICE Systems, Inc., and Fred Reichheld. Net Promoter ScoreSM and Net Promoter System SM are service marks of Bain & Company, Inc., NICE Systems, Inc., and Fred Reichheld. NPS refers to customer likelihood to recommend their MFI using a scale from 0-10 (where 0 is 'Not at all likely' and 10 is 'Extremely likely) and NPS is calculated by subtracting the percentage of Detractors (scores 0-6) from the percentage of Promoters (scores 9-10). 3. Refer to the glossary for source information. 4. CBA and Major Bank Peer reputation scores. Source: RepTrak, The RepTrak Company. Data is collected throughout the quarter and reported at quarter end from July 2020. 5. Surplus CET1 Capital in excess of APRA regulatory minimum of 10.25% under the revised capital framework effective from 1 January 2023. 6. Represents shareholder returns over 1H24 (2H23 dividend and buy-back). 7. CBA generates returns to over 850,000 direct shareholders and indirectly to over 12 million Australians through their superannuation. Slide 17 1. Refer to the glossary for source information. 2. Total retail transaction accounts, excluding offset accounts. 3. Business deposits source: spot balance growth of total interest bearing and non-interest bearing deposits in Business Banking divisional performance. 4. CBA Business lending multiple is based on Business Banking growth rate (excluding Institutional Banking and Markets) over published APRA and RBA Total Business Lending data (excluding estimated Institutional Lending balances). 5. Cumulative funding contribution is calculated as the difference between the spot balance growth in interest earning lending assets and deposits, as reported over the period from June 2018 to December 2023. 6. Camorra Retail Market Monitor NPS. Shown on a 12 month roll, peers include ANZ, BNZ, Kiwibank and Westpac. Kantar Business Finance Monitor NPS. Includes All Businesses ($0-$150m) and Agri ($100k+). Shown on a 4 quarter roll. 7. Based upon RBNZ lending by purpose and deposits by sector data. 8. Includes institutional deposits. 143#144Sources and notes Slide 22 1. Based on most active app users. 2. The total number of customers that have logged into the CommBank app at least once in the month of December 2023. 3. Uplift in the number of monthly logins for the 12 months to December 2023 vs the prior comparative period. 4. Refers to customers who have engaged with a CommBank Yello location (CommBank Yello hub, Offer hub or CommBank Yello offer Next Best Conversation) since launch. Homeowner Benefit Set launched nationally on 4 August 2023. Everyday and Everyday Plus Benefit Set launched nationally on 6 November 2023. 5. Average daily number of customers that have visited the CommBank Yello hub in the CommBank app (post launch on 6 November 2023). 6. Refer to the glossary for source information. 7. The total value ($) of transactions made digitally via the CommBank app including debit transfers (NPP), BPay and home loan repayments. 8. The total number of customers that have logged into a core digital asset (NetBank or CommBank app. Excludes CommBiz) at least once in the month. 9. The total number of logins to core digital assets (NetBank or CommBank app. Excludes CommBiz) divided by the number of customers who have logged into a core digital asset in the month. 10. The total number of customers that have logged into the CommBank app at least once in the month. 11. CBA won Canstar's Bank of the Year - Digital Banking award for 2023 (for the 14th year in a row). Awarded June 2023. 12. CBA was awarded both the 'Most Innovative Major Bank' and 'Best Major Digital Bank' (for the 5th year in a row) at the DBM Australian Financial Awards 2023. Presented March 2023. Award is based on information collected from the DBM Atlas research program - feedback from over 80,000 business and/or retail customers January through December 2022. Slide 44 1. Represents an approximated distribution of 1H24 Group gross income (net of loan impairment) to our customers and stakeholders across Australia and New Zealand. 2. Includes interest paid on deposits. 3. Represents share of household deposits at December 2023. Source: APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS). 4. Includes payment of corporate tax, employee related taxes and Major Bank Levy. 5. Includes interest paid on offshore deposits and wholesale funding as well as earnings returned to shareholders. 6. Includes underlying costs incurred and payments made to our suppliers and partners. 7. Represents Business Bank Business lending, new funding and drawdowns for the six months to 31 December 2023. 8. Retail shareholder calculation is based on the number of shareholders who hold less than 10,000 shares. Slide 57 1. Evident Al Index 2023 published by Evident Insights Index, November 2023. 2. Responses include user prompts and queries. 3. Data source: Customer Engagement Engine Reporting, July 2023 to December 2023. 4. Data source: Customer Engagement Engine Reporting. 5. June 2023 to November 2023. 6. 25 September 2023 to 19 October 2023. 7. Date range: 1 July 2023 to 31 December 2023, average per day. Data source Customer Engagement Engine Reporting. 8. Unique users interacting with the Quick Links bar in the app from 1 July 2023 to 20 November 2023. 144#145Sources and notes Slide 67 1. Percentage growth calculations are based on actual numbers prior to rounding to the nearest billion on a non-annualised basis. 2. Source: RBA Lending and Credit Aggregates. 3. Business including select financial businesses. CBA excludes Cash Management Pooling Facilities. 4. Source: APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS). 5. Source: APRA NFB Deposits, including IB&M. 6. Totals calculated using unrounded numbers. Slide 68 1. Comparatives have been updated to reflect market restatements. 2. CBA source: RBA Lending and Credit Aggregates. Home lending peer source: Peer APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS) balance divided by RBA Lending and Credit Aggregates system balance. 3. System source: APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS). 4. Other household lending market share includes personal loans, margin loans and other forms of lending to individuals. 5. Business including select financial businesses. 6. Represents business lending to and business deposits by non-financial businesses under APRA definitions. 7. Represents CommSec traded value as a percentage of total Australian equities markets, on a 12 month rolling average basis. 8. System source: Based upon RBNZ lending by purpose and deposits by sector data. 9. Series break due to new regulatory definitions set by APRA from 1 July 2019. As a result of this change, market share is not comparable to previous reporting periods. Additional series break from June 21 relating to restatements. Slide 81 1. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. Includes Bankwest, excludes General Insurance. 2. Refer to the glossary for source information. 3. Percentage growth calculations are based on actual numbers prior to rounding to the nearest billion. 4. Source: RBA Lending and Credit Aggregates. 5. Source: APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS). Slide 82 1. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Refer to the glossary for source information. 3. Non-Financial Business Lending Source: APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS). 4. Represents internal view of lending market share. 5. Non-Financial Business Deposit Source: APRA Monthly Authorised Deposit-taking Institution Statistics (MADIS). 6. Merchants acquiring share shows 6 month moving average of market turnover (November 2023). RBA revised definition December 2022. Source: RBA. 7. 38% of new transaction accounts in 1H24 opened digitally. Slide 83 1. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Refer to the glossary for source information. 3. IB&M NIM including Markets is 1H23: 87bpts, 2H23: 91bpts and 1H24: 82bpts. 145#146Sources and notes Slide 84 1. Comparative information has been restated to conform to presentation in the current period. 2. Camorra Retail Market Monitor NPS. Shown on a 12 month roll, peers include ANZ, BNZ, Kiwibank and Westpac. 3. Kantar Business Finance Monitor NPS. Includes All Businesses ($0-$150m) and Agri ($100k+). Shown on a 4 quarter roll. There is a trend break in results from September 2022 due to a change in methodology in the Business Finance Monitor that impacts the number of quarters in the roll from the break. 4. Based upon RBNZ lending by purpose and deposits by sector data. 5. Includes institutional deposits. 6. NIM is ASB Bank only and calculated in New Zealand dollars. 7. NPAT is NZ division and calculated in Australian dollars. Slide 112 1. Includes other short-term liabilities. 2. Represents the Weighted Average Maturity of outstanding long-term wholesale debt with a residual maturity greater than 12 months as at reporting date. WAM and long-term % includes TFF and RBNZ term lending facilities drawdowns. 3. Maturities may vary quarter to quarter due to FX revaluation. 4. Includes Senior Bonds and Structured MTN. 5. Additional Tier 1 and Tier 2 Capital. 6. NSFR numerator (ASF) excludes the size of CBA's TFF drawdowns. Denominator (RSF) increases weighting for TFF collateral by 55%, such that it receives the 65% RSF weighting applicable to unencumbered residential mortgages. 7. Quarterly average. 8. Indicative weighted senior and covered bond funding costs (excluding Tier 2 costs), across major currencies. Updated and restated in FY23 for portfolio mix. Represents the spread over BBSW equivalent on a swapped basis. 9. Includes debt buy-backs and reported at historical FX rates. Slide 113 1. CBA data as at 31 December 2023. Peer data based on Regulatory Disclosures as at 30 September 2023. 2. Total retail transaction accounts, excluding offset accounts, includes Bankwest. 3. Transactions include non-interest bearing deposits and transaction offsets. Online includes NetBank Saver, Goal Saver, Business Online Saver, Bankwest Hero Saver, Smart eSaver, and Telenet Saver and Easy Saver. Savings and Investments includes savings offset accounts. Presented on a net basis after value attribution to other business units. Prior periods have been restated. 4. Includes at-call interest bearing deposits, term deposits and non-interest bearing deposits. Prior periods have been restated. 5. Includes non-interest bearing deposits and other customer funding. Images This presentation includes images in relation to Apple. Apple, the Apple logo, iPhone and iPad are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries and regions. App Store is a service mark of Apple Inc. 146#147| Glossary Term Cash Profit Level 1 Level 2 Corporate Troublesome Credit Value Adjustment (CVA) Derivative Valuation Adjustments (XVA) Funding Valuation Adjustment (FVA) High Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA) International Capital Leverage Ratio Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) Main Financial Institution (MFI) Share - Consumer Description The Profit Announcement (PA) discloses the net profit after tax on both a statutory and cash basis. The statutory basis is prepared in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) and the Australian Accounting Standards, which comply with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). The cash basis is used by management to present a clear view of the Bank's operating results. It is not a measure based on cash accounting or cash flows. The items excluded from cash profit, such as hedging and IFRS volatility and losses or gains on acquisition, disposal, closure, capital repatriation and demerger of businesses are calculated consistently with the prior year and prior half disclosures and do not discriminate between positive and negative adjustments. A list of items excluded from cash profit is provided on page 3 of the Group's 31 December 2023 PA, which can be accessed at our website: www.commbank.com.au/results CBA parent bank, offshore branches and extended licensed entities approved by APRA. Consolidated banking group including banking subsidiaries such as ASB Bank, PT Bank Commonwealth (Indonesia) and CBA Europe N.V. Corporate Troublesome includes exposures where customers are experiencing financial difficulties which, if they persist, could result in losses of principal or interest, and exposures where repayments are 90 days or more past due and the value of security is sufficient to recover all amounts due. The market value the counterparty credit risk on the derivative portfolio, calculated as the difference between the risk- free portfolio value and the portfolio value that takes into account the possibility of a counterparty's default. A number of different valuation adjustments are made to the value of derivative contracts to reflect the additional costs or benefits in holding these contracts. The material valuation adjustments included within the CBA result are CVA and FVA. The expected funding cost or benefit over the life of the uncollateralised derivative portfolio. As defined by APRA in Australian Prudential Standard APS210: Liquidity. Qualifying HQLA includes cash, government and semi-government securities, and RBNZ eligible securities. June and December 2023 measures based on the Australian Banking Association publication 'Basel 3.1 Capital Comparison Study' (March 2023), which compares APRA's revised capital framework, including RBNZ prudential requirements, with the finalised post-crisis Basel III reforms. December 2022 calculation is aligned with the APRA study entitled 'International capital comparison study' (13 July 2015). Tier 1 Capital divided by Total Exposures, expressed as a percentage. Total exposures are the sum of On Balance Sheet items, derivatives, securities financing transactions (SFTs), and Off Balance Sheet items, net of any Tier 1 regulatory deductions that are already included in these items. The LCR is the first quantitative liquidity measure that is part of the Basel III reforms. It was implemented by APRA in Australia on 1 January 2015. It requires Australian ADIs to hold sufficient liquid assets to meet 30 day net cash outflows projected under an APRA-prescribed stress scenario. MFI Share measures the proportion of Banking and Finance MFI Customers that nominated each bank as their MFI. MFI definition: In the Roy Morgan Single Source Survey MFI is a customer determined response where one institution is nominated as the primary financial institution they deal with (when considering all financial products they hold). Peers include ANZ Group, NAB Group and Westpac Group (including St George Group). CBA Group includes Bankwest. Source: Roy Morgan Single Source survey conducted by Roy Morgan, Australian population 14+ (12 month averages to December 2023), excl. unable to identify MFI. Roy Morgan has re-calibrated the results from April 2020 to March 2021 to take into account methodology changes since COVID-19. This has resulted in small differences to some of the previously published figures. Term Description MFI Share - Business DBM Atlas (part of RFI Global) Business MFI Share. Data on a 6 month roll weighted to the Australian business population. MFI Customer Share is the proportion of all businesses with any business banking, that nominate the Fl as their main financial institution. Share based on grouped brands as follows: CBA Group includes CBA and Bankwest, ANZ Group includes ANZ, NAB Group includes NAB, Westpac Group includes Westpac, St George, BankSA and Bank of Melbourne. Merchant Acquiring Share - Rank NPS Consumer NPS Business NPS Institutional NPS Consumer Mobile App NPS Consumer Digital Banking NPS Business Digital Banking NPS & Share Ranks Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR) DBM Atlas (part of RFI Global) Business Merchant Facility Penetration. Data on a 6 month roll weighted to the Australian business population. Merchant Facility Penetration is the proportion of all businesses with turnover below $40m (SME) with a merchant facility issued by the Fl. Share based on grouped brands as follows: CBA Group includes CBA and Bankwest, ANZ Group includes ANZ, NAB Group includes NAB and HICAPS, Westpac Group includes Westpac, St George, BankSA and Bank of Melbourne. DBM Atlas (part of RFI Global) Consumer MFI NPS. Based on Australian population aged 14+ years old rating their likelihood to recommend their MFI. NPS results are shown as a six-month rolling average. DBM Atlas (part of RFI Global) Business MFI NPS. Based on Australian businesses rating their likelihood to recommend their MFI for Business Banking. NPS results are shown as a six-month rolling average. DBM Atlas (part of RFI Global) Institutional $300M+ Business MFI NPS: Based on Australian businesses with an annual revenue of $300M or more for the previous financial year rating their likelihood to recommend their MFI for Business Banking. NPS results are shown as a twelve-month rolling average. DBM Atlas (part of RFI Global) Consumer MFI Mobile Banking App NPS: Based on MFI customers rating their likelihood to recommend their MFI's Mobile Banking App used in the last 4 weeks. NPS results are shown as a six-month rolling average. DBM Atlas (part of RFI Global) Consumer MFI Digital Banking NPS: Based on MFI customers rating their likelihood to recommend their MFI's Mobile Banking App or Online Banking used in the last 4 weeks. Overall Digital NPS is then calculated by weighting Online Banking: Mobile Banking App by a factor of 29:71. NPS results are shown as a six-month rolling average. DBM Atlas (part of RFI Global) Business MFI Digital Banking NPS: Based on MFI customers (turnover below $40m) rating their likelihood to recommend their MFI's Mobile Banking App or Online Banking used in the last 4 weeks. Overall Digital NPS is then calculated by weighting Online Banking: Mobile Banking App by a factor of 44:56. NPS results are shown as a six-month rolling average. NPS, MFI Share, and Merchant Share ranks are based on absolute scores, or simple comparisons of incidences among major banks, not statistically significant differences. The NSFR is the second quantitative liquidity measure of the Basel III reforms, in addition to the LCR. It was implemented by APRA in Australia on 1 January 2018. It requires Australian ADIS to fund their assets with sufficient stable funding to reduce funding risk over a one year horizon. APRA prescribed factors are used to determine the stable funding requirement of assets and the stability of funding. Risk Weighted Assets The value of the Group's On and Off Balance Sheet assets are adjusted by risk weights calculated according to various (RWA) APRA prudential standards. For more information, refer to the APRA website. Total Committed Exposure (TCE) Troublesome and Impaired Assets (TIA) Total Committed Exposure is defined as the balance outstanding and undrawn components of committed facility limits. It is calculated before collateralisation and excludes settlement exposures. Corporate troublesome and Group gross impaired exposures. 147#148Our reporting suite Committed to transparent reporting 2023 2023 Annual Report Climate Report Annual Report Climate Report Profit Announcement For the half year ended 31 December 2023 Basel III Pillar 3 Capital Adequacy and Risk Disclosures as at 31 March 2024 Profit Announcement Pillar 3 Report + View our sustainability performance metrics at commbank.com.au/reporting 2023 Corporate Governance Statement Corporate Governance Statement 2023 Green, Social and Sustainability Funding Impact Report Results Presentation and Investor Discussion Pack For the halt year ended 31 Decembe 2023 Investor Discussion Pack 2023 Sustainability Reporting Appendix Commoeath Bank of Austra This appendix coetas our disclosures aligned to edple toy thesponsible Banking Reporting F and Self-Assesment Template Global Reporting interve ORG Standards index Satanability Accounting Standards and (SA) India Sustainability Reporting Appendix Commonwealth Bank of Australia 2023 Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement Green, Social and Sustainability Funding Impact Report Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement 148#149| Contact us $ Investor Relations Melanie Kirk Investor Relations +61 2 9118 7113 CBAInvestor [email protected] Media Relations Danny John Media Relations +61 2 9118 6919 [email protected] Investor Centre For more information commbank.com.au/investors 149

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