The Commonwealth Bank of Australia's profits are closely watched as it is the nation's top lender and the results provide a guidance on the health of the economy as it transitions away from a dependence on mining.
The bank, the country's largest firm by market capitalisation, posted a 7.6 percent jump in annual net profit to a record 9.93 billion Australian dollar (USD 7.86 billion) for the year to June 30.
The results will be a boost for Commonwealth after the country's financial intelligence agency AUSTRAC said it was taking civil action against CBA for alleged "serious and systemic non-compliance" of laundering and terrorism financing laws.
The bank yesterday said it would slash pay and bonuses of top executives, but backed chief executive Ian Narev despite calls for him to step down.
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"Commonwealth Bank's performance this year has again contributed to the financial wellbeing of our customers, shareholders, our people and the Australian economy," Narev said in a statement today.
Banking income rose by 4.3 per cent due to growth in home lending, business lending and deposit volumes, while bad debt costs fell by 12.8 per cent to 1.1 billion dollar.
Shareholders were rewarded with a final dividend of 4.29 dollar per share, up two percent from the prior period.
"Overall, it was quite a good result with very few issues," Regal Funds Management's senior analyst Omkar Joshi said. "The modest beat to expectations was driven by continued low bad debts."
Shares in CBA rose 1.04 percent to 81.48 dollar in mid- day Sydney trade today.
It also did not report suspicious transactions on time, or at all, that totalled 77 million dollar, and did not monitor customers or manage the risk even after becoming aware of suspected money laundering, AUSTRAC claimed.
Each breach could attract 18 million dollar in fines, potentially running into the billions of dollars.
Chair Catherine Livingstone said today the board had "no reason to believe that the (AUSTRAC) allegations arose from deliberate or unethical behaviour, or any commercial motive".
Narev has admitted "mistakes were made" but told The Australian newspaper Monday he was "focused on doing my job and am not spending any time on thinking about my own position".
The bank said in the profit report today it was reviewing the allegations and was limited in what it could comment on the case given the ongoing court proceedings.
"At this time it is not possible to reliably estimate the possible financial effect on the group," CBA added.