Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Delivers a Cost Turnaround That Changes the Investment Case
Bendigo and Adelaide Bank just posted a third quarter result that caught the market off guard. Cash earnings of $139.7 million came in 18% above what we had implied for the second half run rate and 14% above consensus expectations. The beat was not driven by one-offs or balance sheet tricks. It came from genuine cost discipline, a better-than-expected net interest margin, and early signs that the bank’s multi-year productivity program is delivering ahead of schedule. We have upgraded our cash EPS estimates by 6%, 14%, and 18% across FY26, FY27, and FY28 respectively, lifted the price target to A$11.90 from A$11.51, and reiterated our Buy rating. At a share price of A$10.46, that implies 13.8% upside before dividends.
Research published 11 April 2026. Price target and upside based on prices at time of publication.
About Bendigo and Adelaide Bank
Bendigo and Adelaide Bank is Australia’s fifth largest bank by customer numbers, headquartered in Bendigo, Victoria. The bank operates a community banking model that sets it apart from the major four, with a retail and business banking franchise that spans deposits, home lending, agribusiness, and wealth management. It has built its brand around local relationships and regional presence, serving over two million customers through its branch network and digital channels. Listed on the ASX under the ticker BEN, the bank has a long track record as a regional lender but has increasingly positioned itself as a national competitor with a differentiated service proposition.
The 3Q26 Trading Update in Context
The 3Q26 cash earnings figure of $139.7 million deserves some context. We had pencilled in a second half run rate of around $117 million per quarter, and the consensus estimate sat at roughly $123 million. A result that beats both by double digits is not something investors had priced in, particularly for a bank that has historically delivered modest earnings growth relative to the major four. This was a genuine positive surprise, and the magnitude of the beat forced a meaningful re-rating of earnings expectations across the forecast horizon.
What made the result notable was its composition. Revenue held up well, costs fell sharply, and the margin outcome was better than expected. That combination suggests something structural is shifting at BEN rather than a one-quarter anomaly driven by timing or provisioning.
Net Interest Margin Surprise
BEN reported a net interest margin of 1.98% for the quarter, compared to our estimate of 1.92%. A six basis point beat on NIM does not sound like much in isolation, but for a bank of BEN’s size and lending mix it translates directly into tens of millions of dollars of incremental revenue. The margin outcome reflected a combination of disciplined deposit pricing and a favourable shift in the asset mix.
We think the NIM result is important because it shows that BEN is not buying revenue growth through margin compression, which has been the trap for several smaller banks in the current cycle. If anything, the bank appears to be managing its book more carefully and extracting better returns from the assets it already has. Whether the 1.98% level is sustainable into FY27 depends on the competitive environment, but the direction of travel is encouraging.
Cost Reduction and the Productivity Program
The standout feature of the 3Q26 result was costs. Operating expenses declined 4.1% in the quarter, a sharp move for any bank and one that demonstrates genuine operating leverage. For a company that has historically run a cost-to-income ratio well above the major banks, this kind of reduction matters. It signals that management’s cost agenda is not just aspirational but is translating into actual P&L outcomes.
BEN is now in Phase 2 of its Productivity Program, which targets A$65 million to A$75 million of annual run-rate expense savings by FY28. That is a material number relative to the bank’s cost base, and if delivered in full, it would represent a step change in the bank’s profitability profile. We estimate that the cost-to-income ratio could improve toward 60% by FY28, which would bring BEN closer to the efficiency levels that the market has traditionally only associated with the major banks.
The program is not just about trimming headcount or freezing discretionary spend. Management has structured it around operational transformation, which is where the two new partnerships come in.
Infosys and Genpact Partnerships
BEN has signed a seven-year partnership with Infosys and a six-year partnership with Genpact as part of its Productivity Program. These are long-duration agreements that embed external capability into the bank’s operations, covering technology transformation, process automation, and back-office efficiency. The length of the contracts suggests that both parties are committing meaningful resources, and the structure is designed to deliver sustained cost reduction rather than a one-time benefit.
We see this as a sensible approach for a bank of BEN’s scale. Building all of this capability internally would be expensive and slow. Partnering with established outsourcing and technology firms allows BEN to access best-in-class processes without the upfront capital expenditure and execution risk that would come with a fully in-house transformation. The risk, of course, is that large outsourcing contracts can be difficult to manage, and the benefits sometimes take longer to materialise than the initial business case suggests. But the early signs from the 3Q26 cost outcome are positive.
Earnings Upgrades Across the Forecast Period
We have lifted our cash EPS estimates by 6% for FY26, 14% for FY27, and 18% for FY28. The magnitude of the upgrade increases as you move further out, which tells you that the market is now pricing in a more optimistic trajectory for costs and margin rather than just marking to the 3Q26 beat. This is exactly the kind of earnings revision profile that tends to attract institutional capital, because it suggests the story is getting better over time rather than peaking.
The price target has been raised to A$11.90 from A$11.51, with the Buy rating maintained. At the current share price of A$10.46, the implied upside of 13.8% sits comfortably above the cost of equity for an Australian bank, and that is before any dividend contribution. For a stock that has often been overlooked in favour of the major four, that kind of total return potential is worth paying attention to.
Valuation
BEN has historically traded at a discount to the major banks on most valuation metrics, reflecting its smaller scale, higher cost base, and lower returns on equity. The question now is whether the Productivity Program changes that structural discount over time. If BEN can deliver on its cost-to-income target of around 60% by FY28, the earnings profile will look materially different from where it sits today, and we would expect the valuation gap to narrow.
Our A$11.90 target embeds some of that re-rating, but it does not require BEN to trade at major bank multiples. It simply requires the market to acknowledge that the earnings trajectory has improved and that the risk of cost blowouts has diminished. Given the 3Q26 result, we think that is a reasonable base case.
Risks to Consider
The most obvious risk is execution. Outsourcing partnerships of the kind BEN has signed with Infosys and Genpact carry integration risk, and the benefits may take longer to flow through than the headline targets suggest. If the A$65 million to A$75 million cost saving target slips or is diluted by reinvestment, the earnings upgrade cycle could stall.
There is also competition risk. The major banks are themselves investing heavily in technology and efficiency, and BEN operates in segments where price competition can be fierce. A NIM of 1.98% is a good outcome, but it could come under pressure if the housing market softens or if deposit competition intensifies.
Finally, credit quality remains a background risk for all Australian banks. BEN’s loan book is skewed toward residential mortgages and regional borrowers, and any deterioration in the economic outlook, particularly in regional Australia, would flow through to provisioning charges.
Our View
This is a cost story that is delivering ahead of schedule, and the market has not yet fully adjusted to the implications. BEN’s 3Q26 result was not just a good quarter. It was evidence that the bank’s multi-year productivity transformation is working, and that the earnings upgrade cycle has further to run. The combination of cost discipline, a better-than-expected margin, and long-duration partnerships with Infosys and Genpact gives us confidence that the FY28 targets are achievable.
At A$10.46 with our price target of A$11.90, BEN offers 13.8% upside from a business that is getting structurally more profitable. We think the risk-reward is attractive for investors who are willing to look beyond the major four and back a regional bank that is finally closing the efficiency gap.
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