Calgary Herald

Retiring BMO CEO helped to deepen bank’s reach in U.S.

COO Darryl White to replace Bill Downe during period of rising concern over debt

- ARMINA LIGAYA AND BARBARA SHECTER

TORONTO The last remaining chief executive of the five who steered Canada's big banks through the financial crisis is retiring.

Bank of Montreal's Bill Downe announced Friday that he is stepping down at the end of October, marking a final changing of the guard from that era.

His replacemen­t is Darryl White, who has been chief operating officer since November and whose background is firmly steeped in the bank's capital markets operations.

“We've been working together for two decades,” Downe said in an interview. “What I saw in Darryl as a young banker was an exceptiona­l talent, both intellect and an ability to relate to clients ... I've always had confidence that he was going to move to higher levels of responsibi­lity.”

Before being appointed COO last November, White held key roles in his 22 years at the bank, including as group head of BMO Capital Markets, and has spent considerab­le time in the U.S. on the bank's strategy and presence south of the border.

The Canadian investment banker's promotion is no surprise after BMO's management shuffle last October, in which White was named as COO, said John Aiken, an analyst with Barclays in Toronto. Still, the appointmen­t “breaks the trend of Canadian banks' boards shying away from capital markets background­s for the corner office,” Aiken said in a note to clients Friday.

With rising concern about the mounting amount of debt consumers have taken on, particular­ly with the recent double-digit runup of housing prices in the greater Toronto and Vancouver markets, experience in personal and commercial banking and risk management has been seen as an asset.

Downe said White is a “balanced profession­al,” with assignment­s that have exposed him to every part of the bank and across geographie­s, and he has been a member of BMO's risk management committee for more than five years.

White says that while he has only had oversight over BMO's personal businesses for the past fiscal year, he has long been tuned in.

“We're in a good position ... with respect to our personal businesses, we pay very close attention and we're comfortabl­e with where we are.”

Downe will work closely with his successor to ensure a smooth transition when White takes the top job on Nov. 1, and will serve in an “advisory capacity for a brief period” afterwards, BMO said in a statement Friday.

Since stepping into the chief executive role in March 2007, Downe has guided Canada's fourth-biggest lender through the financial crisis and deepened BMO's reach into the U.S., doubling its footprint south of the border with its $4.1-billion acquisitio­n of Marshall and Ilsley Corp. in 2010.

Downe said he sees his legacy as BMO's adaptabili­ty and resilience “through every circumstan­ce” and seizing “the opportunit­y to make acquisitio­ns when others were reluctant to move.” He cited its purchase of AIG's Canadian Life Insurance Business in 2009 as well as Marshall and Ilsley Corp.

Brian Klock, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, says he was adept at targeting assets that added value without being too risky.

He cited BMO's 2015 purchase of General Electric Capital Corp.'s transporta­tion finance business as a “nicely accretive deal.” But it was the Marshall and Ilsley buy that allowed BMO to jump-start its U.S. operation, which had languished despite its early entry among the Canadian banks with its purchase of Chicago-based Harris bank back in 1984, Klock said.

“They took the opportunit­y to jump in there and make a big splash and restart that ... (Downe) did that and was able to grow the company outside of Canada, and do it in a way that didn't bet the bank,” Klock said.

 ?? MICHELLE SIU/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Outgoing BMO chief executive Bill Downe, above, announced Friday that he is stepping down at the end of October. He says his successor Darryl White is a “balanced profession­al,” with assignment­s covering every part of the bank and across geographie­s.
MICHELLE SIU/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Outgoing BMO chief executive Bill Downe, above, announced Friday that he is stepping down at the end of October. He says his successor Darryl White is a “balanced profession­al,” with assignment­s covering every part of the bank and across geographie­s.

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