Cape Breton Post

TD, CIBC see profit bump helped by U.S. operation

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Two of Canada’s biggest lenders posted jumps in their latest quarterly earnings, but while Toronto-Dominion Bank’s performanc­e beat analyst expectatio­ns, the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce fell short for the first time in four years.

TD Bank Group and CIBC both reported fourth-quarter net income increases of roughly nine per cent to $2.96 billion and $1.27 billion, respective­ly.

Both Toronto-based banks benefited from a presence south of the border, as TD and CIBC’s American operations delivered double-digit increases in net income during the three months ended on Oct. 31.

The quarter “capped a strong year’’ for CIBC, said its chief executive Victor Dodig, as the lender made progress on its strategy, including ramping up the proportion of earnings it derives from outside of Canada.

“Our U.S. region has grown from nine per cent of total CIBC earnings in 2017 to 16 per cent this year, showing we are well on our way to our target of 17 per cent in 2020,’’ he said on a conference call Thursday.

CIBC’s Canadian commercial banking and wealth management

earned $333 million, up from $287 million, while the U.S. commercial banking and wealth management division earned $131 million, up from $107 million a year ago.

The quarter capped off a year of record net income for CIBC, up 12 per cent to $5.28 billion for the 12 months ended Oct. 31, but still missed analyst estimates.

On an adjusted basis, CIBC said it earned $3 per diluted share in the quarter, up from an adjusted profit of $2.81 per diluted share in the same quarter last year. Analysts

on average had expected a profit of $3.04 for the quarter, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.

This marked the first miss for CIBC in four years, said Gabriel Dechaine, an analyst with National Bank of Canada Financial Markets. CIBC’s Canadian banking performanc­e was “solid’’ but margins in its U.S. operations began to show “weakness,’’ he said.

Canada’s fifth-largest lender saw its U.S. commercial earnings retrace from a strong third quarter, down 19 per cent sequential­ly, said John Aiken, an analyst with Barclays in Toronto.

“Coupled with the overall miss against expectatio­ns was a surprising step back in profitabil­ity in CIBC’s U.S. operations; its platform for future growth,’’ he said in a note to clients.

Shares of CIBC fell as much as four per cent on Thursday to $111.41 from its previous close of $116.19 on the Toronto Stock Exchange, but was trading near $112 by early afternoon. TD’s stock was down less than a per cent to roughly $73 early Thursday afternoon.

TD beat expectatio­ns with adjusted profit that it says amounted to $1.63 per share for the quarter, up from $1.36 per share a year ago. Analysts on average had expected a profit of $1.62 per share, according Thomson Reuters Eikon.

TD said its Canadian retail business earned $1.74 billion in its fourth quarter, up from $1.66 billion in the same quarter last year, boosted by strong volumes and market share gains.

The bank’s U.S. retail operations, including TD Ameritrade, earned $1.11 billion, up 44 per cent from $776 million a year ago.

For its full financial year, TD earned $11.33 billion, up from $10.52 billion in 2017.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A TD Canada Trust branch is shown in the financial district in Toronto.
CP PHOTO A TD Canada Trust branch is shown in the financial district in Toronto.

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