National Post (National Edition)

CIBC jumps on strong profit as TD Bank lags

Double-digit mortgage growth at CIBC

- BARBARA SHECTER Financial Post Twitter.com/BatPost

TORONTO • It was a mixed year-end for Canada’s biggest banks, with two beating analyst expectatio­ns with fourth-quarter financial results released this week and two disappoint­ing, as concerns over the fallout from low oil prices give way to scrutiny of mortgages and consumer debt.

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce topped profit expectatio­ns Thursday with quarterly results that included posting doubledigi­t mortgage growth driven by two of the country’s hottest markets: Toronto and Vancouver.

Toronto-Dominion Bank, meanwhile, disappoint­ed with weak performanc­e in its retail operations and higher than expected provisions and expenses in the quarter.

The one-per-cent yearover-year decline in TD’s Canadian personal and commercial banking, though small, “implies this very important segment will underperfo­rm peers again this quarter,” Rob Sedran, a bank analyst at CIBC Capital Markets, said in a note to clients.

CIBC shares jumped 2.2 per cent to a 52-week high of $108.34 , while TD fell 0.8 per cent to $63.07.

Earlier this week, Bank of Nova Scotia exceeded earnings expectatio­ns for the fourth quarter, propelling shares of four of the Big Five banks to 52-week highs, while Royal Bank of Canada came in below expectatio­ns largely as a result of lower trading revenues. Bank of Montreal turns in its fourthquar­ter results next Tuesday.

CIBC, Canada’s fifth-largest bank, boosted net income nearly 20 per cent in the fourth quarter to $931 million ($2.32 a share). After usual items, core cash earnings of $2.60 topped the consensus analyst estimate of $2.49, reflecting growth in retail and business banking, wealth management, and capital markets. The bank increased its quarterly dividend by three cents, or 2.5 per cent, to $1.24.

Mortgage volume was up 11 per cent in the quarter, as CIBC continued to increase business through growing proprietar­y sales that replaced the widespread use of mortgage brokers.

On a conference call with analysts, the bank’s executives said that the mortgage growth translated into other business as the mortgages acted as an anchor product to build deeper relationsh­ips with clients. Personal deposits were up eight per cent, while business deposits were up 10 per cent and business lending was up 13 per cent.

Gabriel Dechaine, a bank analyst at Canaccord Genuity Corp., described the mortgage growth was “frothy” in a note to clients. But he said enhanced disclosure from CIBC on its consumer lending book including mortgages “should alleviate some concerns.”

The bank disclosed that uninsured mortgages it holds in the Greater Vancouver Area and Greater Toronto Area have lower delinquenc­y rates of 90-plus days than the Canadian average.

In addition, the average loan-to-value is lower: 46 per cent in Vancouver and 53 per cent in Toronto, compared to 56 per cent across Canada.

David Williamson, group head of retail and business banking at CIBC, said the relatively small loans as a percentage of the value of the real estate, particular­ly in Vancouver, provide “a tremendous amount of buffer.”

CIBC also disclosed that less than one per cent of the portfolio consists of what are considered higher-risk mortgages in the industry with a loan to value of more than 75 per cent and a Beacon score — used to measure creditwort­hiness — of 650 or lower.

Dechaine said he views the bank’s recent mortgage growth trends as indicative of earnings growth decelerati­on in the future, rather than a credit risk.

In the rest of CIBC’s closely watched consumer book, Barclays Capital analyst John Aiken noted that while credit card writeoffs were essentiall­y flat, there was an uptick in impaired loan formations. In addition, credit cards with delinquenc­ies of 90 days or more increased by five basis points.

Analysts said the strain on consumer loans is so far tied mainly to oil-dependent provinces including Alberta.

On an afternoon conference call, TD executives characteri­zed consumer losses in oil and gas regions as “stable” at Canada’s second-largest bank.

Overall, TD posted adjusted earnings excluding unusual items of $2.3 billion ($1.22 per share) for the fourth quarter, up seven per cent from a year ago.

CIBC, meanwhile, continued restructur­ing efforts in the quarter, taking a charge that reduced reported earnings by almost $100 million.

Banks have been cutting staff and investing in technology as customers do more banking online, and such restructur­ing charges have become common, though Canaccord Genuity’s Dechaine said this is likely to be the last large one for CIBC for the time being.

The bank has taken combined pretax charges of $430-million in 2015 and 2016, which are intended to reduce ongoing annual costs by $350-million by next year and $500 million by fiscal 2019.

CIBC became the second Canadian bank this week to reduce target return on equity. In CIBC’s case, the target is now 15 per cent or more. On Wednesday, Royal Bank of Canada reduced its target return on equity to 16 per cent or more.

On CIBC’s morning conference call, chief executive Victor Dodig said the change “reflects regulatory and market pressures on the bank’s globally,” as well as CIBC’s strategy to expand in the United States where ROEs are typically lower.

He said CIBC expects to close its US$3.8-billion acquisitio­n of Chicago-based PrivateBan­corp Inc. in the first quarter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada