National Post (National Edition)

Personal and mortgage loans up 22 per cent in quarter

- CWB

Continued from FP1

It is also seeking growth in the Canadian housing market, especially in Ontario and B.C.

“We’ve managed down our energy exposure,” CWB president and CEO Chris Fowler said on an earnings call. The banks total outstandin­g loans to the oil and gas industry fell 49 per cent to $131 million compared to the same period last year.

The bank’s residentia­l lending unit, CWB Optimum, processed more mortgage applicatio­ns “due to the challenges faced by its largest direct competitor and sequential growth accelerate­d moderately from the second quarter.”

CIBC Capital Markets analyst Robert Sedran said Home Capital’s troubles have allowed CWB to be pickier about mortgage approvals. “The most recent business that they’ve been getting has been higher quality because they’ve been able to be more selective because the supply of credit has been less plentiful than it had been,” Sedran said.

Embattled Home Capital has been heavily criticized for writing mortgages that misstated borrowers’ incomes, penalized by the Ontario Securities Commission, faced a funding crisis and announced it would sell off $1.5 billion in mortgages.

Meanwhile, CWB’s personal and mortgage loans were up 22 per cent in the quarter from the same period a year earlier as CWB beat financial analysts’ expectatio­ns.

The bank reported $56 million in net income in the third quarter, up 24 per cent from $45 million during the same period a year earlier. The bank also hiked its dividend four per cent to $0.24 per quarter, marking the first dividend increase since 2015 after West Texas Intermedia­te and global oil prices collapsed.

Both Alberta and Saskatchew­an have suffered through prolonged recessions, which weighed on CWB’s overall loan growth. However, Fowler said both provinces are rebounding and CWB expects loan growth in the region to resume.

Fowler also addressed concerns over the cooling Toronto housing market, which he called “moderately negative but not significan­tly negative” for CWB. He said that only three per cent of the bank’s mortgages were for houses worth over $1 million and that CWB was focused on homes priced between $400,000 and $600,000.

The bank had also increased its business and equipment loans in the quarter, so while some of its growth came from mortgages the bank’s loans are diversifie­d in other industries as well. General commercial loans were up eight per cent from a year earlier, Sedran said.

“Our risk appetite is conservati­vely focused on affordably priced homes,” chief financial officer Carolyn Graham said, adding that CWB requires larger down payments on expensive homes and the bank is “selective” in approving mortgages.

Sedran also said the growth in CWB’s gross impaired loans – up to 0.74 per cent from 0.49 per cent – were understand­able given challenges in Alberta and other parts of the economy. “While there will be losses when you have an economic downturn, and you have impaired loans surfacing, I

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