The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Southern foothold

CIBC looks to generate quarter of earnings from U.S. after PrivateBan­corp deal

- BY ALEXANDRA POSADZKI

CIBC closed its acquisitio­n of Chicago-based PrivateBan­corp on Friday, securing its foothold in the U.S. where CEO Victor Dodig said the bank hopes to one day generate a quarter of its earnings.

The Canadian bank (TSX: CM) now earns roughly five per cent of its profits in the U.S., primarily from its wealth management and capital markets operations. The PrivateBan­corp acquisitio­n will grow that to 10 per cent.

Dodig says CIBC hopes to generate a quarter of its profits from south of the border in the long term, a target it plans to achieve through a combinatio­n of organic growth and acquisitio­ns.

“This is really a growth story,” Dodig said in an interview Friday. “Growth in earnings largely by deeper and more client relationsh­ips in the U.S.”

With loan growth in Canada slowing as debt-laden consumers have begun to tap out, the U.S. provides a promising avenue for Canadian banks looking to expand. The growing economy, rising interest rates and promises of reduced taxes and deregulati­on by President Donald Trump also make the U.S. appealing.

However, many of the conditions that make the U.S. attractive for CIBC also created roadblocks for the bank as it wooed PrivateBan­corp shareholde­rs over the past year.

The election of Trump, who has promised to throw out parts of the Dodd-Frank act that was introduced following the global financial crisis, and the expectatio­n of rising interest rates lifted U.S. bank stocks.

Canadian lenders, however, have seen their share prices hampered by jitters about the country’s overheated housing markets.

Those fears became heightened in recent months following a crisis of confidence at mortgage lender Home Capital Group (TSX:HCG), which sparked concerns about contagion to the broader mortgage market.

CIBC was forced to sweeten its offer for PrivateBan­corp twice before the U.S. bank’s shareholde­rs voted last month to approve the takeover.

The cash-and-stock is deal is valued at approximat­ely US$5 billion, based on the closing price of CIBC’s shares on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday of US$80.95. The transactio­n will be paid for with approximat­ely US$2.4 billion in cash and 32.3 million CIBC shares.

The PrivateBan­corp deal will mark CIBC’s second major foray into the U.S. The Canadian bank largely withdrew from that market following a series of missteps in the 1990s and 2000s.

Although a proxy advisory firm warned PrivateBan­corp shareholde­rs about the risks associated with the Canadian housing market, Larry Richman - president and CEO of the PrivateBan­k - said CIBC’s sound underwriti­ng practices and the quality of its team made the U.S. bank feel “very comfortabl­e.”

The two companies will now shift their focus to integratin­g their operations.

“We have very compliment­ary businesses but not many duplicate businesses,” says Richman, who becomes the head of CIBC’s U.S. division.

“It really creates the opportunit­y to leverage the capabiliti­es of each company, always in pursuit of doing more for our clients. I see good revenue opportunit­ies to continue to build profitable client relationsh­ips ... as well as expanding the business we do with our clients.”

 ?? WIKIMEDIA COMMONS ?? CIBC closed its acquisitio­n of Chicago-based PrivateBan­corp on Friday, securing its foothold in the U.S. where CEO Victor Dodig said the bank hopes to one day generate a quarter of its earnings. The Canadian bank now earns roughly five per cent of its...
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS CIBC closed its acquisitio­n of Chicago-based PrivateBan­corp on Friday, securing its foothold in the U.S. where CEO Victor Dodig said the bank hopes to one day generate a quarter of its earnings. The Canadian bank now earns roughly five per cent of its...

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