The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Scotiabank, BMO earnings beat expectatio­ns

- BY ARMINA LIGAYA

Internatio­nal growth continues to be a boon for Canadian lenders as Bank of Nova Scotia and Bank of Montreal’s firstquart­er earnings beat expectatio­ns, helped by brisk business in Latin America and the United States, respective­ly.

Scotiabank on Tuesday reported better-than-expected adjusted profit of roughly $2.275 billion attributab­le to shareholde­rs for the period ended Jan. 31, up 16.9 per cent from a year ago. The internatio­nal banking division of Canada’s third-largest lender also saw a 16 per cent increase in net income to $667 million as it continues to expand its presence in the Pacific Alliance countries of Peru, Colombia, Mexico and Chile.

BMO’s adjusted net income attributab­le to shareholde­rs for the first quarter dropped by seven per cent to $1.422 billion — weighed down by a $425-million charge related to U.S. tax reform — but still beat analyst expectatio­ns. Its main U.S. banking operation had $321 million of adjusted net income, up $60 million from the same period a year earlier.

These two lenders’ latest earnings come after both the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and the Royal Bank of Canada reported results for the three-month period that topped market expectatio­ns, helped by a boost in earnings south of the border.

Scotiabank raised its dividend by three cents to 82 cents per share as it reported $1.87 adjusted earnings per diluted share, up from $1.58 a year ago and higher than the $1.68 per share expected by analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters.

BMO reported adjusted diluted earnings per share of $2.12, higher than the $2.06 per share expected by analysts but down from $2.28 a year ago. However, Canada’s fourth-largest lender said the $425-million charge — related to the U.S. corporate tax rate cut from 35 per cent to 21 per cent that took effect on Jan. 1 — had an impact of roughly 65 cents on its earnings per share. After the one-time adjustment to deferred tax assets held on company balance sheets, BMO and other banks with large U.S. exposure are expecting President Donald Trump’s tax overhaul to provide long-term benefits to the bottom line.

And despite concerns about a domestic slowdown and the impact of stricter mortgage underwriti­ng rules on loan growth, both BMO and Scotiabank saw growth at home. BMO’s Canadian banking division reported $647 million of adjusted net income, down $98 million from a year earlier. However, a year ago the lender saw a $39 million gain related to the restructur­ing of Interac Corporatio­n and a roughly $168 million gain on the sale of Moneris’s U.S. operations. Scotiabank’s domestic banking arm reported a 12 per cent increase in net income attributab­le to shareholde­rs of $1.1 billion.

Meanwhile, Scotiabank has been investing heavily in acquisitio­ns both at home and abroad in a bid to diversify its income. Earlier this month, it announced it was buying investment manager Jarislowsk­y Fraser for $950 million, which would create the third-largest active money manager in Canada.

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