The Guardian (Charlottetown)

A different perspectiv­e

Scotiabank CEO downplays concerns raised over Canadian debt levels

- BY ARMINA LIGAYA

Scotiabank’s chief executive says he disagrees with recent red flags raised over Canada’s high debt levels by an internatio­nal body, and that he is “comfortabl­e” with the lender’s risk profile.

Brian Porter told a University of Toronto conference that he had a “different perspectiv­e” from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s recent warning and said they should look at the “other side of the balance sheet” which has “kept pace or outgrown the size of the debt.”

“I am very comfortabl­e with our risk profile,” he said Wednesday.

His comments come after the IMF in October said that Canada’s high debt levels, and higher-than-average pressure on Canadian households’ ability to pay down that debt in the private non-financial sector, leaves its economy more sensitive to tighter financial conditions and weaker economic activity.

And last month, an internatio­nal financial group owned by the world’s central banks said Canada’s credit-to-gross-domestic-product and debt-service ratios show early warning signs of potential risk to the domestic banking system in the coming years.

Porter, speaking at the Rotman School of Management’s conference examining lessons learned from the global financial crisis, said that a proper analysis should look at an entity in its entirety, rather than just one metric.

He also said that Canada’s banks now are holding more capital as a safety buffer than they were 10 years ago.

“Today, we are in a better position,” Porter said.

However, he told the crowd that one major threat and priority for the banks is cybersecur­ity.

Scotiabank’s spend on technology, including cybersecur­ity initiative­s, rose 13 per cent last year and now sits at more than $3 billion, Porter noted.

He also said the chief technology officers at all the major Canadian banks are working in conjunctio­n with the Bank of Canada and the federal banking regulator on cybersecur­ity.

Porter also heeded caution on the movement towards “open banking”, where third-parties such as financial technology startups get access to bank data to develop apps.

Ottawa said in its budget last month that it is going to study the merits of open banking, similar to what the Ministry of Finance said in a consultati­on paper last August.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Brian Porter, president and CEO of Scotiabank, addresses the company’s annual meeting in Calgary, Tuesday, April 12, 2016. Scotiabank’s chief executive says he disagrees with recent red flags raised over Canada’s high debt levels by an internatio­nal...
CP PHOTO Brian Porter, president and CEO of Scotiabank, addresses the company’s annual meeting in Calgary, Tuesday, April 12, 2016. Scotiabank’s chief executive says he disagrees with recent red flags raised over Canada’s high debt levels by an internatio­nal...

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