The Hamilton Spectator

CIBC’s Q4 earnings beats expectatio­ns as TD falls short

- ARMINA LIGAYA TORONTO —

The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce’s latest quarterly profit got a 25 per cent bump helped by better-than-expected performanc­e in the U.S., while Toronto-Dominion Bank saw a retracemen­t in its earnings south of the border and fell short of market expectatio­ns.

CIBC reported net income of $1.16 billion in the three months ended Oct. 31, up from $931 million during the same time in 2016. On an adjusted basis, CIBC’s profit amounted to $2.81 per share in the fourth quarter, up eight per cent from $2.60 per share in the fourth quarter of 2016, beating the $2.59 in adjusted earnings per share expected by analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters.

The country’s fifth-largest bank said its Canadian personal and small business banking division saw net income of $551 million, down $8 million or 1.4 per cent from the fourth quarter of 2016. On an adjusted basis, the bank’s net income $623 million, up $63 million or 11.3 per cent from the same quarter a year earlier.

But CIBC’s U.S. commercial banking and wealth management unit saw a major bump in profit, with net income for the quarter of $107 million — more than four times the $23 million it saw during the same quarter a year earlier.

That reflected a full quarter of “strong performanc­e” from The PrivateBan­k, after CIBC purchased its parent PrivateBan­corp for roughly US$5 billion in June and rebranded it as CIBC Bank USA.

“U.S. commercial banking and wealth management continue to exceed our expectatio­ns ... The former PrivateBan­k showed one of its best quarters ever,” CIBC president and chief executive Victor Dodig told analysts on a call Thursday.

Meanwhile, TD earned $2.71 billion in its latest quarter, up from $2.30 billion a year ago, boosted by its Canadian and U.S. retail banking business. Canada’s biggest lender by assets said Thursday the profit amounted to $1.42 per diluted share for the quarter ended Oct. 31, up from $1.20 per diluted share in the same quarter last year.

On an adjusted basis, TD says it earned $1.36 per diluted share, compared with $1.22 per diluted share a year ago. Analysts had expected an adjusted profit of $1.39 per diluted share, according to those surveyed by Thomson Reuters.

Barclays analyst John Aiken said in a research note that CIBC came in “well ahead of expectatio­ns on the back of exceptiona­lly strong domestic retail and a better than forecast contributi­on from its new U.S. platform, including PrivateBan­k.”

TD, meanwhile, “disappoint­ed on the back of a retracemen­t in earnings in its U.S. retail segment,” he told clients.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The CIBC reported net income of $1.16 billion in the three months ended Oct. 31, up from $931 million during the same time in 2016.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO The CIBC reported net income of $1.16 billion in the three months ended Oct. 31, up from $931 million during the same time in 2016.

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