The Peterborough Examiner

Bank of Montreal will eye pot business loans very carefully

- ARMINA LIGAYA

TORONTO — The Bank of Montreal, the first of Canada’s biggest lenders to co-lead a cannabis company financing, puts potential sector deals through an “enhanced due diligence process,” its chief executive says.

Darryl White said Thursday that on top of examining factors such as company quality and reputation­al risk, Canada’s fourth largest lender also ensures there is no link to the U.S., where cannabis is illegal under federal law.

The Bank of Montreal casts a “broad net” when assessing a company’s U.S. ties, including criteria such as supplier relationsh­ips, manufactur­ing facilities and intentions to list shares in the U.S., he added.

“If it passed all those tests, what is the argument against?” White told reporters after the lender’s annual meeting of shareholde­rs.

Canada’s largest banks had largely steered clear of the country’s cannabis sector until January, when the bank co-led a $175million financing deal for already licensed producer Canopy Growth Corp.

And in March, the bank’s investment banking subsidiary Bank of Montreal (BMO) Nesbitt Burns co-led a $100-million deal to buy and finance marijuana company Cronos Group Inc.

Other Canadian lenders, however, continue to study the domestic marijuana industry as the country prepares to legalize the drug for recreation­al use later this year.

Many of the Big Five lenders have significan­t businesses in the U.S., where cannabis is legal in some states, but is considered an illegal drug under federal law.

Toronto-Dominion Bank’s chief executive Bharat Masrani said after the lender’s annual meeting of shareholde­rs recently that it views the legalizati­on for recreation­al use in Canada as an “important data point” and would consider prospectiv­e financings down the road.

TD is examining the industry for risks it would need to mitigate, but any prospectiv­e client should not have U.S. exposure, he added.

White said BMO has a “minor” first-mover advantage, but the sector represents a “very small part of our business.”

He also commented on challenges facing the broader Canadian economy, including the beginning of an outflow of investment from Canada to the U.S. that has come in the wake of tax reforms and other factors south of the border.

However, he noted it was not “profound” at this point.

“In real time, we are seeing the early stages of a decision that’s being made to invest, at the margin, in the United States before Canada with some of our customers,” he said.

Ottawa finds itself under increased pressure from some to respond to Trump’s sweeping tax changes which, among other things, cut the U.S. corporate tax rate from 35 per cent to 21 per cent at the beginning of the year.

Royal Bank’s chief executive Dave McKay recently said a “significan­t” investment exodus to the U.S. was underway, particular­ly in the energy and cleantechn­ology sectors.

McKay said capital was already leaving the country “in real time” and urged the federal government to stem the flow.

Thursday’s annual meeting was White’s first as CEO, after his predecesso­r Bill Downe retired at the end of October.

White told shareholde­rs that he was examining the organizati­on with an eye to “lightening the structure.”

Since November, it has been reviewing the bank to make sure all roles are “in line with the market opportunit­y.”

“We’re mapping literally almost every process and every skill and every piece of work that gets done in the bank against what the desired outcomes are,” he told reporters.

This is a “continuous improvemen­t process” without an end date and he did not have headcount projection­s.

“I don’t think it will be a heavier bank going forward.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Workers produce medical marijuana at Canopy Growth Corp.’s Tweed facility in Smiths Falls. The Bank of Montreal has agreed to finance the licensed producer.
SEAN KILPATRICK CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Workers produce medical marijuana at Canopy Growth Corp.’s Tweed facility in Smiths Falls. The Bank of Montreal has agreed to finance the licensed producer.

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