Waterloo Region Record

TD adjusted profit beats estimates to cap off season

- ARMINA LIGAYA

TORONTO — TD Bank’s adjusted earnings came in ahead of analyst estimates Thursday, rising 15 per cent from the year-earlier period after excluding the impact of U.S. tax reform and other items.

The Canadian lender had $2.946 billion, or $1.56 per share, in adjusted diluted earnings per share for the fiscal first quarter ended Jan. 31. That was above the analyst estimate of $1.46 per share of adjusted earnings for TD, according to Thomson Reuters.

Including the impact of a $405-million charge related to U.S. tax reform and other items, TD’s net income was down from last year, but each of its main operating units showed yearover-year increases.

Net income under internatio­nal financial reporting standards was $2.353 billion, down from $2.533 billion in the first quarter of fiscal 2017. Net income per share dropped to $1.24 from $1.32.

“While there are risks on the horizon, if these positive conditions persist, adjusted earnings growth for the full year may exceed our medium-term targets,” TD chief executive officer Bharat Masrani said. in a statement.

The bank, Canada’s second largest by market capitaliza­tion, also raised its quarterly payment to common shareholde­rs by seven cents, or 11.7 per cent, to 67 cents per share.

TD Bank is the last of Canada’s six biggest lenders to report its results for the fiscal first quarter and, like the others, the bank’s earnings got a lift from strong growth at home and internatio­nally. Its Canadian retail banking arm reported a net income of $1.757 billion, up 12 per cent from a year ago, while its wholesale banking division reported a net income of $278 million, up four per cent compared to the first quarter of fiscal 2017.

Meanwhile, TD Bank’s U.S. retail banking arm posted a 19per-cent jump in net income to $952 million. On an adjusted basis, stripping out some onetime items, TD Bank’s U.S. retail division reported $1.024 billion in net income, up 28 per cent from a year earlier.

This quarter, the bank recorded several one-time charges, the largest of which was a $405-million tax charge in connection with a cut to the U.S. corporate tax rate from 35 per cent to 21 per cent as of Jan. 1.

In turn, TD and other Canadian banks with a U.S. presence recorded a one-time adjustment to deferred tax assets held on company balance sheets.

However, these banks are also expecting the tax reform to provide a long-term boost to earnings, and benefits from an increase in economic activity south of the border.

TD Bank’s Common Equity Tier 1 ratio, a key measure of its financial health, was 10.6 per cent, marking a decrease from 10.9 per cent a year ago and 10.7 per cent in the previous quarter.

The lender also reported provisions for credit losses, or money set aside for bad loans, of $693 million, compared to $633 million a year earlier. However, the latest quarter was the first to be subject to a new accounting standard, known as IFRS 9.

The new guidelines increase the emphasis on banks’ expected losses over the life of the loan and, in turn, introduce more volatility to the measure, making it difficult to compare with the same period last year.

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