Medicine Hat News

Economic rebound is coming, but short term looking ‘not as good’: Bank CEOs

- TARA DESCHAMPS

TORONTO

The leaders of Canada’s top banks believe an economic rebound is on the horizon, but say the short-term looks difficult and spending won’t truly pick up until the back half of 2021 or even 2022.

The chief executives of the country’s most prominent banks think Canada is benefiting from generous government relief packages that reduced delinquenc­ies and insolvenci­es and the arrival of several promising COVID-19 vaccines.

However, they say the coming weeks don’t look pretty because growing numbers of Canadians are continuing to contract the virus.

“In the short-term things are going to be not as good as one might have hoped, but overall I think we are in a probably slow way of getting more positive as the year goes by,” TD chief executive Bharat Masrani said Monday.

Masrani made his comments during a virtual appearance at Royal Bank of Canada’s Canadian Bank CEO conference, which saw the CEOs of all of the country’s top banks offer their economic prediction­s for the year.

They all agreed that Canada is in the midst of an economic rebound, but how fast that recovery takes hold will depend on the country’s ability to get the pandemic under control. Vaccines will be key, they said. “We believe roughly four and 4.5 million high-risk Canadians will have to be vaccinated before we can really get back to reopening the economy and we can achieve that within 100 days, if we have the vaccines,” Royal Bank of Canada chief executive Dave McKay said.

The number of doses of COVID-19 vaccines administer­ed in Canada hit 319,938 on Monday. Efforts to get more shots in arms are ramping up as more supply arrives, but there are at least 38 million people living in the country.

Once people are vaccinated, McKay believes those who have been sitting on cash and not spending it because so many things are closed will race back to pastimes like travel and entertainm­ent.

But timing around when that will happen is still a big question.

Most businesses in provinces like Ontario remain closed and Quebec has gone as far as implementi­ng a curfew to curtail cases. Some public health advocates and politician­s are calling for similar measures to be implemente­d elsewhere.

Victor Dodig, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce’s chief executive, believes a rebound will be slow to materializ­e in the hospitalit­y sector and others considered to be “discretion­ary.”

“We are looking into the following fiscal year before you are seeing any robustness there,” he said.

Masrani thinks some consumers will encounter credit trouble in the later half of 2021 or even into 2022, so he’s baking negativity into TD’s economic models.

While Darryl White, Bank of Montreal’s chief executive, said he expects the next two to four months to be a “difficult” period, he has seen some positives.

“We are just not seeing the impaired losses coming in at the rate people would have expected,” he said.

Rent relief, mortgage deferrals and wage subsidies have helped many Canadians manage the crisis and banks have built up large reserves to take care of bad loans that may transpire, he said.

For a rebound to really take shape, McKay believes government relief will have to continue and become focused on areas of the economy that are expected to take longer to recover like small businesses, hospitalit­y businesses and transporta­tion companies.

When a rebound comes, so will change at banks.

Dodig has noticed people shift rapidly to online banking during the pandemic and even those who were using digital options before the virus began circulatin­g are moving more of their transactio­ns online.

CIBC recently transforme­d 250 or one quarter of its banking centres into advice centres because digitizati­on was accelerate­d by the health crisis, he said.

 ?? CP PHOTO GRAHAM HUGHES ?? Royal Bank of Canada President and CEO David McKay addresses shareholde­rs during the bank’s annual general meeting in Montreal on Wednesday.
CP PHOTO GRAHAM HUGHES Royal Bank of Canada President and CEO David McKay addresses shareholde­rs during the bank’s annual general meeting in Montreal on Wednesday.

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