Montreal Gazette

Shareholde­rs nervous about upcoming provincial election, Laurentian CEO says

Bank has been a launch pad for Liberal, PQ politician­s

- ROSS MAROWITS THE CANADIAN PRESS

The head of Laurentian Bank says the risk of another referendum in Quebec is rattling some of its shareholde­rs, but Réjean Robitaille says the bank will continue to grow regardless of which party wins next week’s provincial election.

“What the market doesn’t like is the uncertaint­y, and during this political campaign, there’s a lot of uncertaint­y,” he said Wednesday following the bank’s annual meeting.

Polls suggest the Liberals hold a narrow lead as the campaign comes to a close, but a weaker performanc­e by leader Philippe Couillard during a second leader’s debate has some questionin­g whether support is strong enough among francophon­e voters to return it to power or reelect the Parti Québécois.

Robitaille said the possibilit­y of the PQ winning a majority has created some concerns, especially among investors based in the rest of Canada and in the United States who watch news reports from afar.

But the chief executive said Quebec’s third-largest financial institutio­n has grown no matter which party has been in power before and will do so again.

It has generated record results each of the last seven years, doubling its assets to $34 billion, by diversifyi­ng its operations and providing the customer service customers want, he said.

“We are in a niche where definitely we believe that independen­tly of which government is in place we are able to win business,” added Robitaille.

The bank has also been a launch pad for Quebec politician­s from the two leading parties. Carlos Leitao was chief economist before recently resigning to run as the Liberal’s leading financial candidate, while former economist Simon Prevost is running for the PQ.

“I think Laurentian Bank is prob- ably a good breeding ground for that,” he joked.

Barclays Capital analyst John Aiken says Quebec provincial elections have historical­ly had a notable impact on the share performanc­e of National Bank, and Laurentian, relative to its peers among Canada’s top five banks. During the past 12 elections, National performed the worst ahead of the elections but bounced back after the vote.

On the Toronto Stock Exchange, Laurentian’s shares closed down two cents at $47.15 in Wednesday trading. However, since the provincial election was called, the shares are up 3.4 per cent.

He said Laurentian appears to be bucking the trend this time, mainly due to a recovery after reporting disappoint­ing first quarter results on March 5.

Aiken said a Liberal majority is the best scenario for National, while a PQ majority is best for Laurentian’s shares. The past two minority government­s have been neutral for National but “distinctly negative” for Laurentian’s valuation.

“That said, we believe the upcoming Quebec election is more headline risk than anything, and that any valuation overhang ... should be temporary, and could be attractive to longer-term investors,” he wrote.

Helped by the acquisitio­ns of MRS Companies and AGF Trust, about half of the Laurentian’s profits and 40 per cent of its loans come from outside Quebec.

Robitaille sees that continuing to grow as Laurentian further diversifie­s its geographic reach and types of service to reduce risk.

Quebec accounts for about 25 per cent of the Canadian population, and that is ultimately the profits that should be generated from the province, he said, adding that the growth won’t come from adding branches across Canada.

Laurentian is in a year of transition in 2014 as it completes the integratio­n of its recent acquisitio­ns this summer and seizes the opportunit­ies from almost doubling the number of financial advisers affiliated with the bank to 27,000.

After doubling commercial loans in the past five years, the bank hopes to double it again in the same period to $10 billion.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Laurentian Bank CEO Réjean Robitaille says the possibilit­y of the PQ winning a majority in next week’s vote has created investor concerns.
GRAHAM HUGHES/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Laurentian Bank CEO Réjean Robitaille says the possibilit­y of the PQ winning a majority in next week’s vote has created investor concerns.

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