Banks profit from surge in business loans
ECONOMY
Bank of Nova Scotia and Bank of Montreal, Canada’s third- and fourth-largest lenders, got a boost last quarter as the nation’s businesses increased borrowing to meet customer demand.
Commercial-loan balances at Scotiabank’s domestic banking unit surged 19 per cent to $72.7 billion and gained 13 per cent to $96.2 billion in Bank of Montreal’s Canadian business in the three months through April. Fiscal second-quarter profit at both lenders topped analysts’ estimates.
While the economic outlook has softened amid expectations for continued interest-rate increases, preliminary figures suggest Canada’s economic growth at the start of the year exceeded expectations, and the unemployment rate last month fell to the lowest since 1976. That has the country’s businesses spending more to ramp up output and stockpile inventory to protect against supply-chain snarls.
“You had quite a bit of reopening and a lot of consumer demand in the quarter, so businesses are working to produce more,” Paul Gulberg, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, said in an interview. “Businesses are also staring down the interest-rate increases that are coming, so they’re borrowing more now to lock in at lower rates.”
Those central bank interest-rate increases, meant to cool surging in
flation, are already giving the banks a boost in profitability. Scotiabank’s net interest margin — the difference in what it earns on loans versus what it pays for deposits — widened to 2.23 per cent in the fiscal second quarter from 2.16 per cent in the first quarter. Bank of Montreal’s net interest margin on average earning assets expanded to 1.69 per cent from 1.64 per cent in the first quarter.
Interest-rate hikes gave an even more pronounced lift to results in Scotiabank’s Latin America-focused international business. The unit’s net interest margin widened to 3.86 per cent from 3.76 per cent in the first quarter.
Both banks also boosted their dividends.
Bank of Montreal raised its quarterly payout 4.5 per cent to $1.39 a share. That topped the Bloomberg dividend forecast of $1.36 a share. Scotiabank raised its dividend 3 per cent to $1.03 a share, matching the Bloomberg estimate.
Scotiabank chief executive officer Brian Porter has revamped the international unit by focusing on larger, more-profitable markets and selling off smaller, underperforming operations. The unit benefited last quarter from growth in mortgages and commercial loans.
Net income in the international segment surged 44 per cent to $605 million, benefiting from growth in commercial loans and mortgages.
The unit’s net interest margin also widened 10 basis points from last quarter, reaching 3.86 per cent.
Bank of Montreal’s U.S. business, which the lender is expanding with the $16.3 billion acquisition of Bank of the West, saw the benefit of the commercial-lending expansion as well. Commercial loans there rose 9.4 per cent to $85.7 million.
The business is slated to get a further boost, becoming North America’s fourth-largest commercial bank when Bank of Montreal’s purchase of San Francisco-based Bank of the West from BNP Paribas SA is completed late this year. Bank of Montreal reiterated that it expects the deal to close by the end of 2022.