The Pak Banker

Why Alberta should privatise ATB Financial

- Rita Trichur

ATB Financial incoming CEO Curtis Stange is pictured at the ATB Financial offices in Edmonton on Friday June 29, 2018. ATB's annual profit declined by 50 per cent on a year-over-year basis to $139-million in the financial year that ended March 31 after credit losses spiked.

Former Alberta premier Ralph Klein used to say "the government should be getting out of the business of being in business."

But King Ralph, as he was known, only made limited progress on that front. While he successful­ly privatized Alberta's liquor stores and deregulate­d its electricit­y market, Mr. Klein's plan to sell off the province's public bank, Alberta Treasury Branches, was nixed after the lender became ensnared in a scandal over financing for the West Edmonton Mall.

Fast forward to the present day, and there's never been a better time for the Alberta government to resurrect plans to privatize the 81-yearold financial institutio­n, now known as ATB Financial. The province's economy is sputtering and its finances are deeply in the red. Austerity is not a cure-all.

What Alberta desperatel­y needs is an infusion of cash, which is why Premier Jason Kenney should take another page out of the Klein playbook and reconsider a sale or initial public offering of the province's public bank. Last week's provincial budget was a missed opportunit­y to get the ball rolling.

ATB is the ninth-largest financial institutio­n in Canada based on assets. It has more than 770,000 customers in more than 300 locations across the province, according to its website. The public bank could easily fetch between $1.4-billion and $7-billion, according to a 2017 valuation analysis published by the Frontier

Centre for Public Policy.

And it may not have much trouble finding a buyer. Earlier this year, former Alberta finance minister Joe Ceci said that Bank of Nova Scotia was once interested in buying ATB, according to published reports. (Both ATB and Scotiabank have previously declined comment on the matter.)

Trouble is, Mr. Kenney is an ideologue and not a pragmatist.

"The government of Alberta does not have plans to privatize ATB Financial. Premier Kenney has stated that ATB will remain a Crown corporatio­n under the UCP government," said government spokeswoma­n Jerrica Goodwin in a recent e-mail to The Globe and Mail. He should reconsider. Alberta's deficit is roughly $8.7-billion and its debt is almost $72-billion. Privatizat­ion may not make for easy politics, especially in rural parts of Alberta where folks still look askance at Toronto-based banks that turned their backs on the West during the Great Depression. But it's the right choice for Albertans in an era when smartphone­s are rapidly replacing bricks-and-mortar branches and when banking is increasing­ly a game of scale.

ATB, which was establishe­d in 1938 by the Social Credit government of William (Bible Bill) Aberhart, is struggling to find its raison d'être in modern-day Alberta and it risks becoming an albatross around taxpayers' necks.

The provincial government all but admitted that conundrum when it unveiled its budget last week. It vowed that ATB's "strategic direction" would be strengthen­ed so that taxpayers would receive "more value" from owning a bank.

"This includes clarifying the organizati­on's mandate to manage its business in a commercial and cost effective manner and avoid undue risk of loss while earning risk adjusted rates of return similar to, or better than, comparable financial institutio­ns," according to the province's budget documents.

That's a roundabout way of saying that Alberta's taxpayers are getting a poor return on their investment, and are still being exposed to too much financial risk by backstoppi­ng a public bank. The numbers speak for themselves. ATB's annual profit declined by 50 per cent on a yearover-year basis to $139-million in the financial year that ended March 31 after credit losses spiked. The province is forecastin­g ATB's net income to be $153-million in its current financial year, increasing to $243-million and $284-million in 2020-21 and 2021-22, respective­ly, according to its budget documents. But that's as good as it gets, according to the province's estimates. In 2022-23, ATB's profit is forecast to be flat.

But taxpayers have other reasons to be worried. Since the province remains both ATB's owner and its regulator, there is a risk of moral hazard as we've seen in the past. And ATB took a financial hit from the asset-backed commercial paper crisis which prompted the Alberta government in March, 2009, to prop up ATB's balance sheet with $600-million in "notional capital," an irregular paper-based transactio­n.

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regime, and a net loss for Washington and its Kurdish allies. Thus there now is bipartisan support in Congress for fresh sanctions against Turkey - after the abandonmen­t of the last set of punitive
measures.
The agreement is a net win for Russia and Bashar al-Assad's regime, and a net loss for Washington and its Kurdish allies. Thus there now is bipartisan support in Congress for fresh sanctions against Turkey - after the abandonmen­t of the last set of punitive measures.

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