Canada lenders exit pandemic year with profit growth in reach

Bloomberg

Canada’s largest banks are within striking distance of resuming profit growth — with the help of government programs that prevented major loan losses.
The country’s six biggest banks are expected to post an 11% average decline in adjusted earnings per share when they report fiscal first-quarter results next week, according to analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The comparable quarter a year earlier was the last one before Covid-19 hit. But if actual results beat projections at the same rate they did in the fourth quarter, the banks would eke out a 3.4% profit gain.
Whether or not Canada’s banks manage a surprise return to growth, they’re emerging from the first year of the pandemic having avoided a severe financial crisis largely because of stimulus programs that kept consumers and businesses afloat. With the economy stabilising, banks may be able to set aside less money to absorb souring loans, which would lift profit.
“Now that we’ve got credit put to bed for now, the focus will return to who’s growing earnings the fastest and who has the ability to continue to do so,” John Aiken, an analyst at Barclays Plc, said in an interview.
The S&P/TSX Commercial Banks Index, which tracks the performance of Canada’s eight biggest publicly traded banks, falls 0.3% over the past 12 months, compared with a 2.3% gain for the broader S&P/TSX Composite Index. Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce has been the best performer among the country’s lenders, rising 4.7% in the past year, and Laurentian Bank of Canada the worst, slumping 27%.
Canada’s six largest banks are expected to set aside a combined $2.89 billion in provisions for credit losses in the quarter ended January 31, according to analysts’ estimates. That would be up 24% from a year earlier, before the pandemic took hold in North America, and 11% from the fourth quarter. In that quarter, however, analysts had projected the group would report a combined C$5.32 billion in provisions, overshooting the actual results by almost 61%.
Because of continued government support and potential economic improvements, Aiken is forecasting that total first-quarter provisions will drop 9% from the fourth quarter. There’s a good chance banks will report even lower provisions than estimated and possibly reverse earlier allowances, he said.
“The next step is how comfortable are investors going to be with that, and will the banks receive full valuation credit for an earnings beat that’s predicated just on better provisions or a reversal of allowances?” Aiken said. “A headline beat on that basis may not necessarily warrant a strong share-price reaction.”
Possibly more important to investors will be the performance of the banks’ core lending businesses. Growth in residential mortgages may continue to be relatively strong, while other types of consumer lending, such as credit cards, could remain soft, Aiken said.
He said he’s “reasonably hopeful” that banks will post some growth in commercial lending, particularly in sectors that haven’t been hit by lockdowns.
Capital-markets divisions, which benefited from the volatility of the past year to post record quarterly results, softening the blow of weaker lending.
While earnings from those divisions are likely to rise from a year earlier, recent results from the US signal that strength may be waning. US investment banks saw a 1% decline in capital-markets revenue in the fourth quarter from the previous three months due to weaker trading results, particularly in fixed income, currencies and commodities, Royal Bank of Canada analyst Darko Mihelic said in a note to clients.
“We believe the Canadian banks’ capital markets revenues in the first quarter of 2021 will trend in a similar way as the US banks,” Mihelic wrote. “Despite differences in fiscal periods, the correlation between the Canadian banks’ and US banks’ capital markets revenues is relatively high.”
Expenses also will be a focus. After costs were kept in check in fiscal 2020, they might climb this year, Aiken said. The banks’ non-interest expenses may rise 3.4% in the fiscal first quarter from the previous three months, he estimates. The ability to keep those increases in check will be a key differentiator among the banks, he said.
“In a lower-revenue-growth environment,” Aiken said, “the banks that do the best job of containing expense growth will be the ones that have the stronger quarters.”

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