Canada's 5th largest lender attributes large part of this result to its U.S. division
The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce set the tone for banks’ earnings season with a dividend hike and better-than-expected first-quarter net income, helped by a boost in earnings in its U.S. division as it looks to expand south of the border amidst slowing mortgage growth at home.
Canada’s fifth-largest lender said late last week it continues to see benefits from the purchase of Chicago-based The PrivateBank, which CIBC acquired in June 2017 and rebranded in September as CIBC Bank USA. As part of its strategy to ramp up its U.S. presence, it also purchased Chicago-based wealth management firm Geneva Advisors for roughly US$200 million last year.
“With a second full quarter’s contribution from CIBC Bank USA, we continue to perform well and deliver against our commitment to build client relationships north and south of the border,” CIBC chief executive Victor Dodig said in a conference call, as quoted by The Canadian Press.
In the latest quarter, CIBC’s U.S. commercial banking and wealth management division reported net income of $134 million in the latest quarter, up $105 million from the same period in 2017, contributing to a more than 22% increase in adjusted net income year-over-year despite slowing mortgage growth.
It’s a welcome sign for the bank, which has a larger domestic exposure than its peers and mortgages – demand for which is expected to slow under new tighter rules – also represent a bigger chunk of its loan book, according to Shannon Stemm, an analyst with Edward Jones in St. Louis.
CIBC was the first of Canada’s big lenders to report results for the quarter ended January 31, kicking off the season by raising its quarterly payment to common shareholders by three cents to $1.33 per share – even as it reported a decline in profit attributable to shareholders, which amounted to nearly $1.31 billion, down from $1.39 billion a year ago.
However on an adjusted basis, the bank said it earned a record $1.41 billion or $3.18 per diluted share for the quarter, up from $1.15 billion or $2.89 per share a year earlier. Analysts had expected an adjusted profit of $2.83 per share, according to Thomson Reuters.
Read more: Housing, NAFTA make outlook for biggest banks murkier
Industry watchers were also eyeing CIBC’s results for early signs of the impact of recent changes to the banking landscape, such as stricter rules surrounding uninsured mortgages as of January 1. Canada’s biggest banks have cautioned that the federal financial services regulator’s revised qualifying rules – requiring would-be homebuyers with a down payment larger than 20% to prove they can continue to service their mortgage if interest rates rise – could present a headwind to loan originations.
Demand for mortgages in December saw an uptick, with national sales up 4.5% according to the Canadian Real Estate Association, as buyers scrambled to snap up homes before January 1.
CIBC’s mortgage balances for the fiscal first quarter were $203 billion, up 9.1% from $186 billion a year earlier. In comparison, the bank saw a more than 12% jump in mortgage growth from $166 billion in the first quarter of 2016. Originations of Canadian uninsured residential mortgages for the quarter were $9 billion, down from $12 billion a year ago.
Christina Kramer, CIBC’s group head of personal and small business banking for Canada, said it is too early to gauge the extent of the impact of the mortgage underwriting rules, as well as the January interest rate hike.
“We saw some pull forward in November and December, so January itself is not a good indication alone,” she told analysts. “So early days, we’re not seeing any big change to customer behaviour.”