CIBC releases Q2 report


Wednesday, May 23rd, 2018

Q2 showed better than expected returns

Armina Ligaya
REP

TORONTO _ The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce reported better-than-expected earnings for its second quarter with a nearly 25 per cent increase in net income, year over year, due to strong results at home and south of the border helped by its U.S. acquisitions last year.

The lender, the first of the large Canadian banks to report its latest results, said Wednesday it earned a profit attributable to common shareholders of $1.29 billion or $2.89 per diluted share for the quarter ended April 30, up from $1.04 billion or $2.59 per diluted share a year ago.

On an adjusted basis, Canada’s fifth-largest bank said it earned $1.32 billion or $2.95 per diluted share for the quarter ended April 30, up from $1.06 billion or $2.64 a year earlier.

Analysts had expected a profit of $2.81 per share, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.

`”In the second quarter, each of our business units performed well,” CIBC chief executive Victor Dodig said in a statement.

“We delivered robust earnings growth with continued progress on our strategy to build a relationship-oriented bank for a modern world with high quality, diversified earnings growth and disciplined expense and capital management.”

The lender’s Canadian personal and small business banking division reported a 16 per cent increase in net income to $584 million. The increase came despite slowing growth in mortgage lending amid tighter regulations, higher interest rates and April national housing sales activity at lows not seen in several years.

CIBC’s spot mortgage balance for the second quarter was $203 billion, up 6.8 per cent from a year ago, but flat compared with the first quarter. By comparison, in

the second quarter of 2017, CIBC’s spot mortgagebalance was $190 billion, up 12.4 per cent from the previous year and up 2.2 per cent from the previous quarter.

Meanwhile, the lender’s domestic commercial banking and wealth management arm earned $310 million for the quarter, marking a nine per cent increase from the same period a year ago.

CIBC’s U.S commercial banking and wealth management arm saw a significant jump in net income in the second quarter, climbing 431 per cent year-over-year to $138 million. It was boosted by the acquisition of Chicago-based PrivateBancorp in June last year, later rebranded as CIBC Bank USA. The bank also acquired Chicago-based private wealth management firm Geneva Advisors in the fourth quarter of 2017.

The lender’s capital markets arm, however, saw a seven per cent decrease in net income to $249 million compared with one year ago “primarily due to higher non-interest expenses and a higher effective tax rate, partially offset by higher revenue.”

The bank’s provisions for credit losses, or money set aside for bad loans, was $212 million, up $33 million or 18 per cent from the second quarter of 2017. CIBC said this was primarily due to an increase on provisions on impaired loans due to the inclusion of the results of CIBC Bank USA. As well, this marked the second quarter which reflects a new accounting standard that puts a greater emphasis on a bank’s expected losses over the life of the loan, and in turn, introduce more volatility to the measure.

The bank’s common equity tier 1 ratio, a key measure of the bank’s financial health, was 11.2 per cent, up from 10.8 per cent in the previous quarter but down from 12.2 a year ago.

Gabriel Dechaine, an analyst with National Bank of Canada Financial Markets, said CIBC’s latest quarterly results were positive with “exceptional results” in Canadian personal and commercial banking 

The Canadian Press

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