Profits dip as BMO and Scotiabank set aside hundreds of millions more to cover bad loans | CBC News

Profits dip as BMO and Scotiabank set aside hundreds of millions more to cover bad loans | CBC News

Two of Canada’s biggest lenders revealed quarterly earnings on Wednesday that suggest a gloomier outlook for Canada’s economy, with sharply lower profits and a large jump in the amount of money they’re setting aside to cover bad loans.

Bank of Montreal and Scotiabank posted quarterly results before stock markets opened on Wednesday, and while the exact numbers differed, they shared some worrisome themes.

Scotiabank said it made a profit of just over $2.1 billion in the three months up until the end of April, a decline of 21 per cent from the $2.7 billion it earned the same time last year. On an adjusted basis, the bank’s profit came in at $1.70 per share. That’s less than the $2.16 from this time last year and also less than the $1.76 that analysts were expecting.

Part of the profit drop came because the bank set aside a lot more money to cover potentially bad loans on its books. Known as “provisions for credit losses,” the closely watched metric tracks the amount of money that the bank sets aside on its books to write off loans that it thinks might go sour.

The bank set aside $709 million during the quarter. In the same period a year ago, its provisions for credit losses were only $219 million.

BMO numbers

It was a similar story at the Bank of Montreal, where the bank set aside more than $1 billion for bad loans. That’s way up from the $50 million it recorded the same time a year ago.

A big part of that increase in credit loss provisions came because of the loan book inherited from Bank of the West, an American bank that BMO purchased last December and finalized in February. The acquisition was the biggest one in BMO’s history, and while it may help the bank expand its presence in the United States over the long term, in the short term it came with at least $705 million worth of loans that the bank is electing to move into its provisions for credit losses.

The increases in non-performing loans “reflect uncertain economic conditions,” said analyst Mario Mendonca, who covers both banks for TD.

BMO’s profits took a big tumble to just over $1 billion during the quarter, well down from $4.7 billion a year ago, mostly due to costs associated with the $16-billion acquisition mentioned above. But even on an adjusted basis, the bank’s profit came in at $2.2 billion, or $2.93 per share.

That’s down from $3.23 last year and less than the $3.21 that analysts were expecting.

Shares in both lenders were down in early trading following the release of the numbers, but the news wasn’t all bad for investors. Both banks saw fit to increase their quarterly dividend to shareholders, a sign they are confident in their outlook.

BMO upped its quarterly payout by four cents to $1.47 per share, while Scotia hiked by three cents to $1.06.

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