TSE:BMO

Bank of Montreal (BMO.TO)

225.53
+1.89 (0.85%)
as of May 27, 2026, 8:00:00 pm Market Open.
1164 watching
0
Investor Insights
star iconMay 27, 2026, 12:00 am

This summary was created by AI, based on 17 opinions in the last 12 months.

The Bank of Montreal (BMO) has garnered a mixed set of reviews from experts, reflecting both a positive outlook and caution regarding valuation. Many analysts praise BMO for its stable dividend and strong performance across various business lines, especially highlighting its successful operations in the U.S. Despite some concerns about potential credit risks and the impact of inflation, the Canadian banking sector remains attractive due to its oligopolistic nature and robust regulation. Some experts indicate that while the stock may not be immediately appealing due to high valuations, others believe it offers solid growth potential and encourages cautious investment strategies. Overall, while BMO is seen as a strong performer, experts urge caution, advising a watchful approach amid market corrections and considering diversification into more defensive sectors.

consensus icon
Consensus
Mixed
valuation icon
Valuation
Overvalued
review icon
Similar
RY

Most recent Opinions go here

Be up to date, don't miss your chance.

PAST TOP PICK
(A Top Pick May 23/25, Up 53%)

In view of his other two Past Top Picks, this demonstrates why you don't build a 3-stock portfolio ;) Doing well in US. Bad credit is starting to show up in non-prime, but all the banks are running squeaky-clean credit portfolios.

HOLD

Will continue to own as long as it's technically sound. Doing a great job across business lines. Not adding at this time. It can be on your list to add once markets improve after current correction.

HOLD

Likes it. Stable dividend, never cut. Assets grew in wealth management because markets went up. They get fees on the higher asset base. Banks could be under pressure if inflation starts to rise, so be cautious. For new $$, diversify elsewhere.

When rates rose in 2022, hit the hardest with loan losses (especially in US).

PARTIAL SELL

Don't have to rush out to sell. Premium valuation. He might lighten up and look for laggards such as US financials, lifecos, pipelines, utilities.

BUY ON WEAKNESS
Canadian banking sector.

Outlook is favourable. He owns BMO, RY, and TD. All 3 had good earnings, with TD probably the best. But the other two were also strong.

Tight, well-regulated oligopoly. A need, not a want. Diversified by geography and line of business. Good line of sight through the cycle to high, single-digit rate of dividend growth. He's overweight the banks.

WEAK BUY

The smaller 5 of the Canadian Big 6 banks (RY aside) tend to take turns doing well. Believes it was 2 years ago that BMO outperformed everyone, so not surprising that they lagged this year. Good US operation, and may be able to pick up some of the slack that TD's not able to capitalize on.

BUY

When he looks at the sector, great numbers across the board. Many raised dividends, ROEs are improving. Yield curve is more upward-sloping, which is helping. PCLs have been a concern and ticked up, but less than what market expected. Better growth numbers. Expectations for earnings numbers are being increased. All the names are looking good here. 

When he looks at banks, he looks at the dividend and growth at the most reasonable price. Really likes BMO here. 

DON'T BUY
Earnings report good today, reduced loan loss provisions, yet stock's gone down.

It was the lowest-quality beat of all the banks reporting. The beat was because they released provisions back into earnings. The only one of the Big 5 she doesn't own. Always trades at a premium, and she doesn't understand why. 

Issue last year of quality of US loans. Took a lot of provisions, but now has released those. This signals everything in the US is OK, but she disagrees based on where we are in the credit cycle. The release is premature.

BUY

His firm owns RY, BMO, and TD as cornerstone holdings in its dividend-growers mandate. Canadian banking is a stable, well-regulated oligopoly. Structurally profitable, heavy barriers to entry. Diversified by line of business and by geography. Its fee-based businesses should be very profitable this quarter.

One fly in ointment:  tepid loan growth demand, especially in mortgages, and to a lesser extent in commercial loans. Thinks the worst of credit loss provisions is behind the Canadian banks.

BUY

You could add to this one here. 

PARTIAL SELL

Whole Canadian banking sector is fully valued, trading effectively at record highs on valuation. Not time to load up. Time to take some profits and invest in more defensive names, as Canadian economy is on a more fragile footing than other parts of the world.

WEAK BUY

Prefers this one and remaining peers today to RY, just on valuation. Though RY is the best bank in Canada, this name trades at a far better multiple.

BUY

Broke out. So far, so good. Trend is up. Higher highs, higher lows. Nothing wrong with the chart. 

PARTIAL SELL
BMO vs. ENB

Banks look to be extended, but pipelines seem to be reaccelerating (TRP, ENB). Given his view about a potential correction coming soon, doesn't mind rotating a bit out of BMO and putting some into ENB.

COMMENT
Strategy: Sell a call in the money for a stock that's going ex-dividend. After that date, share price will go down. So the call option you sold should go down in price. When you buy back the call, you make a profit.

If you own this name and you're comfortable selling it at this level, as you think it's not going to go up from here and may even go down, then this seems like an OK strategy. 

For him, he typically likes to leave a bit of upside between where the stock's trading and where he sells the call. 

If you look at the Canadian banks, they're pretty stable businesses. Volatility's not as high, so neither are the options premiums. Selling something closer to the money, or even in the money, can make sense. You're really riding a fine line that what you expect is going to happen actually does over a short period. That's pretty hard to predict, so he'd leave a little bit offside.

Showing 1 to 15 of 954 entries

Bank of Montreal (BMO.TO) Frequently Asked Questions

What is Bank of Montreal stock symbol?

Bank of Montreal is a Canadian stock, trading under the symbol BMO.TO (previously BMO-T on Stockchase) on the Toronto Stock Exchange (BMO-CT). It is usually referred to as TSX:BMO or BMO.TO

Is Bank of Montreal a buy or a sell?

In the last year, 17 stock analysts published opinions about BMO.TO (previously BMO-T on Stockchase). 10 analysts recommended to BUY the stock. 5 analysts recommended to SELL the stock. The latest stock analyst recommendation is . Read the latest stock experts' ratings for Bank of Montreal.

Is Bank of Montreal a good investment or a top pick?

Bank of Montreal was recommended as a Top Pick by Chris Thom - CIM, DMS, FCSI on 2025-07-31. Read the latest stock experts ratings for Bank of Montreal.

Why is Bank of Montreal stock dropping?

Earnings reports or recent company news can cause the stock price to drop. Read stock experts' recommendations for help on deciding if you should buy, sell or hold the stock.

Is Bank of Montreal worth watching?

17 stock analysts on Stockchase covered Bank of Montreal in the last year. It is a trending stock that is worth watching.

What is Bank of Montreal stock price?

On 2026-05-27, Bank of Montreal (BMO.TO) stock closed at a price of $225.53.