Stock price when the opinion was issued
Taking less on credit provisions than other banks. Positive: credit situation better than others. Negative: taking more risk and, if wrong, stock would be penalized. Canada-centric. Exposed to residential mortgages and commercial real estate in Canada; two iffy sectors, but doing better than expected. Good earnings and good asset management.
Don't sell. Trading more cheaply than RY. RY commands a premium price for a premium asset.
Used to have a habit of running into sharp objects, but CEO has turned this around. Warrants consideration. Great domestic personal and commercial business, capital markets, and wealth management. Modest presence in US, and has stayed out of trouble there.
If you already own NA and RY, consider TD or BMO before this one. But if you're going to add 2 more banks to your portfolio, no quarrels with adding this one.
Owns it in his firm's dividend model. Doesn't expect a stock split, as banks have abandoned the old rule of thumb to split once stock reaches $100.
We now have an understanding that tariffs will be 35%, which will cause some havoc importing our goods into the US. But can Mark Carney grow Canada by continuing to reduce barriers and by seeing some growth between provinces? If yes, then banks in general are primed to do quite well going forward. They'll be supplying the funding for companies, infrastructure, etc.
The chart shows a V-shaped recovery since April's tariff worries. In Canada, interest rates have been cut aggressively, so the Canadian banks have skated through. Wealth management divisions are strong. Loan loss provisions are down. NA and RY are the best, but CM and BMO are reporting much better earnings, which catches his attention.
Canadian banks are a core part of anyone’s portfolio. Lots of positive stuff about them. CIBC was one of the two banks who beat expectation in last earnings. We see Canadian banks outperform from August after Q3 earnings and have to see strong earnings in Q4; otherwise they tend to underperform. Seeing some softness in the general banks. Sold their Canadian financial sector positions at the end of November. Looking to get back in the sector late January. On the technical basis, breaking above $125 or so would be positive technically. Right now, banks can still move up. It’s not that they aren’t positive at this time of the year, but it’s just that they tend to underperform the TSX Composite at the moment.