
TSE:RY
This summary was created by AI, based on 56 opinions in the last 12 months.
Royal Bank (RY-T) is seen as a strong performer in the Canadian banking sector, boasting significant strengths in diverse areas including wealth management and capital markets. Experts laud its consistent dividend growth, with some analysts highlighting an average annual increase of over 10% in dividends. Despite these strengths, there are concerns about the current valuation, as RY is trading at a premium compared to historical averages, leading some to suggest trimming positions or waiting for a better entry point. The bank's recent quarterly earnings show resilience in the Canadian economy and increased earnings in capital markets, making it a top pick by several analysts. However, overall sentiment reflects caution due to high valuations and potential economic challenges ahead.
Both have a very large domestic presence, which helps them in this environment. Both had very good numbers last quarter and are very good businesses. As expected, all banks increased credit provisions.
RY will benefit more from its large capital markets business. Volatility helps capital markets a lot; perhaps you won't get the M&A, but a lot of trading goes on with equity, debt, and other derivatives. It's global. Expectation in US of deregulation in financial services; if so, RY will benefit a lot more than NA.
NA is smaller and more focused in Quebec, though the CWB acquisition is changing that.
Good time to buy. Multiple has contracted on prospect of a slowing economy and potential for increased loan loss provisions. As a group, banks have been increasing loan loss provisions for a couple of years. Unknown how tariffs will impact economy; but RY is diversified with strong retail deposit base. HSBC Canada integration going well, source of future growth. Attractive dividend, increases a bit each year.
Value scores 8/10, fundamentals 8/10. King of capital, resilience, and diversified lending. Steady, consistent beats compared to the other Canadian banks. Strong Q1, shrugging off a lot of the rate cut noise. Still sees upside in wealth management and US expansion. Rock-solid balance sheet that can weather any storm.
Slowing mortgage growth, which could continue if Canadian housing slows and tariffs ramp up. Core hold for her on reliability and growth.
You have to take all the indicators together. For example if the price is going up, but momentum is slowing, you know it's going to be bad news for the stock eventually.
This chart hit a high ~$180, pulled back, and is attempting to hit it again. That will be a resistance point, which needs to be cracked. If momentum's already overbought, and it's about to hit resistance, he'd say it has less chance of going through resistance. However, if it's hooking up through the level, then you could see it go through $180.