TSE:TD

Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD.TO)

158.00
+1.76 (1.13%)
as of Jun 4, 2026, 2:37:20 pm Market Open.
2224 watching
0
Investor Insights
star iconJun 4, 2026, 12:00 am

This summary was created by AI, based on 64 opinions in the last 12 months.

Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) has shown remarkable resilience since the fallout from its money laundering penalties, recovering significantly and achieving record earnings in the last quarter. However, despite this recovery, many analysts express concern about its current valuation, noting that it trades at high PE multiples compared to historical norms for Canadian banks. The consensus indicates a prevailing belief that TD is slightly overvalued, with suggestions to trim positions rather than buy more at this stage. While the bank's strong fundamentals, solid dividends, and potential for growth in the Canadian market are highlighted, regulatory constraints in the US and diminishing growth prospects are factors pushing some investors to reconsider their positions. Overall, TD's stock performance reflects the ongoing challenges and opportunities within the Canadian banking sector.

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Consensus
Trim
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Valuation
Overvalued
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RY, RY
Unspecified

It has had a great run and is the best preforming Canadian bank. All banks have recovered since April. You can probably count on a 5 to 7% return plus the dividend.

HOLD

Past high back in 2022 was around $108. In the doghouse until May of this year. One of his biggest positions. He's riding the wave. Could break above $100 very easily, and $108 isn't out of the question. Momentum is peaking right now, but he's seeing a drop in volume (which indicates sideways motion or pullback). Be cautious, it's overextended.

If it dropped back to $90, he'd definitely consider exiting.

BUY ON WEAKNESS

This situation highlights a massively important point. When these high-index component companies trip and do a faceplant, they get massacred. Everybody jumps on the hate train, and all you hear are negative comments. Looking at the chart, stock's probably up 25% this year from the point of peak negativity. 

The biggest source of return in any investment is the change in the multiple. TD can still grow at a low single-digit rate, and then the multiple rerates. It went from 9x PE to 11.5x PE. Now slightly above his buy price. Excellent job righting the ship, and it was all the excess capital that was the key.

Longer term will do reasonably well. For those looking for income, and you get a bit of earnings growth. The big longer-term question is whether it stays in the US or not. Unlikely to commit additional capital to build out its platform in the US.

WAIT

Although it is a great operation, wait for a pullback. There is a potential slowdown and job losses. Also we're getting to the season where banks typically don't do well and many mortgages will be maturing.

DON'T BUY

Stock's rallied simply because of the big selloff when $3B fine was announced. Still in penalty box in US -- can't grow their business there, so where are they going to? Only thing left to buy in Canada is LB, and no one seems to want it because it's mainly commercial mortgages. Wants a bigger footprint in digital, so it's laying off staff.

Don't buy here. US growth overhang could last a number of years. Not a lot of upside.

BUY

It's the best Canadian bank performing so far this year, but the worst in 2024. Their US problems are not yet behind them (they have to work through the asset cap, part of the penalty for money laundering). They have limited growth in the US, but also won't need capital to grow. So they could buy back shares. TD trades at a discount, so he likes this for the long term.

HOLD
Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research

The company is recovering from its US indiscretions, and recent earnings were good. Credit quality remains good, and recent cost-cutting efforts may help offset any potential economic weakness. The stock remains cheap with a good, secure dividend.
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BUY

Won't be an immediate fix, but remember that the market is a forward-looking, discounting mechanism. Q2 earnings results were much better than expected. Biggest segment is Canadian personal and commercial banking, and that missed expectations. Sizeable outperformance in US retail, strong outperformance in wealth management, did very well in capital markets.

Most over-capitalized bank in Canada. Will be buying back a lot of stock. Working hard to remediate money-laundering deficiencies in US. All its plans should help to rebuild investor confidence and restore its premium multiple.

WAIT
Reports next week.

Was a screaming buy back at $78. Likes its Canadian banking business. Sold Schwab, redeployed proceeds back into Canada. Now at $90, she'd be hesitant to go into any bank right now before earnings. Suspects all banks will need to increase credit provisions. Wait to see plan for growing in Canada.

Over the very long term, it and RY are the 2 premier Canadian banks, so she'd be OK paying a premium to own.

HOLD

It was losing last year but is winning this year and in fact is the only Canadian bank up this year. He is hesitant about doubling a position at this point since it should go sideways.

BUY

Coming out of a really vulnerable time with money laundering. Settled case, implemented new protocols. US assets capped; but TD shifted some assets around, giving them space to grow without running afoul of the cap. New CEO is very committed to turning over a new leaf.

WEAK BUY

The steep fines they paid for money laundering are all in the rear-view mirror. TD is more exposed in the US vs. its peers. Is trading at a high valuation in this space. The worst is behind them. Pays nearly a 5% dividend. Other banks are his favourite, but you can own this.

DON'T BUY

Q1 was a much-needed low-drama quarter. Schwab sale. Market appreciated the quicker CEO transition. Wealth management good, strong capital markets. Still trading at a premium to the group, and that's not warranted because of growth limits in US.

All banks are at risk if economy darkens. But if economic environment is OK, he thinks BMO has the best upside.

BUY

Asset cap in US will be in place for a number of years; once it's eventually lifted, that will be an avenue for growth. US accounts for about 25-30% of earnings. Bank feels it can still grow in Canada. Valuation still quite attractive at 10x PE. Path back to growth will take a while. Yield is quite attractive too.

BUY
TD vs. BAC

Likes TD a lot. Very undervalued at 10x PE. Potential for multiple to rerate in medium term. More upside as it distances itself from the overhang of regulatory infractions. All that should give you a better total return. He'd pick TD.

For BAC, even with deregulation in US, the big banks are already so large, it's hard to imagine they'd be allowed to get even bigger.

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