Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Bank CEO worries shift to political uncertainty as mortgage risks ease

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jan, 2025 01:47 PM
  • Bank CEO worries shift to political uncertainty as mortgage risks ease

The heads of Canada's biggest banks are finally seeing risks around mortgage renewals easing, only for worries about tariffs and political uncertainty to take their place.

"I think the tariffs can do a lot of damage," RBC chief executive Dave McKay said Tuesday at a bank CEO conference hosted by RBC Capital Markets.

"It's disappointing to hear the rhetoric intensify, when we thought it was de-intensifying or mitigating to an extent."

The worry comes as incoming U.S. president Donald Trump has threatened to impose a 25 per cent tariff on Canadian and Mexican imports over what he says is concerns around border security.

McKay said it's not just a question of whether the U.S. will impose tariffs, but whether they'll be broad or targeted, as well as how long they might stay in place. 

"It's causing concern among everybody that it will do economic damage, and we're not sure the objectives it's trying to achieve," he said.

The bank is preparing for a variety of scenarios, said McKay.

CIBC chief executive Victor Dodig said he is also concerned about the risks, but that he's hoping it will become clear the damage tariffs would do to both countries.

"I'm sure that sensible minds will prevail in terms of looking at the integrated nature of our economy, and how do we move things forward for the benefit of American consumers and companies and Canadian consumers and companies."

He said whatever the outcome, the bank will manage through it just like it did during the pandemic, by controlling what it can — and Canada should do the same with actions like an internal free-trade agreement.

"Let's get the controllables right at home first."

Making progress domestically, however, won't be easy after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced on Monday he had suspended parliament until March 24 and would be stepping down after a Liberal leadership race. 

The uncertainty around who will lead the Liberals and what will happen with the election this year will likely affect investments in Canada, BMO chief executive Darryl White said.

"What do people do when they're uncertain? They wait ... that waiting that is a natural consequence of uncertainty, is starting I think to set in a little bit in Canada."

It's a contrast to the U.S. which he said had more uncertainty a year ago around government, interest rates and regulatory policy but is seeing spending ramp up.

"Look, you can say what you want about the outcome, but most of that uncertainty has been taken away," White said. "Set aside the drama, there's clearly a pro-growth agenda that people are signing up for."

The uncertainty on the political front is a contrast to the Canadian mortgage market, which is where much of the fretting has been focused for banks over the past couple of years.

Mortgage concerns are ebbing after the Bank of Canada started lowering its key interest rate last year to what is now 3.25 per cent, with further rate cuts expected in the months ahead. 

Borrowers have managed well through the "great renewal" of mortgages, as analysts have called the adjustment for borrowers to much higher rates than they signed on to in the early days of the pandemic. Despite the higher rates, delinquency rates remain below pre-pandemic levels.

Some 60 per cent of RBC customers should renew at lower rates, McKay noted. 

"When we look at the overall payment shocks, it's decompressed significantly."

Many Canadians are still struggling with higher payments, which have also been a drag on the economy, but that is only reinforcing the view that the Bank of Canada will keep pushing down rates aggressively in the short term, he said.

TD Bank chief operating officer Raymond Chun, who is set to take over the top job in April, said the bank already saw activity pick up late last year.

"Certainly we saw a noticeable pick up in Q4 in sales and mortgage volumes inside of TD and as an industry at large, and that was even before the full effect of the two 50 basis points decline had really played through."

Chun noted that about a third of mortgages coming up for renewal in the next two years will likely be at lower rates.

"From a credit risk management perspective, you've probably already seen the higher end."

TD is facing its own challenges though as it works to bring its anti-money laundering program up to standards following a more than US$3 billion fine last year for oversight failures in the U.S.

The bank also suspended its key financial guidance for the year as it works through a strategic review with updates expected later in the year, but Chun said the bank would provide quarterly updates on what they do know. 

There's no question though about the bank's commitment to the U.S., Chun said.

"First and foremost, we are 100 per cent committed to our franchise in the United States."

MORE National ARTICLES

Mounties in Squamish, B.C., recover stolen search-and-rescue equipment

Mounties in Squamish, B.C., recover stolen search-and-rescue equipment
Mounties in Squamish say they have recovered BC Parks and search-and-rescue equipment that was stolen this fall.  They say in a news release that police received a report on Oct. 18 that a BC Parks storage unit had been broken into overnight and "large items" stolen.

Mounties in Squamish, B.C., recover stolen search-and-rescue equipment

Wet and windy Christmas for B.C. coast, as holiday procession of storms takes aim

Wet and windy Christmas for B.C. coast, as holiday procession of storms takes aim
The weather office says a "powerful frontal system" will then arrive on the south coast and Vancouver Island Christmas morning, with strong winds and heavy rain expected to last late into the night. 

Wet and windy Christmas for B.C. coast, as holiday procession of storms takes aim

Bright Nights Train cancelled

Bright Nights Train cancelled
Vancouver's parks board says its popular Bright Nights Stanley Park Train will not return for the rest of the holiday season. It says in a news release that operations were stopped last week after exhaust from one of the train’s locomotives caused a driver to get sick. 

Bright Nights Train cancelled

Former B.C. premier Glen Clark has been appointed as the new BC Hydro chair

Former B.C. premier Glen Clark has been appointed as the new BC Hydro chair
Former B.C. premier Glen Clark is returning to the public eye, two years after leaving his high-profile position as president of Jim Pattison Group. The provincial government has announced that Clark has been appointed to chair BC Hydro's board of directors, taking over for Lori Wanamaker, whose term ends on Dec. 31. 

Former B.C. premier Glen Clark has been appointed as the new BC Hydro chair

B.C. mayor gets calls from across Canada about 'crazy' plan to recruit doctors

B.C. mayor gets calls from across Canada about 'crazy' plan to recruit doctors
A British Columbia community's "out-of-the-box" plan to ease its family doctor shortage by hiring physicians as city employees is sparking interest from across Canada, says Colwood Mayor Doug Kobayashi. The mayor said the community has hired its first family doctor for a city-operated medical clinic, and the Victoria-area city is looking to hire seven more under the first-in-Canada pilot project.

B.C. mayor gets calls from across Canada about 'crazy' plan to recruit doctors

Sentencing hearing for parents in death of Calgary toddler set for March

Sentencing hearing for parents in death of Calgary toddler set for March
A sentencing hearing for a Calgary couple in the death of their badly burned and emaciated toddler has been scheduled for next year. Sonya Pasqua and Michael Sinclair pleaded guilty last week to manslaughter. Gabriel Sinclair-Pasqua, who was 18 months old, died in 2021 after suffering major burns to a third of his body.

Sentencing hearing for parents in death of Calgary toddler set for March