Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Banks bracing for possibility oil prices will remain low for prolonged time

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2015 10:42 AM

    TORONTO — Canadian banks are taking a hard look at their energy and consumer loans as they brace for the possibility of a prolonged period of depressed oil prices.

    The chief executive of Royal Bank of Canada (TSX:RY) said RBC will begin testing its $9.6-billion portfolio of energy-related loans to see how it will perform if oil prices remain around US$45 a barrel for an extended time.

    Dave McKay says Canada's largest commercial bank has already tested how the portfolio would fare if oil prices hovered around $60 per barrel and is comfortable with the results. But, given the continued drop in oil prices, the bank will be retesting for $45 a barrel, McKay told a conference of Canadian bank CEOs on Wednesday.

    Chief executive Bill Downe says the Bank of Montreal (TSX:BMO) has tested its $5.9 billion portfolio of oil and gas-related loans — which makes up roughly two per cent of the bank's total loan book — to see how it will perform in a scenario where oil drops to $35 a barrel.

    "We have looked at the portfolio even in a scenario of $35 a barrel WTI this year, and $50 barrel WTI next year, which I think is consistent with the most difficult downside scenario you can find in the last 50 years," Downe said.

    Even in such a situation, Downe says losses to the bank would be "very, very manageable — in fact they're quite small relative to the overall size of the bank balance sheet."

    Canada's top lenders are also monitoring their portfolios of consumer loans in Western Canada, including credit cards and mortgages, which could be at risk if the drop in oil prices leads to widespread job losses.

    The price of oil has been cut in half over the past six months and traded in recent days at its lowest levels since the spring of 2009.

    Suncor, one of Canada's largest energy companies, said Tuesday it was cutting 1,000 jobs — mostly employees of contractors — and reducing its capital budget by $1 billion due to the drop in oil prices. The move followed an announcement last week by Shell Canada that it was cutting its workforce at its Albian Sands oilsands operation.

    Downe says 20 per cent of BMO's consumer loans are in the West, and he expects to see an increased number of customers who are unable to pay their credit card and mortgage debts, although the change is likely still a quarter away.

    The loan losses could extend beyond Alberta as well, said CIBC (TSX:CM) chief executive Victor Dodig.

    "The question now is: how much of this is going to be contained more locally and how much of it will ripple through the rest of the country?" Dodig said.

    The bank executives say they are also concerned about the possibility that plummeting energy prices will lead to a slowdown in the Canadian economy that will hamper their growth prospects, particularly in the personal loans business.

    "The bigger story, if there is going to be a story, is if this is a sustained period where prices of oil go lower than where they are, what happens to growth?" said Bharat Masrani, the chief executive of Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX:TD). "What happens to consumer sentiment in that part of the world?"

    While the banks were already expecting consumer borrowing in Canada to slow, Downe says the impact will be even greater than anticipated in 2015 and 2016.

    However, McKay said RBC expects to reap some benefits from the lower oil price, as well. He predicts the bank's commercial lending business in Ontario — Canada's most populous province — will see higher revenues, as the weaker loonie boosts exports to the U.S. and leads to growth in that part of the country.

    RBC also expects lower oil prices will boost economic conditions in the Caribbean — a region that is a net importer of oil — and will aid RBC's businesses there.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bill Cosby forced to confront abuse allegations in midst of Ontario show

    Bill Cosby forced to confront abuse allegations in midst of Ontario show
    LONDON, Ont. — Bill Cosby was forced to publicly confront the sexual assault allegations that have dogged him for weeks when a heckler at the second stop on his three-city Canadian tour yelled out a direct accusation.

    Bill Cosby forced to confront abuse allegations in midst of Ontario show

    Teen shot in head at Eaton Centre recalls 'total darkness' in impact statement

    Teen shot in head at Eaton Centre recalls 'total darkness' in impact statement
    TORONTO — More than two years, four surgeries and 1,200 stitches later, a teenager shot in the head in a crowded downtown food court recalled on Friday what little he remembers of the attack that left him so close to death.

    Teen shot in head at Eaton Centre recalls 'total darkness' in impact statement

    NDP veteran Yvon Godin won't seek re-election in his N.B. seat

    NDP veteran Yvon Godin won't seek re-election in his N.B. seat
    OTTAWA — Veteran New Democrat MP Yvon Godin says he won't run in this year's federal election.

    NDP veteran Yvon Godin won't seek re-election in his N.B. seat

    History museum pays $300,000 to N.S. man for world's oldest known hockey stick

    History museum pays $300,000 to N.S. man for world's oldest known hockey stick
    GATINEAU, Que. — The Canadian Museum of History has acquired what it believes is the world's oldest known hockey stick.

    History museum pays $300,000 to N.S. man for world's oldest known hockey stick

    First trials of Ebola vaccines suggest they are safe; next phase next month: WHO

    First trials of Ebola vaccines suggest they are safe; next phase next month: WHO
    The first clinical trial designed to see if two experimental Ebola vaccines actually work may begin in late January and two others are slated to start in February in West Africa, the World Health Organization said Friday.

    First trials of Ebola vaccines suggest they are safe; next phase next month: WHO

    Dalhousie University announces more penalties in Facebook dentistry scandal

    Dalhousie University announces more penalties in Facebook dentistry scandal
    HALIFAX — Dalhousie University says the 13 dentistry students who were allegedly members of a Facebook page where sexually violent content was posted will no longer attend classes with the rest of their classmates.

    Dalhousie University announces more penalties in Facebook dentistry scandal