Sunday, April 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Royal Bank pulls out of the Caribbean, prepares for slower growth: analyst

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Nov, 2014 10:21 AM

    TORONTO — The latest decision by Royal Bank (TSX:RY) to exit its international business in the Caribbean is another sign that Canadian banks are cutting their losses in the region and cleaning house, an analyst said Friday after RBC confirmed its making changes at its wealth management division.

    "What we're seeing is the banks are doing a thorough evaluation of their business mix and figuring out what makes sense long term and what is probably best left in the hands of someone else," said Craig Fehr, an analyst with Edward Jones in St. Louis, Mo., on Friday.

    Canada's largest bank said the Caribbean move, which follows the sale of its Jamaican operations earlier this year at a loss, will affect international wealth management teams in Toronto, Montreal and the U.S., will result in an undetermined number of job losses.

    One media report stated the restructuring would affect about 300 employees, a figure that RBC refused to confirm.

    "While regrettably there will be some job losses, it would be premature at this stage to estimate the number of employees that will be impacted as we are currently considering a number of strategic options for these businesses," said RBC spokeswoman Claire Holland in an email.

    RBC said these efforts will help the bank focus on serving high net worth and ultra-high net worth clients in key areas for expansion, including Canada, the U.S., the British Isles and Asia.

    It added that the overall restructuring will affect RBC's Wealth Management division. Its RBC Suisse business in Europe will also undergo a strategic review.

    This move by RBC follows a similar one announced earlier this month by Scotiabank (TSX:BNS), which is planning to cut 1,500 jobs — about two-thirds of them in Canada. None of its domestic branches is slated for closure but Scotiabank said its international banking arm will shut 120 of its foreign branches, including in Mexico and the Caribbean region.

    CIBC (TSX:CM), which has maintained a presence in the Caribbean since the 1920s, said in September that it planned to focus on managing expenses amid challenges in the region.

    Fehr said Canadian banks are taking the prudent step of reorganizing their businesses, as the sector prepares for lower profitability.

    "I think we're moving into the next phase of the economic cycle — particularly domestically — where Canadian consumers will probably demand less of personal loans and certainly mortgages," Fehr said.

    "So the bread and butter source of profitability for Canadian banks is perhaps losing some of its momentum, so they're perhaps looking for different avenues for growth and employ capital to different areas going forward."

    The banks may also be reorganizing ahead of the likely possibility of higher interest rates coming from the Bank of Canada sometime in 2015. The central bank's key short-term interest rate has been at 1.0 per cent since September 2010, making it relatively inexpensive for the banks' customers to borrow money to make major purchases such as real estate and vehicles.

    "We're seeing all bank management take a look at their businesses. For the last several years, they learned how to operate in this low interest rate environment," said Fehr. "I now think it's a prudent move on behalf of the banks to try and identify how and where they can position their businesses in an environment where rates ultimately start to rise."

    Like several other major Canadian banks, RBC is undergoing a change in upper management after the retirement of long-time chief executives. RBC's newly appointed CEO Dave McKay took over in August from Gord Nixon. Scotiabank's CEO Brian Porter took over the top job from Rick Waugh last November. CIBC's Victor Dodig became CEO in September and TD's Bharat Masrani officially became the bank's chief executive on Nov. 1.

    RBC is Canada's largest bank, offering a wide range of financial services including personal and commercial banking, large-scale capital funding, investor services, and insurance.

    RBC's pullout from the Caribbean international wealth management business follows this year's sale of its Jamaican banking division, at a loss. Despite the RBC Jamaica items, the bank had a profit of nearly $2.4 billion in the quarter ended July 31, including a record $285 million at Wealth Management, up 22 per cent from a year earlier.

    The bank's fourth-quarter and fiscal 2014 annual results on Dec. 3. As of the end of July, it's nine-month profit was $6.67 billion including $100 million in losses related to the sale of RBC Jamaica and $32 million for post-employment benefits and restructuring in the Caribbean between Nov. 1 and July 31.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police
    TORONTO — Four people have been arrested in a shooting in northwest Toronto that sent five people to hospital, one with life-threatening injuries, police said Thursday.

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Mother of Woman Killed In Kamloops Crash Is 'Utterly And Completely Shattered'

    Mother of Woman Killed In Kamloops Crash Is 'Utterly And Completely Shattered'
    The mother of one of two people killed by a driver who crossed into the other lane on the Trans-Canada Highway near Spences Bridge says she is "utterly and completely shattered."

    Mother of Woman Killed In Kamloops Crash Is 'Utterly And Completely Shattered'

    Coquitlam Man Charged For Keying Over 100 Vehicles In The Lower Mainland

    Coquitlam Man Charged For Keying Over 100 Vehicles In The Lower Mainland
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Charges have been approved for a man accused of keying over 100 Vancouver-area vehicles this month.

    Coquitlam Man Charged For Keying Over 100 Vehicles In The Lower Mainland

    Passport Fees A Cash Cow For Federal Government

    Passport Fees A Cash Cow For Federal Government
    The cost for a five-year passport increased to $120 from $87 last year, while a new 10-year passport was introduced at a cost of $160.

    Passport Fees A Cash Cow For Federal Government

    Nisga'a Sign Pipeline Benefits Deal With B.C., Back LNG Projects

    Nisga'a Sign Pipeline Benefits Deal With B.C., Back LNG Projects
    VICTORIA — The Nisga'a Nation has signed an agreement with the B.C. government to receive benefits from proposed liquefied natural gas projects.

    Nisga'a Sign Pipeline Benefits Deal With B.C., Back LNG Projects

    Yukon man tells court he can legally shoot wolves because of aboriginal rights

    Yukon man tells court he can legally shoot wolves because of aboriginal rights
    WHITEHORSE — A First Nations' man who claims to have an aboriginal right to shoot wolves has pleaded not guilty to three charges under the Yukon Wildlife Act.

    Yukon man tells court he can legally shoot wolves because of aboriginal rights

    PrevNext