18 January 2008

CIBC: The Bank Most Likely to Walk Into a Sharp Object

  


The Globe and Mail, Sinclair Stewart, Tara Perkins, Boyd Erman, 18 January 2007

The week before Christmas, a group of senior bankers gathered at the Toronto offices of Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce to work out the details of an emergency funding effort.

For CIBC chief executive officer Gerry McCaughey, it had been both a miserable and taxing month, doubtless the most difficult of his 21/2-year reign atop the bank. The bank had taken $753-million in writedowns because of its entanglement with a spiralling subprime mortgage mess, and recently stunned investors with the acknowledgment that it had $10-billion worth of hedged exposure to that market.

What these investors didn't know was that CIBC was preparing to write down an additional $2-billion in a matter of weeks, enough to make it one of the costliest misadventures in Canadian banking history.

Mr. McCaughey, whose entire tenure to this point had been geared toward erasing the taint of previous scandals, methodically stripping away risk and rehabilitating the bank's maverick reputation, knew that he would have to make senior management changes, and was already in secret negotiations to recruit his close friend Richard Nesbitt, who runs the Toronto Stock Exchange, as a replacement for Brian Shaw as head of the gaffe-prone investment bank, CIBC World Markets.

Mr. Shaw, who probably suspected at this time that his days were numbered, nevertheless remained in Toronto while his family went to Mexico on vacation, helping to carry out one of Mr. McCaughey's imperatives: Defusing potential bombs by exiting whatever remained of the bank's structured product businesses. About 40 consultants had also been brought in to help CIBC clean up the debris.

The most pressing issue was the bank's balance sheet. Given the grisly prognosis for the subprime market, it had become clear that CIBC would likely have to take billions of dollars in additional charges to mark down the value of its holdings, a scenario that would erode the bank's capital levels and could put them dangerously close to minimum regulatory limits.

At a board meeting in December, Mr. McCaughey and his fellow directors agreed that the bank would have to approach private and public investors to raise close to $3-billion, and that it should do so as fast as practicable: Any delay could make the effort more costly, if not impossible, given that conditions were deteriorating almost daily.

On Dec. 18, Mr. McCaughey hired UBS as a financial adviser, in part because of the firm's strength in the banking sector, and in part because of his respect for Oliver Sarkozy, UBS's joint global head of financial institutions – and, incidentally, the half-brother of French President Nicholas Sarkozy. The two bankers had met when CIBC purchased an additional stake in FirstCaribbean International Bank in 2006, and had remained close since that deal, keeping in touch with regular telephone conversations.

The initial meeting, in Toronto, was supposed to last a half hour, but went much longer, thanks to an extended conversation about history between Mr. McCaughey and Mr. Sarkozy – surely no surprise to the CIBC contingent, who are well acquainted with their boss's tendency to digress.

When they did get down to business, Mr. McCaughey insisted that he would not merely issue a chunk of stock in a private placement to large institutional investors – he wanted a sizable piece to be sold to the public as well. The deal would also have to be straight equity: CIBC couldn't issue preferred shares, as many of its U.S. peers have done to bail themselves out of similar trouble, because the bank was already up against a cap on these securities.

Throughout the holidays – even on Christmas Day – the bankers finalized details of the plan, and kept in touch daily on 8 a.m. phone calls. As the New Year approached, they drew up a list of private parties who might be enticed to buy $1.5-billion worth of stock; an additional $1.25-billion would be sold in the market to regular investors.

The list included the Ontario Teacher's Pension Plan; Asian tycoon Li Ka-shing, once a major shareholder of the bank, and a customer dating back almost four decades; Canada Pension Plan Investment Board; insurer Manulife Financial Corp., once rumoured to be a possible merger partner for CIBC; the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec; and the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System.

On Monday, Jan. 7 – the first day back from holidays for many on Bay Street – the bank dropped the bombshell: Mr. Nesbitt would leave the TSX and replace Mr. Shaw as head of CIBC World Markets; Tom Woods, the chief financial officer, would be placed in charge of the faltering risk management operation, taking over from Ken Kilgour; David Williamson, a well-regarded former executive at life insurer Clarica, would be brought in as CFO; and Nick LePan, the past Superintendent of Financial Institutions, would join the board.

A few days prior to this announcement, CIBC had secretly begun to contact private investors, and initially the hope was to unveil the capital-raising effort in the second week of January. But there was a glitch. Teachers, which had contemplated taking a large piece of the deal, was demanding more stringent terms than CIBC was willing to offer. The bank balked, and Teachers left the table, forcing CIBC to bring in another investor.

Other than causing a small delay, however, this did little to upset the bank's plans; in fact, the participation was so strong – abetted by an offering price that was about 13 per cent lower than where CIBC's stock was trading – that another pension fund, the Public Sector Pension Investment Board, was refused a piece of the deal when it attempted to get in at the 11th hour.

But once news of the capital injection hit the markets, reaction was mixed. While some applauded Mr. McCaughey's prudence, and agreed that this would cushion the blow, others viewed it as a grim portent.

The bank could have absorbed the $2-billion it planned to write down in the first quarter of this year, but adding more capital was tantamount to an expectation – if not an admission – that more was to come.

New and improved CIBC

On the last day of May, 2007, a group of senior management at CIBC huddled in a boardroom and prepared to begin a conference call with analysts. It had been a good second quarter, for the most part. For more than a year, Mr. McCaughey had been painstakingly laying out his vision for the New and Improved CIBC: no more fumbling after Wall Street glory, no more over-the-top risk-taking.

This was a return to your grandmother's bank, a boring cash cow that catered to retail customers, lent money to Canadian corporate clients, managed financial wealth, and augmented this with a strong, but plain vanilla, investment bank.

So far, so good, investors seemed to be saying.

Of course, banks can't control the economy, and CIBC, like most in the industry, could see trouble on the horizon. In the previous few months, there were worrisome signs emanating from the U.S. housing market, which was suffering rising defaults among so-called “subprime” borrowers: that is, people with weak credit histories that had purchased a home at higher interest rates. Billions of dollars worth of these mortgages were bundled into complex securities known as collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs, and then sold off in chunks to large investors, including banks.

Smart investors were starting to ask questions. On the May conference call, a hedge fund manager, Mark Cicirelli, asked a seemingly arcane question about CIBC's exposure to a small CDO called Tricadia 2006-07, from which the bank had apparently purchased $330-million worth of securities backed by mortgages: How much money did the bank stand to lose if the mortgage market fell off a cliff, something that was now looking more and more likely?

Not much, replied Brian Shaw, head of CIBC's investment bank. He explained that Tricadia pooled together a series of reasonably good-quality CDOs, and the result was a security that was highly rated by the credit rating agencies.

“I guess I would just conclude,” he offered, “by saying in summary our risk in this space is not at all major.”

Mr. Cicirelli wasn't altogether convinced by the explanation. Nor, for that matter, was Mr. McCaughey.

‘De-risking the business'

For the next few weeks after the call, Mr. McCaughey attempted to get the measure of CIBC's dealings with the worsening subprime market and, autodidact that he is, make himself an expert on the subject. Although he was not intimately aware of the bank's CDO activities, given they were such a small part of the bank's overall business, sources said the Tricadia question left him uneasy: History had long since taught him that if someone smelled smoke at CIBC, a fire was probably not far behind.

As June progressed, this smoke only thickened. A growing host of subprime casualties was appearing, headlined by a major blowup at a hedge fund operated by Bear Stearns, Wall Street's fifth-largest player.

Despite reassurances from some of his managers that the majority of these CDOs were not merely safe, but also insured, Mr. McCaughey began questioning everyone, from department heads to front-line traders. Often, sources said, he would request sheaves of information, take it home on the weekend, and arrive Monday morning armed with a series of questions.

The answers, it soon became apparent, were of little comfort, either to Mr. McCaughey or the board, which received a debriefing on the issue during the middle of the month.

CIBC, a bank whose mantra had become “de-risking,” was sitting on $1.7-billion worth of unhedged CDOs, much of which were backed by subprime mortgages – in other words, the bank had not bought protection from insurers to guard against the possibility of default on this portfolio.

A further $10-billion worth – a staggering amount – had indeed been hedged, but $3.5-billion of that amount was hedged with a single insurer. Normally, that kind of concentration would elicit concern, but Mr. McCaughey was told by some managers that there was little to worry about: These securities were rated triple-A – in other words, very safe and low-yielding – and on top of that, CIBC had purchased protection from an A-rated bond insurer.

“As we were de-risking the business, it was an area we didn't get to,” conceded one director. “We didn't think of it as high risk.”

By the time they did, it was all but too late – in the second week of July, the CDO market collapsed, leaving the bank with little means of offloading its holdings or buying further protection.

Two years after arriving as CEO, and working to overcome a $2.4-billion (U.S.) settlement with Enron Corp. investors, Mr. McCaughey was facing the possibility he might have to write down most of the value of his $1.7-billion worth of unhedged positions, leaving the bank with a punitive charge. Little did he know at the time, that that was the least of his worries.

A triumph of alchemy

It's logical to ask, given the bank's self-proclaimed focus on risk, just how CIBC could blunder into what one director described as “a catastrophe.” To be fair, a good portion of the problem was systemic, and any investment bank that had the misfortune of playing in this game has been savaged, as the examples of Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, UBS, and Bear Stearns, among others, have made painfully clear. So far, global banks have written off more than $100-billion in subprime-related mishaps, and the toll continues to climb.

So how could some of the shrewdest minds in the financial world be so horribly gulled?

The explosion of CDOs in recent years is a triumph of alchemy; financial engineers, looking to create a more liquid market for asset-backed securities, devised a way to repackage questionable assets in a way that won top marks from credit rating agencies.

The process is notoriously complex, and has several permutations, but a basic scenario would look something like this. An investment bank pools together various forms of debt, like subprime mortgages, into a CDO structure. The structure is then divided into layers, or “tranches:” The top portion, the most highly rated, would have the least chance of default but would pay the lowest interest. As one descends through the layers, the risk climbs, and so do the premiums to investors.

The theory behind CDOs was that they could diversify risk by slicing it up and dispersing it widely throughout the financial system. Of course, the appetite for these securities fuelled the need for more and more product, which meant that many people who shouldn't have qualified for mortgages – or who were likely to default once their payments increased – were approved for homes they couldn't afford.

Once the mortgage market collapsed, it triggered a domino effect in the financial system, decimating the value of CDOs, forcing banks to take charges, and threatening the stability of the very insurers from whom banks like CIBC bought protection.

The glaring flaw in this meltdown was the ratings: In retrospect, these subprime-backed securities look nowhere near as safe as the triple-A paper issued by the world's bluest of blue-chip companies. Yet many were rated as such, thanks to clever financial manoeuvring by the originators of these products – and, many would say, sloppy procedures at some of the world's top credit rating agencies.

Which brings us back to CIBC. The important thing about ratings is how they affect a bank's capital position. Banks are required by regulators to backstop their investments with capital; the higher the rating, the less capital required, since the security is perceived as a relatively low-risk investment. That also means a bank can amass a much larger portfolio of triple-A securities than it could with lower-rated investments.

One of the first things Mr. McCaughey did when he arrived at CIBC was reduce the amount of economic capital at his investment bank by 50 per cent, in essence, drastically reducing its risk profile and tilting more of the bank toward predictable retail earnings.

In theory, that kind of move would force CIBC out of undesirable businesses by putting a chokehold on capital.

In practice, something rather different happened. CIBC migrated to more highly rated securities, in order to ease up on capital, and saw an opportunity in the burgeoning CDO market.

The bank accumulated much of its $12-billion worth of CDO exposure over the past 18 months. Sometimes it would act as guarantor. Sometimes it would actually help structure the deals. And sometimes it would simply be a buyer.

“They acted as sales agent, guarantor, underwriter,” said one person familiar with the bank's involvement. “It was for information flow; you create a body of knowledge, and you become a player.”

Picture this. An investment bank originates a CDO, and asks CIBC to guarantee – or essentially insure – a senior tranche of triple-A-rated notes. The bank says fine, since the capital requirements would be minimal, and then, for added caution, takes out the equivalent of a reinsurance policy with another bond insurer. The bank collects a premium as a guarantor, pays out a smaller premium to the insurer, and pockets the difference. In other cases, when the bank was trying to help a deal along, it would take a chunk of triple-A securities onto its own books without buying protection: The irony is that these securities were seen as having such low risk – and consequently, paid such meagre returns – that it wasn't easy to offload them.

Even so, as several executives and directors have privately pointed out, taking unprotected positions in complex derivatives was antithetical to the strategy that Mr. McCaughey had been preaching for the bank: Focusing on core areas of strength, and exiting some of the more exotic areas where the potential for damage far outstripped the possible rewards.

Other Canadian banks largely steered clear of this structured product market, but not CIBC, which has shown an almost genetic predisposition toward following whatever the pack is doing in New York or London, usually with abysmal consequences (Enron and the U.S. mutual fund trading scandal being two of the more recent examples).

“CIBC was not in the business of – and should not have been in the business of – investing in these things for their own account,” said one senior source at the bank.

“Somebody on the business side, early in the year, should have seen that this was occurring. We ended up sitting on stuff we shouldn't have been sitting on. It's a management and accountability issue.”

The hedged book bites

Initially, CIBC appeared to emerge somewhat less scathed than had been expected. In August, the bank ended weeks of speculation by revealing publicly it would take a $290-million charge on $1.7-billion worth of unhedged exposure to CDOs underpinned by residential mortgages.

At this point, other than a few pockets of muttering, no one paid much attention to the hedged book. There was even some cautious optimism. In September, the U.S. Federal Reserve cut the benchmark interest rate by 0.5 percentage points, triggering a mini-rally that appeared to cauterize the bleeding in the subprime market.

But the optimism was short-lived.

By October, the indexes that measure the health of the subprime market were foundering again. At the end of the month, Merrill Lynch reported $8.4-billion (U.S.) in charges, and fired its CEO, Stan O'Neal. Citigroup, meanwhile, unleashed the first in a series of writedowns – $5.9-billion – and its embattled leader, Charles Prince, soon resigned.

On Nov. 5, CIBC parted ways with the head of its debt division, Phipps Lounsbery, who ultimately had responsibility for the CDO book (the same day, incidentally, that Mr. McCaughey unloaded his money-losing U.S. investment bank to Oppenheimer Holdings).

But the trouble was just beginning.

Two days after Mr. Lounsbery departed, ACA, the insurer with which CIBC had hedged $3.5-billion worth of subprime-backed securities, reported a massive loss, and cratered in the market. Standard & Poor's responded by placing ACA on credit watch negative, signalling a possible rating cut.

Such a move would be disastrous for CIBC: If ACA was pushed into default, and could no longer provide insurance, CIBC could be forced to write off billions of dollars. Suddenly, the $10-billion hedged book – up to this point regarded as relatively safe – was in serious jeopardy.

“You expect hedges to work,” one director said. “We wished we didn't have one [large] single exposure … but most of our focus was on the unhedged.”

From a risk-management perspective, the decision to hedge so heavily with a single insurer – and a shaky one at that – appears foolhardy. Sources said CIBC risk experts and traders would “work down the book,” meaning they would hedge with a triple-A-rated insurer for what they could, and then migrate down through the ranks. Others have posited that ACA may have given them more favourable pricing terms for such a large chunk of business.

Regardless of how safe the underlying investments appeared, executives and directors at CIBC acknowledge it was a serious mistake to rely so heavily on one counterparty, and that the risk systems were flawed in that respect.

As ACA teetered, CIBC held a board meeting, and Mr. McCaughey and the directors ran through their options. In the short term, they would signal to the market an additional $463-million in charges on their unhedged securities, which had further declined in value throughout the fall. Longer term, however, they realized they faced more drastic measures.

“We had to keep the bank on the track of refocusing World Markets,” explained one director. “And then there was the need to bring in new management. We felt we had to move quickly on that to restore confidence. When all is said and done, we needed a new management team to continue Gerry's strategy and execution.”

Elsewhere, some investors have wondered why Mr. McCaughey's own job was not imperilled by this costly pratfall, seeing how similar mistakes sealed the fate of banking CEOs in the U.S.

But several directors at CIBC, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Mr. McCaughey continues to have their full backing. For one thing, they noted, these securities had received the imprimatur of credit rating agencies, and their collapse gored just about everyone in this area of the market. Secondly, given CDOs were a small and esoteric part of the bank's overall business, the directors maintained the warning signs would not have naturally risen to the CEO's office.

“It's clear he got let down in one part of the business that no one expected to be a problem,” a board member said. “This is a damn shame, because that strategy [of reducing risk] is a good one, and Gerry was well down the track.”

The popular guessing game now is how much more pain CIBC will have to bear. The bank seems to believe the worst is over, but some analysts remain skeptical, especially in light of news this week surrounding bond insurers, the firms like ACA that provide hedges on the CDOs.

On Thursday, credit rating agency Moody's Investors Service put the ratings of bond insurer MBIA Insurance Corp. on review for a possible downgrade. That came just a day after Ambac Assurance Corp. reported record losses and was itself placed under review, along with all of the securities it guaranteed.

It's not known how much, if any, of CIBC's exposure might be hedged with Ambac or MBIA. In early December, the bank said it had five triple-A-rated counterparties and two double-A-rated counterparties.

Even if the worst of the storm has passed, CIBC still faces a difficult test, not only in recapturing the confidence of investors, who have seen this movie one too many times, but in fixing a risk-monitoring culture that clearly did not function properly.

“The changes that they've made – two very senior and respected board members, plus new members of their executive team – we looked at pretty favourably,” said Peter Routledge, a senior credit officer with Moody's.

“But capital isn't a cure for risk-management shortcomings.”

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17 January 2008

BMO Hopes to Attract LaSalle Employees & Clients

  
Financial Post, Duncan Mavin, 17 January 2008

When Bank of America muscled in on Chicago's banking market last year, there were questions in some quarters about whether the Bank of Montreal retail banking unit in the area would suffer from the increased competition from one of the top retail banks in the United States.

But executives at BMO's Chicago-based Harris subsidiary appeared unfazed and insisted Bank of America's purchase of local rival LaSalle Bank could present opportunities, as the transaction would result in some shakeup at LaSalle.

Yesterday, Harris executives followed up on their rhetoric, announcing the bank has poached five bankers to its commercial-market team as a result of the fallout from Bank of America's takeover of LaSalle.

"There's been a lot of dislocation [at LaSalle] and, frankly, they've lost a healthy number of people and we've been the recipient," said Peter McNitt, head of business banking.

Harris has hired four senior executives from LaSalle as well as another senior banker from Bank of America as it tries to gain market share in the areas of small business and commercial banking.

The move to bulk up senior staffing at Harris comes despite gloomy forecasts for the U.S. economy, which could hit commercial banking particularly hard.

Mr. McNitt acknowledged that local businesses tied to the residential housing market are "dormant" due the slide in the U.S. economy. However, on the industrial side, "we have not seen the contagion from real estate flow in," he said.

"You can conjecture that there are some economic turbulence that could lead people not to expand," Mr. McNitt said. "But we really believe there are some good people out there who are knocking on our door and who want to hook their wagon to our growth engine."

"Obviously clients are interested in building relationships that help them navigate difficult times," Mr. McNitt said.

Harris hopes to demonstrate commitment to local commercial clients by building its business locally.

The BMO unit -- which shares the bulk of Chicago's banking market with JPMorgan Chase & Co., and LaSalle -- now bills itself as the only hometown bank in Chicago, despite its Canadian parent. The bank recently signed a deal to become the official partner of the Chicago Bulls, which, Mr. McNitt said, has helped demonstrate its commitment to the area.

The bank is hoping to attract more talent from LaSalle as well as "a significant number" of former LaSalle clients, Mr. McNitt said;

No Collusion on Rates, Irate Banks Say

  
Financial Post, Duncan Mavin, 17 January 2008

Executives at Canada's big banks were outraged at suggestions they have held discussions to set interest rates independently of rate-setting decisions from the Bank of Canada.

It is "absolutely not" the case that the banks get together to set rates, said a spokesperson for Bank of Montreal.

"Pricing decisions are proprietary decisions and we don't discuss them in advance," he said.

Privately bankers expressed frustration at the suggestion in a media report yesterday that the banks were discussing defying the central bank -- which is expected to cut its key interest rate by 25 basis points next week--because their own borrowing costs have risen due to the global credit crunch.

In public too, the banks denied very strongly that any collusion has taken place.

"Canadian banks make competitively driven, independent decisions with respect to the setting of interest rates," said a spokesperson for Royal Bank of Canada.

"Pricing decisions reflect both economic realities and the Bank of Canada's monetary policy," she said.

A spokesperson for Toronto-Dominion Bank said the bank sets rates following its own policies, and "factors in a bunch of things including market conditions and what the Bank of Canada is doing.

"From our point of view, it's a TD decision and not a group decision," he said.

The other big banks declined to comment on the story.

The media report cited a report issued in mid-December from TD, in which the bank's economics department speculated some banks could choose not to reduce the prime rate after a Bank of Canada rate cut.

The TD spokesperson said the report from the economics department was "no reflection of corporate policy" and he pointed out that TD has no history of defying the bank of Canada.

Other industry sources also said the banks are unlikely to act in a way that would be considered a big snub to the Bank of Canada.

Officials at the Bank of Canada were actually pleasantly surprised at how quickly the banks followed the central

bank's last rate cut in December, considering tough market conditions, said one very senior ranking bank executive.

Bankers also speculated about the source of the media report which caused a stir on Bay Street. One BMO insider said, "If the pot is being stirred on this, it's not coming from BMO."
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16 January 2008

Shareholders Sue to Stop Commerce Bancorp Deal

  
Reuters, 16 January 2008

Two Commerce Bancorp shareholders go to court on Thursday to try to block a shareholder litigation settlement that is key to the bank's $8.5 billion merger with Toronto-Dominion Bank .

In court documents filed late last week, Ben Rozwood, an attorney for the two plaintiffs, asked the judge to throw out the proposed settlement reached by the companies and shareholder litigation firm Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann.

The two shareholders also ask the court to appoint Rozwood, of Robbins Umeda & Fink in San Diego, as lead counsel in new settlement talks.

Rozwood and his clients say the settlement reached by Bernstein Litowitz, which acted as lead counsel for shareholders in nearly a dozen consolidated lawsuits aimed at stopping the merger, did not cure problems with the deal.

Shareholders claimed, among other things, that the deal was undervalued, riddled with conflicts of interest, and that the termination fee that deters Commerce from seeking another suitor was too high.

"The only thing they got for the class was a reduction in the termination fee (but) the reduction is contingent on the TD Bank deal closing (when) it's too late for another suitor to come in and bid," Rozwood said.

A representative for Bernstein Litowitz had no comment.

In affidavits filed with the court on Thursday, Rozwood and financial adviser Matthew Morris of Fin/Econ Partners said the deal contained no protections for shareholders against a sharp drop in the acquiring company's share price.

The lack of a "collar" in the cash- and stock-based deal has cost Commerce shareholders $750 million as TD Bank's share price has fallen since October 1, the affidavits said.

Rozwood and Morris also contend that shareholders lost $1 billion in equity by allowing the chairman and CEO of Commerce Bancorp's insurance arm, CBIS, to head the special committee that oversaw the merger and to later purchase CBIS for half its assessed value, according to the affidavits.

In the settlement, which has not yet been approved by the court, Commerce Bancorp agreed to modify the merger agreement to reduce the fee it would pay if the merger falls apart, to $255 million from $332 million, according to a securities filing.

In exchange, the plaintiffs agreed to dismiss federal and state claims.
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Dundee Securities on Banks

  
Financial Post, Duncan Mavin, 16 January 2008

For the first time in four years, there will be no meaningful earnings growth at Canada’s banks in the next 24 months, says Dundee Securities analyst John Aiken.

The banks have sidestepped the worst of the carnage from the U.S. subprime crisis — with the exception of Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, which has US$3.3-billion of writedowns so far. But other “clouds are looming,” Mr. Aiken says.

A slowdown in the U.S. economy will have an impact on credit quality on both sides of the border. Banks will also have problems shifting loans off their books as they have done in the past because of the collapse of the markets for asset backed commercial paper and structured investment vehicles.

The result is that provisions for loan losses, which have been at historic lows in recent years, will likely begin to rise at last, Mr. Aiken says in a research note titled “Out of the Frying Pan, Into the Fire.”

The Dundee Securities analyst’s advice is to be “market weight at best” on Canada’s banks, and investors should focus on the banks with the strongest capital positions.

Among the big six, Mr. Aiken favours Bank of Nova Scotia, which has an earnings base more diversified outside of North America than its rivals. Scotiabank is rated “outperform,” by Dundee with a $55 price target.
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CIBC Raises $2.75 Billion

  
The Globe and Mail, Tara Perkins, 16 January 2008

Two Canadian institutional investors are contributing the bulk of the $1.5-billion infusion that Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is receiving by way of a private placement.

Insurer Manulife Financial Corp. is taking up $500-million worth of CIBC shares, while the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec will pick up $450-million.

This is part of the $2.75-billion worth of shares the bank is issuing to repair the financial damage inflicted by the meltdown in the U.S. subprime mortgage market.

CIBC is following in the footsteps of a growing number of global financial institutions that are selling off stakes in themselves to cope with the fallout from their subprime mortgage exposure. But the bank is in a unique position because it has found much of the equity in its domestic market rather than having to rely heavily on foreign investors.

That should be interpreted as a positive sign, because it means the people who know the bank best are willing to put up the money, said Gavin Graham, chief investment officer at Guardian Group of Funds.

Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-Shing is taking $350-million of the private placement and OMERS Administration Corp. is picking up the remaining $200-million, sources say.

CIBC will also offer at least $1.25-billion worth of discounted shares to public investors to reach the $2.75-billion total. The bank is grappling with a total of more than $3-billion in writedowns related to the U.S. subprime mortgage market.

Yesterday, chief executives of two of Canada's biggest banks said that the equity infusions are a good thing.

"It's very healthy for the financial system - if there are issues - to be recapitalized, rather than for those issues to get worse," Royal Bank of Canada chief executive Gord Nixon told a banking conference.

"Certainly close to home, I think that's a very good thing for the system because, among other things, what it shows is there is a lot of capital support out there for the major financial services companies."

Bank of Nova Scotia chief executive Rick Waugh agreed. "Look what's happening - huge, billions of dollars of sophisticated money finding a home. Good news."

The cash injections will help those banks be more competitive than they otherwise would have been, but their troubles are forcing them to exit certain businesses - and that's creating opportunities for RBC, Mr. Nixon said.

In a note to clients, Credit Suisse analyst Jim Bantis said the "capital injection should significantly reduce the uncertainty surrounding CIBC's financial position, [but] we remain concerned that the core operating franchise remains under siege by its competitors."

Mr. Nixon said the turmoil that's hampering many banks is creating opportunities. "We are seeing business that we might not have seen before."

But Canada's biggest bank isn't salivating over acquisition opportunities, despite the fact that banks are cheaper.

"We do have an environment where unexpected opportunities may present themselves," Mr. Nixon said. "We're in a position to take advantage of those, but we're not going to chase transactions for the sake of doing deals simply because values have come down."

Outside of Canada, he suggested that wealth management deals would be more attractive to RBC right now than buying banks. Both would be priorities over any capital markets, or investment banking, opportunities.

But RBC remains committed to its capital markets business, which accounts for roughly one-quarter of its earnings, Mr. Nixon said.

Investment banking profit growth will likely slow. RBC will be seeking most of its growth this year from consumer banking and wealth management, he suggested.

But Mr. Nixon said he doesn't expect "doom and gloom" in the capital markets business over the next few years.
__________________________________________________________
Reuters, 15 January 2008

Shares of Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce fell 2.9 percent on Tuesday after the bank said it would issue at least C$2.75 billion ($2.70 billion) in new shares and take additional writedowns for U.S. subprime mortgage-related securities.

While analysts and the bank itself warned that more writedowns could be on the way, some investors said CIBC's recent stock slump already reflected bad news.

"We felt that, on a near-term basis, it was oversold," said Neil Andrew, portfolio manager at Leeward Hedge Funds. His firm bought CIBC shares after the news on Monday.

"We took comfort in the price discount that was offered, as well as the recent fundamental data points that have been revealed," Andrew said.

CIBC's stock issue consists of a C$1.5 billion private placement to four investors at C$65.26 a share, and an offering of C$1.25 billion to a syndicate of underwriters, at C$67.05 apiece. Those are discounts of 9 percent and 7 percent, respectively, to Monday's last price.

If the underwriters exercise their options for additional shares, the new issuance could total C$2.9 billion.

On the Toronto Stock Exchange, CIBC shares dropped C$2.07, or 2.9 percent, to close at C$70.00, in line with the composite index, which lost 2.8 percent on Tuesday.

CIBC shares tumbled 28 percent in 2007, the worst performance among Canadian banks, but they have fallen the least in 2008, with a decline of just 0.8 percent.

At an investor conference on Tuesday, the president and chief executive of Royal Bank of Canada , the country's largest bank, said the recent string of North American bank recapitalizations, including CIBC's, were positive for the financial system overall.

"Close to home, I think that's a very good thing for the system because, amongst other things, what it shows is there is a lot of capital support out there for the major financial services companies," Royal Bank Chief Executive Gordon Nixon said.

Nixon, who spoke at a CEO conference organized by his bank's capital markets unit, said those banks will be more competitive than they would otherwise have been with weak capital ratios. But he said they will become more cautious in the marketplace as well.

CIBC, Canada's fifth-largest bank, said on Monday it would take a further $2.46 billion in pretax writedowns on its unhedged exposure to subprime mortgage securities and the falling value of counterparty protection from U.S.-based bond insurer ACA Financial Guaranty Corp.

Glenn MacNeill, vice-president of investments at Sentry Select Capital Corp in Toronto, said he was "a little anxious" about the magnitude of CIBC's share issue, which is expected to close later this month.

"The C$2.75 billion is bigger than expected," MacNeill said. "They've got to stop having these surprises, they're just not fair to shareholders."

But investors should brace for potentially more writedowns at CIBC, some analysts said. The credit ratings of U.S. bond insurers that are CIBC's counterparties in some subprime-related hedges are on watch for possible downgrades.

CIBC acknowledged that more adjustments were "possible" in its fiscal first quarter, which ends January 31.

Still, the stock offering will give the bank a "considerably higher capital cushion" to deal with its subprime exposure, and it should reassure investors that a cut to CIBC's dividend is not on the way, said Jim Bantis, financial services analyst at Credit Suisse.

Earlier on Tuesday, U.S. bank Citigroup said it would cut its dividend by 41 percent amid a subprime-mortgage induced loss of $9.8 billion. The bank is also raising $14.5 billion in new capital.

Bantis said that, hypothetically, even if CIBC had to write down $4 billion of its remaining $6.5 billion exposure to hedged subprime securities, the Canadian bank's infusion of new capital would keep its Tier 1 capital ratio at a "still comfortable" level of 9.2 percent, above the 7 percent level required by regulators and the bank's own 8.5 percent target.

CIBC has taken other steps in recent weeks to deal with the fallout from its subprime-mortgage missteps.

It exited the structured credit business and sold its U.S. investment banking business, replaced the head of CIBC World Markets as well as its chief risk officer, and appointed David Williamson as its new chief financial officer.

Credit rating agency Moody's said it will be important to see how the management changes affect the bank's "risk management discipline." Moody's kept its negative outlook on CIBC, citing ongoing concerns about risk management.
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The Globe and Mail, Derek DeCloet, 15 January 2008

Gerry McCaughey is taking absolutely no chances.

All around him, bankers are fighting, and in some cases begging, for fresh capital. Citigroup, having just accepted $7.5-billion (U.S.) from the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, is looking for another $10-billion. Merrill Lynch seeks several billion more, Morgan Stanley is cashing a $5-billion cheque, while UBS took a $10-billion investment from an overseas fund and earned a snarky new nickname - Union Bank of Singapore.

It's a good thing for Wall Street that a massive glut of savings exists in Asia and the Middle East. But Hong Kong billionaires, Saudi oil sheiks and government-sponsored investment companies need only so many North American bank shares. A state-run Chinese bank just withdrew from a planned investment in Citi, perhaps because earlier Chinese investments in financial services stocks (Blackstone Group, Barclays) have been money losers so far.

And the news from America - about real estate and mortgages - is getting worse, not better.

So if you're CIBC, you might as well try to get your money while you can.

"You don't mess around at a time like this," says one bank analyst who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Mr. McCaughey's not messing around. His new plan is to build the equivalent of a financial nuclear bunker by raising as much as $2.94-billion (Canadian) in new equity at what can only be described as a distressed price. Ifthings in the U.S. mortgage market get truly catastrophic - as opposed to merely awful, as they are now - CIBC ought to survive, thanks to the flood of dollars coming from Asia's richest man, three of Canada's largest institutions, and the investing public, which will be putting up nearly half the dough.

It's far more than the bank needs. Even after taking another $2.46-billion writeoff on its portfolio of mortgage securities, CIBC stands to come out of this capital-raising exercise with an equity base that's much larger than regulators require. And if the bank were to take another $5-billion mortgage hit (in addition to the $3-billion-plus it has already lost), it would still be financially sound. No rumour-mongering hedge fund manager will be able to whisper "CIBC" and "insolvency" in the same breath.

Still: Why so much money, and why now? The dilution, 12 per cent, is serious. Why burn your shareholders by selling this much equity at $65 when you could have issued shares at $75, $80, maybe even $85? Aside from the obvious - you don't want to wait until you're under duress to recapitalize - there are two other reasons, one personal, one financial.

The first is that Mr. McCaughey's reign, which had been going swimmingly until a few months ago, has been badly thrown off course by the mortgage mess. He had two options: (a) spend the rest of 2008 talking about nothing but one stinking rotten investment and fighting the rumour mill every day, or (b) taking the hit and moving on. Dragging things out serves no one but the short sellers. By issuing this much stock - "it's ridiculous," says one investor in financial company - Mr. McCaughey can return to the more comfortable role of nerdy banker who uses six-syllable words for "loan."

The second reason, the financial one, is more serious. The subprime crisis is set to change how banks operate. How's that? By destroying investor faith in the many kinds of structured investment vehicles and the credit agencies who rate them.

The banking business, circa 1980, was all about taking deposits, making loans and earning profit from the interest spread between the two. But today's bank, as often as not, makes the loan and then sells it to someone else in an intricate asset-backed security. Or maybe it doesn't make the loan at all, but instead flogs some 20-year corporate bond to every yield customer it has over the age of 60.

Ian de Verteuil, the top-ranked bank analyst at BMO Nesbitt Burns, calls it "disintermediation," which is a fancy way of saying that the bank still gets its cut but it doesn't hang on to as much risk. If it doesn't hang on to the risk, it doesn't need as much capital. And that equation - more profit with less capital - is the banker's Holy Grail. It brings higher dividends, higher stock prices and happy investors.

It all works, as long as the investing public continues to buy what the banks are selling. But now they aren't. The structured-bond business isn't dead, but it is limping. U.S. banks issued $322-billion (U.S.) in asset-backed bonds in the second quarter of 2007. Then the credit crunch hit and - boom - the number dropped by nearly 60 per cent in the third quarter.

That can mean only one thing: the banks are going to have to assume more often their former role - as risk-taking lenders, rather than mere middlemen. That means they'll need more capital. It's no place for a bank with a crummy balance sheet, and Gerry McCaughey knows it.
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Financial Post, Barry Critchley, 15 January 2008

First there was the announcement of the $2.75-billion common-equity offering-- one of the largest in Canadian history -- then there was a not-so-subtle hint that more writeoffs may be on the way.

Those two dots are connected by the issuer, in this case Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, offering equity at a substantial discount to the current trading price. Just like the retail chains: Make it cheap, the crowds pile in; make it even cheaper and everyone piles in. Investors seem to be lapping it up given reports that the issue has met with a warm reception. "It is well oversubscribed," said one underwriter.

Little wonder. The stock, which hit a 52-week high of $103.30 last October, is all but being given away.

The reason? Well, the price for the $1.25-billion public portion of the deal was set at $67.05, a price that represents a 7% discount to the bank's trading price of $72.07 at the time the stock was halted.

On top of that there are the 4% underwriting fees that will make their way to the underwriters involved in the transaction. Accordingly, CIBC will receive $64.14 from selling common shares. (CIBC and UBS are joint bookrunners and each have 30% of the issue.)

There is also a $1.5-billion private-placement portion to the transaction. Those shares are being purchased by four investors: The Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec; Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd.; Manulife Financial (which anted up $500-million), and OMERS. Those investors bought their shares at $65.26 apiece -- a level that represents a 9.5% discount to CIBC's recent trading price.

On top of that, the four institutions are set to receive a 4% commitment fee -- believed to be a first for Canada. There is nothing like receiving a little incentive for those investors who came to the rescue of the bank whose middle name is trouble. For receiving that juicy fee, the four institutions are required to hold their newly acquired shares for four months.

Two of the institutions have a CIBC connection. A few years back, there were reports that Manulife lobbed a merger proposal at CIBC, only for that plan to be rejected by the federal government. Meanwhile, Cheung Kong Holdings is a holding company associated with Li Ka-shing, the Hong Kong-based billionaire. Three years back, almost to the day, on Jan. 12, 2005, Mr. Li announced the sale of 17 million shares at $70 a share. That sale amounted to 4.9% of the bank's outstanding common shares. At the time, Mr. Li said he had "been pleased to be an investor in CIBC for many years, and this investment in the Bank has earned a handsome return." Mr. Li donated some the proceeds from the share sale to the Li Ka-shing Foundation.

Presumably, the four institutions agreed to make their investment after being canvassed by CIBC and after doing their own due diligence. It's understood that CIBC first approached institutional investors on Jan. 4, the first Friday of the new year. "It took 10 days to get it done. That's a long time for a deal like this. So they obviously got squeezed," said one market participant, who added that similar deals done by U.S. banks were wrapped up relatively quickly. (Most of the U.S. deals were done with sovereign funds.)

It's not known whom CIBC approached but it's worth noting that B.C. Investment Management Corp. (with assets of more than $83-billion).; Alberta Investment Management Corp. (more than $70-billion); Ontario Teachers Pension Plan Board (more than $100-billion) and CPP Investment Board (assets of $121-billion) didn't invest. And CIBC sold common shares in contrast to some of the U.S. institutions which offered high-yielding preferred shares.

Maybe the list of non-buyers was never asked, but it could also be that even a sweet discount wasn't enough for them to belly up to the bar for CIBC.

Private Placement: - $1.5-billion from Manulife, Caisse, Li Ka-shing, OMERS at $62.65/share or a 13.5% discount to the current price of $72.07 ($65.26 a share, less 4% commitment fee).

Bought Deal - $1.25-billion to $1.437-billion at $67.05/share or a 7% discount to the current price.

Why his deal now? - To bring CIBC's Tier 1 capital ratio to an acceptable level of 11.3% if no more write-downs related to its subprime-mortgage exposure in the U.S. are taken beyond the already-announced $2.4-billion; 10.2% if another $2-billion is needed; 9% if another $4-billion is needed.

Goal - Keeping Tier 1 capital ratio above 8.5%
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The Globe and Mail, Richard Blackwell, Tara Perkins, Lori McLeod, 14 January 2008

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce's massive $2.75-billion stock offering puts it in a bullet-proof position to weather more writedowns that may be in the pipeline, bank watchers said Monday.

The $2.75-billion issue comes as the bank is in the process of taking about $3.4-billion (U.S.) in pretax writedowns for its exposure to U.S. subprime loans, including $2.46-billion announced Monday.

CIBC said it would place $1.5-billion (Canadian) of the new shares with a group of four investors, including Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing, at a price of $65.26 apiece, well below the $72.07 the stock was fetching just before the sale was announced Monday afternoon. The rest will go to other investors at $67.05 a share.

The size of the issue took many observers and investors by surprise, and some suggested there could be more writedown pain to come. With its equity infusion, the bank could comfortably afford to take an additional $4-billion in pretax writedowns and still have enough capital to satisfy regulators.

Because the issue was quite a bit bigger than the market expected, “it does suggest that clearly there are further writedowns that are going to take place,” said Juliette John, a vice-president at Bissett Investment Management.

“Is there another shoe to drop?” asked Shane Jones, managing director of Canadian equities at Scotia Cassels, who said the bank has raised far more funds than it needs.

The bank said it does not expect any further writedowns, but it is possible they might be required before its quarter ends Jan. 31. It will not be updating investors before its results come out on Feb. 28.

Despite those concerns, most observers said they think the move will help support CIBC's stock price, because it gives so much backing to the balance sheet. “It really does provide a cushion, should there be any unexpected or unforeseen issues that arise,” said Brenda Lum, an analyst at DBRS Ltd.

DBRS still has the bank under review with negative implications due to concerns with overall risk management.

CIBC appears to be operating under the philosophy that it is better to be safe than sorry, analysts said. Having to go back to the market for a further infusion in the future could be costly, while it would be relatively easy for the bank to buy back shares if it found it no longer needed the cushion.

Murray Leith, director of research at investment adviser Odlum Brown Ltd. in Vancouver, said that while the size of CIBC's issue was a surprise, in the long run it will be good for the stock.

“I admit being shocked, off the bat, by the size of the equity offering,” he said. CIBC already had the capacity to deal with major writedowns, but now “with this amount of money being raised their balance sheet is rock solid,” he added.

There's no question that CIBC's cost of funding loans has increased in recent months because of concerns over the writedowns, Mr. Leith said. But this move will cut those costs sharply, and increase profits.

He described the new capital as “as a pretty smart insurance policy,” even if it is dilutive to existing shareholders, some of whom will not be happy.

“This will probably leave a bad taste in a bunch of people's mouths and I expect it will trade down tomorrow,” Mr. Leith said.

“But the way I look at it is that they are taking all the downside out of the stock, and of all the Canadian banks I think this is the one that will do it [perform best] over the next 12 months.”

Ms. John agreed that CIBC will likely emerge in very good shape. “You can't overlook the fact … that this bank does have the power to earn a lot of money,” she said.

Still, the price discount of the new shares is actually even deeper than it appears on the surface. That's because there is also a 4 per cent “commitment fee” paid to the main investor group – equivalent to another discount of $2.61 a share.
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National Bank Financial, 14 January 2008

Subprime Exposure Remains the Defining Issue In view of the lower-risk strategy that had been articulated since management was changed and the Enron charge was taken in 2005, we believe that this issue is more troubling than prior missteps by the bank, regardless of whether some of the more dire potential financial implications are realized.

Discounted P/E Valuation Well Outside Historical Levels We believe the discounted multiple implies that earnings estimates are too high either because i) subprime-related charges will be large enough to require a dilutive equity issue in order to recapitalize, or ii) wholesale earnings will be greatly compromised by a move to avoid risk.

It Appears Much Bad News is Reflected in the Valuation We believe the current valuation is reflecting either an equity issue of roughly $2.4 billion or a core earnings contraction at CIBC World Markets of more than 50%. Although we do not see a high probability of either event occurring, nor are we able to dismiss the possibility, given the still uncertain outlook.

DCF Implications Consistent With P/E Analysis We believe the DCF analysis also shows that there is much negative news currently reflected in the valuation. However, it also demonstrates that once the subprime issue is largely resolved, there is still significant value in the franchise.

Conclusion – With Poor Visibility, We Remain Cautious Once it is apparent that the subprime issue is contained, we believe the valuation can begin to recover. Until that time, we expect volatility to remain. With an above-average risk profile and the potential for more negative news, we believe a more cautious stance is warranted and reiterate our SectorPerform rating.
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Profle of RBC CFO Janice Fukakusa

  
The Globe and Mail, Tara Perkins, 16 January 2008

When she returned from vacation after the holidays, Royal Bank of Canada chief financial officer Janice Fukakusa enthusiastically presented her team with a Microsoft Word document sketching out some goals for the finance department.

She had had some time to step back, get some reading done, and think about her vision for the team.

It was a luxury for a woman who arrives in her office at the country's biggest bank by 6:30 most mornings, and doesn't usually make it out until six p.m., when she leaves armed with a stack of printed e-mails that she'll spend a couple of hours poring over later in the evening.

"You spend so much time on the whole enterprise, you don't get enough time to spend on your area," she says.

So she was excited when she brought the document in. And after 20 minutes of discussion with her department, one of her colleagues said, "Couldn't you just have rested on your holidays?" she recalls with a laugh.

Ms. Fukakusa, 53, is passionate about driving the finance department into a more strategic role within the bank.

"Finance roles have got to change in today's environment from being simply recorders," she says.

One way to accomplish this, she says, is to mechanize some processes. "We're not fully automated, but I think we're trying to get there, because that's how you free up the people."

Rather than spend hours putting numbers into spreadsheets, Ms. Fukakusa believes finance employees should be able to scrutinize the data and use it to make recommendations to their organization.

In one as large and diverse as Royal Bank, it is easy to imagine scenarios where the left hand wouldn't know what the right is doing. From her position, Ms. Fukakusa can not only look out across different parts of the company, she can also drill down into them. For example, she can spot if one part of the bank has a different interest rate forecast than another, and then research why that is.

But, more than that, the finance department's ability to tap into a whole host of data across the company creates a golden opportunity for it to make itself a vital part of the bank's strategic development, she says.

But this will require a change in focus from the recent concentration on governance issues, Ms. Fukakusa says.

"I think there's a real value to understanding the numbers and making it a strategy," she says. "But it takes a large transition for a finance group.

"Two years ago, everyone was wrestling with governance and SOX [the U.S. Sarbanes-Oxley Act]. That was what it was all about, and you went right back down to brass tacks about governance and technical stuff. And now, people are coming out of this, the environment's changing, and you're thinking, 'We have to do something differently in finance.' "

While each change in direction can be a difficult process, there are rewards for the organization, Ms. Fukakusa says.

Adjusting to SOX "was a painful process," she says. It was tough to execute, partly because executives had to pressure staff to make it a priority. "But it really, I think ultimately, is a good idea because it gives transparency to the process."

Now, the bank is trying to get out ahead on the international financial reporting standards (IFRS) that it will be required to implement in a couple of years. By 2011, public companies in Canada will have to replace the generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) with the international standards as a basis for their financial reporting.

In addition to dealing with global accounting standards, Canada's banks were required to comply with the Basel II Accord late last year, and will soon be releasing their first quarterly earnings under these new international banking rules.

Organizations need to balance transparency and making information digestible to investors, cautions Ms. Fukakusa.

"The issue with Basel is, in order to get comparability [between institutions], you add a lot of disclosure. ... It's not so much about measurement as disclosure: how you're treating certain portfolios, how you apply operational risk criteria.

"It's sort of like IFRS and the European banks," she adds. "Some of them felt that it was an opportunity to just stuff in triple the disclosure," much of which is difficult for investors to understand.

Ms. Fukakusa has been known to take out her pen and reword the Royal Bank's reports, because she likes them to be easy to digest.

As global financial institutions cope with the current fallout from the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis, transparency has become the buzzword of the day.

"From our perspective, in looking at the issues around the [recent] market disruption, we layered into our annual disclosure a lot of facts and numbers and exposure levels that are not material, not significant, from an overall financial perspective," Ms. Fukakusa says. "But they are actually [significant] for an investor, because you need to build credibility and trust."

"A lot of times, when you're working with numbers, you think that if someone has the numbers they'll have the whole story," Ms. Fukakusa says. But that's not the case. "I spend a lot more of my time now with investors than I would have, say, a year ago."

And she has been asked questions beyond the numbers, such as "How do you look at risk management? Do you have overrides at the senior level? How respected is the chief risk officer?"

Those types of questions can shed more light on an organization than the straight numbers. And while it's impossible to ensure that negative issues will never crop up, the key to being able to deal with them is having established a precedent for open and frank dialogue, Ms. Fukakusa says.

The Fukakusa file

Title

Chief financial officer, Royal Bank of Canada

Education

Bachelor of arts from University of Toronto

Master of business administration from York University's Schulich School of Business.

Career path

Before joining RBC in 1985, became a chartered accountant and chartered business valuator while working at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

At RBC, began as a mergers and acquisitions analyst; subsequently held variety of positions, including vice-president portfolio management, senior vice-president multinational banking, chief internal auditor, and executive vice-president of specialized services.
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15 January 2008

2008 RBC CM Bank CEO Conference

  
The Globe and Mail, Richard Blackwell, 15 January 2008

Toronto-Dominion Bank chief executive officer Ed Clark says he likely won't consider more acquisitions in the United States because the potential targets would take so much money to fix.

Any banks that are coming available south of the border require a tremendous amount of new capital, he told a banking conference in Toronto Tuesday.

To buy a struggling U.S. bank "you have to have double money," Mr. Clark said. "You've got to be in a position where you can acquire, but you also have … to recapitalize what you just acquired.

"Frankly we're not in that position [since] we don't have a lot of surplus capital," he said. "I don't see us swooping in and buying something."

Last fall, TD agreed to buy Commerce Bancorp Inc. of Cherry Hill, N.J., for $8.5-billion (U.S.). That deal, which would make TD a North American powerhouse, has not yet closed.

One reason there have not been more purchases of U.S. financial institutions is that many potential acquirers "are on their knees or are out in Asia looking for money," Mr. Clark said.

Several U.S. banks, and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, have looked East for recapitalization after taking a hit in the subprime mortgage market.

Mr. Clark made several references to the fact that TD, unlike other banks, has not had to take writedowns related to the subprime market.

He said TD avoided some of the riskiest businesses, such as selling credit derivatives or other structured products, because he realized "they were cruising for a bruising."

TD still takes risks, Mr. Clark insisted, but these are directly related to the way it executes its operations. "We do take transparent, understandable risks."

One spinoff of the "meltdown" among the other big banks is that they will "shift their strategies to be more like us," he said, with an increased emphasis on high-service retail banking.

Over all, Mr. Clark said, TD will be affected by the pain other banks are suffering in the current financial services crisis, even if it is not feeling any direct impact.

"You may not be on the train, but if you're standing at the station watching the train go by and it has a train wreck, you'll still get hurt."

In the United States in particular, Commerce Bancorp and Banknorth Group Inc., which TD bought in 2005 and renamed TD Banknorth Inc., will certainly be hit if the banking crisis evolves into a general economic downturn, he said. Still, TD will endure less pain than many other banks because they have been run very conservatively.

"If this financial crisis turns into a general U.S. heavy slowdown, both of those entities have to be affected, but they will be positive outliers," Mr. Clark said.
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Reuters, 15 January 2008

The top executives of Bank of Nova Scotia and Royal Bank of Canada said on Tuesday that they are financially well placed to make acquisitions, but unlikely to seek big deals just because global bank stocks have come under pressure.

Royal Bank, the largest in Canada, is in the process of closing purchases of RBTT Financial Group in the Caribbean and Alabama National BanCorp in the U.S. Southeast.

"We feel we're in a position to continue to look at acquisitions," Royal Bank Chief Executive Gordon Nixon told a conference in Toronto.

"On the banking side of the equation, both in the United States and the Caribbean, I wouldn't look for us to be deploying capital in those areas in the short term, given that we've got two acquisitions in process," Nixon said.

Royal will stay "disciplined" as it keeps looking at possible deals, and would be more likely to make wealth-management acquisitions than another bank purchase, he added.

"We do have an environment where unexpected opportunities may present themselves ... but we're not going to chase transactions for the sake of doing deals, simply because values have come down," Nixon said, pointing out that Canadian bank stock valuations have fallen too, as the global industry has been pummeled by the credit crisis.

As for Bank of Nova Scotia , President and CEO Rick Waugh told the same RBC Capital Markets conference that his bank's strategy is consistent, so he does not foresee any "transformational" acquisitions.

In 2007, Scotiabank bought Banco del Disarrollo in Chile, 25 percent of a Thai bank, and 10 percent of First BanCorp in Puerto Rico, among other deals.

Outside Canada, Scotiabank tends to start with small ownership stakes in financial companies, and gradually increases its holdings.

"The pipeline is always good," Waugh said. "Capital is not a constraint (to future acquisitions)."

About 31 percent of Scotiabank's $4 billion profit in 2007 came from its international banking segment, which operates in Mexico and dozens of other countries in the Caribbean and Central America, South America and Asia.

Domestically, Canada's third-largest bank has taken steps to beef up its lagging wealth management business. It bought an 18 percent stake in Toronto-based money management firm DundeeWealth Inc last year.

Since the September purchase, which Waugh said equated to about $13 per DundeeWealth share, DundeeWealth stock zoomed up to more than $23, then fell back below $17, on changing speculation about whether controlling shareholder Ned Goodman would accept takeover offers.

Scotiabank has the right to match any offer to buy DundeeWealth. Mutual fund firm CI Financial Income Fund expressed interest in late 2007, and holding company Power Financial Corp and Manulife Financial Corp , Canada's largest insurer, were also rumored to be suitors.

"Of course we have the opportunity to increase our exposure when and if Ned Goodman decides to do something, but in the meantime we're in a very nice position," Waugh said.
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Reuters, 15 January 2008

A recession in the United States poses the main risk to Toronto-Dominion Bank's U.S. earnings, not the credit portfolio of a pending acquisition, the bank's chief executive said on Tuesday.

"We can't outrun a U.S. recession," TD Bank President and CEO Ed Clark told a conference in Toronto.

"We are what we are; we can't outrun a Canadian recession," he added.

But Clark said TD's U.S. banking operations -- which will soon consist of New Jersey-based Commerce Bancorp Inc as well as New England-focused TD Banknorth -- should outperform its peers in such a scenario.

TD is working to complete its pending $7.6 billion stock-and-cash acquisition of Commerce Bancorp. Commerce shareholders will vote February 6 on the proposed takeover.

Once the transaction closes, the Canadian bank will decide whether to keep or sell a $4 billion portfolio of Alt-A mortgages it will inherit from Commerce.

"It's a portfolio we can dispose of -- it's not like it's a no-bid world out there," Clark said.

Alt-A loans fall between subprime mortgages and those with prime status, because applicants either lacked some documentation or had high loans relative to their home value.

"We will not hold that portfolio unless we're absolutely confident we're going to get more money back than it would be to get rid of the portfolio," Clark said.

Any mark-to-market adjustment in the portfolio value would not affect the bank's capital structure in a big way, and would not pose any earnings risk, Clark said.

Last week, TD had to fend off market rumors about a possible multibillion-dollar write-down, forcing the retail-focused bank to point out again that it had stayed away from U.S. subprime mortgage investments.

TD is effectively trying to complete a three-way merger between Cherry Hill, N.J.-based Commerce and Portland, Maine-based TD Banknorth. TD Bank swallowed the latter last year when it bought out minority shareholders.

Banknorth gave the Canadian bank a U.S. operating platform and expertise in commercial banking, and Clark said he would not have tried to buy Commerce without having Banknorth first.

"I couldn't have afforded it without the economies of scale of putting the two together, and I'm not sure I would want to be taking on the venture of Commerce with none of the operating skills that Banknorth brought," Clark told the conference organized by RBC Capital Markets.

TD is increasing provisions for bad loans at Banknorth, even though an accompanying rise in charges has not materialized, and the bank will continue to be conservative in increasing general reserves, Clark also said.

"One of the interesting dilemmas for everybody in financial services is, it is doom and gloom, and yet you can't actually see it in your numbers," Clark said.

"You keep saying, 'Well, it's got to show up in my numbers because the world is going to hell in a handbasket,' but it isn't showing up ... that's an anomaly that we can't figure out."
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The Globe and Mail, Tara Perkins, 15 January 2008

The equity infusions that some global banks, including Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, are receiving are a good thing for the financial system, says the CEO of the Royal Bank of Canada.

“It's very healthy for the financial system — if there are issues — to be recapitalized, rather than for those issues to get worse,” Gord Nixon told a banking conference in Toronto on Tuesday.

“Certainly close to home, I think that's a very good thing for the system because, amongst other things, what it shows is there is a lot of capital support out there for the major financial services companies.”

While banks that are receiving cash injections might become more competitive than they otherwise would have been, those banks are also being forced to exit certain businesses, and that's creating opportunities for RBC, Mr. Nixon said.

Bank of Nova Scotia chief executive Rick Waugh also said he believes the liquidity injections are a positive sign.

“Look what's happening — huge, billions of dollars of sophisticated money finding a home. Good news,” he said at the conference.

The comments come one day after CIBC announced that it is raising $2.75-billion by selling discounted shares to investors as it grapples with a total of more than $3-billion in writedowns related to its exposure to the U.S. subprime mortgage market.

On Tuesday morning, the bank's shares were trading down more than 3 per cent, at $69.86 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

In a note to clients, Credit Suisse analyst Jim Bantis said that the “capital injection should significantly reduce the uncertainty surrounding CIBC's financial position, [but] we remain concerned that the core operating franchise remains under siege by its competitors.”

Mr. Nixon said that, globally, opportunities have been created by the market turmoil that's hampering many banks.

“We are seeing business that we might not have seen before,” he said.

But Canada's biggest bank isn't salivating over acquisition opportunities, despite the fact that banks are cheaper.

“We do have an environment where unexpected opportunities may present themselves, and we're in a position to take advantage of those, but we're not going to chase transactions for the sake of doing deals simply because values have come down,” Mr. Nixon said. Outside of Canada, he suggested that wealth management deals would be more attractive to RBC right now than buying banks would be. Both would be priorities over any capital markets, or investment banking, opportunities.

But Royal Bank remains committed to its capital markets business, which accounts very roughly for one-quarter of its earnings, Mr. Nixon said.

Investment banking earnings growth will likely slow from recent levels. RBC will be seeking most of its growth this year from consumer banking and wealth management.

But Mr. Nixon said he doesn't expect “doom and gloom” in the capital markets business for the next few years.

“It will shift around, but we certainly aren't expecting it to fall off the cliff,” he said. “And we do think there will be an opportunity simply because of other people exiting certain businesses.”

Mr. Nixon said the financial system and markets are already starting to feel better, and that the liquidity that's been pumped into the system is having an impact. However, the “real world” is not necessarily feeling better, he said.

He believes that what happens in the real world, with respect to economic growth, will be “the real story for 2008.”

His colleague Charles Winograd, head of RBC Capital Markets, said 2008 will be simpler than the past year.

“To quote the rhetoric of an election campaign long ago, it will be the economy stupid,” he said, adding that it will be Main Street, not Wall Street, that's key.
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Reuters, 11 January 2008

Investors looking for future Canadian bank-stock outperformers should consider the winners of the past decade, which include Royal Bank of Canada and Bank of Nova Scotia , an analyst says.

Ten years ago this month, the first of two big Canadian bank-merger proposals was unveiled.

The two planned unions -- Royal Bank with Bank of Montreal , and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce with Toronto-Dominion Bank -- gave rise to much political debate and were ultimately killed in late 1998 by the Liberal government of the day.

Since then, half of the Big Six Canadian banks have been able to "get on with life" without mergers by using different strategies, while the other half delivered relatively poor performance, Credit Suisse bank analyst Jim Bantis said in a research report this week.

The three in the latter category -- National Bank of Canada , Bank of Montreal and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce -- don't appear poised to break out of the pack, Bantis said.

"Despite more compelling valuations, near term we are unconvinced that the lower tier performers of the past decade are positioned to outperform due to respective off-balance sheet issues and lagging domestic retail franchises," Bantis wrote.

Royal, the country's largest bank, took first place in his scorecard of decade-long performance.

The ranking was based on 10 measures, including growth in share price, dividends and return on equity, and levels of non-recurring charges, acquisition spending and branch expansion.

Toronto-Dominion and Scotiabank tied for second place, followed by National Bank, BMO and finally CIBC.

CIBC's last-place finish comes partly from above-average charges connected to failed energy trader Enron, and to relatively slow growth in assets and market capitalization over the past decade. CIBC's market value grew by only 28 percent in that period, Bantis said.

In his view, Royal and Scotiabank are best positioned to emerge "relatively unscathed" from the ongoing credit crisis. Both have made numerous acquisitions outside Canada in recent years, but the pair have avoided anything too large or too risky, Bantis noted.

"Royal Bank achieved its leading performance by investing in and improving its leading domestic retail franchise," Bantis said.

TD Bank has also created a highly profitable domestic retail bank, but Bantis cited some "trepidation" because of its strategic gamble on the U.S. retail banking market.

TD is in the process of acquiring New Jersey-based Commerce Bancorp in a cash and stock deal that was valued at about $8.5 billion last autumn, but is now worth about $7.8 billion at TD's recent share price.

And last year, TD spent $3.2 billion to acquire the remaining stake in New England-focused TD Banknorth that it did not already own.

Three Canadian banks -- Royal, TD and Scotiabank -- were among the top 10 in North America by market capitalization in 2007, up from just one Canadian bank in 1997, according to Credit Suisse.

"We have witnessed stunning growth by the Canadian banks during the past decade," Bantis wrote.

But even so, Royal's market cap is less than half that of the third-largest U.S. player, JPMorgan Chase , he noted.

The Canadian Bankers Association made a similar point this week to a federal competition-policy review panel. The industry association said that while the Canadian sector is expanding, U.S. and European competitors have ballooned in size due to mergers and acquisitions. The CBA wants Canadian banks to be able to do the same.
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Deposed CEO Sues Commerce Bancorp for Damages

  
Dow Jones Newswires, 15 January 2008

The founder of Commerce Bancorp Inc. has sued his old company, claiming he was wrongly forced out last year.

In a lawsuit filed this week in U.S. District Court in Washington, Vernon W. Hill II said his ousting cost him more than $50 million in damages and his wife another $7.5 million.

Bank spokesman David Flaherty didn't return a call Tuesday.

Hill founded Commerce in 1973 with one branch. Using a business model taken more from the fast-food industry than banking, Hill, who owns dozens of Philadelphia-area Burger King franchises, oversaw it as it expanded to about 425 locations along the East Coast.

But it was his unconventional way of doing business that ended his career at the bank.

Last June, he was pushed out as part of an agreement with the federal Office of the Controller of the Currency. The regulator was troubled with the bank's double-dealing; a partnership Hill controlled owned the land that many of the banks sat on.

Hill's wife, Shirley Hill, ran InterArch, an architecture and design firm that designed the branches.

He disclosed the side businesses, but it wasn't until the bank became a major player that regulators found them to be a problem.

In the lawsuit, filed on behalf of Hill, his wife and Interarch, Hill claims the bank hasn't paid him the roughly $12 million or granted him about $3.5 million in stock options it owes him.

Hill also claims that being pushed out of Commerce made it hard for him to find another job. Eventually, he made his own. He announced in November that he and a former Commerce analyst would start a private investment group, Hill-Townsend Capital, based in Chevy Chase, Md.

The suit also claims Interarch hasn't been paid nearly $3 million it's owed. Interarch also claims that Commerce violated copyright protections by using Interarch's designs and has undone the business by hiring away some of its key employees.

In October, Commerce announced it was being bought by Toronto-based Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) in an $8.5 billion cash and stock deal. The sale is to close in February.
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Credit Suisse on Life Insurance Cos

  
The Globe and Mail, 15 January 2008

Canada’s biggest life insurers, Manulife Financial, Sun Life Financial and Great-West Lifeco, are in a great position to make more major U.S. acquisitions, according to Credit Suisse Canadian financial services analyst James Bantis.

For one thing, he said in a report to clients, they have a “stunning but well deserved” valuation premium over their U.S. peers, with their stocks currently trading at 12.7 times his estimate for 2008 share profit, compared with 10.5 south of the border.

For another, the stellar rise in the value of the Canadian dollar “has made the cost of entry into the U.S. banking market considerably less expensive for Canadian lifecos.

As well, they have suffered “relatively little damage” from the global credit and liquidity crisis triggered by the subprime mortgage debacle in the United Sates.

Although Sun Life and Great-West have, in fact, recently sold some U.S. businesses, Manulife “has been candid in its desire” to do another transaction similar to its $15-billion acquisition of John Hancock in 2003, Mr. Bantis said in the report, which is part of a broader Credit Suisse look at M&A possibilities in insurance around the world.

As for potential U.S. targets – for Canadian and other foreign acquirers – the report cites: Lincoln National, Principal Financial, Ameriprise, Phoenix Cos., Mercury General, Progressive, Infinity and RLI.
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14 January 2008

Odlum Brown Rates Banks as 'Buy'

  
Financial Post, Duncan Mavin, 14 January 2008

Canadian banks, whose stocks have performed relatively well through the global credit crunch, are well-positioned to take advantage of the shakeout from the market turmoil, according to Murray Leith of Odlum Brown. The bank stocks should remain a core position in investor portfolios and Odlum Brown rates the entire sector “buy,” he said.

“We remain optimistic regarding the outlook for our economy and Canadian bank stocks in particular,” Mr. Leith told clients in a note. “Fiscally, the country is on solid footing with budget and trade surpluses. Demand for Canadian resources will likely remain buoyant. The Canadian housing market is still healthy and unlikely to experience U.S. style mortgage problems. Canadian banks were far less aggressive in introducing innovative and higher risk lending products. Also, speculative activity in the Canadian real estate market has been less pronounced.”

Mr. Leith pointed out that while Canadian bank stocks are down an average of 19.9% from their 52-week highs, major U.S. banks are down an average of 31.5%, while some of the larger U.K. and European banks are down an average of 32.9% from their 52-week highs.

Widening of credit spreads could see the Canadian banks pick up more business, giving a further boost to their stocks in the long term.

Also, the Canadian banks continue to be dividend machines. “The average bank yield (not including National Bank because we haven’t tracked its yield historically) of 4.3% currently represents more than 110% of the 10 year Government of Canada bond yield of 3.9%,” Mr. Leith noted.

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, whose shares have been hit hard because of its subprime woes, will be the best performing stock in the next twelve months, Odlum Brown forecasts. Longer term, however, Toronto Dominion Bank is favoured because of solid leadership, a strong domestic retail franchise, and a solid U.S. growth plan.

“If we had to pick just one bank to own for the next ten years, it would be TD,” Mr. Leith said.
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09 January 2008

CIBC Executive Management Changes

  
Financial Post, Jonathan Ratner, 9 January 2008

Shares of U.S. monoline financial guarantors such as Ambac Financial Group Inc. and MBIA Inc., which guarantee that bond principal and interest are paid when an issuer defaults, continued their descent on Tuesday. CIBC followed as it has $8.1-billion in known subprime related monoline hedge exposure and investors feared more may emerge.

There has been no shortage of negative news surrounding the industry recently, Blackmont Capital analyst Brad Smith told clients in a note. Speculation regarding higher non-subprime collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) continues to climb, analysts are cutting their earnings estimates, more shareholder lawsuits are emerging, and news surfaced that regulators have urged Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. to get into the monoline market.

“While still grappling with assessing the subprime hedge exposure, investors may need to brace for additional stresses in the event CIBC has hedged other non-subprime credit exposures through the monoline insurers,” Mr. Smith told clients in a note.

The bank’s disclosed subprime credit exposures represented just 13% of the aggregate notional value of its written credit default options as of Oct. 31, 2007, and the active writing of non-subprime credit protection by monoline insurers means CIBC may face more stress if global credit markets deteriorate further, he added.

Investors need more disclosure from the bank so they can better assess the risks and rewards, Mr. Smith said. But until this is provided by the bank and the monoline situations gets clearer, he is keeping CIBC at a “sell” with a $65 price target.
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The Globe and Mail, Tara Perkins & Sinclair Stewart, 8 January 2008

When bond insurer ACA Capital was put on watch for a possible rating downgrade by Standard & Poor's in early November, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce CEO Gerry McCaughey knew his problems had just become much worse.

He had already been caught off guard in May when it emerged his investment bank, the once-celebrated CIBC World Markets, had brought it more than $10-billion (U.S.) worth of exposure to the risky U.S. subprime real estate market. Worse yet, $3.5-billion of it was hedged with one single shaky bond insurer, ACA Capital, whose financial condition was deteriorating.

CIBC's investment bank had wandered so far off the course Mr. McCaughey knew he had to shake up senior management. Yesterday, he pulled the trigger, parting ways with two of his top lieutenants to clear the way for some new recruits with reputations for being staid and able to make tough decisions.

Leaving are chief risk officer Ken Kilgour and Brian Shaw, who has been running CIBC's investment banking division. CIBC's current chief financial officer, Tom Woods, is taking over as chief risk officer.

Coming in are Richard Nesbitt, the head of the TSX Group Inc. and one of Mr. McCaughey's best friends, and David Williamson. They will be made head of CIBC World Markets and chief financial officer respectively.

Mr. McCaughey will be staying in his role despite the pressure he's been facing. He took the top job at CIBC in 2005, just as it was cleaning the slate on its Enron exposure.

He has staked his reputation on making it a less risky bank and thought he'd largely accomplished the task before the subprime issue arose.

Analysts had previously decried the lack of internal candidates for the CEO's job at the bank, and some were speculating yesterday that Mr. Nesbitt might one day be a contender.

Reaction to the management reorganization was generally positive, although some analysts noted that it will not solve the bank's brewing subprime issues.

CIBC suggested in December that it might have to take a $2-billion writedown this quarter as a result of its exposure to the U.S. subprime mortgage market, in addition to $978-million (Canadian) in charges it has already announced.

"CIBC needed to bolster its management team following the bank's [subprime] calamity, and we believe the addition of material 'external' bench strength will allow the bank to move beyond its current trials," BMO Nesbitt Burns analyst Ian de Verteuil wrote in a note to clients.

The changes show that the board is not taking the current situation lightly, wrote Dundee Capital Markets analyst John Aiken, adding that they do little to change the current predicament the bank faces.

Yesterday's shakeup wasn't the first move Mr. McCaughey has made in recent months in an effort to prevent a recurrence of the bruising the bank is taking on subprime. He scaled back CIBC's structured credit operations, replaced the head of debt markets, began exiting European leveraged finance and sold CIBC's U.S. investment banking division.

Genuity Capital Markets analyst Mario Mendonca said the current problems won't dissipate until CIBC fences in its subprime exposure by either entirely hedging it or writing it down, and also stated that its future earnings power has not been significantly eroded.

In addition to the new executives, CIBC said yesterday that is nominating Nick Le Pan, the former head of Canada's banking regulator, and Bob Steacy, a retired chief financial officer of Torstar Corp., to its board.

Bob Astley, who was the CEO of Clarica Life Insurance when Mr. Williamson was its CFO, said yesterday that CIBC's new CFO is "one of the most straightforward and trustworthy people I've ever met.

"He has a very restrained ego, he's not a big ego kind of guy," Mr. Astley added.

Toronto securities lawyer and corporate governance specialist Peter Dey hired Mr. Williamson as chief executive of Atlas Cold Storage Income Trust after the company was hit by an accounting scandal.

"I think he's a terrific guy, and I think it's a terrific appointment [at CIBC]," Mr. Dey said. "David is a guy that, I think, responds to a challenge, and clearly CIBC has some challenges."

Mr. Dey added that these new additions to CIBC's team "will raise the tone at the top."

Stop the bleeding: CIBC witnessed big changes in its upper ranks a few years ago in the wake of the $ 2.4billion ( U. S.) Enron settlement. Now, facing an even larger writedown over U. S. subprime mortgage exposure, itís saying goodbye to the head of CIBC World Markets and its chief risk officer.

Richard Nesbitt, a friend and former colleague of CIBC chief Gerry McCaughey, was chief executive officer of TSX Group Inc. until yesterday morning. His new job? Steering the brokerage clear of the troubles that continually undermine the parent.

Accountant David Williamson, 47, is the new chief financial officer. Companies he turns his hand to ñ including Atlas Cold Storage and Clarica Life Insurance ñ tend to be coveted by others and taken over.

Nick Le Pan, 56, is the former head of the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions, which regulates the banks. But he most recently made headlines as the author of a report highlighting the shortcomings of the RCMPís ability to investigate securities fraud cases

Rounding out CIBC's bid to keep an eye on the details is Robert Steacy. He is an accountant who toiled for 25 years at Torstar Corp. before retiring as CFO in 2005.
__________________________________________________________
The Globe and Mail, Virginia Galt & Tara Perkins, 7 January 2008

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce president and chief executive officer Gerry McCaughey has shaken up the bank's executive ranks in the wake of recent problems related to CIBC's subprime exposure.

As part of the re-organization, Mr. McCaughey has recruited TSX Group chief executive officer Richard Nesbitt to take on a new role as CEO of CIBC World Markets.

Tom Woods, currently chief financial officer of CIBC, becomes chief risk officer, effective immediately.

And David Williamson, formerly president and CEO of Atlas Cold Storage and CFO of Clarica Life Insurance, will be joining CIBC as chief financial officer, effective this week, the bank said.

Mr. Nesbitt, who served as CEO of the TSX Group Inc. from 2004 to 2007, will join CIBC on Feb. 29.

As part of the reorganization, Brian Shaw, CEO of CIBC World Markets, and Ken Kilgour, chief risk officer, will be leaving CIBC.

"We are pleased to have Tom Woods leading our risk function," Mr. McCaughey, said in a statement.

"Tom is a seasoned professional with deep knowledge and understanding of our risk profile and our strategy of consistent and sustainable growth," he said.

"Richard Nesbitt and David Williamson are talented and respected executives who share CIBC's vision of creating shareholder value by delivering consistent, solid and sustainable growth over time. We are pleased that they will be joining CIBC."

In December, CIBC raised the possibility that it could take another $2-billion (U.S.) in charges this quarter as a result of its exposure to the U.S. subprime mortgage market. That's in addition to $978-million (Canadian) in charges that had previously been announced. Some analysts believe the future writedowns will surpass $2-billion.

In addition to shaking up the executive ranks, CIBC announced Monday that it will nominate Nicholas Le Pan, former superintendent of financial institutions, and Robert Steacy, retired CFO of Torstar Corp., for election as members of CIBC's board of directors.

CIBC's large exposure to subprime has caused some analysts and investors to question the credibility of the bank's executives and directors, and has been a particular problem for Mr. McCaughey, who took over as CEO in the summer of 2004 right as the bank took a multi-billion dollar hit as a result of Enron. One of Mr. McCaughey's top priorities became taking risk out of the bank.

Genuity Capital Markets analyst Mario Mendonca wrote in a note to clients that he sees the management changes as "a positive first step in the three-step process required to allow [CIBC] to trade on its future earnings power rather than solely on the subprime exposure."

The other steps are to put a fence around the exposure, and to provide comfort that future earnings power has not been significantly eroded, he wrote.

The most important change, he said, is the appointment of Mr. Williamson as CFO. Mr. Williamson joined Clarica 17 months before it was sold, and joined Canada Life nine months before it was sold. He joined Atlas Cold Storage two and a half years before it was sold, Mr. Mendonca said.

"In highlighting Mr. Williamson's track record for joining companies that are subsequently sold, we are not suggesting that [CIBC] is on the selling block," he wrote. "Instead, we are suggesting that Mr. Williamson's primary contribution to the bank may be one of selling any number of large business units within the bank, including World Markets. If on the other hand, cross-pillar mergers are permitted, Mr. Williamson's insurance background could prove very valuable in ther merger or [CIBC] and one of Canada's large insurers."

Edward Jones analyst Craig Fehr said Monday's announcements were "a necessary move" for the bank. "It's no secret that their risk management has been called into question," he said, adding that these changes signal to investors that CIBC is serious about managing risk.

He applauded the decision to bring some fresh blood to the bank. "I think replacing the head of the wholesale business with an outsider brings in a new perspective," he said.

"It's tough to say if it's sufficient at this point," he said. "It's a step in the right direction."

John Aiken, an analyst at Dundee Securities, said in a note to clients that he was "one of the many who believed that additional management changes at CIBC were necessary after the apparent disruption in CIBC's risk management policies that resulted in incremental, outsized exposure to U.S. subprime real estate.

"However, after already cleaning house not too long ago, CIBC must be very careful given that [it does] not necessarily have the same management depth as some of its peers," he added.

"We believe that these executive changes are a harbinger of additional changes, particularly in World Markets given Richard Nesbitt's background and history at both TSX Group and HSBC Securities Canada," he said. "While the management changes will likely be viewed positively by the market, as it demonstrates that the board is not taking the current situation lightly, we note that it does little to change the current predicament that CIBC faces."

Monday's moves are not the first Mr. McCaughey has made as a result of the subprime issue. He sold off the bulk of CIBC's U.S. investment banking business this fall, and made changes in the lower levels, including replacing the head of debt markets.

In announcing Mr. Nesbitt's resignation as CEO of TSX Group, TSX chairman Wayne Fox said Mr. Nesbitt had effectively led tremendous change at his organization.

"He leaves behind a strong management team that will continue to execute on the organization's growth strategy as it has in the past," Mr. Fox said in a statement.
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Financial Post, Jonathan Ratner, 7 January 2008

CIBC’s announcement that it has lured TSX Group Inc. CEO Richard Nesbitt to head up its investment banking division, CIBC World Markets, accompanies several other senior management changes at the bank. As of Jan. 10, David Williamson, who has served as CEO of Atlas Cold Storage and Chief Financial Officer of Clarica Life Insurance, becomes CFO. CIBC’s new Chief Risk Officer, Tom Woods, previously served as the bank’s CFO.

Dundee Securities analyst John Aiken said he was one of many that believed more management changes were needed at CIBC after an apparent disruption in its risk management policies led to an “incremental, outsized exposure to U.S. subprime real estate.”

But given that the bank completed another house cleaning not so long ago, “CIBC must be very careful given that they do not necessarily have the same management depth as some of its peers,” he told clients in a note.

Given Mr. Nesbitt’s background and history at TSX Group and HSBC Securities Canada, more changes may be in the works at both World Markets and CIBC, he added.

And while the market may like the changes as a sign that CIBC’s board is serious about the company’s recent woes, the problems remain.

Mr. Aiken believes CIBC’s ultimate exposure to U.S. subprime real estate investments will likely be more than US$2.4-billion, which represents roughly $4.75 per share in charges.

“Consequently, we believe that CIBC’s valuation will continue to be driven by its balance sheet and any potential positives stemming from the executive changes will be overshadowed in the near term.”

He continues to rate the shares a “market underperform” with a $65 price target.
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08 January 2008

Blackmont Cuts Bank P/E Targets

  
Financial Post, 08 January 2008, David Pett

The ongoing uncertainty swirling around financial stocks has prompted Blackmont Capital analyst Brad Smith to revisit the median price earnings ratio he expects Canadian banking stocks to trade at this year.

Citing the "rising uncertainty with respect to both the near- and longer-term impact that ongoing global credit market dislocations may have on future bank earnings," Mr. Smith cut his median P/E prediction for Canadian banks to 10 times earnings compared with 12 times previously.

The downward adjustments mean his median twelve-month projected upside for banking stocks swoons from 31% to 12%.

He keeps his BUY recommendations on Bank of Nova Scotia, Royal Bank and Bank of Montreal while lowering his target prices for National Bank and CIBC, on which he has a "hold" and "sell," respectively.

• BMO target price cut from $72 to $63
• TD Bank target price cut from $77 to $68
;

07 January 2008

TD Bank & Commerce Bancorp Amend Deal

  
Reuters, 7 January 2008

Commerce Bancorp Inc , New Jersey's largest bank, on Monday said it has settled shareholder lawsuits over its planned $8.5 billion acquisition by Canada's Toronto-Dominion Bank , and said it expects fourth-quarter credit losses to increase.

In a regulatory filing, Cherry Hill-based Commerce said it reached an agreement that would reduce the fee it would pay if it backed out of the stock-and-cash merger, to $255 million from $332 million.

In exchange, it said the plaintiffs would dismiss their federal and state claims, including those against former Chief Executive Vernon Hill.

The settlements were reached after mediation before retired Magistrate Judge Joel Rosen of the U.S. District Court in New Jersey, and require final documentation and court approval, Commerce said.

Commerce also said it expects to set aside $50 million to $60 million for credit losses in the fourth quarter, up from $26 million in the third quarter.

It attributed the increase to a large loan transferred to non-accrual status, residential and other real estate exposure, and exposures to leveraged loans in its commercial portfolio.

Commerce announced the takeover by Toronto-Dominion on October 2, barely three months after it announced Hill's departure following the disclosure of a variety of dealings involving him and his family. The bank has said it faces a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission probe into those dealings.

Toronto-Dominion's purchase of Commerce would nearly double the U.S. presence of Canada's second-largest bank, which previously bought TD Banknorth of Portland, Maine and Hudson United Bancorp of Mahwah, New Jersey. Commerce on Monday set a February 6 meeting for its shareholders to vote on the merger.
__________________________________________________________
Bloomberg, Jeff Kearns, 7 January 2008

Toronto-Dominion Bank fell to a six-week low on speculation Canada's second-largest bank may write down loans tied to the subprime mortgage market.

Toronto-Dominion spokesman Simon Townsend said in an e-mailed statement that "TD does not have any direct or indirect exposure to U.S. subprime mortgages." The Toronto bank's shares fell C$1.46, or 2.2 percent, to C$65.66 in Toronto trading.

Options traders increased their bets that the stock will continue to decline.

"They're supposedly going to be taking a writedown related to their subprime and collateralized debt obligation exposure,'' said Michael Nasto, senior trader at U.S. Global Investors Inc., which manages $5 billion in San Antonio. ``We're hearing it's going to be $11 billion.''

In Canadian options trading, contracts that convey the right to sell the shares at C$62 before Jan. 18 were the most active. Those contracts, which require a 5.9 percent share-price drop to reach their strike price, more than quadrupled to 45 cents in Montreal trading.

Bearish options bets outnumbered bullish ones, or calls, by 2-to-1 in Canada and 34-to-1 in U.S. trading. Puts trading volume in the U.S. surged to 10,537 contracts, or 29 times the 20-day average.

``There are rumors of a writedown,'' said Steve Sosnick, equity risk manager at Timber Hill LLC, the options market-making unit of Interactive Brokers Group. ``I'm seeing very active put buying of TD options in both Canada and the U.S. and for TD this is unusual activity."
__________________________________________________________
The Globe and Mail, Tara Perkins, 7 January 2008

Shares of Toronto-Dominion Bank slumped Monday on speculation that the lender had substantial undeclared exposure to the subprime mortgage mess, a notion the bank staunchly denies.

TD chief executive officer Ed Clark has spent the past few months reminding anybody who will listen that his bank has avoided the subprime debacle, but a rumour swept through the market Monday morning that the bank could have as much as $12-billion of exposure through complex derivatives.

The speculation was that the bank got the exposure through Commerce Bancorp, a U.S. lender that TD is acquiring, and with so many rumours about banks coming true, some investors were inclined to believe the tale.

At their lowest, TD shares dropped as much as $2.12 each, or 3.2 per cent, to $65 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

However, officials of both banks denied any subprime exposure. Commerce Bancorp's director of investor relations, Edward Jordan, said Monday that the New Jersey-based bank has no exposure to subprime mortgages.

"We don't have any subprime," he said.

Late in the afternoon, TD issued a statement saying it does not have any direct or indirect exposure to U.S. subprime mortgages, and that, based on its continued due diligence, Commerce Bancorp also has no direct or indirect exposure in its investment portfolio and has only nominal exposure in its loan portfolio.

"TD continues to be comfortable with the credit quality of Commerce's investments and loan portfolios," TD stated.

Commerce did disclose in a filing with regulators yesterday that it expects to book a fourth-quarter charge in the range of $50-million (U.S.) to $60-million in relation to credit losses, up from $26-million in the third quarter. The charge stems partially from real estate exposures, and exposures in the leveraged loan part of the bank's portfolio.

TD's stock closed down 2.18 per cent, or $1.46 (Cdn) at $65.66 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.
__________________________________________________________
The Globe and Mail, Tara Perkins, 4 January 2008

Toronto-Dominion Bank and the New Jersey bank that it's buying have entered into a settlement agreement to put to rest a number of lawsuits that had been filed on behalf of the target bank's shareholders.

As part of the agreement, they will make changes to some aspects of the $8.5-billion (U.S.) takeover deal, including reducing the break fee that Commerce Bancorp Inc. of Cherry Hill, N.J., would have to pay TD if the takeover falls through.

In regulatory filings yesterday, Commerce disclosed that 10 purported shareholder class-action suits against it had been filed since it announced on Oct. 2 that it had struck a deal to be taken over by TD.

All of the suits named Commerce and some of its executives and directors; seven of the suits also named TD Bank.

The suits, which were consolidated in the New Jersey Superior Court, alleged that TD was not paying enough for Commerce, which was accused of not doing enough to maximize shareholder value. Plaintiffs then took their claims to the federal court in New Jersey, where TD was accused of aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty.

"Although Commerce and TD believe that these lawsuits are without merit, they sought a settlement in order to avoid the burdens and expenses of further litigation," Commerce's proxy statement said.

They negotiated from Dec. 28 to Dec. 31, when they reached a settlement agreement that was put to the court on Jan. 2.

It led to TD and Commerce making additional disclosures about their deal. They also agreed to change the break fee, chopping it to $255-million from $332-million.

The proposed settlement is still subject to court approval.
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Bloomberg, Jesse Westbrook, 2 January 2008

A Toronto Dominion Bank unit, trying to prevent investor losses, received regulators' approval to buy $300 million in mortgage-linked securities out of one its money market funds.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission won't object if Toronto Dominion's TD Asset Management USA Inc. purchases ``trust certificates'' held by the fund, the SEC said in a Dec. 21 letter released by the agency. The certificates, which may trigger losses if the underlying home loans default, account for about 1.6 percent of the fund's total assets.

Toronto Dominion, Canada's second-largest bank, joins Legg Mason Inc. and Bank of America Corp. in trying to bolster money- market funds whose holdings have plunged amid the worst U.S. housing slump in 17 years. The bailouts are aimed at keeping funds from falling below the $1-a-share threshold promised to investors. That can shake confidence and spur withdrawals.

``The Company's board of directors has authorized the proposed transaction as being in the best interest of the fund and its shareholders,'' TD Asset Management said in a Dec. 21 letter to the SEC.

The trust certificates, issued by Corsair Trust I-1020, are held by TD Asset Management's TDAM Money Market Portfolio. TD Asset Management sought permission to buy the certificates after determining ``the absence of liquidity in the market'' may have prompted losses.

Corsair is a limited-purpose finance company, similar to a structured investment vehicle, TD Asset Management spokeswoman Lisa Hodgins said. The trust certificates, which included a credit-default swap, were a ``non-material holding'' for the TDAM Money Market Portfolio, she said in an interview.

SEC spokesman John Nester declined to comment.

SIVs, popular investments for money funds looking to increase yields, sold commercial paper or medium-term debt backed by subprime mortgages. SunTrust Banks Inc. and Bank of America have propped up funds with SIV-issued debt in the past month.

Atlanta-based SunTrust received SEC approval in October to prop up two money-market funds if they suffered losses on $115 million in medium-term notes issued by an SIV. Last month, SunTrust injected $1.4 billion into the funds.
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03 January 2008

Dundee & Desjardins' Outlook for the Financial Sector

  
Financial Post, Jonathan Ratner, 3 January 2008

It was a turbulent year for the financial sector. Make that the banks, who had a particularly weak second half of 2007. While Canadian lifecos outperformed the S&P/TSX composite index just slightly last year, climbing 7.3% and 7.2%, respectively, the banks declined 9.9%, according to Desjardins Securities.

Analyst Michael Goldberg predicts the tough times will continue in 2008, with the financials as a whole expected to perform worse than last year and the lifecos to outperform the banks.

“Once again, dividends and dividend growth are king,” he told clients in a note, adding that Toronto-Dominion Bank, Bank of Nova Scotia and Manulife Financial Corp. continue to be rated “top pick.”

“They [lifecos] continue to have stronger profitable business platforms and greater management depth outside of Canada than the banks,” Mr. Goldberg said. He also said a more stable loonie will become more evident in their international operations and the lifecos will benefit from the aging global population’s desire for long-term savings.

The fact that most lifecos start from a lower dividend payout base when compared to the banks points to stronger dividend growth for lifecos in 2008.

The analyst also likes low loan-to-value alternative lenders Home Capital Group Inc. and Quest Capital Corp., Kingsway Financial Services Inc. due to its diverse businesses and attractive valuation, and Brookfield Asset Management Inc. for its alternative asset management business. They are all rated “buy” at Desjardins.

As for the banks, Mr. Goldberg acknowledged the many differences between Canadian and U.S. names and their respective economies, but insisted that Canadian banks will be affected by slower U.S. bank lending.

“While credit spreads widen, existing loan spreads may not widen at the same pace,” he said. “On balance, if loan growth is slow, the effect is a slowdown in net interest revenue and related fee income.”
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Financial Post, David Pett, 31 December 2007

Manulife Financial Corp. appear to have avoided the headaches associated with the ongoing credit crisis that has gripped the financials sector over the past few months, Dundee Capital analyst Susan Cohen says.

She recently reviewed Manulife's credit quality and said in a note to clients that the company's exposure to subprime mortgages – estimated somewhere around $860-million – is benign and material losses are not expected. Meanwhile, she said the company has no exposure to collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) or structured investment vehicles (SIVs).

As for the company's bond portfolio which totals $97-billion, Ms. Cohen noted that Manulife looks at the quality of the underlying bond and does not invest on the strength of the financial guarantor.

"Therefore the strength of the financial guarantor (i.e. the fact that S&P downgraded several) is not a factor and will not result in losses." she said.

She did acknowledge, however, that should 2008 usher in recessionary conditions and the unfolding of a normal credit cycle, it is likely that some deterioration in the company's credit quality will occur.

That said, she told clients it is premature to revise 2008 earnings estimates at this time and left her "market perform" rating and $45.75 price target unchanged.

"We maintain that credit quality at Manulife is superior to that of most Canadian banks and many US lifecos and thus remains a relatively defensive investment."
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02 January 2008

Minsheng Cleared to Form Fund Venture with RBC

  
Bloomberg, Zhao Yidi, 2 January 2008

China Minsheng Banking Corp., the nation's first privately owned bank, said it has approval to set up a fund management company with the Royal Bank of Canada and Three Gorges Financial Co.

Minsheng received a notice of approval from the China Banking Regulatory Commission on Dec. 28, according to a stock exchange filing that doesn't provide details. The bank said in October 2006 that it will own 60 percent of the venture while Royal Bank of Canada, that country's biggest bank, will control 30 percent and Three Gorges will own the remaining 10 percent.

Minsheng wants to diversify its revenue and risks while the government curbs lending to prevent the economy from overheating. Setting up a fund management unit will allow Minsheng to profit from a stock market that more than doubled last year.

The venture will also help Royal Bank of Canada join Schroders Plc and Alliance AG among institutions that have set up fund units to tap China's $2.2 trillion of household savings.

China's government encourages banks to set up fund management companies to broaden their revenue sources and increase institutional investment in the nation's stock market.
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TD Bank Can Bolster Its Money Market Fund, SEC Says

  
Bloomberg, Jesse Westbrook, 2 January 2008

A Toronto Dominion Bank unit, trying to prevent investor losses, received regulators' approval to buy $300 million in mortgage-linked securities out of one its money market funds.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission won't object if Toronto Dominion's TD Asset Management USA Inc. purchases ``trust certificates'' held by the fund, the SEC said in a Dec. 21 letter released by the agency. The certificates, which may trigger losses if the underlying home loans default, account for about 1.6 percent of the fund's total assets.

Toronto Dominion, Canada's second-largest bank, joins Legg Mason Inc. and Bank of America Corp. in trying to bolster money- market funds whose holdings have plunged amid the worst U.S. housing slump in 17 years. The bailouts are aimed at keeping funds from falling below the $1-a-share threshold promised to investors. That can shake confidence and spur withdrawals.

``The Company's board of directors has authorized the proposed transaction as being in the best interest of the fund and its shareholders,'' TD Asset Management said in a Dec. 21 letter to the SEC.

The trust certificates, issued by Corsair Trust I-1020, are held by TD Asset Management's TDAM Money Market Portfolio. TD Asset Management sought permission to buy the certificates after determining ``the absence of liquidity in the market'' may have prompted losses.

Corsair is a limited-purpose finance company, similar to a structured investment vehicle, TD Asset Management spokeswoman Lisa Hodgins said. The trust certificates, which included a credit-default swap, were a ``non-material holding'' for the TDAM Money Market Portfolio, she said in an interview.

SEC spokesman John Nester declined to comment.

SIVs, popular investments for money funds looking to increase yields, sold commercial paper or medium-term debt backed by subprime mortgages. SunTrust Banks Inc. and Bank of America have propped up funds with SIV-issued debt in the past month.

Atlanta-based SunTrust received SEC approval in October to prop up two money-market funds if they suffered losses on $115 million in medium-term notes issued by an SIV. Last month, SunTrust injected $1.4 billion into the funds.
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