Monday, December 16, 2024

Banks head into Q4 with investors looking for better days ahead

Must read

TORONTO — The majority of Canada’s big banks are heading into fourth-quarter earnings this week riding high as fears around mortgage defaults and a recession ease.

But analysts say the banks will have to show there’s enough earnings growth ahead to justify current valuations that are on the high end of historic trends.

“We believe that the banks now must prove out the thesis,” said Canaccord Genuity analyst Matthew Lee in a note.

The S&P TSX bank index is up around 12 per cent since last quarter’s results, including a 19 per cent gain for Scotiabank and 17 per cent climb for CIBC.

The exception is TD, which was hit with a US$3 billion fine and growth limits in the U.S. because of its anti-money laundering deficiencies. Its stock is down slightly this quarter amid these struggles.

Lee said, overall, the banks are now trading at a “lofty” 12.1 times earnings, a level justified by a constructive growth environment, robust capital positions and loan books that look reasonably healthy, but they will need to show improved margins ahead to maintain their stock prices.

“With sector valuations full, we believe the next leg of upside will have to come from earnings growth,” Lee said.

Investors that have propped up bank stocks are already looking past the still-worsening credit fundamentals and sluggish loan growth to the turnaround ahead, said Scotiabank analyst Meny Grauman.

“Canadian bank stocks have seen some good momentum since the summer, as the soft landing scenario for both the U.S. and Canadian economies took hold,” he said.

“The current rally is less about what the banks report in Q4, and more about their outlooks for next year and beyond.”

Even TD appears promising when looking further out, said Grauman.

“We also continue to like the risk-reward profile for TD, even though this is very much not a consensus view.”

While U.S. regulators have limited TD’s asset growth, Lee said he thinks TD won’t drastically underperform its peers over the medium term, with levers like mortgage growth and its U.S. wholesale business to help drive gains.

The bank has been going through a leadership shakeup as it works to fix the gaps found by regulators and there’s more change ahead after chief executive Bharat Masrani announced he’s stepping down next year.

With so much change going on at the bank, and its limited guidance so far for fiscal 2025, analysts will be most closely watching its outlook, said Lee.

TD aside, the perception of Canadian banks has shifted notably from recent quarters where bank stocks were under pressure over concerns that defaults would spike as borrowers buckled under the strain of high interest rates.

Latest article