Good morning, and welcome to Scotiabank's 2022 Q3 results presentation. My name is John McCartney, and I'm Head of Investor Relations here at Scotiabank. Presenting to you this morning are Brian Porter, Scotiabank's President and Chief Executive Officer, Raj Viswanathan, our Chief Financial Officer, and Phil Thomas, our Chief Risk Officer. Following our comments, we'll be glad to take your questions. Also present to take questions are the following Scotiabank executives, Dan Rees from Canadian Banking, Glen Gowland from Global Wealth Management, Ignacio Deschamps from International Banking, and Jake Lawrence from Global Banking and Markets. Before we start, on behalf of those speaking today, I refer you to slide 2 of our presentation, which contains Scotiabank's caution regarding forward-looking statements. With that, I will now turn the call over to Brian.
Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. This morning, Scotiabank announced Q3 earnings of CAD 2.6 billion or CAD 2.10 per share, representing a 4% year-over-year increase. Strong personal, commercial, and corporate banking activity resulted in another quarter of solid earnings in a period where market-sensitive businesses were challenged globally. The bank's trading revenues within GBM and GBM LATAM were down over CAD 250 million year-over-year and CAD 150 million quarter-over-quarter due to lower client activity. Asset growth of 13% year-over-year and strong credit quality, combined with prudent expense management, positions the bank well for continued earnings growth. The macroeconomic backdrop of our key geographies remains positive as economies begin to stabilize following a unique confluence of circumstances.
In Canada, we see the strength of the labor market as an important counterbalance to the impact of inflation on consumer confidence. In the Pacific Alliance countries, growth is moderating somewhat from the rapid post-pandemic GDP recovery experienced over the last year. Central banks in the region have acted quickly and decisively to date to control inflation. Our credit outlook remains favorable, a result of our high quality, highly secured portfolio. Delinquencies and write-offs have continued to trend positively, which in absolute terms are lower than our pre-pandemic experience. We are closely monitoring customer balance sheets and spending behavior for early signs of stress and the impact of recent inflationary pressure on the daily cost of living.
Despite our current experience and confidence in the strength of our portfolio, we have made conservative adjustments to reflect the possibility of future economic outcomes, resulting in higher PCLs in the international retail division this quarter. Average customer deposit balances remain significantly above pre-pandemic levels, with observable additions in term products in response to rate increases. Buoyed by strong employment, overall consumer spending in Canada also showed strength in the quarter, up nearly 20% with year-over-year increases in discretionary categories, plus the obvious impact of higher gasoline and grocery prices. Lower market valuations and a slowdown in the financing transactions in public equity and fixed income markets have impacted our market sensitive GBM and wealth business results. Our personal and commercial businesses, however, both domestically and in our international banking division, have delivered strong volume growth in line with our risk appetite.
Canadian banking delivered strong earnings growth of 12% year-over-year. Residential mortgage activity held at robust levels through the quarter. Our efforts to grow and sectorally diversify our commercial banking businesses resulted in very strong contribution once again this quarter, and we saw a continued recovery in card and auto balances. Importantly, strategies implemented to improve deposit momentum resulted in our deposit growth, matching our Canadian banking loan growth in the quarter, both up 3% from Q2. During the quarter, we were very pleased to announce a significant expansion of the existing Scene+ loyalty offering, adding the ability to earn and redeem points on more categories covering everyday spend, including grocery and pharmacy. The evolution from an entertainment loyalty offering to an expanded lifestyle platform is clear as we welcome the Empire brands, including Sobeys and Safeway, to the Scene+ partnership.
We believe the Scene program will be an important driver for the bank in terms of customer acquisition. The Atlantic Canada rollout kicked off just last week, added 150,000 new Scene members during the rollout. The rollout will continue in stages across the country in the coming months. International Banking also delivered strong earnings growth of 30% on the back of solid loan and revenue growth while managing through higher interest rates and inflation. Our Caribbean business is recovering strongly now and reflecting a more normalized level of contribution. Global Wealth Management results showed good stability and earnings resilience, down a modest 3% year-over-year, considering that equity and debt markets experienced double-digit. Careful expense control, market share gains and growth in our private banking and advisory channels, including international wealth, help mitigate the impact of lower fixed income and equity markets.
We continue to build on our capabilities with the goal of delivering comprehensive wealth advice and solutions through our strong and trusted brands. ScotiaMcLeod, MD Financial Management, and Jarislowsky Fraser. The integration of our private banking professionals into these relationship channels has been a significant growth driver for our business. Global banking and markets saw a strong loan growth of 9% in the quarter. Robust business lending activity was offset by an extremely quiet period for capital markets issuance and challenging markets for trading. Average deposit growth was strong in the quarter, driven by new client acquisitions. Last week, we announced the launch of Scotia TranXact, our digital payments platform for business banking clients, which we expect to further bolster our continued deposit strength. We continue to invest significantly in both technology and people.
Despite heightened expense pressures, each of our Canadian banking, international banking, and global wealth businesses continue to generate positive operating leverage. Our common equity tier 1 capital ratio ended the quarter at 11.4% as we deployed capital primarily to support organic loan growth while continuing to return capital to our shareholders. We view our current capital levels as prudent and appropriate given the current environment. The bank continues to be recognized as a global leader in the markets we operate. At the recent 2022 Euromoney Awards for Excellence, Scotiabank was named the best bank in Canada, as well as North America's best bank for sustainable finance, and best investment bank in Chile. We also continue to invest at the grassroots level in the communities where we live and work.
We released the inaugural ScotiaRISE Impact Report, highlighting the 1st year's results, detailing 200 community partnerships and CAD 26 million in community investments globally. Recent commitments include programs to help newcomer Canadian youth stay in school and CAD 100 million in support of black-led small businesses here in Canada. Overall, we are pleased with our Q3 results and believe the bank is very well positioned from a risk management perspective and continues to execute on long-term oriented growth strategies regardless of volatility in markets and a more variable near-term economic outlook. With that, I'll turn the call over to Raj for a detailed financial review.
Thank you, Brian, and good morning, everyone. Before I begin, I'd like to note that all my comments on the bank and business line results are on an adjusted basis. I'll review the performance for the quarter starting on slide 5. The bank reported another strong quarterly earnings of CAD 2.6 billion and diluted earnings per share of CAD 2.10, an increase in EPS of 4% year-over-year. Return on equity was 15.4% this quarter. While all bank pre-tax, pre-provision earnings decreased 1% year-over-year, the pre-tax, pre-provision earnings for the 4 business lines in aggregate increased 3%. Revenues were up 1% year-over-year as an increase in net interest income of 11% more than offset a decline in non-interest revenue of 12%, primarily relating to trading and advisory revenues being lower.
The increase in net interest income was driven by strong loan growth across all business lines. The net interest margin declined a modest 1 basis point quarter-over-quarter. Interest expense increased during the quarter, driven by a couple of key factors. With central banks increasing rates quite rapidly, we are seeing liabilities reprice largely in line with these rising interest rates. Secondly, customers are choosing to move deposits towards higher paying term deposits. The combination of these 2 factors, offset by the benefits from interest rate risk management initiatives, has resulted in a modest margin compression during the quarter. We expect the pace of asset repricing to pick up in future quarters. Non-interest income declined CAD 417 million or 12%.
Fee and commission income fell 3% in spite of an 8% growth in banking revenues as wealth management revenues declined 3% and underwriting and advisory fees was down CAD 100 million or 49%. Trading revenues were down CAD 167 million or 35% in both GBM and GBM LATAM, driven by volatile markets and low client activity. The PCL ratio was 22 basis points for the quarter, up 9 basis points from the last quarter. Year-over-year, adjusted expenses increased modestly by 2%, driven by higher personnel costs and share-based compensation and advertising and technology-related spend to support business growth. The productivity ratio was 53.4% this quarter, while our year-to-date operating leverage was a negative 0.9%.
On slide 6, we provide an evolution of our common equity tier 1 ratio over the quarter, as well as the quarter's change in risk-weighted assets. The bank reported a common equity tier 1 ratio of 11.4%, down 20 basis points from 11.6% last quarter, primarily from strong earnings that was offset by organic growth and the impact of share repurchases. This represents approximately CAD 4 billion of excess capital over the 10.5% level. Strong internal capital generation of 28 basis points was entirely offset by growth in organic risk-weighted assets. During Q3, the bank repurchased approximately 5 million shares, deploying 9 basis points of capital. The bank has deployed capital in line with our strategy to grow the bank organically, being opportunistic on inorganic opportunities while returning capital to shareholders during 2022.
Year-to-date, the bank has deployed all the internal capital generated of approximately 90 basis points to grow RWA organically that will support future capital generation. In addition, the bank used 62 basis points of excess capital to repurchase approximately 31 million shares year-to-date. Our priority remains to deploy capital to support organic growth initiatives in each business line while prudently managing capital in the face of a less certain economic outlook. Turning now to the business line results beginning on slide 7. Canadian banking reported earnings of CAD 1.2 billion, up 12% year-over-year. Pretax pre-provision earnings also grew 13% year-over-year, driven by strong revenue growth of 12%. Net interest income increased 16% following several quarters of volume growth and recent margin expansion.
Residential mortgages grew 14%, while business loans grew 23% compared to last year. We would note that the anticipated slowdown in mortgage growth is reflected in the quarter-over-quarter increase, which moderated to 2%. Deposit growth during the quarter was also healthy at 4% year-over-year. Net interest margin expanded by 7 basis points quarter-over-quarter to 2.29%, benefiting from higher deposit spreads and the impact of the Bank of Canada rate increases. The portfolio mix remains skewed towards secured retail lending and commercial loans, thus partially offsetting the NIM expansion. Non-interest income was in line with last quarter, but declined modestly by 1% as the prior year had elevated earnings attributable to private equity and income from associates, though partially offset by higher banking revenues, insurance fees and foreign exchange fees.
Expenses increased 9% year-over-year, driven by higher technology, advertising and personnel costs to support business growth. The segment generated positive operating leverage for a 7th consecutive quarter and achieved year-to-date operating leverage of 2.4%. The PCL ratio was 9 basis points, an increase of 2 basis points compared to the prior year. Turning now to global wealth management on slide 8. Earnings of CAD 383 million declined a modest 3% year-over-year, impacted by equity and bond markets that are down significantly more. Revenue declined 2% due primarily to lower fee income driven by lower assets under management and trading volumes, partially offset by higher interest income from strong private banking volume growth and margin expansion.
Expenses declined 2% as lower volume related expenses, primarily compensation, were partly offset by higher costs to support business initiatives. The productivity ratio this quarter was 59.9%, improving 30 basis points from last year. This division has generated positive operating leverage in 10 of the last 11 quarters, and the year-to-date operating leverage is positive 0.3% despite revenue headwinds. The assets under management decreased 6% to CAD 320 billion, while assets under administration decreased CAD 1 billion to CAD 581 billion primarily due to market depreciation. This quarter saw strong growth across several wealth business lines in Canada and international despite the impact of market volatility on assets under management, reflecting the benefits of a diversified business model.
On a pretax pre-provision basis, Canadian wealth earnings were essentially in line with the prior year, excluding the impact of Scotia iTRADE, our retail trading platform that saw volume moderation. International wealth continued to grow with pretax pre-provision earnings up 5% year-over-year. Now referring to slide 9. Global banking and markets generated earnings of CAD 378 million, down 26% compared to the prior year. The results were driven by solid business banking performance as loans grew 22% and deposits grew 9% with improving margins, mainly in the United States in line with our growth strategy there. Client acquisition and engagement are positive and the loan and M&A pipelines remain strong. Revenue declined 8% due entirely to lower capital market activities, both advisory and trading.
Capital markets revenue was down this quarter with fixed income revenues down 34% and equities down 25% year-over-year. Although modest considering that fixed income and equity issuances in the Canadian market were down 70% and 80% respectively. Net interest income increased 12%. Average loans and acceptances increased CAD 9 billion or 9% quarter-over-quarter, and CAD 20 billion or 22% year-over-year. Sequential loan growth accelerated this quarter in Canada and the U.S., while average deposit balances increased 4% quarter-over-quarter and 9% year-over-year. Non-interest income decreased by CAD 143 million or 16% compared to the prior year, driven by reductions in underwriting and advisory due to lack of customer activity and slightly lower trading revenues.
Expenses were flat quarter-over-quarter as the business managed expense growth to respond to lower capital markets revenue. Expenses were up 6% year-over-year, due mainly to technology costs to support business development, partly offset by lower personnel costs. Continued PCL recoveries reflect the high credit quality of the lending book. GBM LATAM, which is reported as part of international banking, reported earnings of CAD 192 million, the 2nd highest quarter, up 5% year-over-year, as business banking earnings more than offset a weaker capital markets performance. This business has continued to deliver good growth despite the challenging market conditions we referenced earlier, driven by our focused banking activities to large corporate clients in the Pacific Alliance. Slide 10 shows the international banking results. My comments that follow are on an adjusted and constant dollar basis.
International banking reported another solid quarter with net income of CAD 631 million, up 30% year-over-year. The segment's net earnings continued to grow in line with the economic recovery and has steadily delivered improving results for 8 consecutive quarters. Pre-tax, pre-provision earnings grew 7% year-over-year, with a strong recovery in the Caribbean and Central America that grew 31%, which more than offset a 4% decline in the Pacific Alliance. Year-over-year loans grew 13%, with commercial loans up 14% and mortgages up 16%, while personal loans and credit cards also grew 7%. Revenue was up 3% year-over-year, driven by higher net interest income, which is partially offset by lower non-interest income. Quarter-over-quarter, net interest margin declined a modest 3 basis points to 385 basis points.
Recall that net interest margin expanded 17 basis points in the first 2 quarters of 2022 in this segment. The slight net interest margin compression was a result of higher cost of funds driven by a steep increase in central bank rates, movement of deposits from core to term, and deposits repricing faster than assets. Although non-interest revenue was down CAD 106 million, fee and commission revenue was up 9%. The remaining decline was due to lower trading income, mainly in Peru and Chile, lower insurance revenue, and higher investment gains last year. The provision for credit loss ratio declined year-over-year by 16 basis points to 84 basis points.
Non-interest expenses were flat compared with the prior year, despite high inflation of around 10% in the Pacific Alliance countries and increases related to business growth, which were mostly offset by benefits from accelerated digital progress and efficiency initiatives. This segment has generated positive operating leverage of 2.5% year to date. On slide 11, I'd like to briefly highlight the aggregate performance of the 4 business lines. Despite challenges in market-facing businesses, total revenues and pre-tax, pre-provisions for the 4 business lines together grew 3%, while year-to-date operating leverage was positive 1%. These metrics once again speak to the resilience and diversified earnings potential of our key operating segments.
Now turning to the other segment, we reported a modest adjusted net loss of CAD 52 million compared to a loss of CAD 10 million in the prior quarter and CAD 7 million in the prior year. Year over year, the change was a result of lower contribution from asset liability management activities and significantly lower investment gain that was offset by lower taxes and lower non-interest expenses. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Phil to discuss risks.
Thank you, Raj. Good morning, everyone. As Brian highlighted, the macroeconomic outlook has evolved since last quarter. Despite higher inflation, additional interest rate hikes, and moderating GDP forecasts, the credit quality of our portfolio remains strong. The following factors give us confidence across our footprint. First, the strong health of our customers and a favorable business mix continues to deliver low delinquency rates, low impaired formation, and improved write off trends. Deposit levels remain high, and we are seeing our customers exhibit prudent financial management. Secondly, loan originations across all portfolios continue to be of high quality. Thirdly, corporate credit is a positive differentiator, with no material bridge book exposures or watchlist accounts. Finally, despite these trends, we are thoughtful about the less favorable macroeconomic forecasts. The increase in our PCL ratio this quarter is primarily driven by expectations of longer-lasting inflationary pressure and more central bank rate increases.
Our ACL coverage reflects this outlook. With this backdrop, I will highlight a few points on what we are seeing across our portfolios. In our Canadian portfolio, performance remains favorable compared to pre-pandemic levels. Delinquency of 90+ days for retail was 15 basis points, or roughly half of the pre-pandemic ratio. Customer deposits on average are 14% higher than they were 2.5 years ago. While consumer spending remains high, repayment trends show improvement. Our Canadian uninsured mortgage portfolio remains strong, with LTVs of 46% and an average FICO score of 800. While we continue to see some preference towards variable rate mortgages, we note that 97% of our variable rate mortgage customers are above prime and have FICO scores of approximately 800.
These customers also have solid balance sheets with approximately 40% higher balances in their deposit accounts compared to fixed rate customers. Supporting these strong consumer metrics is a tight labor market, where unemployment remains at all-time lows of 4.9%. In our commercial portfolio, our growth is the result of a targeted high credit quality strategy. We are focused on sectors with favorable industry fundamentals such as commercial real estate, agriculture, and automotive. The bank's commercial real estate portfolio remains solid, made up of residential projects with tier 1 developers who have strong balance sheets and industrial properties where demand continues to exceed supply. Moving on to international banking retail, our credit quality is better positioned than it was pre-pandemic. Our portfolio is now 72% secured versus 65% pre-pandemic, driven by mortgage growth of 15% year-over-year in international banking.
Origination quality continues to improve. Our focus on high credit quality rated customers remains and has increased to 96% for originations versus 80% pre-pandemic. Portfolio delinquency of 90+ days decreased 88 basis points versus pre-pandemic as a result of prudent credit practices. Now turning to PCLs on page 15 and 16. PCLs this quarter were CAD 412 million or 22 basis points. The increase from last quarter was primarily driven by higher performing PCLs, up CAD 210 million due to loan growth and a less favorable macroeconomic outlook. Impaired PCLs were CAD 389 million this quarter, down CAD 406 million from last quarter, and remain at historical lows. We continue to see low levels of delinquency in both Canadian and international banking.
Our current allowances for credit losses this quarter were CAD 5.3 billion or an ACL of 72 basis points. Non-performing ACL remains stable in line with historically low yield formations and net write-offs. Total ACL coverage represents about 12 quarters of net write-offs, almost double our pre-pandemic levels. In summary, our customers continue to exhibit strong financial health. On a product-by-product basis, the ACL ratio is higher for most retail products relative to pre-pandemic levels reflecting current environments. Our lower all bank PCL ratio of 72 basis points versus pre-pandemic was driven by our change in business mix in favor of secured products, offset by additional weighting to downside risk related to a less favorable macroeconomic forecast. Lastly, despite the current macroeconomic headline concerns, we remain confident in the quality of our repositioned portfolio and prudent credit practices.
With that, I will turn the call back to Brian for closing remarks.
Thank you, Phil. Despite the heightened volatility in recent months and the resulting impact on our market-facing businesses, the bank remains on track to deliver a strong overall performance in fiscal 2022. As such, our commitments to deliver earnings growth, return on equity, and prudent expense management while maintaining a strong balance sheet remain intact. We have taken appropriate action to ensure we are conservatively provisioned in light of a less certain economic outlook. We will continue to closely monitor changes as they impact our businesses and the financial health of our customers. Greater than 95% of our double-digit loan growth this year to date represents exposure to very high quality investment grade corporate and commercial customers or secured retail borrowers. The typical indicators of softening demand or data that suggest business confidence in the real economy is trending lower is just not present.
Any project or investment deferrals we've seen from our corporate and commercial customers have been driven by prudence related to uncertain completion costs or labor availability rather than demand-side concerns. The portfolio repositioning we have undertaken in recent years by customer profile and geography has the bank set to capitalize on attractive higher growth markets in product segments consistent with our organization-wide risk framework. In summary, we are pleased with the operating performance of the bank this quarter. We are encouraged by the resilience and growth potential of the markets where we operate.
We expect our P&C businesses in Canada and international to grow earnings through high quality secured loan growth that will continue to support stable loan loss provisions. We are pleased by the expansion of the Scene+ loyalty program this quarter and the potential that presents in terms of customer acquisition in supporting our growth. We are very pleased with the resilient performance of the wealth management businesses in the face of double-digit contraction in equity and fixed income markets this quarter. We are well positioned to capture the money that is in motion with our diversified product offering. We expect the GBM business to bounce back in Q4. Origination businesses are rebounding and loan, deposit, and M&A pipelines remain strong.
We remain highly confident that the diversification of our business model, prudent risk management and focusing on meeting the needs of our customers, especially through challenging times, will yield strong long-term results for all our key stakeholders.
Thank you, Brian. We will now be pleased to take your questions. Please limit yourself to 1 question and then rejoin the queue to allow everyone the opportunity to participate in the call. Operator, can we have the first question on the phone, please?
Thank you. The first question is from Ebrahim Poonawala from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Maybe the first question, if you could spend some time on the margin outlook, Raj. 1, just talk to us in terms of expectations for consolidated NIM, NII, understanding your hedging program, that's been ongoing. Secondly, if you could both in Canadian and international banking, where do you see the margin going over the next few quarters? For international, do we need central banks to stop rate hikes before we see the margin expansion in international IB? Just give us a sense of the trajectory of the margin in international. What could be the end state, for that segment in terms of the margin? Thank you.
Sure. Thanks, Ebrahim, and good morning and thanks for the question. Let me just address the modest margin compression of 1 basis point we saw this quarter at the all bank level, and then I'll get to the 2 business lines you referenced. I'll point out a few reasons. The rapid increase in administered rates resulted in deposits repricing faster and a move to term deposits, which I referenced in my prepared remarks, both in Canada as well as in the Pacific Alliance countries. Significant increase, as you notice, both, you know, across all the Pacific Alliance countries. Brian referenced the 300 basis points in Colombia, for example. This also results in increased cost of funds, both deposits and term funding from the wholesale markets. What we've seen is stronger than anticipated growth in lower margin products too, you know, corporate, commercial mortgages.
That's also impacted what I would call the asset margin. Then asset repricing is ongoing, but it's obviously not kept pace with the changes in deposit repricing. That's kind of the explanation for the 1 basis point. Looking forward, we expect asset repricing to continue. That should improve the margin in future quarters. I'm talking about all bank now. The modest margin compression, frankly, is a result of the hedging that you referenced, the benefits that we have at the all bank level. As you know, we've typically hedged the U.S. and CAD and not necessarily the Pacific Alliance interest rates because you don't have the ability to hedge. Specifically to the 2 business lines you referenced, Canadian margin you saw expanding, a lot of it came from the deposit side.
Asset margins are lower, as you would expect in this rising rate environment in the medium term or in the short term, I should say, and start repricing through the medium term. Then we should start seeing asset margin expand in the Canadian bank. The same thing applies to international banks. It's only slightly different in that, you know, the rapid rate of increase has been exponentially high, say, compared to Canada. You're seeing a bigger impact in the international banking margin. I go back to the same thing in my prepared remarks, Ebrahim. That margin quickly rebounded from 369 to 386 in the last quarter of 17 basis points. That's the impact we see. The modest margin compression of 1 basis point is for the same reasons that I quoted, which applies to the whole bank.
You know, deposits moving in faster, conversion of what we would call co-deposits to term deposits happening pretty quickly in some of the countries in the Pacific Alliance. We should see margin expansion happening through the international banking business line as well. I'm not going to say in Q4 it's going to start expanding. I think Q4 will remain maybe likely stable. You know, looking forward into 2023, and we'll speak more in detail in November, we would expect that we should see NIM expansion in the international banking space as well.
Got it. That was helpful. Just, I'm sorry if I missed it. Did you talk about what you expect in terms of just consolidated all bank NIM for the Q4 , or how much of expansion you expect near-term?
Yeah, I think it should be fairly stable, Ebrahim, because I think the international bank NIM being stable, you know, cost of funds are now coming down fairly quickly, as we all know. As you know, central banks are trying to deal with inflation effects. I think the Canadian margin will, you know, I would say modestly expand as deposits margin contribute a little bit more. I'd say it's likely expected to be in line with what you saw this quarter, maybe a basis point or 2 one way or the other.
Got it. I'll take you. Thank you.
Thanks, Ebrahim.
Thank you. The next question is from Gabriel Dechaine from National Bank Financial. Please go ahead.
Good morning. I just have a question on the deposit, the substitution effect. Sounds like you're seeing it more in the international segment switching from, you know, 0 cost to term deposits. Is there any chance we start to see that in a more accelerated fashion in Canada? Just a quick one on the you know, client activity comment and GBM. You know, I get that characterization. I'm just wondering if you can put some maybe sort of frame it with a few numbers. M ore importantly, are you starting to see that reverse in the current quarter? Thanks.
Sure, Gabe, I'll start, and I'm sure Dan might have other stuff to say or not so specific to the business. This conversion, if I can call it that, between core to term, is actually happening in the Canadian bank too.
Okay.
It's just that the deposit base is significantly larger, so it's not actually showing up as big as it's showing up in the international banking space. That's the short version of the answer. Specific numbers, we've seen already about CAD 4 billion move from core to term deposits, and in international banking, it's been over CAD 1 billion. R elatively speaking, we're seeing similar trends in both businesses that I think is expected to continue until, you know, central bank rate increases stop, I would say, in the international banking space specifically. Jake, do you want to take the question on the GBM?
For sure. Thanks, Raj. Gabe, thanks for your question. To give you some dimensions or framing around it, I'll talk about Canada and the U.S. We've seen a decline in ECM issuance north of 80% in both of those markets, and those are our 2 largest markets. After that, on the debt capital market side, you've seen issuance decline north of 60% in the quarter in those same 2 markets, Canada and the U.S. To further frame that out, that's the lowest issuance levels we've seen in these markets at any point in the past 5 years. That's important because it obviously impacts some of the fee lines, but those new issues also then contribute to activating the capital markets, whether it's secondary trading, whether it's hedging activity, et cetera. Does have a material impact in the quarter.
In terms of outlook, we have already started to see it rebound. It's still early in Q4. We're only a few weeks in, but we're seeing our ECM business at a stronger level than where we were throughout all of Q3. T here are some signs of the rebound happening, including in ECM and DCM in those key markets in Canada and the U.S., so we're favorably disposed as we work through Q4 here. Hope that answers it.
I was thinking more the ECM, DCM activity. We've all seen that. I was thinking more along the lines of whether it's prime brokerage or some of the other business lines that we don't see as clearly and, you know, declines in margin loans, stuff like that. I guess it's probably along the same line.
Sure. Well, happy to add some coloring around that too. During the quarter, you obviously saw VIX shoot up. You saw equity indices be quite volatile and come down. With that, we also saw cost of funds, as Raj alluded to, move up. You had 2 effects happening, spreads narrowing on financing businesses and in trading margins. At the same time, you would've seen clients degrossing their exposure to a downward pressured market. That would've taken trading assets and trading securities down in the quarter, which you would've seen. We've been thoughtful around our balance sheet construction. As that's come down and as clients have not been accessing the primary market, whether it's debt or equity, we've been able to grow our loan side of the balance sheet and support our client growth there.
We've seen continued strong loan growth in our focus markets like the US and Canada, and we've seen continued good deposit growth to fund that at the end of the day. We definitely see a reduction in trading activities as clients, both corporate and institutional, move to the sidelines. We also saw it in financing businesses as well as spreads got more narrow and as clients degross their investment portfolios.
Thanks, and enjoy the rest of your summer.
Thanks, Gabe.
Thank you. The next question is from John Aiken from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Jake, if you can stay on the microphone for a second. I understand the impact on trading from the ECM to DCM, but I was a little bit surprised to see the downdraft in the FX trading specifically. Is this just a spillover impact on the FX trading from what you saw in the markets? Or were there actually trading losses generated? Like, I noticed there were 2 days of trading losses during the quarter. Was that specifically ascribed to FX, or is this just client volumes were down and you just weren't able to generate the same amount of trade?
Hey, John, I'll start. It's Raj, and then I'll pass it on to Jake for additional color specific to FX. What you're referencing is what we categorize as FX and other, I think in the trading related sub-pack page. I think the key is the other over there. FX has been actually fairly good when you look at it quarter-over-quarter or year-over-year, so that's not the contributor. Commodities goes into it, and we have a lot of what I would call other derivative related trading activities, and a lot of it is hedged for the interest rate, you know, products that we have, which goes through NII in the GBM LATAM business, which is in international banking. That's where you're seeing the year-over-year.
Some component of it relates to last year, as you know, you know, we had some opportunities both in Peru and in 1 other country in the Latin American space. Because of political turmoil, we had opportunities to actually monetize some sort of trading revenues. That's what you're not seeing this quarter compared to Q3 of 2021. There's not much there relating to FX specifically, but there are various other, what I would call, trading related activities that go under that line. It tends to be not as volatile as what you've Scene+ this quarter, but you could see from time to time moments in that line. Jake, do you want to add some color on FX?
Yeah. I think you've answered that question well. John, we're not seeing any real material change in the current period around client FX activity. As Raj noted, it was a bit elevated back in Q3 last year due to some good conditions we saw, particularly in the GBM LATAM piece of the business. With respect to your comment around that, we did have 2 trading loss days in the quarter. Nothing material, nothing broken there, and not ascribed to any bad FX trades in any way, just weaker market days for the platform.
Great. Thanks for the color. I'll requeue.
Thank you. The next question is from Scott Chan from Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Maybe for Phil on credit. Thanks for the incremental data points that you talked about on the call. Is there anything that's being changed in terms of your prior fiscal 2023 total PCL target ratio in the mid-30's inter-quarter? I'm just trying to assess quarter-over-quarter what you know happens to inflation or anything like that, if that's an incremental or material change or outlook there.
Thanks for the question, Scott. I appreciate it. We're not gonna—I won't restate guidance for 2023 now, but I'll give you some indicators of what we're seeing in our portfolios that may be helpful to you. I think, you know, first off, if I start to compare our current portfolio to pre-pandemic, we're running somewhere in the lines of half of our delinquency rates, half of our net write off rates, a big move to secured lending away from unsecured lending. You know, the other thing, if you look at our international footprint, we've really repositioned in terms of the quality of originations there. In addition to, you know, we'll have the sale of CrediScotia, our Peruvian consumer finance portfolio that will be coming through in October this year.
That will also represent a bit of a tailwind from a PCL perspective for us heading into next year. You know, we're seeing both in our international platform and our Canadian platform, really healthy consumers. Even in IB, when we mine and look at how our deposit account customers or payroll account customers are performing, they're still holding liquidity in their accounts versus pre-pandemic. We're seeing that same sort of trend in Canada. You know, we're not seeing any big credit headwinds on the horizon. If I could just reiterate, health of consumers continues to be very strong, and all the sort of key credit risk indicators continue to be positive.
If I could sneak a quick one for Raj. Slide 24 in your investor presentation, the rate sensitivity. I've noticed over the past couple quarters, a 100 bp parallel shift upwards would negatively impact your NII, which is contrary to peers. Is it all hedging or is there some other aspects that make that sensitivity that way?
Yeah, it is a good question, Scott. I think you're referring to the 100 basis point sensitivity, right? Which increased from CAD 126 million to CAD 267 million this quarter. You're absolutely right. I think as I mentioned before, this table captures the impact of a parallel shift, so I won't repeat all that stuff. W hat I will say is, as rates have gone up, we know that that certainly did not happen. Short end went up, long end did not move, frankly. Our view on hedging remains the same. Short-term rates went up, term rates remain the same. Anticipated additional central bank rate hikes have already been what we think is priced into the rate curve, the medium term, whether it's 3 years, 5 years, however you look at it.
What we started doing in Q4 2021, Scott, is we started capturing the benefit from higher term rates that the market is already indicating by cautiously extending what we call the bank's balance sheet duration. Not all of it, some portion of it. That's what resulted in lower NII sensitivity. Every time you extend duration, the sensitivity is going to go down, as you would expect. It's already captured in the net interest income line, what we report quarter-after- quarter. That's what you're seeing. We do believe that we are positioned appropriately, and it's being reflected, like I talked a little bit earlier about why our NIM compressed only 1 basis point. The benefit of the hedging activity offsets some of what we expect as deposit rates going up significantly.
That's what you're seeing, and we'll continue to extend duration thoughtfully as we look at the rate curve as well as the construct of our balance sheet and how our balance sheet is evolving, be it on the asset side or on the deposit side.
Okay. That's helpful. Thank you very much.
Thanks.
Thank you. The next question is from Mario Mendonca from TD Securities. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Raj, if we could go back to the international segment, specifically Pacific Alliance. Last quarter, the margin was up 9 basis points, this quarter down 20 basis points. Well, I'm trying to understand that type of volatility over a 2-quarter period. Is it all sort of deposit activity and deposit behavior? Or was there something else going on in that segment related to, as you just mentioned, extending duration? Is there anything else going on besides just deposit behavior, depositor behavior?
Yeah, I'll answer the second part first, which is extending duration, Mario. Our extension of duration is generally focused only on CAD and US, because that's where we have the ability to hedge derivatives and all that stuff. I'll pass it on to Nacho to speak specifically about what he's seeing in the Pacific Alliance countries relating to the margin compression this quarter compared to the expansion he saw in 2 quarters.
Yes, sure. Good morning, Mario. Listen, I think like Raj mentioned earlier, this volatility in our NIM is driven by very steep increases in central bank interest rates. Just in the last quarter, it was 2.5% on average in the Pacific Alliance countries, 4% increase in Colombia, 2.75% in Chile, 2% in Peru. What you are seeing really deposit repricing happening faster than asset repricing. However, as you mentioned, the first 2 quarters, if you take not only the Q2 , but the first 2 quarters, Pacific Alliance countries expanded margin by 20 basis points.
That we gave up this quarter. We expect, as Raj mentioned, this margin compression to be temporary because we are repricing our assets. As soon as interest rates stabilize and then turn downwards, we will see margin expansion. Central banks in the region have proactively raised rates in advance of the Fed, and as a result, inflation appears to have peaked in Peru and soon in the other 3 countries. In fact, the 4 countries are one of the few which already have positive real interest rates adjusted by 2023 forward-looking inflation. If you combine this trend with very strong asset growth, we are seeing in the Pacific Alliance countries 16% expansion of our loan book year-over-year, 4% in the quarter, 4% in retail, 5% in commercial.
Eventually, this trend will be positive to revenue growth when we see stability in our cost of funds and then a downward trend.
Okay. Nacho, could you talk then about the average duration of the loan book and maybe the earning asset book in international banking generally and maybe Pacific Alliance as well?
Sure. I'll start, Mario. I think one of the nuances we have, which is a positive specifically in, you know, the commercial side of the international banking book, repricing happens every quarter, typically, right? Every 3 months, you have the ability to reprice. You can price to win, you can price to not win. W e have a lot of flexibility there. The average duration will be 1 to 1.5 years if you want to look across the portfolio, be it on the retail side or on the commercial lending side. What's important to remember, our commercial book is actually bigger than our retail book in international banking, just by size. It's almost CAD 80 billion, while the retail book tends to be between CAD 65 billion to CAD 70 billion, depending on the quarter that it goes.
I think the ability to reprice is fairly quick on the commercial book side, on that side. When it gets to the retail side of the book, we have a lot of mortgages and so on, which is, you know, increasing the duration a little bit, but still well within the 2-year mark.
Okay. It sounds to me, Raj, not to put words in your mouth, but we could see that as early as the H1 of 2023, some margin expansion then.
Definitely. I think to expand a little bit on what Nacho said, what we saw in the first 2 quarters, Mario, was asset margin expansion in IB. What is offsetting now is the deposit margins, which is under pressure in the IB world because of the steep increase in rates. As asset margins start to come back, which we do expect, I think your hypothesis is correct.
Okay.
Thank you. The next question is from Lemar Persaud from Cormark Securities. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Maybe for Raj, I appreciate that you already provided a look on margins at the all-bank level. I'm wondering if you could just talk a little bit about the divergence of the margin performance at the all-bank level versus the retail segments broadly. Like, Canadian banking margins up 7 basis points sequentially, international down 1 basis point. Now, while I can appreciate that that isn't the all bank. Well, it doesn't make up the all bank NII, it does make up the bulk of it. Could we see this dynamic playing out that is, you know, kind of good margin performance in the retail segments, but all bank margins continue to move lower? Or is it just something unique this quarter that weighed at the all bank level?
Hey, Lemar, thank you for the question. I'll take your last sentence as, yes, it is something unique this quarter. I'll speak a little bit about how it works between, like you said, the corporate segment and say the Canadian bank, which is the easy one to talk about. As you know, transfer pricing works on both the deposit side and the asset side. What you saw this quarter is when deposits start repricing quickly, you know, mechanically, we pay the Canadian bank from the corporate segment, and we charge them for the asset side. As we look forward, as asset margins start expanding in the Canadian bank as well, you'll see the offset coming. Which means the Canadian bank should be flat, should not be a headwind to the Canadian bank margin, but you'll see the pickup at the all bank level.
Now, how soon that will happen, you know, it depends on how soon asset margins start expanding, which is already happening, but you should see the exponential component of it over the next couple of quarters. Shouldn't impact the Canadian banking margin, to be clear. Will help the all bank margin stabilize.
Okay. I appreciate that. If I could squeeze another one in maybe for Dan. I'm just wondering if you could drill down into what drove the strong business loan growth this quarter. Was it market share gains? Maybe talk to what provinces and industries this growth came from. Was it 1 or 2 chunky loans? Maybe offer an outlook for Q2, Q3. I guess where I'm going with this is I'm wondering if any borrowers are starting to show signs of hesitation given the challenging macroeconomic environment. Thanks.
Yeah. Thank you, Lemar. It's Dan here. Look, I think our strategic emphasis on growing our market position in business banking played out again this quarter. You're perhaps referring to loan growth, but we're very pleased with the deposit growth, including sequentially in commercial. That's important because this segment self-funds more deposits and loans. As Raj mentioned, you know, we're expecting to see our ongoing emphasis on deposits in commercial continuing to Q4. We're undersized in this segment. Our investments and the core operating performance of the teams is what's driving the growth rate. I think if you adjust for our starting position, meaning the smallest of the big 5, our growth rate looks more in line. Thank you for calling out the provinces.
As I've said many times, we have particular opportunity in British Columbia and Quebec. They are growing above the national growth rate, both in loans and deposits. We're pleased with the dynamics there. To reemphasize, you know, we are not
Our credit appetite remains consistent. We've invested in expanding our sales teams and providing them with better technologies, and that's what's contributing to steady market share gains, whether it's in those provinces or in important industries like agriculture, transportation, real estate, technology, and distribution. The balance of growth in the last couple of quarters has been more balanced than previous. A year or 2 ago, we would have been calling out real estate exposure as a main driver. That's now much more balanced, which you can imagine we're pleased about. In terms of outlook, we're not seeing any hesitance from commercial borrowers to continue to invest in their business. We're not seeing any pressure on utilization rates. Credit migration has actually been improving.
The tone from the majority of our customers has been medium-term orientation, invest in capital equipment, land and people, and they're struggling to find product and they're struggling to find people and they're investing in the assumption that the economic outlook will be good over the medium term. Our emphasis there will continue and as will our emphasis on deposits.
Okay, thanks. Thank you. The next question is from Doug Young from Desjardins Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. Hopefully, this is a quick one. Just on international banking. You know, when I think back over the last year, you put through cost reductions, you picked up an extra stake in Chile, this year. I get that FX headwinds have been pressuring in the capital market discussion as well. I figured we'd start to see more sequential growth and pre-tax, pre-provision earnings. I guess my question is that a realistic expectation as we go into Q4 or into next year? You know, you've talked a bit about NIMs and what your expectations are, but maybe just kind of backing up, taking it to a big picture level, is that a realistic expectation or are the headwinds still really too big at this point?
No, I think it's a realistic expectation. Actually, we saw revenues growing up 2% Q-over-Q despite NIM being relatively flat. We are seeing very good business growth momentum, both in commercial and retail. We expect this loan and deposit growth to continue. As you mentioned, we have been managing very well our expenses. Our expenses are flat year-over-year, despite high inflation of average 10% in the countries. This is driven by very strong digital progress and timely execution of all efficiency gains that we committed through the restructuring charge last year. Our operating leverage year to date is 250 basis points.
Looking forward, I expect this good momentum in loans and deposits to continue translating into revenue growth with some volatility, as we have explained today, driven by central bank interest rate movements and market-related revenues. We also expect positive operating leverage and good expense management to continue.
I'm just gonna add something to that. It's Brian, and I think Nacho answered the question exceedingly well. I just focus on the macro picture. Asset growth is gonna continue. The demand for credit is strong. We have significant pipelines on the corporate, commercial, and retail businesses. As we answered earlier, asset repricing is happening now and will continue through the balance of fiscal 2023. You know, I'm not gonna forecast rates, but we've commented rates in the last quarter were up 400 basis points in Colombia, 275 basis points in Chile. The base rate in Peru has gone from 25 basis points to 725 in the last 9 months, to give you some idea of how rates have increased and how dramatic they are.
Rates are peaking, and it's a question whether there's 1 more or central banks are done. That positions us very well in terms of the asset growth pipelines and the margin in our business.
I appreciate it. Maybe just 1 quick one for Raj. I think you talked about targeting positive all bank operating leverage in fiscal 2022. You're negative year to date, with 1 quarter left to go. Do you still think you can show, you know, positive operating leverage for this year?
Let me give you a little more elaborate answer than that. I think 3 of our business lines are expected to deliver positive operating leverage. This will be Canadian, international banking as well as wealth management. GBM is coming off 2 strong years, will not primarily due to lower trading and advisory revenue that is unfortunately impacted by the lack of client activity. I don't think that's going to correct itself as quickly in Q4. What that will likely result for the bank, the operating leverage will be slightly negative, I think. It's 0.9% negative this quarter or sorry, year to date. I believe it'll be that. What I do want to point out is we're meeting all our other medium-term objectives like, you know, ROE, EPS growth, and of course, strong capital ratios.
Good. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from Sohrab Movahedi from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Wanted to just go to Dan. Dan, your segment has had double-digit pre-tax, pre-provision growth for a number of quarters now. I don't want to say is this as good as it gets, but you know, what's your outlook here for your pre-tax, pre-provision? The flip side of the question, I guess, broader question for Brian, you know, the international segment is back for Q2 in a row now, CAD 600 million+ in earnings. I think it's still only around 25% of the total bank when you have depressed kind of GBM results. You know, resilient wealth results, but presumably GBM and wealth will kind of rebound.
Trying to kind of get a feel for how much of the total bank is international going to be, you know, once you have some, I'll call it mean reversion in some of the other segments. You know, keeping in mind that probably Canadian banking is going to moderate from here, or that compounds the felony depending on how Dan answers the question, I suppose.
Thank you, Sohrab. Of course, obviously we're pleased with double-digit PTPP growth rates and for a little while now. You know that is outsized in terms of the long-run performance of this segment in general in the industry. Some normalization would be a reasonable expectation. We're certainly pleased to have published 7 quarters of positive operating leverage. You've noticed for a while now we're hovering around 44% productivity ratio. Much of our confidence in PTPP going forward rests on the production and productivity of the sales and the digital teams.
I think notwithstanding the fact that there are some views that the economy could slow dramatically from here, our belief is that the performance of the segment, the way that the system is better fit together, gives us confidence that we'll outperform on a fair basis in terms of PTPP growth rate over the medium term, including into next year. In terms of projecting levels, I think, you know, the team here would prefer to leave outlook for next year to next quarter, and I'll pass it to Brian for his comments.
Yeah. Thank you for the question, Sohrab. Just a comment on international, which I think is important, is that sometimes it gets buried in the detail. Raj did mention in his comments, GBM LATAM produced profit of CAD 192 million this quarter. I think the 2nd highest on record. That business continues to do exceedingly well. We have bright prospects for that business. As I said earlier to another question, a great pipeline of business there. The international wealth results were up this quarter, and we see good growth trends in that business.
The international business in its entirety and you know I'm really pleased with the results out of the division this quarter because as I said this was given the rapid and rate increases that we've seen and the impact on the liability side of the balance sheet and how we responded with our customers. I'm very pleased with the results. We will benefit from asset repricing in subsequent quarters, and we're starting to see that already. The international business. The last point I'd make is the Caribbean results this quarter were very strong. We haven't seen that for a while, and it shows you the diversification benefit of our business as tourism has picked up, and we expect a strong 2023 for our Caribbean business.
International, the outlook for international is very strong and bright indeed, and we look forward to continued improving results.
Okay. I appreciate it. Can I just do 1 quick follow-up with Dan?
Yeah.
When push came to shove, what sort of, where can you get operating leverage? Do you have room on your expenses? Or if revenue growth slowed down, could we be faced with negative operating leverage?
Look, I think, you know, margin has a big impact, right? NII is such a big piece of the line. I think we've said on a few prior quarters, Sohrab, that, you know, we haven't seen the full pickup yet compared to pre-pandemic in credit cards, in automotive. Those 2 books combined represent a significant portion of total revenues. We've been producing substantial operating leverage for a long time now in the business bank. The larger that share becomes of the total makes a big difference. Obviously Tangerine is a beneficiary of a deposit growing environment. I think our ambition is to continue to print positive operating leverage on a quarterly basis, but certainly on a full year basis this year and into next year, regardless of what happens with expenses.
I appreciate that. Thank you.
Okay. On behalf of the entire management team, I want to thank everyone for participating in our call today. I know we went a little bit over. I look forward to speaking with you again at our Q4 2022 call in November. Have a great day.
Thank you.