All participants, please stand by. Your conference is ready to begin. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to National Bank of Canada's third quarter results conference call. I would now like to turn the meeting over to Ms. Linda Boulanger, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, Ms. Boulanger.
Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our third quarter presentation. Presenting this afternoon are Laurent Ferreira, President and CEO of the bank, Marie Chantal Gingras, Chief Financial Officer, and Bill Bonnell, Chief Risk Officer. Also joining us for the Q&A session are Stéphane Achard and Lucie Blanchet, Co-Heads of P&C Banking, Martin Gagnon, Head of Wealth Management, Denis Girouard, Head of Financial Markets, Ghislain Parent, Head of International, and Jean Dagenais, Senior VP Finance. Before we begin, I refer you to slide two of our presentation, providing National Bank's caution regarding forward-looking statements. With that, let me now turn the call over to Laurent.
Merci, Linda, and thank you everyone for joining us. This morning, we released strong third quarter results with pre-tax/pre-provision earnings up 9%, driven by double-digit growth across all business segments. This translated into an industry-leading return on equity of 18%, reflecting our disciplined approach to capital, risk, and cost management. We continue to operate in an uncertain and complex environment dominated by elevated inflation, rising interest rates, and heightened geopolitical risks. While headline inflation recently showed signs of deceleration, it still remains too high. The Bank of Canada is expected to continue to raise rates in September to slow demand and tame inflationary pressures. Given this backdrop, a slowdown in economic growth is expected to persist through next year. Although the probability of a recession has increased over the past few weeks, it is not our base case.
Our economics team is currently calling for a soft landing of the Canadian economy. In our view, inflation should continue to decelerate and interest rates should normalize this fall to just over 3%. In this scenario, the unemployment rate should stabilize just over 5.5% in 2023. In this context, the bank is on solid footing. Our capital levels are strong, with a CET1 ratio of 12.8%. Our credit portfolios continue to perform well. We are maintaining a disciplined and balanced approach in underwriting new deals, and we continue to carry a prudent level of reserves. Turning now to our business segments. P&C delivered a record quarter with revenue surpassing the CAD 1 billion mark for the first time in its history.
Pre-tax/pre-provision earnings were up 18%, supported by strong growth on both sides of the balance sheet, as well as expansion of net interest margin. On the retail side, mortgage loans grew 8% year-over-year. Given the rising interest rate environment, we anticipate the demand for real estate secured lending to continue to normalize back to pre-COVID levels. Several factors continue to support the Canadian housing market, including strong immigration and unemployment at historical lows. We also expect Quebec's housing market to be resilient, given better relative housing affordability, consumer savings, and debt levels in the province. Commercial loans are up 17% year-over-year, with solid growth across industries and geographies. While clients are being more prudent due to the economic context and higher financing costs, we expect commercial loan demand to remain robust in the coming quarters.
Our wealth management franchise delivered a strong performance this quarter. Pre-tax/pre-provision earnings were up 11% year-over-year, highlighting our diversified revenue mix. We saw a significant uplift in net interest income, propelled by a large deposit base and rising interest rates. We also delivered strong net sales in all channels despite challenging market conditions, demonstrating the depth of our franchise. Financial Markets had another strong quarter, with revenues of CAD 611 million, up 14% from last year. Momentum continued in global markets with strong performance across most business lines. Our corporate and investment banking franchise generated good results supported by domestic M&A activity and balance sheet growth. Our performance track record in Financial Markets speaks to the resilience and diversification of our franchise.
Moving on to our international segment. ABA Bank had another strong quarter, with revenues and net income up 28% and 31% respectively. This was driven by strong loan and deposit growth. The underlying fundamentals of Cambodia remain strong. The country is underbanked and benefits from strong demographics. Also, Cambodia is a US dollar-based economy. As a result, they are experiencing a level of inflation in line with Western countries. Turning now to our US specialty finance business. Credigy's result continued to reflect strong underlying performance across asset classes. Rising interest rates impacted revenues from assets at fair value this quarter. Nonetheless, assets were up 2% on a sequential basis, driven by higher utilization, new deals, and extensions. In the current environment, Credigy remains highly selective and will continue to pursue a disciplined investment approach.
To conclude, there are several scenarios on the table as to the path of the economy. Despite potential headwinds ahead, the bank is well-positioned. Our third quarter performance reaffirms the resiliency of our franchise, our business mix, and our strategic choices. We have a defensive positioning with strong capital levels, resilient balance sheet, and prudent credit allowances. This provides us with flexibility to grow our business and a buffer in an uncertain environment. Our businesses are positioned to continue to perform well and generate attractive growth. Our Personal and Commercial franchise has an overweight position in secured lending and a disciplined approach to volume growth, margins, and credit quality. Financial Markets has proven its resiliency with consistent performance over time, with a focused domestic strategy. Our Wealth franchise is demonstrating the strength of its earning power through the cycle.
Finally, our international businesses remain well-positioned to deliver strong growth and high return over time. Looking ahead, we will maintain our usual discipline with a view on our longer-term priorities and growth objectives. National Bank has a long-standing track record of delivering superior value to its shareholders over the long term. This remains both our philosophy and our priority. Before I turn it over to Marie Chantal, I would like to congratulate Étienne Dubuc and welcome him to our senior leadership team as co-head of Financial Markets effective November first, a responsibility he will share with Denis Girouard. Étienne has been in leadership position with the bank for nearly 25 years, including as head of equities for the last 3. Congratulations to Étienne. We are thrilled to have him on our team. Marie Chantal, over to you.
Thank you, Laurent, and good afternoon, everyone. Turning to our results on slide 7. Revenues increased by 8% year-over-year. All business segments performed very well, supported by solid asset growth, good client activity, and a favorable interest rate environment. Pre-tax, pre-provision earnings grew 9% year-over-year. Our strong performance reflects the resiliency and diversified earnings stream of each business segment. We generated positive operating leverage of 0.6% this quarter, bringing us to 1.5% year to date. We are well on track with our target to achieve positive operating leverage for the full fiscal year. Turning now to expense management. First, higher operating costs year-over-year are mainly related to investments made in our people over the past year to support the business and remain competitive in a tight labor market.
Our amortization expense also increased in line with the deployment of technology projects. We are also seeing a return to travel and business development activities, which are contributing to the year-over-year increase. Second, the other important component is our investment spend to support business growth and protect the bank. This includes technology projects to enhance client experience and acquisition and to expand activities in areas of expertise. It also includes investments in our systems, processes, and cybersecurity. The bank's balanced approach continues to contribute to high pre-tax, pre-provision earnings growth with our expense line tied to our business performance. All business segments generated double-digit PTPP earnings growth in the quarter. This was partly offset by our other segment. As a reminder, the other segment includes our treasury function and corporate investment. In Q3, a number of factors impacted our top-line performance in this segment.
This included lower investment gains in the context of more favorable markets last year. Unfavorable mark to market due to hedging accounting inefficiencies and the impact of hedging activity against a potential decline in interest rates, reflecting our defensive positioning. The bank's approach has always been to target stable and predictable NII growth through the cycle. We manage interest rate risk dynamically to balance the upside and protect against the downside. This is consistent with the overall prudent positioning of the bank. As demonstrated by our Q3 results, the bank is benefiting from higher interest rates. On a total bank basis, NII was up 16% year-over-year, and our net interest margin, excluding trading, was up nine basis points year-over-year. In the current market conditions, we expect lower PTPP earnings for the other segment in Q4 compared to Q3.
This will be in part driven by lower investment gains. In addition, we typically recognize higher expenses in the fourth quarter for this segment. At the same time, all business segments are well-positioned, and we are seeing good momentum as we are entering Q4. Looking now at expenses by segment on slide 8. Each business segment remained disciplined in managing expenses, ensuring that the right investments in people and technology are made to support business growth. Our teams are also constantly looking at generating efficiencies, which is key in an inflationary context. This has translated into best-in-class efficiency ratios in some of our segments again this quarter. Now turning to capital on slide 9. We maintained a high CET1 ratio, ending Q3 at 12.8% while generating strong organic growth. Third quarter earnings, net of dividends, added 45 basis points to our ratio.
RWA growth represented 47 basis points of capital. This was largely driven by asset growth in commercial and corporate banking and by an increase in market risk RWA, reflecting market volatility in the quarter. There was no NCIB activity in Q3. At this time, we do not expect any buyback activity in Q4 as we continue to see organic growth opportunities in our businesses. In a context of heightened macroeconomic uncertainty, we believe it is prudent to maintain robust capital levels. Once again this quarter, the bank achieved strong revenue and PTPP growth, as well as superior ROE. In an uncertain economic environment, the bank's strong fundamentals and prudent approach to capital, cost, and risk management position us favorably to continue generating business growth and long-term value for shareholders. With that, I will now turn the call over to Bill.
Merci, Marie Chantal, and good afternoon, all. I'll begin on slide 11. Although fixed income and equity markets experienced significant volatility during the third quarter, underlying employment and economic conditions remained supportive of a strong performance across our credit portfolio. Our provisions on impaired loans remained very low at just CAD 17 million or 3 basis points. Retail impaired provisions remain well below pre-pandemic levels. Provisions were stable quarter-over-quarter in the international segment, and in the non-retail portfolios, we benefited from net recoveries, which can be lumpy from quarter to quarter. Even excluding the benefit of these recoveries, our impaired PCLs would have still been low, however more representative of the normalization we expect to continue well into 2023. Our provisions on performing loans totaled CAD 33 million or 7 basis points.
The primary drivers of the allowance build this quarter were the update to our forward-looking scenarios reflecting a deterioration in the outlook, an increased weight of the pessimistic scenario and portfolio growth, which were partially offset in the management overlay. Looking ahead, we've maintained our fiscal year 2022 guidance on impaired PCLs at below 15 basis points. Current underlying conditions, particularly the strong level of employment and consumer savings, support a slower rate of normalization of impaired PCLs than we had expected at the beginning of this year. Our visibility on the outlook for performing PCLs remains more cloudy due to the significant uncertainties in the economy's path forward. The same factors we discussed last quarter, inflationary pressures, supply chain challenges, geopolitical risks, and the direction and speed of interest rate changes, are still present and all contributes to a less certain outlook.
In these uncertain times, we remain very confident with our defensive geographic and business mix, as well as our prudent level of allowances. Turning to slide 12. Total allowances for credit losses increased to almost CAD 1.1 billion, remaining more than 40% above the pre-pandemic level. Performing allowances increased by 4% to CAD 854 million, taking our coverage of last 12-month impaired PCLs to 9.7 times, and coverage of pre-pandemic 2019 impaired PCLs to 2.7 times. Our impaired allowance was stable in the quarter and provides a strong 51% coverage of gross impaired loans. We continue to believe it prudent to hold these significant levels of credit allowances in the current macro environment. Now on slide 13. Gross impaired loans were stable quarter-over-quarter at CAD 615 million or 30 basis points.
Net formations declined to CAD 34 million, benefiting from net repayments in commercial and corporate loan portfolios. As I mentioned last quarter, we had expected the expiry of moratoriums at ABA to generate an increase in impaired formations and that these should peak before the end of this year. So far, the actual performance is matching our expectations. These ABA loans are well collateralized and prudently provisioned. Slide 14 provides details on our resi portfolio. The geographic and product mix has remained stable, with Quebec accounting for 55% and insured mortgages accounting for 30% of the total portfolio. LTV on our uninsured mortgage portfolio improved to 50%, and on the HELOC portfolio, LTV was 46% based on authorized limits or 28% based on outstandings. Approximately 31% of mortgages have variable rates, and investors account for about 11% of all resi borrowers.
While higher rates have already impacted the housing market through lower volumes and easing prices, the resilience in our resi portfolio remains strong. Borrowers incomes are rising, delinquency rates improve, and clients have built up very heavy, healthy levels of equity, as demonstrated by the low LTVs. In summary, we are pleased with the credit performance again this quarter and remain comfortable with our defensive positioning, our resilient mix and our prudent level of allowances. With that, I'll turn it back to the operator for the Q&A.
Thank you. We will now take questions from the telephone line. If you have a question and you are using a speakerphone, please lift your handset before making your selection. If you have a question, please press star one on your device's keypad. You may cancel your question at any time by pressing star two. Please press star one at this time if you have a question. There will be a brief pause while participants register for questions. We thank you for your patience. Our first question is from Gabriel Dechaine from National Bank Financial. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon. Just want to ask about Credigy. We did see the assets grow 10% year-over-year. I'm wondering if some of the disruption in credit markets is getting us, you guys more optimistic about the growth at Credigy in coming quarters, because seems like that might be the case. If it is, maybe where you're seeing those opportunities.
Yeah. Thank you, Gabriel. This is Ghislain. As we discussed last quarter, we remain confident that the current environment will create multiple areas of opportunities for Credigy. I think it's more a question of timing now. As you mentioned in the third quarter, we saw a reversal of the trend observed in the first half of the year. Total assets grew, you know, compared to last year and last quarter, which is very positive. You know, we may have more visibility in Q4, but in the current environment, the business remains highly selective and prudent, Gabriel.
Okay. The wealth business, we saw, you know, big increase in in NII in that segment, highlighting the rate sensitivity there. I'm just wondering if since we had, you know, the 100 basis points rate hike at the midway point of the quarter, is there gonna be a similar bump in Q3? Maybe if you can, you know, talk about further down on the outlook, what the deposit beta dynamics are in that business, if any.
Thank you, Gabriel. Look, we have a very large platform of AUA with CAD 621 billion, and that brings all kinds of opportunities for deposits. There's three main categories of deposits. Broker deposits is by far, you know, the most important to our net interest income. But they each have dynamics. The high interest cash performers have different dynamics. We also raise GICs for the bank through the brokerage channel. There's a lot of counter effects. In general, you're right. In Q3, we had rates increase in the middle of the quarter and we're gonna benefit from this in Q4 for sure.
I don't want to go any further than that, but you know, I'll just tell you this, that we've been working on net interest income optimization for years, where there's a lot of optionality built in our model, and this quarter is a good example of this optionality.
All right. Well, last one more broadly or for those at the bank, just wondering about, you know, we saw good NIM expansion at the consolidated level ex trading. I'm wondering how you see that evolving over the next several quarters when you start to factor in, you know, maybe some funding cost pressure now across the industry here, the substitution effect, people moving from, you know, zero cost deposits to, you know, term deposits and eventually having to pass through some of the, you know, the rate hikes to your depositors as well. Maybe you can just, you know, share your thoughts on how you see the all bank NIM evolving over the next few quarters.
Hi Gabriel, it's Marie Chantal.
Hello.
I'll answer the first part of your question, and then maybe Lucie can jump in. On an all bank NIM outlook, we're actually very pleased with the level of the NIM at the moment. Good expansion year-to-date, 14 basis points, and we do expect it to continue to trade up if rates continue to increase. Of course, it's also dependent on the business mix, but we see a trend going up. Lucie, did you wanna?
Yeah. If I can add to that, Gabriel, we don't really see a migration from core deposits to our term deposits.
Okay.
We don't really factor in any effect of that. As a matter of fact, we continue to grow our core deposit base close to high single digits%. That's quite positive on the margin.
All right, well, I'll leave it there. Thanks.
Thank you. Following question is from Meny Grauman from Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon. Going back to Credigy, you referenced mark-to-market fair value asset adjustments. I'm just wondering if you could give us a little bit more color on what exactly is going on there, and also if you could scale it in terms of the delta with the prior quarter.
Yes. This is Ghislain Parent. First, I want to highlight that the underlying portfolio performance remains strong. We continue to be very pleased with the positioning of the portfolio. As you know, now 85% of the assets are secured. In terms of revenue drivers this quarter, we've had a negative impact from assets at fair value due to the rising interest rates environment, essentially. The portfolio mix was also a factor this quarter. Of course, 85% of the assets are secured. The type of assets are generally offering a lower return than unsecured. Those two elements explain essentially what happened this quarter.
There's nothing in terms of credit, in that mark-to-market, you're saying?
No. No. As you know, mark-to-market, you know, it's essentially an accounting thing. The fact that, you know, we hold our portfolios to maturity, we know that it's temporary. You know, we will get the value back eventually. As I mentioned, you know, with the underlying portfolio is still very strong.
Got it. Marie-Chantal, you talked about the other segment a little bit. You highlighted three factors. I'm wondering if you could scale them a little for us in terms of was there one that was particularly impactful this quarter as you look at the difference between Q3 and Q2?
Hi, thank you for the question. I don't think there's any one of them that were more important than the other. As I said in my remarks, investment gains, mostly because of the higher market conditions in 2021, then mark-to-market because of the hedging position and the interest rate positioning. Those are the, basically the three elements that explain our lower revenues on the other segment.
Then, I caught a little bit of it, but I wanted to clarify in terms of the guidance you provided. Like, are you suggesting that the loss could be bigger in Q4? I didn't quite catch what you were saying there.
Yes. You've caught it right.
Okay.
We're expecting lower PTPP earnings in Q4 compared to Q3, mostly related to higher investment gains. We're foreseeing little, but given market condition, it's gonna be lower.
If we look out to 2023, is there anything we should keep in mind? This obviously always a hard line to forecast, but is there anything?
Yeah
That's likely to change in 2023 in terms of those dynamics?
I think it's, there's so much going on, it's too early to say. A lot of moving parts, so we'll be able to give more of an outlook next quarter on that one.
Thank you.
Thank you. Following question is from Paul Holden from CIBC. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good afternoon. Seems like you get this question every quarter. I'm gonna take my turn this quarter and maybe get you to elaborate on the strength in Financial Markets relative to peers. What do you think were the main drivers that result in a better revenue and earnings than what the other banks have reported so far?
Thank you, Paul. It's Denis. Yeah, good quarter, but what stands out this quarter, it's not only one line of business like, you know, we saw in the first half. Out of our 18 lines of business that we're looking at, 12 show positive results compared to, you know, Q3 last year. Two were flat and four were down. It's kind of a widespread results that we have. Nothing spectacular, but just kind of consistent revenue growth through many businesses. You're talking fixed income, commodities, FX, you know, equity. It's all from all the centers and back and forth. It's quite good. Very pleased with the results.
Okay. Okay, good.
Paul, it's Laurent. Just maybe, you know, adding to what it's to, you know, the disciplined approach that
Yeah
Denis just talked about. One of the big difference that you should be aware of is we are focused on Canada. We have a Canadian platform, and most of our peers-
Have businesses in the U.S., and I think that could be a big delta in the results that you're seeing so far.
That's helpful. Thank you. Next question is with respect to the interest rate hedging that was mentioned earlier in the conversation. Hoping you can elaborate on that in terms of how you position the interest rate hedge. When I look at the disclosed interest rate sensitivity and compare it to last quarter, it doesn't appear to have impacted that disclosure, so maybe can help us understand why.
Hi, it's Marie Chantal again. Let me try to answer your question, and if it, let me know if it's not sufficient enough. In terms of hedging activity, it's really related to the normal course of hedging activities within treasury. We generally aim to limit mark-to-market fluctuations over normal conditions through hedge accounting, but sometimes hedge accounting is not possible. Therefore, mark to market impact goes through the P&L. We did saw some of the accounting inefficiencies in the current quarter. This is basically what happened. Does this give you a little bit more details?
I think that answers a different question. I was under the impression that there's out of those three components in the other segment you mentioned, there was the third one was the defensive interest rate positioning.
Yes.
Is that? Yeah?
Yeah, it is.
That's what you're referring to. Okay. That's good then. Last question from me, if I may. Laurent, you'd mentioned a positive outlook for commercial going forward. I guess one of the things I scratch my head a lot about is when are higher borrowing costs going to impact the commercial market? Seems like everyone's putting up strong commercial growth, including National. I have to think eventually higher rates do their job, not just in resi mortgages, but also in the commercial segment also.
I think my comment is, you know, the trends are good. Obviously with rising rates and overall slowdown, we do expect the growth of that momentum to slow down. Maybe I'll let Stéphane maybe give you a bit more color.
Yeah. Paul, we're not overly concerned with that. We're seeing a couple of things. For one, our clients have already using rate risk management tools much more than they were during the pandemic or prior to that. Many of them have not seen rising rate environments, and so we're guiding our advice and counsel to them to hedge themselves, and that's working well. The second element is there's still residual liquidity in Canadian businesses that is higher than the pre-pandemic level. We've got quite a bit of time before, I think, the cost of financings actually affect businesses. Yes, profits in 2022 among Canadian businesses will be lower than 2021, but 2021 was really a peculiar year.
Okay. Okay, I'll leave it there. Thank you.
Thank you. Our following question is from Mario Mendonca from TD Securities. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon. Can we go back to Paul's question? Paul asked why the interest rate sensitivity didn't change from Q2 to Q3. Is the answer as simple as, the company's actions to limit interest rate risk were not new in Q3, maybe that had already been, those positions had already been put on in prior quarters? Is that the right answer?
Yeah, Mario, that's certainly part of it is Bill. I'll just refer you to what Lucie mentioned in some of her comments that we are still seeing good growth in core deposits. The volume of core deposits certainly has an impact on the sensitivity number that's disclosed. That's another important component.
Were there actions taken in the quarter then that would have reduced the rate sensitivity, ignoring the increase in core deposits?
No. No. Your assumption is right. We did not change any hypothesis in Q3.
I see. When the bank says you take steps to protect the margin, is it also as simple as saying you're extending the duration of the liquid assets, either in the cash market or in derivatives? Is that also an appropriate way to describe it?
Partially, that would be aligned.
Say that again?
Yeah. I think that that's part of it for sure.
Okay. Maybe Ghislain's already answered this question. When you were talking about Credigy, and you were talking about how there were some mark-to-market charges in the quarter, or maybe it was less favorable this quarter than prior quarters, did that go through the net interest income line? Because I know you don't disclose a margin in that business, but when we sort of try to calculate our own margin, it looks like it was down fairly substantially from one quarter to the next. Are those mark-to-markets through the net interest income line, and that's why the margin looks weak?
Yeah. Thank you, Mario. I will let Jean answer that question.
Yes. In fact, it goes into the other income, the mark-to-market, so the fair value to P&L portfolio. What will impact the net interest income will be more the mix of the type of loans that we will have on the book.
The margin was down fairly meaningfully then. It sounds like it is a number I can rely on if the mark-to-markets are going through other income. The mix, are you referring to mix in Credigy or mix in ABA or both?
Mix in Credigy.
that was a fairly meaningful drop from one quarter to the next. Is that all explained by mix?
Mostly. Mix and cash are fine. It's all together.
Okay. We shouldn't necessarily expect that to rebound abruptly next quarter. Is that fair?
We have new portfolio, so it will depend on the return on new portfolio. We have also extended a loan that is quite profitable that could improve the net interest income also.
Okay, thank you.
You're welcome
Thank you. The following question is from Doug Young from Desjardins Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon. Just going to Canadian P&C Banking, the expense ratio of 51.6%. That's the lowest, or you can correct me if I'm wrong, but it's the lowest that I can remember. Was there anything unusual in the quarter? Is this essentially a new run rate? Just hoping to dig a little bit into what drove that.
Yes, it's Lucie. The nature of the expense increase is exactly related to what Marie-Chantal referred to in her script. 60% of that is related to wages, FTE, and the rest is related to investments in the business, basically, and our transformation. We're very happy to deliver positive operating leverage in that context, and this is what we really focus on.
I was more thinking, not that the expense growth was big, that you actually did a really good job managing expenses and keeping expenses low relative to revenue growth. I guess that's where I was coming at that from. Trying to get a sense of, is there? It doesn't sound like there's anything unusual.
No.
Is this kind of a, you've got this business running at a 51%-52% mix ratio, and that's what we should be essentially anticipating going forward? Is that what I read from that?
Well, this is Laurent, Doug. I think we need to remain a little cautious about, you know, outlooks at this point in time. There's still a lot of uncertainty in the market and an uncertainty also in the path of the current macroeconomic environment. I can tell you what the objective is. The objective is always to continuously improve our performance. From time to time, you know, you will see some quarters where it could be a little bit more difficult. But you know whether you wanna, you know.
The idea is we do have targets to always improve our next ratio, but I think it's a little premature to at this point in time to say that this level is our run rate for the time being.
Okay. I was just wondering if there's anything allocated at corporate, but it didn't seem like that was the case. Bill, you know, you talked CAD 33 million performing loan build. You gave a few different reasons for that. Can you kind of segment how much related to loan growth versus, you know, the FLI and the scenario weight changes? I think you also said, you know, that was offset by an overlay, meaning that you released an overlay, so that would have been higher net of the overlay. I'm just trying to get a sense of some of the moving pieces there.
Yeah, sure, Doug. The vast majority of the driver of the build was the updated scenarios, the forward-looking indicators. That our baseline became more severe, our pessimistic scenario became more severe, and the weight in the pessimistic increased. That was far and above the biggest driver of that. Loan growth certainly is always a driver. I don't have the specific mix, but assume that the vast majority was from the outlook update. What I meant by the offset is that last quarter when we described it, I mentioned that we had increased the overlay to take into account some of the uncertainties that weren't reflected in our models and scenarios.
As we updated the scenarios to more pessimistic, more severe, they now include more of what had been covered in the overlay. There was a reduction in the overlay to offset that.
Okay. I get that.
Yeah.
I think new gross impaired loan formations were CAD 174. I think it was CAD 134 last quarter. Is that mostly due to what you described as ABA, or is there other items within the formation side?
On the formations, you'll see on slide 13, it was primarily ABA. As I discussed last quarter and mentioned again in my prepared remarks, the moratoriums at ABA will all be expired by the end of the year. Last quarter was around 7, now it's around 2% are left. And as they expire, there'll be some that will move into the 90-day past due, and that generates the formations. I had given color last quarter that we expected it to peak in the second half, and that's still the case. We're close to the peak in the formation level, and it's following our expectations very closely.
What we would expect to see through 2023 would be a decline in the gross impairments in ABA. The rest of the business, as you can see, formations are very low. You know, the current conditions with unemployment and the current GDP. Everything is very strong in the current conditions. That is what's generating really, you know, exceptional performance in credit, not just at our bank, but across, I think, the sector in impaired loans. Delinquencies remain low, savings rates remain high. It's a strange situation where current conditions are so benign, and yet there's so much uncertainty in the forward views.
That's why you'll see very low impaired and yet pretty significant build in performing provisions. Does that answer your question?
Yep. I appreciate the color. Thank you.
Thank you. Our following question is from Nigel D'Souza from Veritas Investment Research. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good afternoon. I wanted to follow up on allowances on performing loans. I know, I note that you mentioned that you released about 43% of the allowances built during the pandemic, and you're 42% above the pre-pandemic level. Just want to clarify that that's more so on an emotional basis. Because when I look at your allowance rates relative to loan balances on slide 26, your ACL coverage relative to loans is just marginally above where it was before the pandemic. Is it fair to say that when you look at your allowances relative to loans, you actually aren't carrying substantial excess allowances?
Hi, Nigel. Thanks. If you look at that table on 26, and why we provide it so clearly is that it helps you see the impact of mix. If you look at the total retail number, the total allowance over loans is less than pre-pandemic. That's primarily because of the mix of credit cards and mortgages. We know that through the pandemic, excess savings built up. Customers were prepaying their revolving and lower use on the revolving and the credit cards. At the same time, there was higher growth in mortgages, which is a lower risk portfolio.
Even though our mortgage line, you'll see that ACL coverage that you talk about is significantly higher still in Q3 2022 than it was in pre-pandemic. Taking into account the mix, you get the lower total retail. The metric which I'd point you to is, and I think I've had it in the earlier slide on allowances, which is the total performing allowance over pre-pandemic impaired PCLs. I think that's a better, or it's a useful metric to look at because it does contain insights around the mix of the portfolios. The way I think about that, Nigel , is, you know, pre-pandemic, we were end of cycle.
We had been building up performing allowances, and we had a ratio of about 1.7-1.8 times our run rate impaired losses, pre-pandemic losses, normal course losses, impaired losses. Currently we are at 2.7 times our pre-pandemic run rate impaired losses. That gives you an idea of if we're going into a slowdown, we are even more prepared in terms of allowances for non-performing loans, compared to our normalized run rate of impaired PCLs. That's why I look to the pre-pandemic number. Does that help?
Okay. Yeah, that's helpful color. If I could just follow up on forward-looking indicators that you're using for performing PCLs on slide 31. Just want to make sure I understand your assumption for housing prices. When I see that number there, 6.8% for 2022 and then 7% for 2023, that's Q4 relative to Q4. So is that assuming that essentially your housing price index gets back to where it was in Q4 2021? Is that the correct interpretation? That's your base case scenario?
Thanks for the, I don't know whether this will answer your question directly, but when looking at the disclosures on the forward-looking indicators, there's a few ways of looking at them, and sometimes the slicing and dicing cannot allow you to see the severity of some of the changes. One thing I'll say is that when you look at it, and you can't see it in that disclosure or what's in our MD&A, but you know, the baseline is peak to trough change in the Teranet-National Bank HPI of 10%. It's important to understand, as I'm sure you do, the nature of some of the indices on prices.
The Teranet HPI is one that really compares actual changes in actual prices for the similar housing. Some of the numbers that you'll see in the press, the CREA number, which is very impacted by the value of the homes that actually transacted. You may see more severe numbers in the CREA index, and that could be simply because there are less high value homes transacting, longer sales periods and such. I think the more accurate in terms of our risk context for the forward-looking indicators is what we use, and I think it's consistent across the banks, is more of the National Bank Teranet Index. That's a long answer, but does that help with your question?
That does help. Just a minor clarification in terms of your outlook. Does that incorporate an expectation for interest rates to decline in 2023? The reason I ask that is because affordability is taking a hit with higher mortgage rates. Is that part of the scenario? If not, then maybe some color on, you know, your rationale for expecting just a 10% decline in HPI.
Yeah. It does include the scenario is kind of complete, including rising interest rates. I think there's some qualitative language you can see in the MD&A, which gives you a sense. Since you know you've asked that question, I'll just give you a little color. I think consistent with what you've heard today and yesterday from some peers, the Canadian consumer, the indicators of the Canadian consumer's financial health and the capacity to address increasing interest rates and increasing costs of living from inflation is pretty good. The savings rates, excess savings, which we had expected to decline throughout 2022 have continued to increase in 2022 across income cohorts.
In our portfolio, our client base, there was a slight decrease only in the top earners. The highest earning cohort had a slight decrease in excess savings, and that was because of more comfort in more consumption, so travel and spending. Across all of the others, it continued to increase quarter-over-quarter. The additional color, which I think I can share because of our, you know, our overweight in Quebec, is the capacity of the Quebec consumer to absorb higher interest rates and cost of living is even stronger for a few reasons.
We've talked about a lot in the last 10 or 15 quarters that Quebec households have got higher dual income households because of the very high participation rate of women in the workforce in Quebec. You know, of course, that the consumer debt to disposable income in Quebec is much lower than the average. That's because of affordability, lower house prices and such.
In this environment where inflation is driving higher costs, an important factor to consider too is actually the cost of energy for households in Quebec is not impacted as much in the same way as the rest of Canada, in that in Quebec, households, I think it's 70% of the energy costs of households in Quebec is coming from electricity, and the pricing of that has been quite stable, as opposed to 35%, I think, in the rest of Canada. Some of the drivers of increasing expenses for the Quebec consumer are more tempered, and it gives us even more confidence on the resilience of the Quebec consumer in particular. Does that help answer your question?
Yeah, that's really helpful insight. That's good. That's it for me. Thank you.
Thank you. Our following question is from Scott Chan from Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.
Oh, good afternoon. Denis, I wanted to go back to capital markets, and you referenced like 18 buckets, and 14 buckets were up year-over-year. You called out, like before, trading buckets, but was there anything else in investment banking in terms of those buckets that stood out that you could help us out with?
Thanks, Scott. It's Denis. Yeah, investment banking side, in fact that bucket, as you all know, M&A was good for us. I think we have a, we've seen increases of 25% of revenue in M&A. The CCM corporate book, loan book, increased by 14% year-over-year, adds good volume. And the other sectors that did not do that well is for the whole street, it's everything related to underwriting either or. It's a debt capital market, either government or corporates, they're quite down compared to last year, and also the equity market. You know, despite the fact that the underwriting was quite low, I think it was well then compensated by the CCM book revenue and also the street book revenue. Does that give you a bit of a color?
That, that's very helpful. Last question, Marie Chantal. I just wanted to clarify your comments on other income for fiscal Q4 and what I think relates to PTPP. Did you state that the net income loss would be bigger in fiscal Q4, and that would affect the overall PTPP at National?
That's correct. For Q4 compared to Q3. That's correct.
Okay. Thank you very much.
Thank you. Following question is from Joo Ho Kim from Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon, and thanks for taking my question. Just wanted to ask on wealth management, and we saw a good improvement in the efficiency ratio, not just this quarter, but over the past several years.
Now it's reaching below 60% on a year-to-date basis by my math. I'm wondering if we could continue to see this kind of improvement in the medium term, and if there's a target sort of that you had in mind, and whether we would need sort of a favorable market condition to continue to see the improvements in here. Thank you.
Well, thank you for your question. It's Martin. Yeah, we worked hard over the last six years on our efficiency ratio. We took it down by about 10%. Maybe early on, there were some low-hanging fruits. I would say that we don't have a specific target in mind. We want to manage the operating leverage, so it's quarter after quarter that we manage this very carefully. This time we benefited from net interest income, which comes with very little variable costs. All of this to say that the business mix will impact our efficiency ratio. If current trend continues, there could be some further gains to come.
Okay, thank you. Just last one for me. Just on the residential mortgage growth, you know, growth is still relatively robust this quarter, but seeing some moderation in the year-over-year trend. I'm just wondering if you can expand on what you're seeing in terms of client activity. How should we think about the overall sort of housing market that's happening right now, translating to the growth as you go forward? Thank you.
Yes, it's Lucie. Definitely the fast rate hikes had an impact on the demand. We had two years of unsustainable level in terms of transactions, so I think we're getting back to normal. With the further rate hikes that we expect this fall, we believe that originations will continue to grow at a slower pace in Q4. That being said, I think like Bill mentioned, we're well positioned because 50% of our originations are in Quebec, and we see the market as being more resilient in Quebec. The outlook for Q4 is that we anticipate to deliver slightly lower growth rate in Q4, but still strong in the context. Beyond that, don't know if it's premature beyond Q4, but the trends that we see definitely is a market normalization.
It's not a market collapse. We think rising rates will continue to reduce the number of transactions, which should lead to more balanced market across the country. House prices, like Bill mentioned, should normalize and come down from their peaks in most major markets. Beyond that, I think the factors are there to be supportive of a mortgage growth that should normalize to pre-pandemic level over the course of 2023. When will that happen? This is the unknown.
Thank you very much.
Thank you. Our following question is from Mike Rizvanovic from KBW Research. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Good afternoon. A question for I guess for Bill or for Laurent. I wanted to go back to Laurent's comment about the soft landing as a base case scenario. If you can maybe just clarify, are you referring to just your own footprint? Is that mostly a Québec dynamic or is that something that you're expecting for Canada? Then just maybe for Bill, it like that does seem to be quite a bit of a contrast with your conservative approach on reserving, which you basically held since the onset of the pandemic. I'm just wondering why you need to hold excess reserves at this level when you're looking for a soft type landing.
Thank you for your question. It's Laurent. It is our base case scenario for the Canadian economy as a whole. I mean, there is an increased probability of a recession. We know that, but it is currently not our base case. Look, I think the fact that we have seen increased savings during 2022, the tight labor market will act as a buffer in a slowdown. These are, you know, I think the two major forces right now that are playing out in our scenario and why we think that the most likely scenario for the Canadian economy is a slowdown soft landing.
We think that, you know, the central bank will start to look at, you know, the impact on unemployment, as rates go up and will potentially adjust accordingly. You know, those are the scenarios, you know, Canadian economy is strong. There's excess savings. The unemployment level is very low. Commodity prices that are up are you know very good windfall for the Canadian economy. It's not a Quebec thing. It's a Canadian story.
Mike, if I could just add on to your question on the allowances and the reserving. Laurent described the base case. We do also have a pessimistic case, and the pessimistic case is different, and it sees a possibility or it's that scenario is significant increase in unemployment, significant, you know, 300 basis points increase in unemployment, GDP down 5.5%, pretty severe numbers.
We did increase our weight on that scenario, decreasing our optimistic case. By you know the nature of the math that generates additional performing allowances. We're quite comfortable remaining prudent and holding significant allowances because while Laurent mentioned the base case, this is a situation that the uncertainty is high over where the path will go and the different potential paths are quite different. Does that answer your question, Mike?
Yeah, for sure. Is it fair to say that whatever component of that is management overlay, that conservatism that you've sort of had since the onset of the pandemic, that's here to stay basically, that's not gonna change anytime soon?
No, it does adjust. I think I mentioned that it changed. It was increased last quarter because we felt there were some aspects of the context that weren't perfectly reflected in the models and the scenarios. It reduced a little bit this quarter because some of those potentials were incorporated into our scenarios and models, so it can move.
Okay, got it. Thanks for that. Just a quick one for Lucie. I just wanna go back to residential mortgage growth and National's growth. You've been trailing peers for quite some time last several quarters, and it looks like it's exacerbated this quarter with respect to the banks that have reported so far. My question is, just given the dynamics of the Quebec market, and you know, the lower issues on affordability and leverage perhaps, should we not expect National to benefit from a better Quebec housing market in terms of volume? Should we expect that growth rate to maybe pick up and maybe even surpass peer levels in the next few quarters in a higher rate environment?
That's a good question. I would say that we need to look a little deeper into the numbers. About 50% of our originations comes from Quebec, and when we look at that, definitely our growth rate in Quebec is higher than what we see outside Quebec. When we blend that in, this is where you see kind of a modest growth relative to peers. That being said, we are very comfortable with our growth trend, this quarter and also in the past quarter and across the cycle as we remain disciplined, as you know. Our discipline in terms of pricing is also guiding us. We have to realize that the spreads on the mortgage business in the last year have been difficult, and we've made some decisions in the context of tighter margins.
Yeah. Maybe I could add just one comment to Lucie's. Mike, it's Bill. Just that you've heard Lucie talk for many quarters about the balanced approach on volume and pricing and risk. The numbers that you're seeing in Q3 are for mortgage. Mortgage volumes disbursed in Q3 were originated well before Q3. With the balanced approach that we take on the mortgage growth, you should expect to see when the market is more frenzied, the growth rate will be below peers. Hopefully on the opposite side, when the market is less frenzied, our growth rate could be higher than peers.
I think some of that, if you mentioned growth rate versus peers over the last three or four quarters, that's during times that Lucie mentioned where prices were peaking, spreads were lower and potentially some more risk was seen. Choices were made.
Just to complement that also, when we look at our Quebec growth, we are kind of ahead in terms of growth in the province.
Okay. Thanks. Thanks very much for that color. Very helpful.
Thank you. Our following question is from Darko Mihelic, from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you. I'm sorry, I'm gonna be that guy that beats a bit of a dead horse here because I wanna I think we bounced around a little bit, I really wanna understand something. Apologies for these questions in advance. I've got a series of questions that will really help me understand the interest rate issue. Maybe I can just draw your attention to slide 21. The third negative on this slide is the impact of hedging activity reflecting your defensive interest rate positioning. My first question is the following: I read that to say you're starting to hedge against rates going down, and you lost a little bit of money on that, and it showed up in the revenues here.
I think I also heard you later on say, however, that when rates go up in the fourth quarter, you will still benefit from a rising margin. Here's my first question, is just from a geography point of view, let's suppose the Bank of Canada raises rates by 50 basis points in the fourth quarter. I understand that, you know, there'll be wider margin bank-wide, but here in this particular business segment, would I expect there to be a bigger negative to the revenues?
This is Laurent. Let me maybe, at a high level, answer your question. You know, overall,
We have obviously positive impact from rising rates in all of our core businesses, as you saw. When we look at the current macroeconomic environment and the uncertainty around it, we took the decision to be a little bit more defensive in our positioning in our treasury. Yeah, you are correct. We're slightly long bonds, and that impacted revenues in Q3. But these activities are very dynamic, Darko, so it could change from quarter to quarter. We could decide to reduce our position. Depending on how we perceive the uncertainty and the risks in the market. It's not linear.
Okay. That's helpful. I think I've got the geography right. I don't think you're gonna help me with the quantum. Maybe instead of attacking the quantum, I do wanna understand a couple of other things. First is, I mean, when I look at my coverage universe, your bank would never have screened for me as being the most sensitive to rates. In fact, it's the opposite. The question is, Laurent, if rates do go up, would your bias be to continue and maybe hedge more for the downside or no?
Again, it will all depend on outlook and our read of the economic situation. If we do believe that there is, you know, increasing risks, increasing uncertainty, you know, we might decide to hedge more. If we, you know, don't see that, and we do have, you know, greater exposure to rising rates, we might also decide not to, you know, hedge that. It's not based on our overall exposure. It's a mix of different things and, you know, what we believe the interest rate outcomes will be and do the forward rates, you know, will the forward rates realize themselves? It's not a clear answer that I can give you on this one here.
Yeah. Maybe give me the clear answer then on why you made a decision to increase the hedging for this quarter. That might help.
I don't think we increased hedging this quarter.
Okay.
It's the impact of previous.
Previous hedging, yeah.
Hedging that was done sometime mid-2021 that is continuing to impact, but it's not this quarter.
It's just showing up this quarter for summary and didn't show up in prior quarters? I mean, I'm just, I'm trying-
Well, rising interest rates had that impact.
Yeah. It's showing up more importantly this quarter.
Because what shows up is that, as you notice on the slide, we put three main reasons. In previous quarters, some of the other elements were offsetting the impact. This quarter, the reason is that the three main elements are all together in the same quarter. That's why it's a bit more impacting. In many cases, one will offset the other.
Is it because we've passed a certain threshold of rates that it's showing up more now? Even without more hedging, that it could still end up showing up more as rates go higher?
I mean, definitely, you know, the rates environment was very volatile over the past quarter. Yes, it did show up a little bit more obviously. It's not the only thing that showed up in other segments, right? There's hedging activity, mark-to-market impact also on some of our derivatives. Obviously lower gains in investment versus 2021. You know, I think markets are such that it's not, you're not seeing the same opportunities in terms of gains on investment.
Okay. All right. Well, thank you very much for extending the call and taking my questions. I appreciate it.
Maybe, Darko, we could just conclude on the fact that total bank NII, like I said, is still up quite importantly as well as total NIM all bank.
Yep. No, I appreciate that. That's right.
Yeah.
Yep. Thank you.
Thank you. Once again, please press star one at this time for any questions or comments. Following question is from Lemar Persad, from Cormark Securities. Please go ahead.
I'll be quick here. Maybe for Marie-Chantal or Laurent. How should we think about the appropriate CET1 ratio for National in light of the current macroeconomic uncertainty?
Hi. As I said in my remarks, we're very pleased with our current capital level that does provide us with flexibility to support organic growth. In terms of the level of capital that you could expect, the level that we are at this point of time is the one that we're very comfortable with.
I guess really where I'm going at is 12.8%, that seems to me like a, you know, quite a strong CET1 ratio. And one in which I think, you know, the bank should be able to kind of pursue buybacks, notwithstanding the challenging macroeconomic backdrop and organic RWA growth. The question then, what could go wrong to cause a significant drawdown in that 12.8% CET1 ratio?
Look, it's Laurent. Buybacks, we just said that, you know, we did take a bit of a pause in Q3 and we're gonna extend that pause. You know, buybacks are not off the table forever, right? They are always a complement. You are right, we are at a good level in terms of CET1. You know, in terms of a lower threshold, in our mind, right, it's we think that 12 is a minimum where we wanna be.
At this point in time, given you know the higher level of uncertainty in the market and, you know, market volatility, the economic path, you know that we took that decision in Q3 and extended that through Q4.
Okay. Thanks. I'll leave it there.
Thank you.
Thank you. We have no further questions registered at this time. I would now like to turn the meeting back over to Laurent Ferreira.
Well, thank you very much everyone for joining us, and we will speak to you at Q4 in December. Thank you.
Thank you. The conference has now ended. Please disconnect your lines at this time, and we thank you for your participation.