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Oil price slide casts shadow over Canada’s banks, despite solid quarter

Canadian banks are beginning to see the impact of the oil rut in their corporate lending books and in their consumer loan portfolios.

Canada’s big banks wrapped up the very first quarter from the fiscal year with increased profits and widely expected dividend hikes. However the early impact from the oil rut was evident, with an increase of provisioning and reports of accelerating credit card and loan delinquencies within the hardest hit provinces, primarily in Western Canada.

Scotiabank hikes dividend as profit rises, but oil woes are registering

Bank of Quebec beat analyst estimates with first quarter earnings, the quarterly dividend by nearly three per cent

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Bank of Nova Scotia, the last to report for that period ending Jan. 31, beat analyst estimates by a handful of cents using the results released Tuesday.

Like Toronto-Dominion Bank, Royal Bank of Canada, and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce before it, Canada’s third-largest bank raised the quarterly dividend to be paid to shareholders. Scotia boosted the dividend nearly three percent to 72 cents a share.

Despite one fourth referred to as solid by financial analysts, Scotia executives followed other bank officials by acknowledging a less pretty picture for clients hit by the plummeting price of oil.

Canadian banks are starting to determine the impact of the oil rut in their corporate lending books and in their consumer loan portfolios. Pockets of unsecured lending, including credit card debt and some auto loans, are expected to become the toughest hit with the unemployment rate in Alberta now over the national average.

The amount of cash Scotia set aside in credit loss provisions rose to $539 million the first quarter, up from $463 million a year ago, with the increase driven mainly by higher provisions within the gas and oil sector and in the Canadian retail portfolio.

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