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  • A mysterious fleet is helping Russia ship oil around the world. And it’s growing

    LondonCNN — 

    Russian oil is still finding its way to buyers around the world. But even those who spend their days tracking its movement across oceans struggle to work out exactly who is ferrying it.

    As Western sanctions against Russia have escalated over its invasion of Ukraine, more ships have joined an existing fleet of mysterious tankers, ready to facilitate Russia’s oil exports.

    Industry insiders estimate the size of that “shadow” fleet at roughly 600 vessels, or about 10% of the global number of large tankers. And numbers continue to climb.

    Who owns and operates many of these ships remains a puzzle. As trading Russian oil became more complex over the past year, many Western shippers withdrew their services. New, obscure players swooped in, with shell companies in Dubai or Hong Kong involved in some cases. Some bought boats from Europeans, while others tapped old, creaking ships that might have otherwise ended up in the scrapyard.

    “You’ve gone deeper into the dark arts,” a senior executive at an oil trading firm told CNN, referring to this opaque network.

    The under-the-radar fleet has increased in importance as Moscow tries to avoid working with Western shippers, and as customers in China and India supplant those in Europe, now banned from purchasing seaborne Russian oil and refined products such as diesel. Delivery to more distant buyers requires additional boats — and ship owners willing to deal with added complexity and legal risk, especially after Group of Seven countries imposed price caps on Russian oil.

    https://edition.cnn.com/2023/03/01/business/russia-oil-shadow-fleet/index.html

  • U.S. crude stockpiles rise for tenth consecutive week, EIA says

    U.S. crude oil inventories rose for the 10th week in a row, surging to their most since May 2021, but record U.S. exports of crude oil kept the build smaller than in recent weeks, data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration showed on Wednesday.

    Crude inventories rose by 1.2 million barrels in the week ending Feb. 24 to 480.2 million barrels, compared with analysts’ expectations in a Reuters poll for a 500,000-barrel rise.

    A widening of U.S. crude and Brent crude spreads contributed to a record 5.6 million barrels per day in U.S. crude exports last week, which resulted in a smaller build than in previous weeks, according to UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo.

    Meanwhile, net U.S. crude imports fell by 1.15 million bpd, the lowest on record, EIA said.

    “The record exports helped keep crude supplies in line,” added Price Group analyst Phil Flynn.

    Crude stocks at the Cushing, Oklahoma, delivery hub rose by 307,000 barrels in the last week, the most since June 2021, the EIA said.

    As a heavy maintenance season continued to weigh on refinery runs, refinery utilization rates fell by 0.1 percentage point in the week while refinery crude runs fell by 31,000 barrels per day, the EIA said.

    U.S. gasoline stocks fell by 900,000 barrels in the week to 239.2 million barrels, the EIA said, compared with analysts’ expectations for a 500,000-barrel rise.

    Distillate stockpiles, which include diesel and heating oil, rose by 0.2 million barrels in the week to 122.1 million barrels, its most since January 2022, versus forecasts for a 500,000-barrel drop, the EIA data showed.

  • Canadian home prices to drop 12% in 2023, but still remain unaffordable for many: poll

    The drop in home prices in Canada this year will be steeper than forecast three months ago but mild compared with a historic run-up during the COVID-19 pandemic, leaving many first-time buyers still priced out of the market, a Reuters poll showed.

    Following nearly a year of mostly aggressive interest rate rises from near-zero that the Bank of Canada has only recently set on pause at 4.50 per cent, mortgage rates have soared over 170 basis points, restricting activity in the once red-hot market.

    Average home prices in Canada have already fallen roughly 15.0 per cent from their early 2022 peak and are forecast to drop 12.0 per cent this year, according to the median view from a Feb. 15-28 poll of 13 housing experts.

    That is slightly more severe than the 10.0 per cent fall predicted in a November survey.

    But that expected decline is dwarfed by the more than 50 per cent rise during the height of the pandemic, and is a very small fraction of prices that roughly tripled over the past two decades, suggesting the dream of owning a home will remain out of reach for many prospective first time buyers.

    While most analysts said such a fall in house prices would improve affordability somewhat, others said they needed to drop a lot more to make any difference.

    “We think in normal times a 30 per cent house price decline would be a crash, but in this context of what we’re coming from with the two-year surge, it’s a necessary correction to restore affordability,” said Tony Stillo, director of economics for Canada at Oxford Economics.

    Asked how much average house prices would fall from peak to trough, the median response was 20.0 per cent, more than the 17.5 per cent predicted in the November poll. The range of forecasts varied from 12.5 per cent to 30.0 per cent.

    House prices in Toronto and Vancouver, front runners in the recent house price boom, were forecast to drop 15 per cent and 12 per cent, respectively, in 2023, compared with rises of over 50 per cent and 30 per cent during the pandemic.

    Without a large correction, prospective homeowners will continue renting. A strong majority, 7 of 10 analysts, said home ownership would decrease over the next two to three years.

    “We view the drop in average prices as only offsetting the run-up in mortgage rates, so net affordability really hasn’t improved in the past year,” said BMO Capital Markets chief economist Douglas Porter.

    “Of course, the Canadian housing market is rarely ‘affordable’ for many potential first-time buyers.”

    Urban rent affordability is also set to worsen over the next two years, according to eight of 11 respondents, with rents kept elevated through ever-expanding demand from immigration and supply not keeping pace.

    “Strong rental demand and low vacancy rates will maintain intense upward pressure on rents,” said Robert Hogue, assistant chief economist at RBC.

  • RBC beats analysts’ forecasts despite drop in first-quarter profit

    Royal Bank of Canada RY-T -3.55%decrease posted a drop in first-quarter profit as it set aside more loan-loss reserves amid deteriorating economic conditions, but it outperformed analyst expectations as higher interest rates boosted fixed-income trading.

    RBC and National Bank of Canada NA-T +1.64%increase joined most of their peers in recording lower earnings in the quarter as clients absorbed higher borrowing costs and lenders set aside more funds for bad loans.

    “While interest rates may be peaking, they may remain higher for longer as tight labour markets and other supply imbalances keep inflation high and constrain economic and market activity,” RBC chief executive officer Dave McKay said during a conference call with analysts.

    RBC earned $3.2-billion or $2.29 a share in the three months that ended Jan. 31. That compared with $4.1-billion or $2.84 in the same quarter last year. Adjusted to exclude certain items, including tax-related adjustments, the bank said it earned $3.10 a share, edging out the $2.94 analysts estimated, according to Refinitiv.

    RBC is the fourth major Canadian bank to report earnings for the fiscal first quarter, with National Bank also posting results on Wednesday. Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce CM-T +0.06%increase and Bank of MontrealBMO-T +0.89%increase also posted lower profit that still beat analyst estimates, while Bank of Nova ScotiaBNS-T +1.48%increase reported lower-than-expected results. Toronto-Dominion Bank TD-T -0.21%decrease is set to post its financial results on Thursday.

    RBC set aside more funds to cover sour loans than analysts had expected. The bank posted $532-million in provisions for credit losses, up from the $105-million it reserved in the same quarter a year earlier.

    Montreal-based National Bank also posted a drop in earnings, while topping analyst estimates on loan-loss provisions that rose less than expected. In the quarter, National Bank set aside $86-million in provisions for credit losses. In the same quarter last year, it had a recovery of $2-million in provisions.

    The Montreal-based lender earned $881-million or $2.49 a share in the three months that ended Jan. 31. That compared with $930-million or $2.64 in the same quarter last year. Adjusted to exclude certain items, the bank said it earned $2.56 a share. That beat the $2.37 analysts expected, according to Refinitiv.

    “The uncertainty is really around the path of inflation and how interest rates react, as well as how the tight labour market reacts in the near future,” National Bank CEO Laurent Ferreira said in an interview.

    RBC’s revenue climbed 16 per cent to $15.1-billion in the quarter, boosted by a spike in its global markets division as higher interest rates boosted bonds and fixed-income trading. That offset a slump in corporate and investment banking as capital markets profit rose 9 per cent to $1.22-billion. But that bump was largely fuelled by market volatility, and trading activity typically picks up during the bank’s first-quarter earnings, RBC head of capital markets Derek Neldner said on the conference call.

    RBC’s share price slumped 3.6 per cent on Wednesday as investors shunned narrowing net interest margins and rising expenses.

    “It is hard to get too negative on a 5 [per cent earnings-per-share] beat, but certainly our view of the quarter is coloured by the fact that the bank’s capital markets business did all the heavy lifting with a record trading quarter,” Scotiabank analyst Meny Grauman said in a note to clients. “The problem is that other parts of the business missed the mark,” including costs and lending margins, he added.

    As the bank hired staff and invested in technology, expenses in the quarter surged 17 per cent to $7.68-billion. Inflation also caused an increase in salaries and in fees from third-party suppliers, as well as a pickup in travel and conference spending from slow activity during the pandemic, according to chief financial officer Nadine Ahn.

    “When you look at technology spend, it’s been a huge contributor to client acquisition,” Ms. Ahn said in an interview. “The focus going forward is that we’re very diligent in terms of what that next dollar of tech spend is, and what it’s going to add in terms of value.”

    Lending margins have also been thrust into the spotlight as higher rates push homebuyers and borrowers to the sidelines. RBC’s net interest margin – the difference that the bank earns on loans and pays on deposits – tumbled nine basis points from the previous quarter to 1.47 per cent. (One hundred basis points equal one percentage point.)

    While earnings in its retail arm benefited from loan growth, with profit rising 8 per cent from a year earlier, lending margins were offset by weaker lending margins in its U.S. division. Customers also transferred money into longer-term savings accounts to take advantage of higher interest rates. These are costlier for banks than cheaper deposit products, such as chequing accounts, and put pressure on lending margins.

    Investors rewarded National Bank as it bucked the trend, boosting the stock 1.6 per cent in Toronto on Wednesday. The lender posted a spike in its net interest margin from the previous quarter, benefiting from higher interest rates. But waning demand for loans could temper margins this year.

    “There is so much uncertainty depending on interest rates,” National Bank chief financial officer Marie Chantal Gingras said in an interview, adding that clients could start stashing more money away in high-interest savings products.

  • TD Bank’s $13.4-billion U.S. acquisition dealt heavy blow after First Horizon warns of regulatory issues

    TD-T -0.21%decrease prospects of closing a major acquisition in the United States took a hit Wednesday after its merger partner, FHN-N -10.62%decrease, disclosed that the deal is struggling to receive regulatory blessings in a timely manner.

    In an annual filing, First Horizon, which is based in Memphis, Tenn., disclosed that TD TD-T -0.21%decrease recently told its management team that TD does not expect to get the required regulatory approvals in time to complete the deal before May 27, which is when their merger agreement is set to expire.

    Merger deadlines can be extended more than once, but what makes Wednesday’s filing unusual is that First Horizon FHN-N -10.62%decrease and TD did not seem fussed about approvals only three weeks ago. At the time, the two banks put out a joint press release saying they had “mutually agreed” to extend the merger deadline from Feb. 27 to May 27. “TD and First Horizon are fully committed to the merger and continue to make significant progress in planning for the closing and the integration of the companies,” they added.

    First Horizon disclosed in its annual filing Wednesday that “receipt of regulatory approvals for the pending TD merger has taken longer than originally anticipated.”

    TD agrees to pay US$1.21-billion to settle Stanford Ponzi scheme lawsuit

    First Horizon’s shares closed down 11 per cent to US$22.14. TD agreed to pay US$25 a share in a deal worth US$13.4-billion.

    In an e-mailed statement, TD noted that the bank cannot say much until it reports earnings Thursday, but added that it “remains committed to the transaction” and that it has initiated discussions about another extension.

    The announcement is the second major development for TD this week after the bank disclosed Monday that it will pay US$1.2-billion to settle a lawsuit from investors accusing it of contributing to a major Ponzi scheme.

    Approvals for U.S. bank mergers must come from various parties, including the Federal Reserve, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (which is TD’s primary U.S. banking regulator) and various other regulatory, antitrust and other authorities.

    Appeasing all of these bodies can take longer than desired for large deals, but it is rare for two merger partners to publicly appear at odds. “We view this as a negative development for TD’s U.S. growth strategy,” BMO Nesbitt Burns analyst Sohrab Movahedi wrote in a research note to clients Wednesday.

    First Horizon’s disclosure was also made during a period of heightened scrutiny of U.S. bank mergers. President Joe Biden has asked for a broad review of competition rules, and the banking sector has been specifically targeted because so few deals have been blocked in recent history. Consumer-advocacy groups worry that merger synergies, or savings, are not always passed on to clients in the form of cheaper products.

    In mid-February, TD announced a five-year community-benefits plan that focuses on lending, banking access and other services for diverse and underserved groups in the U.S. The package includes opening 25 new branches and promises US$21-billion in home lending for lower-income and minority communities, as well as additional funding for small-business loans and community-development investments.

    The bank also said that there will not be any merger-related First Horizon branch closings, and that it will hire additional diverse employees to work on mortgage loans.

    Bank of Montreal also faced a lengthy review of its $17.1-billion acquisition of California-based Bank of The West, which it announced in December, 2021. Like TD, BMO had to push back the deal’s closing deadline and participated in multiple public hearings with regulators. However, BMO received the necessary blessings in January and the transaction closed last month.

    While TD says it is still committed to the First Horizon transaction, which it would use to build a substantial footprint in the U.S. southeast, National Bank of Canada analyst Gabriel Dechaine noted Wednesday that the takeover was met with mixed reactions.

    Since the deal was announced, “common investor concerns relayed to us revolved around valuation/timing and TD’s ability to turn around a business that was generating subpar growth and that had faced integration issues of its own [from] a separate transaction,” he wrote in a note to clients.

    TD paid 2.1 times First Horizon’s book value, and anything above two times is viewed as a premium price. U.S. banking-sector stocks have also dropped since the transaction was announced, with the KBW Nasdaq Bank Index falling 14 per cent over the past year.

  • RBC fiscal Q1 earnings drive higher on P&C banking, wealth management

    Royal Bank of Canada’s (NYSE:RY) fiscal Q1 earnings beat the average analyst estimate, increasing from the prior and year-ago quarters, driven by strong results in its Personal & Commercial Banking and Wealth Management units and a rebound in Capital Markets. That was partly offset by lower results in its insurance business. In addition, the bank known as RBC (RY) set more reserves aside for potential loan defaults as it took a dimmer view of the macroeconomic outlook and credit quality. Q1 adjusted EPS of C$3.05 (US$2.25), topping the C$2.94 consensus estimate, rose from C$2.78 in the prior quarter and from C$2.87 in the year-ago period. Net interest income for the quarter ended Jan. 31, 2023 slipped to C$6.20B (US$4.57B) from C$6.28B in Q4 2022 and increased from C$5.27B in Q1 2022. Net interest margin of 1.47% narrowed from 1.56% in the prior quarter and widened from 1.39% in the year-ago quarter. RBC (RY) provision for credit losses of C$532M rose from C$381M in Q4 and from C$105M in Q1 2022. Preprovision pretax earnings of C$5.9B increased 12% from the prior quarter and rose 7% from the year-ago period. Personal & Commercial Banking preprovision pretax earnings were C$3.23B, up 4% Q/Q and 18% Y/Y; net income of C$2.06B increased 3% Q/Q and 7% Y/Y. Wealth Management preprovision pretax earnings of C$1.15B increased 1% Q/Q and 7% Y/Y, while net income of C$848M rose 1% Q/Q and 3% Y/Y.  Insurance preprovision pretax earnings of C$190M tumbled 49% Q/Q and 25% Y/Y; net income of C$148M dropped 45% Q/Q and 25% Y/Y. Capital Markets preprovision pretax earnings of C$1.42B surged 76% Q/Q and fell 3% Y/Y; net income of C$1.22B jumped 72% Q/Q and 9% Y/Y. Conference call at 8:00 AM ET. Earlier, Royal Bank of Canada (RY) non-GAAP EPS of C$3.05 beats by C$0.12, revenue of C$15.09B beats by C$1.56B.

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  • Toronto-Dominion Bank FQ1 expected to benefit from segment earnings

    The Toronto-Dominion Bank (NYSE:TD) FQ1 results are expected to benefit from segment earnings, which were strong across most Canadian banks.

    TD Bank is scheduled to announce FQ1 earnings results on Thursday, March 2nd, before market open.

    The consensus EPS estimate is CAD2.20 and the consensus revenue estimate is CAD11.99B.

    Over the last 2 years, TD has beaten EPS estimates 100% of the time and revenue estimates 100% of the time.

    Over the last 3 months, EPS estimates have seen 5 upward revisions and 0 downward. Revenue estimates have seen 1 upward revision and 0 downward.

    Looking at the peer performance, Canadian banks have seen a solid quarter. Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce posted a stronger-than-expected FQ1 earnings, helped by higher interest rates and a lower provision for credit losses.

    Royal Bank of Canada also beat FQ1 analyst estimates driven by strong results in its Personal & Commercial Banking and Wealth Management units and a rebound in Capital Markets. Bank of Montreal also turned in better-than-expected adjusted EPS for the quarter ended Jan. 31.

    Bank of Nova Scotia was an exception as FQ1 earnings missed consensus estimates. Net interest income slipped from the prior quarter while the bank set aside more for potential credit losses.

    Here is a look at TD’s segment results last year:

    Toronto-Dominion is going into the next earnings cycle with elevated concerns about its rate sensitivity and exposure to credit risk, but underlying earnings power looks stronger than for most peers, according to Seeking Alpha author Stephen Simpson.

    Among the major five Canadian banks, Toronto-Dominion Bank could be the best pick right now, SA contributor Daniel Schönberger said.

    The bank has closed the acquisition of Cowen (COWN), which will which will advance its long-term growth strategy in the U.S., and expects to close the First Horizon (FHN) acquisition later in 2023.

  • Bank of Nova Scotia Non-GAAP EPS of C$1.85 misses by C$0.17, revenue of C$7.98B misses by C$280M

    • Bank of Nova Scotia press release (NYSE:BNS): Q1 Non-GAAP EPS of C$1.85 misses by C$0.17.
    • Revenue of C$7.98B (-0.9% Y/Y) misses by C$280M.
    • Return on equity of 13.4%, compared to 15.9%
    • The provision for credit losses was $638 million, compared to $222 million, an increase of $416 million.
    • The provision for credit losses ratio increased 20 basis points to 33 basis points.