How should we feel about soaring bank profits during a pandemic? - Action News
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How should we feel about soaring bank profits during a pandemic?

Annoyed by high bank profits? Stunning returns, with a little taxpayer help, are one more signal the Canadian economy is roaring back. Besides, odds are you're a shareholder.

Strong banks helped Canadians during COVID-19 but people love to hate them

A man wearing a protective face mask last year in Toronto's financial district. Despite fears for the economy then, Canada's banks have roared back as if the pandemic never happened. (Carlos Osorio/Reuters)

You can almost smell the simmering outrage against Canada's big banks in the comments at the bottom of a recent CBCGo Public story about rising bank fees.

But this week, as the banks revealed another round of stunning results, the news was a fresh reminder that despite the pandemic's disruption, theimpact of COVID-19 did not lead to the economic catastrophe that so many feared at the time. Some say banks were partly responsible for that positive outcome.

And while the bank fee story was a magnet for online anger, comments beneathCBC'sreportson bank profits were far more nuanced.

Love 'em and hate 'em

"You know, it's interesting. People seem to love and hate the banks at the same time," said Hilliard MacBeth, longtime Edmonton-based financial advisor and author of the gloomy book on Canadian real estateWhen the Bubble Bursts.

MacBeth has encountered many people dealing with Canada's financial institutions over his 42 years in the personal finance business. He says Canadians are surprisingly uncritical of banks so long as they get loans when they need them. He also thinks Canadiansmight be more critical if they were better informed.

WATCH | Customers speak out about about bank fee increases:

Customers frustrated by bank fee hikes during pandemic | Go Public

3 years ago
Duration 2:05
Several customers of Canadas big banks reached out to Go Public with frustrations about increased bank fees during the pandemic. The fee increases come after each of the big five banks reported billions in profit for this year's first quarter.

"I don't think the public is very aware of this," he said. "They just hear 'you're approved for that loan'and they're happy."

Certainly some of the people loving the Canadian banks this week include those who invest in them. Andwhether youknow it or not, odds are you too are an investor. Canada and Quebec's pension plans have big stakes in the banks. So do mutual funds, life insurance companiesand other financial groups that promise futurepayoutsbased on the money you set aside today.

Strictly from an investor's point of view, Jim Shanahan, a financial equities analyst with Edward Jones, saidthe banks have demonstratedtheir merit, bouncing off last year's lows to attain new highs. As you can see by clicking on the graph above, it was as if the pandemic never happened. He said taxpayers should be grateful.

"Patient, long-term investors have been rewarded by holding the shares and they are mostlytrading at or near all-time highs," Shanahan said.

He works out of the Edward Jones headquarters in St. Louis, Mo., where Canadian bankshave a reputation for conservative risk management. That paid offin the 2008 financial crisis, when they did not need U.S.-style bailouts, and also during the crisis brought on by the pandemic.

Solid backstop

"I think that Canadian taxpayers and businesses and other stakeholders should be pleased with the performance of the banks, which provided a very solid backstop during a very weak Canadian economy and performed exceptionally well," he said in a phone interview.

Despite wall-to-wall advertising pointing out how much they love you, banks are not your mom.Like every other profit-making company, they are in it for the bottom line. That does not mean they ignore criticism on fees or other things we complain about if we complain loud enough. And certainly, as people who spoke toGo Public pointed out, raising fees at the same time as making astonishing profits does not look especially good to their valued customers.

Readers' frequent suggestions that disgruntled customers switch to credit unions or to one of the (big-bank owned) low-fee alternatives illustrate how people determined to stick it to the big banks have options. The fact that we keep using them seems to back upMacBeth's position that Canadians remain tolerant of the banks' behaviour.

"The only way that Canadians would lose their love affair with the banks right now is if the banks started to foreclose on homes and also to put people in bankruptcy over their credit cards and their HELOCSand all that stuff," MacBeth said. "That doesn't seem to be happening."

One of the reasons for increased bank profits is the government support for real estate lending, which may not be good for the economy in the long run. (Don Pittis/CBC)

Some people complain about excessive government payouts during the pandemic, fearing they will bring tax increases. But MacBeth believeswithout that support, Canada was reallyclose to that kind of meltdown.

"It was on the verge of happening a year ago, and then the government of Canada came in with massive transfers of income and dollars to the households which essentially, if you think about it, is a transfer to the banks," he said.

As the banks reported this week,their loan losses were negligible as Canadians paid off non-mortgage debt.

Taxpayers get some credit

As many banking expertswill point out, Canadian banks are successful notjust because they are so cautious and so wise. It's also because taxpayers have their backsand becausegovernment regulators keep them in line.

As Shanahan observed, Canadian banks had "much higher capital requirements" to help them, and borrowers, survive the downturn. He said that as those requirements lift, expect increased dividends andshare buybacks. Executive bonuses will be back on the table.

But as with so much at the heart of the Canadian economy these days, the banks have been riding a wave of rising house prices as Canadians borrow and spend on real estate, even as they pay off other loans. Many Canadian don't think much beyond the bank that lent them the money to buy, but once again, the taxpayer is there for the bankswith what are effectively mortgage subsidies.

"In Canada, the CMHC is the primary risk takerand the bankjust gets to keep all the profits," MacBeth said. "They're taking loans away from something that might beproductive and giving more loans to households who are buying real estate they can't really afford."

And as many, including our central bankers, have said in the past, if that trend continues, diverting so much of our wealth to inflating the price of unproductive real estate may not be the best thing for Canada, or for its banks, once the pandemic is over. By comparison theeffects of rising fees, while evidently annoying, are of small economic consequence.

Follow Don Pittis on Twitter @don_pittis