As the risk of sizable losses on commercial real estate loans grows, Canadian banks’ earnings are poised to take a hit, according to the head of Canada’s financial-system regulator.
“It’s likely that banks across the world are going to suffer some” commercial real estate losses “and they’re likely to be meaningful,” Peter Routledge, head of the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions, said Friday at a conference in Toronto hosted by TD Securities. Those losses will probably be “earnings events” for Canadian banks, but not a major capital risk, he added. “We’re expecting institutions to act early, to identify troubled loans, take provisions early and work them out, move them through capital.”
Office buildings are under particular stress as both property valuations and revenue have slumped amid occupancy levels that remain well below pre-pandemic levels in many places. Using a traffic-light analogy, Routledge said office loans are a “dark orange” issue in Canada and a “dark red” problem in the U.S.
OSFI knows which banks are most highly exposed and has been working with them to make sure they’re “putting in place the capital and operational buffers to absorb a greater deterioration in the asset class than they might expect,” Routledge said.
While Canadian banks put more money aside for potentially souring commercial-property loans in fiscal 2023, “more pain is likely, given the state of real estate markets,” Paul Gulberg, senior industry analyst with Bloomberg Intelligence, said in an email Friday. There are particular challenges with loans in the U.S., he said, because lenders in the country don’t have recourse to debtors’ other assets, and borrowers are facing more near-term refinancing needs.
Toronto-Domi
Read more on financialpost.com