Canada Bank Bailout Cost $114 Billion At Peak, CCPA Says

The Huffington Post Canada  |  By Posted: 04/30/2012 10:40 am Updated: 04/30/2012 1:05 pm

UPDATE: The Canadian Bankers' Association has responded to the CCPA's report, telling The Huffington Post that no Canadian banks were in danger of failing during the financial crisis, contradicting a claim in the CCPA's report.

“They seem to be implying that liquidity support is the same as a bank bailout and this is not the case,” CBA spokeswoman Rachel Swiednicki said in an email. “These funding measures were put in place to ensure that credit was available to lend to businesses and consumers to help the economy through the recession. These funding measures were not put in place because banks were in financial difficulty.”

More of the CBA’s response to the report can be found at the bottom of this article.

Canada’s banks were bailed out by U.S. and Canadian institutions to the tune of $114 billion, says a new report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

The report puts a large dent into the perception that Canada’s banks survived the financial collapse of 2008 without the need for the sorts of government bailouts seen in the U.S. and Europe.

According to the report, titled The Big Banks’ Big Secret: Estimating Government Support for Canadian Banks During the Financial Crisis, Canada’s biggest banks relied heavily on support from the Bank of Canada, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. and the U.S. Federal Reserve between October, 2008 and July, 2010.

SECRET CANADIAN BANK BAILOUT: WHAT EACH BANK GOT

By the CCPA’s estimates, that works out to $3,400 for every man, woman and child in the country. On a per capita basis, that’s more than what U.S. banks needed. The most liberal estimates for the U.S.’s Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) place the cost at around $3,000 per person.

“At some point during the crisis, three of Canada’s banks—CIBC, BMO, and Scotiabank—were completely under water, with government support exceeding the market value of the company,” CCPA Senior Economist David Macdonald said in a press statement Monday. “Without government supports to fall back on, Canadian banks would have been in serious trouble.”

Over the same period, the CCPA notes, Canada’s big banks recorded a combined total of $27 billion in profits and the banks’ CEOs received an average pay raise of 19 per cent.

“For instance, Edmund Clark of TD Bank saw his overall compensation jump from $11.1 million in 2008 to $15.2 million in 2009,” the report states.

WHAT CANADA'S BIG BANK CEOs EARNED LAST YEAR

The CCPA stresses that these numbers are estimates, because the government has not released an official account of the bailouts.

“While the details around the American bank bailout are fully available to the public (due to a legal challenge forcing this information into the open), the Canadian federal government and Bank of Canada offer far less transparency."

The study used the bank’s own public statements, as well as reports from the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) and the Bank of Canada to put together

It says the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. -- the governmental body that insures Canadians’ mortgages against default -- bought up $69 billion-worth of mortgages from the banks.

UPDATE: The CBA is defending the CMHC's buyout of mortgages held by banks, saying the total amount spent to buy them was only "55 per cent of the allocated amount." The bankers' industry group argues that many of the mortgages "were already insured and therefore, created no additional risk for the government. ... CMHC estimates that by the time the program has ended, the [mortgage buyout program] will have generated an estimated $2.5 billion in net revenues for the government (and therefore taxpayers)."

"Three of Canada’s banks -- CIBC, BMO, and Scotiabank -- were at some point completely under water, with government support exceeding the value of the company,” the report states. “In March 2009, CIBC stood out for receiving support worth almost one and a half times the value of all outstanding shares. It would have taken less money to have simply bought all the shares in CIBC instead of providing it with support.”

Canada’s financial institutions have been lauded over the past three years for seemingly having weathered the global financial storm without the need for large-scale bailouts. The country’s smooth economic sailing during the crisis has made Canadian finance bigwigs like former Finance Minister Paul Martin and Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney into quasi-superstars in the financial world.

But the CCPA argues that reputation is undeserved.

“The details uncovered in this report fly in the face of repeated assurances that Canadian banks did not need extraordinary support. Nothing could be further from the truth. Three of Canada’s banks drew support that was worth (at peak) more than the total value of their company,”

The Huffington Post Canada has contacted the Canadian Bankers’ Association and several banks for comment, and will update this story with their responses.

UPDATE: The Canadian Bankers' Association has responded to the CCPA's report in an email to The Huffington Post. Here are some highlights of that email:

Although the financial crisis did not begin here, Canada’s financial markets were impacted. During the global financial crisis, a number of large banks in other countries became insolvent, and either failed or received taxpayer-funded bailouts where the government bought part or all of those banks. For example, since the beginning of 2008, 436 banks in the US have failed. Due to the crisis of confidence in global credit markets, some funding sources that banks normally relied upon became unavailable.

Canadian banks get about two-thirds of their funding from deposits, which shows the strengths of our banking system. The other one-third come from credit markets and it was these markets that were seizing up. Funding was less available. Canadian banks continued to lend and increased their lending after some non-bank lenders pulled out of the Canadian market.

While some of the funding came from Bank of Canada programs, according to the Bank of Canada, Canadian banks needed less official central bank liquidity support than their foreign counterparts. The Bank of Canada publicly outlined how this funding would be provided to the market....

It is important to remember that Canada’s banks are well-regulated and the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) carefully monitors individual banks to ensure that they remain financially stable.

The Oxford dictionary defines bailout as “financial assistance to a failing business or economy to save it from collapse”. That definitely was not the case here: not one bank in Canada was in danger of going bankrupt or required the government to buy an equity stake under taxpayer-funded bailouts.

SECRET CANADIAN BAILOUT: WHAT EACH OF THE BANKS GOT

Loading Slideshow...
  • 5. BMO: $17 Billion

    The financial support extended to BMO amounted to 118 per cent of the bank's value at the time, <a href="http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/reports/big-banks-big-secret" target="_hplink">according to the CCPA</a>.

  • 4. CIBC: $21 Billion

    The financial support extended to CIBC amounted to 148 per cent of the bank's value at the time, <a href="http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/reports/big-banks-big-secret" target="_hplink">according to the CCPA</a>.

  • 2. (tie) RBC: $25 Billion

    The financial support extended to RBC amounted to 63 per cent of the bank's value at the time, <a href="http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/reports/big-banks-big-secret" target="_hplink">according to the CCPA</a>.

  • 2. (tie) Scotiabank: $25 Billion

    The financial support extended to Scotia amounted to 100 per cent of the bank's value at the time, <a href="http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/reports/big-banks-big-secret" target="_hplink">according to the CCPA</a>.

  • 1. TD Bank: $26 Billion

    The financial support extended to TD amounted to 69 per cent of the bank's value at the time, <a href="http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/reports/big-banks-big-secret" target="_hplink">according to the CCPA</a>.

WHAT CANADA'S BIG BANK CEOs EARNED LAST YEAR

Also on HuffPost:

Loading Slideshow...
  • What Canada's Bank CEOs Earned Last Year

  • 6. Louis Vachon, National - $7.5 Mln

    <strong>Profit per dollar earned by the CEO: $162.27</strong> National Bank's Louis Vachon took home $7.5 million, the lowest total of any of the six major banks, but the most in terms of the bank's net income.

  • 5. Gerry McCaughey, CIBC - $9.5 Million

    <strong>Profit per dollar earned by the CEO: $326.32</strong> Gerry McCaughey's total compensation grew 12 per cent, to $9.5 million, in 2011. Source: <a href="https://www.cibc.com/ca/pdf/investor/proxy2012.pdf" target="_hplink">CIBC Management Proxy Circular</a>

  • 4. Bill Downe, BMO - $9.9 Million

    <strong>Profit per dollar earned by the CEO: $330.81</strong> Bill Downe's total compensation for 2011 was up 4.2 per cent from his 2010 pay of $9.5 million. Source: <a href="http://ca.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idCATRE81Q1W320120227" target="_hplink">Reuters</a>

  • 3. Gordon Nixon, RBC - $10.1 Million

    <strong>Profit per dollar earned by the CEO: $480.40</strong> Gordon Nixon's total compensation fell 8 per cent in 2011, to $11 million. Source: <a href="http://www.rbc.com/newsroom/2012/0206-proxy.html" target="_hplink">RBC Management Proxy Circular</a>

  • 2. Rick Waugh, Scotiabank - $10.6 Mln

    <strong>Profit per dollar earned by the CEO: $501.71</strong> Waugh's total earnings for 2011, at $10.6 million, were down slightly from the $10.66 million he earned in 2010. Source: <a href="http://www.thestar.com/business/article/1137400--scotiabank-ceo-s-pay-down-slightly-from-2010" target="_hplink">Toronto Star</a>

  • 1. Ed Clark, TD Bank - $11.3 Million

    <strong>Profit per dollar earned by the CEO: $517.45</strong> Ed Clark's total compensation for 2011 was meant to be around $12 million, but the bank's board scaled it back to $11.3 million -- roughly the same as in 2010. Source: <a href="http://www.thestar.com/business/article/1135817--td-bank-ceo-ed-clark-s-pay-down-to-11-3-million-in-2011" target="_hplink">Toronto Star</a>

FOLLOW CANADA BUSINESS

UPDATE: The Canadian Bankers' Association has responded to the CCPA's report, telling The Huffington Post that no Canadian banks were in danger of failing during the financial crisis, contradicting a ...
UPDATE: The Canadian Bankers' Association has responded to the CCPA's report, telling The Huffington Post that no Canadian banks were in danger of failing during the financial crisis, contradicting a ...
 
 
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05:26 PM on 05/07/2013
And the duplicitous actions of banks colluding with gov't have resulted in huge fee increases, higher hidden fees to merchants being passed on to consumers, and an adjusted cost of funds being sub zero via aggressive rate cuttings.
So savers get nothing, borrowers pay twice and retirement ends up in poverty, if at all.

This is why we have a recovery in corporate earnings yet not in human capital.
yer
Stop the Alberta Taliban
05:26 PM on 05/06/2013
How is this not a double dipping scam? Instead of giving people money to pay off their bank loans they give the money to the banks increase their CEO payouts while they ask more from customers. We paid twice
02:26 PM on 04/08/2013
According to the CDIC's 2010 Annual Report, CDIC protects $590 billion CAD in total eligible deposits, and has $1.95 billion CAD in assets to meet insurance claims.

This amount represents 0.33% of total eligible deposits.The CDIC is also authorized to borrow up to $17 billion if necessary from the federal government or the financial markets and may request further funds from Parliament.

For liquidity purposes the CIPF fund has two lines of credit provided by two Canadian chartered banks totalling $125 million.

The CIPF fund has also arranged insurance in the amount of $131 million for any one loss and in the annual aggregate in respect of losses to be paid by CIPF in excess of $100 million in the event of Member insolvency.

"Bearable" public debt has been defined by the IMD as being 60% or less of GDP and Canada’s forecast-ed ratio for 2013 of 96.6% compared to our 2010 ratio of 85.1% far exceed bearable public debt ratio to GDP of 60% in both years.

Knowledge is power and you are not as safe as you might think!

timestoronto.blogspot.ca/2013/03/government-condoned-thieves-for-revenue.html
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
08:08 PM on 09/17/2012
First of all, this is not "new" information. It has been knows for years. Second, the CBA is correct: a liquidity backstop is not the same as a bailout. To understand the difference, a person needs to understand what liquidity is: assets that can be used immediately, usually to cover the day-to-day operations of the financial institution. Normally banks and other fi's carry enough liquidity to easily manage their expected short-term needs, with an extra cushion for safety. When the financial markets went south big time, the banks found themselves in a situation where they had plenty of assets (like secure mortgages) that could not be converted into usable funds. So they sold some of these securities to the government.

This was not TARP. The assets sold were not funny paper, but well within the risk parameters set by the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions. As pointed out, taxpayers will net a couple of billion on the deal.

Anytime you have a lender, you'd better have a public liquidity backstop of last resort. For the banks in Canada, this is the federal government. For credit unions it's the provinces. Otherwise, the institutions would have to run on a one-dollar in, one-dollar out basis. Credit would dry up almost overnight...which harm people who never borrow (Hi there!) but would effectively bring our economy to a standstill.
03:32 AM on 09/08/2012
bancos são um grande monopolio de dinheiro ....
10:33 PM on 05/08/2012
The banks should get bailouts and the public sector and the middle class should pay for them. Why? Because we saw this coming and didn't stop it. Year after year we see the gap between rich and the 99% increase. The time it takes for the elite to make what the average person makes becomes less and less - 3 days, 2 days, by three o'clock. We elect governments who acknowledge this but don't see it as as problem; never mind the fact that they haven't proposed solutions. The Occupy movement braved billy-clubs, water cannons, mace and frigid nights to spread the word and are still largely ridiculed. So, unless there is a general strike supporting the next time students in Quebec take to the streets, fully expect to lose all the delayed compensation you put into benefits and pensions. Have lots of kids because a 2-income family will go the way of the one-income family. And get ready to spend a couple of nights to get those day-care spots.
12:17 AM on 05/02/2012
Canadian banks should admit that there would have been bank failures - following bank runs - absent Canadian government bailouts. With no one else willing to finance their operations, they would have been in the same situation as Lehman Bros - toxic banks. If no one lends to you and all your depositors take their money and run, you will go bankrupt regardless of how much capital you think you have. It's a confidence game and Diamond Jim put his finger on the balance to make it easier for the banks to weather the storm. This kind of lying is what will ultimately destroy this CONservative government; the lies seem to get bigger every day.
03:03 PM on 05/01/2012
How do you know that even now we are only getting half the story. The us also gave the banks acess to free money from the taxpayers coffers at 0 interest rate so they could then lend that money back to the people (taxpayers) they got it from for free with a nice interest rate attached any bets that the ReformCons did the same thing here easy to pay something back when you are paying no interest and getting your money from the people you are paying back for free. Nice bit of Transparency Reform Cons.
02:43 PM on 05/01/2012
How embarassing for every Canadian. Every -body in the world was laughing as to how naive these poor people could possibly be?...Now we know. It is very sad that this country endures such an identity crisis through generations. Difine Canadian? Well, again now we really don't know but we know one thing for sure......We are not American! (Are We?) Mom......Are We?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Skookum1
truth can't be bought, but lies sure can be sold..
03:13 PM on 05/01/2012
"Mom" is Great Britain, and she's disowned us.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charles the Great
Canadian/Israeli Goy in Alert,Nunavut
01:05 PM on 05/01/2012
So the banks paid the Money back and they only got it as a result of the system we have in place on the banking system.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Watson Richardson
11:30 AM on 05/01/2012
all the MONEY has been paid back. Case closed.
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albertarick
These are questions for wise men with skinny arms
11:26 AM on 05/01/2012
Paying off or buying someones debt or making their payments for them are the same thing. Liquidity support = bailout. The only difference is to spin the narrative such that the banks didn't get a favour from the taxpayer. That would imply that the favour would be returned, can't have that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dale Chan
Hope is both panacea and poison.
02:49 AM on 05/01/2012
I wish I was too big to fail.
12:59 AM on 05/01/2012
It worked and the government ultimately made about $3B on the deal so what's everybody bitching about.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sdgreen
03:04 AM on 05/01/2012
Lefties like to whine and make nonsensical hot air!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr e MaN
Political Atheist
10:21 AM on 05/01/2012
Rights never complain or whine, except when they do. And when in government make nonsensical legislation. Laying off people into and already bad economy is a really good idea as it gives confidence to the CONsumers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charles the Great
Canadian/Israeli Goy in Alert,Nunavut
01:08 PM on 05/01/2012
I fail to see what was the problem is. This is how the system we have on the banking system in Canada works. Also they paid it all back. The Tax payers got it all back in full. The Banking System is under the watch of the government. They gave the banks cash to keep them from going broke. If they went broke then everyone who has accounts with the banks would have lost all their money anyway.
09:58 AM on 05/01/2012
3 billion? The number is 2.5 billion, and it is expected to generate 2.5 billion in profit. So this hasn't happened yet.
11:00 PM on 04/30/2012
Its actually worst than this, I am really sick of this, its the reason why I don't save in paper anymore.