Topic: Blue Chip Stocks

Investors in Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce benefit from a 5.3% yield

Improved results for its retail banking business helped lift overall earnings in the most-recent quarter for this member of Canada’s Big Five.

A recent acquisition continues to build the bank’s U.S. operations and its share of the growing wealth management business.

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CANADIAN IMPERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE, (Toronto symbol CM), is the smallest of Canada’s big five banks, with assets of $642.5 billion.

CIBC announced that it will raise its quarterly dividend by 2.9%. Starting with the October 2019 payment, investors will receive $1.44 a share instead of $1.40. The new annual rate of $5.76 yields a high 5.3%.

CIBC has now raised its dividend an average 7.6% annually over the last 5 years, including this latest increase.

In its fiscal 2019 third quarter, ended July 31, 2019, the bank’s earnings rose 0.7%, to $1.38 billion from $1.37 billion a year earlier. Due to slightly more shares outstanding, earnings per share improved 0.6%, to $3.10 from $3.08.

Those figures exclude unusual items, among them costs related to CIBC’s June 2017 purchase of Chicago-based PrivateBancorp Inc. for $6.6 billion in cash and stock. That firm mainly lends to small and mid-sized businesses. It also provides wealth management services. On that basis, the latest earnings beat the consensus estimate of $3.06 a share.

Blue Chip Stocks: Earnings are up on both sides of the border

Earnings from Canadian retail banking (46% of the total) rose 2.5% in the quarter on higher loan volumes and interest rates. The Canadian commercial banking and wealth management business (25%) reported 0.6% lower earnings due to higher loan-loss provisions and new spending on those operations.

CIBC’s U.S. operations (contributing 13% of total earnings) saw its earnings rise 6.4% on higher business loan volumes and greater assets under management for its wealth management operations. Earnings from securities trading (16%), which also lends to clients, declined 12.8% on rising credit loss provisions.

Overall revenue in the quarter increased 4.1%, to $4.73 billion from $4.55 billion a year earlier. However, loan-loss provisions jumped 20.7%, to $291 million from $241 million. The bank increased provisions largely as a precaution against an overall economic slowdown.

Recommendation in The Successful Investor: Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is a buy.

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