--- title: "加拿大銀行在特朗普關税的影響下做好了應對最壞情況的準備" type: "News" locale: "zh-HK" url: "https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/244250901.md" description: "加拿大的銀行,包括加拿大皇家銀行和 BMO 金融,因特朗普總統的關税帶來的經濟壓力而增加了貸款損失準備金。最近的一份滙豐報告顯示,72% 的美國公司面臨更高的運營成本,許多公司預計成本將進一步上升。儘管面臨這些挑戰,銀行們正在為潛在的貸款違約做好準備,同時也在解決合規問題,例如 TD 銀行增加了反洗錢措施的資金。加拿大皇家銀行報告的淨收入為 43.9 億加元,略低於預期,因為在經濟不確定性中其準備金增加了超過 50%" datetime: "2025-06-12T12:02:55.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/244250901.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/244250901.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/244250901.md) --- # 加拿大銀行在特朗普關税的影響下做好了應對最壞情況的準備 Enjoy complimentary access to top ideas and insights — selected by our editors. Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) was just one of many banks that upped loan loss provisions in the face of President Donald Trump's tariffs impacting the Canadian economy. Cole Burston/Bloomberg News U.S. bank earnings felt the pressure of President Donald Trump's tariff plays as performance in loan growth and per-share earnings were downcast for many financial institutions. Unsurprisingly, banks and financial firms headquartered outside the U.S. weren't exempt from this crunch either. Data released by HSBC toward the end of last month revealed many American corporations have begun to see higher expenses due to the tariffs and are on standby for more price hikes in the near future. More than 5,700 companies were polled in the report, including roughly 1,000 based in the U.S. with revenue between $50 million and $2 billion. Of those in the U.S., 72% reported higher operating costs, and 77% forecasted continually climbing costs. These hikes didn't dim growth expectations however, as 93% reported that they were confident in their ability to expand international trade operations over the next two years. "Most \[corporations\] are taking a watch-and-wait approach on a short-term basis," Marissa Adams, HSBC's head of trade for Europe and the Americas, told American Banker. "They are very much taking it step by step, waiting to see where things happen." **Read more:** **Tariffs raised costs for 7 in 10 large US firms: Survey** The fallout from Trump's tax plays have driven up loan-loss provisions at institutions like Royal Bank of Canada, Scotiabank and BMO Financial Group, which have begun stockpiling funds to cover loans that as of now are in good standing but could change amid tax worries. Tariffs weren't the only challenge facing banks north of the border. TD Bank Group said it would double its original $500 million funding allocation toward fixing anti-money-laundering procedures after vulnerabilities led to a $3.1 billion fine from the Securities and Exchange Commission and a U.S. asset cap. That didn't stop TD from beating analyst estimates for per-share earnings across the three months ended April 30, coming in at CA$1.97 against average estimates for CA$1.78 as per Bloomberg. Credit loss provisions also outpaced expectations, totaling CA$1.34 billion against a predicted CA$1.41 billion. Read on to gain new insight on international earnings performance below. Adobe Stock ## What does Wise hope to gain through a U.S. stock listing? The U.K.-based payments company Wise is testing the initial public offering waters in the U.S. market, in the wake of similar IPO moves from stablecoin issuer Circle and challenger bank Chime. Kristo Käärmann, Wise co-founder and CEO, explained that Trump tariff worries have been mostly offset through the company's geographic diversification, cementing the U.S. as the "biggest market opportunity in the world for our products today, and would enable better access to the world's deepest and most liquid capital market," Käärmann said in a June 5 statement. "We believe the addition of a primary U.S. listing would help us accelerate our mission and bring substantial strategic and capital market benefits to Wise," Käärmann said. Other factors that play into the effort's success include the amendment of a January consent order from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau over allegations of illegal remittance practices, which originally penalized Wise with $450,000 to resolve claims and just over $2 million to the CFPB's victims relief fund. The amendment dropped the $2 million to a $44,955 civil penalty. **Read more:** **Why Wise's American ambitions include a stock listing** Cole Burston/Bloomberg ## Economic waves lead RBC to up loan-loss provisions The Royal Bank of Canada boosted its loan-loss provisions by more than 50% quarter over quarter, as Trump's tariff announcements created unrest among consumers and banks alike. For the three-month period ended April 30, RBC posted a net income of 4.39 billion Canadian dollars ($3.17 billion), slightly under analyst projections for CA$4.54 billion as per S&P. Diluted earnings per share at CA$3.02 and total quarterly revenue at CA$15.67 billion also fell short of respective estimates at CA$3.09 and CA$15.74 billion. RBC CEO Dave McKay told investors during the bank's most recent earnings call that he was aware that the increased provisions would lead to missed expectations from analysts, but he "still took them at the end of the day, because that's what the scenarios advise us." "It's not like we spent that money — it goes into an ACL \[allowance for credit losses\], and if we're wrong, we'll release it," McKay said. **Read more:** **RBC braces for rocky economy, boosts loan-loss provisions** Chloe Ellingson/Bloomberg ## BMO overhauls its balance sheet to bolster U.S. performance BMO Financial Group is shedding specific lower-returning portfolios and moving away from higher-cost deposits to help strengthen the bank's profitability in the U.S. BMO executives are hopeful that offloading a U.S. credit card portfolio and franchise loan portfolio that failed to meet original return forecasts, combined with reductions in higher-cost certificates of deposit and noncore deposits, will boost its return on equity to roughly 12% sometime in the next three to five years. "I'm quite impressed with the way our teams aren't just waiting for a rebound in loan demand," CEO Darryl White said during last month's earnings call. "We're on the journey, we're making these moves, and we're executing pretty well against them. And that's before an uptick in loan demand, which, you know, I've been saying this for some time, but it will come one day." **Read more:** **BMO sells lagging businesses in push to boost U.S. returns** Galit Rodan/Bloomberg ## Tariff crunch drags down Scotiabank Q2 performance The prospect of a weakening Canadian economy and recession woes weighed heavily on Bank of Nova Scotia's second-quarter earnings performance. Scotiabank reported adjusted per share earnings of CA$1.52 for the second fiscal quarter, four cents shy of the CA$1.56 average estimate from analysts according to a Bloomberg survey. Credit loss provisions were up to CA$1.4 billion for the three month period ended April 30, which was higher than the CA$1.34 billion forecast. "While there are still some headwinds to underlying growth, we believe that this is a result of the operating environment and not necessarily Scotia-specific," John Aiken, analyst for Jefferies Financial Group, said in a note to clients. "Consequently, as investors look past the provisions on performing loans, we believe that the results should be viewed quite favorably." **Read more:** **Scotiabank misses on higher loan provisions as tariffs bite** Cole Burston/Bloomberg ## TD's $1B pathway to compliance failure recovery TD Bank Group is allocating roughly $1 billion toward improving its anti-money-laundering protocols, after suffering $3.1 billion in penalties and an U.S. asset cap due to facilitating the movement of more than $670 million in dirty money through the bank. Previous projections from TD called for $500 million on AML improvements for the fiscal year ending in October, and the bank has spent more than $196 million so far to strengthen its training, analysis standards and other internal processes. "While we still have work to do, we remain on track with our planned remediation activities and are building the foundational AML program that we need for the years ahead," Leo Salom, who leads TD's U.S. banking operations, said on a call with analysts. **Read more:** **TD to spend $1B in 2-year span on compliance fixes** ### 相關股票 - [002329.CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/quote/002329.CN.md) - [BMO.US](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/quote/BMO.US.md) - [HSBA.UK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/quote/HSBA.UK.md) ## 相關資訊與研究 - [亞太市場面臨科技與金融挑戰,南寶與三星展現成長潛力,利率上升擾動投資信心](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/287207167.md) - [安賽樂米塔爾出售 Vallourec 持股套現 6.67 億美元仍保留 17.3% 股權](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/286868709.md) - [屈臣氏聯手韓國人氣 IP「Wasabi Bear」!首波加價購 20 款聯名商品登場](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/287224099.md) - [長和︰將尋求一切可行途徑保障集團在巴拿馬港口權益](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/287174139.md) - [小米 YU7 GT 本月 21 日登場,另發布小米 17 Max 大屏旗艦手機](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/286709342.md)