M and A
Canada's Fifth-Largest Lender On The Prowl For Large Wealth Management Acquisitions

Toronto-listed Canadian Imperial
Bank of Commerce seeks acquisitions
valued at more than C$1 billion ($948.72 million) to raise the
amount of profit
it generates from wealth management, media reports said.
"Much of the growth that we are planning will come from
the US and will be focused
on asset management, private wealth management and private
banking," chief
executive Gerry McCaughey is reported to have said at a
Scotiabank summit in Toronto. The bank is also
interested in acquiring businesses in Canada.
The comments come a few days after Canada’s
fifth-largest lender said its profits in the three months to 31
July, which
rose, were in part driven by stronger performance of the wealth
arm of the
business.
A preference for larger acquisitions comes as CIBC plans to
increase the percentage of overall profit it derives from its
wealth management
unit to more than 15 per cent from the current level of 11
percent, McCaughey
said.
"As we have worked through the universe of potential
acquisitions, it has become clear that choices improve as we
expand the size of
the universe under consideration," he said.
While rivals like Bank of Nova Scotia and Toronto-Dominion
have
sought assets in Latin America and the United States, CIBC has
limited
itself to smaller targets, largely in wealth management,
Reuters, in one of the reports on McCaughey’s remarks,
pointed out.
The largest recent M&A deal was CIBC’s C$848 million
acquisition of 41 per cent
of American Century investments in 2011. Most recently, it said
in April that
it would acquire wealth firm Atlantic Private Wealth Management
for $210
million.
Last week, CIBC said that its profits rose 5.8 per cent for
the third quarter of the year, ending 31 July 2013, driven by
its
wealth-management unit. The firm said that its wealth management
unit reported
net income of $102 million for the third quarter, up $26 million
or 34 per cent
from the same quarter last year.