RY Q2-2019 Earnings Call - Alpha Spread
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Royal Bank of Canada
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Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2019-Q2

from 0
Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to RBC's Second Quarter 2019 Financial Results Conference Call. Please be advised that this call is being recorded.I would now like to turn the meeting over to Nadine Ahn, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, Ms. Ahn.

Nadine Ahn

Thank you, and thanks for joining us. Speaking today will be Dave McKay, President and Chief Executive Officer; Rod Bolger, Chief Financial Officer; and Graeme Hepworth, Chief Risk Officer. Then we'll open the call for questions. [Operator Instructions] We also have with us in the room Neil McLaughlin, Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking; Doug Guzman, Group Head, Wealth Management and Insurance; and Doug McGregor, Group Head, Capital Markets and Investor and Treasury Services.As noted on Slide 1, our comments may contain forward-looking statements, which involve assumptions and have inherent risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially.With that, I'll turn it over to Dave.

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

Thanks, Nadine, and good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us. We delivered a solid second quarter. We earned $3.2 billion, up 6% from last year and EPS was up 7%. We achieved continued growth in our core businesses where we have been investing to create more value for our clients and our shareholders. As we grow our client franchises, we're focused on maintaining a premium ROE. Our ROE of 17.5% this quarter continues to exceed our medium-term objective. We ended the quarter with a robust CET1 ratio of 11.8%. This provides flexibility to fund organic growth opportunities and to return capital to our shareholders.Our results were supported by strong underlying economic fundamentals in our core markets. Though GDP softened the last couple of quarters, the Canadian economy remains resilient and the unemployment rate is hovering near 4-decade lows. Regulatory changes have helped some of Canada's major housing markets stabilize, particularly in Ontario and to the east. Western Canadian markets remain under downward pressure, overall, making housing more affordable.In the U.S., we saw strong GDP growth and record low unemployment levels. Trade tariffs are expected to temper GDP growth. However, the underlying fundamentals of consumer spending and business investment remain favorable. Against this backdrop, we delivered solid volume growth and continued to increase our market share with the investments we made across multiple business lines.In the first half of the year, we continue to invest, especially in client-facing talent and technology. In the latter half of the year, we expect to slow expense growth to drive better operating leverage. While there continues to be market economic uncertainty, I remain confident in the diversity of our business mix and our focused growth strategy.This quarter, we saw PCL on a few accounts in our commercial book. While elevated from historical lows last year, we do not see this as a systemic trend. Our investments and our commitment to helping clients thrive and communities prosper have helped RBC maintain the #1 brand in Canada. This year, we're the only Canadian company recognized in the top 100 global brands, an accomplishment we are very proud of.So now turning to our business segments. In Canadian Banking, we saw increased market share and strong volume growth across a number of businesses. Higher revenue was driven by the strong execution of our growth strategy and the benefit of investments we made across our multichannel distribution network, including our client-facing sales force and mobile-banking platform. Business Banking saw strong deposit growth and client acquisition as a result of our highly engaged sales force. Commercial growth remains strong and diversified across sectors, including commercial mortgages. Card volumes were also strong and we're pleased to be recognized for our cards and reward platform with best loyalty rewards strategy at the Retail Banker International Global Awards.Our mortgage business also performed well, generating solid volume growth of 5% year-over-year in what continues to be a very competitive environment. We continue to innovate and create more value for our clients through a number of new digital offerings, including personalized AI-powered budgeting insights through NOMI.Turning to Wealth Management. We had strong earnings growth as the markets gained momentum and flows increased. We built on our leading position in Canadian Wealth Management attracting new investment advisers and leveraged our technology and investment performance to strengthen relationships and grow our clients. Once again, RBC Dominion Securities was named the #1 brokerage firm in Canada in the 2019 Investment Executive Brokerage Report Card.We continue to see strong AUM growth in Global Asset Management, an industry-leading performance. 82% of our funds beat their benchmark on a 3-year basis. This quarter, we expanded our alternative asset offerings by launching the RBC Canadian Core Real Estate Fund through an innovative partnership with BCI. Our U.S. Wealth Management franchise continues to perform well as we execute on our growth strategy in the United States. Both U.S. Wealth AUA and AUM were up double digits as our U.S. private client group continued to see great adviser recruitment. City National had yet another quarter of double-digit loan growth. Our results reflect the success of our organic expansion strategy driven in part by attracting top talent from across multiple industries and geographies.While our insurance results were down year-over-year, we still expect to see earnings growth for the full year. We continue to introduce innovative approaches to drive better outcomes for the increasing number of disability clients who are also facing mental illness. Through our exclusive Onward by Best Doctors program, we are better assisting clients by expediting their recovery through virtual access to health care experts. We're also exploring expansion of our virtual care programs to provide to more people who may be facing mental health challenges while still actively at work.Our Investor & Treasury Services business faced revenue headwinds in light of secular trends in the asset services industry. Our cost structure continues to improve through our investments and technology initiatives, which are streamlining processes and creating efficiencies.Our capital markets business delivered record earnings this quarter. Our fixed income and currency business and [ equities ] businesses generated strong revenue in both primary and secondary trading as we saw markets recover from challenging conditions last quarter. While our corporate banking and investment banking revenues were relatively flat this quarter, we saw strong market share gains despite lower industry-wide fee pools. This highlights both the strength and resiliency of our franchise as well as strong relationships with our clients through the cycle.In April, we issued our first Green Bond to find a portfolio of new and existing businesses and projects that promote sustainability and a transition to a low-carbon economy. This transaction follows a series of environmental milestones at RBC, including our commitment to provide $100 billion in sustainable financing by 2025.So in conclusion, our results over the first half of the fiscal year are testament to strength of a diversified business and our disciplined strategy to grow our client franchises and deliver long-term value to shareholders. I would also like to comment on the floods in Eastern Canada. The difficult situation in Eastern Canada is impacting many families and communities. RBC remains committed to helping those affected by the floods and we have launched a financial relief program to assist our clients and are proud to support the Red Cross, first responders and volunteers to support of local relief efforts.And now I'll turn it over to Rod to discuss our financial results.

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Dave, and good morning, everyone. Starting on Slide 5, we had strong second quarter earnings of $3.2 billion, the second highest on record. Earnings were up 6% from last year and diluted EPS of $2.20 was up 7%. Before I discuss segment-level performance, I want to start with some perspective on key enterprise-wide performance drivers, and I'll start with cost management.Pre-provision pretax earnings were up 7% year-over-year even after absorbing an elevated expense growth of 8% as we continue to invest to create more value for our clients. 1/3 of this expense growth was driven by higher variable compensation on improved results. And another 1/3 was related to investments to drive business growth in the form of additional sales force, distribution, transformational technology and marketing spend. While we remain confident in our client-focused growth strategy highlighted on our Investor Day last year, we are always mindful of risk to the macroeconomic environment.We'll continue to manage our cost base on the revenue outlook and expect expense growth to slow to the low-single digits in the second half of the year. We believe our scale and discipline positions us well to pull levers and prioritize discretionary projects, if necessary. However, we will always balance any tactical cost measures with our commitment to creating long-term value for our clients and shareholders.Next on taxes. Our effective tax rate of 19% was down from last year. Given our outlook for business mix, we expect our total effective tax rate to be in the 20% to 22% range over the second half of the year. And given our continued double-digit earnings growth in the U.S., we would expect our structural tax rate to increase modestly over the next year or so given the relatively higher tax rate in U.S. compared to other lower tax rate jurisdictions.I'll talk about capital next on Slide 6. Our strong earnings allowed us to generate over 30 basis points of internally generated capital, while also distributing $1.5 billion in common dividends to our shareholders this quarter. Credit risk RWA was up only 1% from last quarter as client-driven growth in Canadian Banking and City National were offset by runoffs in underwriting transactions. Market risk was down over $3 billion quarter-over-quarter, largely due to lower fixed income inventory in capital markets and I&TS.Going forward, we expect the effect of IFRS 16 and revisions to the securitization framework to impact our CET1 ratio in Q1 of 2020. And given our premium ROE, we expect to absorb this impact with less than 1 quarter of retained earnings. As Dave noted, we remain well positioned to fund organic growth opportunities and to return capital to our shareholders.Moving on to our business segment performance on Slide 7. Personal & Commercial Banking reported earnings of over $1.5 billion. Canadian Banking net income of over $1.4 million was up 2% from a year ago as 7% pre-provision earnings growth was partially offset by higher PCL on select commercial accounts. Strong volume growth was the largest contributor to the year-over-year increase in net interest income, driving over 2/3 of the growth outpacing the benefit from higher interest rates.Our strong, growing deposit base as well as solid loan growth should continue to be the main driver of higher net interest income going forward. Deposit growth was strong, up 9% across both business and personal accounts. Put another way, we added over $30 billion of deposits over the last 12 months. And given market volatility and higher interest rates, we saw a double-digit growth in term GICs as our retail client shifted into higher-yielding savings products.We also saw solid middle-single-digit growth in noninterest-bearing personal deposit accounts as Canadians continue to choose RBC as their primary bank. Net interest margin was up 6 basis points from last year and 1 basis point from last quarter, largely driven by higher deposit spreads. And given the outlook for interest rates, we expect NIM to remain relatively flat over the next several quarters.Operating leverage in Canadian Banking was 1.7% this quarter as we continue to invest in client-facing staff, technology and marketing to drive sustained business and client growth. Going forward, we expect operating leverage to be in the 2% to 3% range subject to volatility between quarters as we slow the rate of expense growth.Turning to Slide 8. Wealth Management earnings of $585 million were up 9% from last year. Revenue, AUA and AUM were up double-digits year-over-year as North American equity and bond markets rebounded from challenging market conditions in Q1. While the majority of industry players are reporting net redemptions, RBC Global Asset Management generated mutual fund net sales of $6 billion with over $2.5 billion from individual investors. The majority of our retail flows were in long-term fixed income and balance solutions as we continue to support clients through uncertain times.Our industry-leading net sales resulted in our all-in Canadian retail market share increase to 15.5%, up 40 basis points from a year ago. Adding to our strong growth, our non-U.S. Wealth Management efficiency ratio improved 80 basis points year-over-year. In U.S. Wealth Management, earnings were up 8% year-over-year in U.S. dollars, as strong growth in our U.S. private client group more than offset higher PCL at City National.City National continued to generate strong growth in net interest income, up 14% year-over-year. In U.S. dollars, City National pretax pre-provision earnings were up 10% year-over-year. With deposit competition remaining intense, we utilized select wholesale funding this quarter to meet increasing client demand resulting in margin compression quarter-over-quarter. We remain confident that our wide range of deposit initiatives will enable us to support strong, prudent loan growth at City National.Furthermore, recoveries on legacy loans that we guided to last quarter were delayed and should now provide a boost to margins in Q3. We maintain our guidance from last quarter and expect City National NIM to be range-bound from year-to-date levels assuming no rate cuts for the rest of the year.Moving on to insurance on Slide 9. Net income of $154 million was lower as last year benefited from more favorable investment-related experience driven by new investment strategies. This quarter also had higher disability and life retrocession claims costs. Going forward, we expect some quarterly volatility from the timing of longevity reinsurance sales. Over the last 3 years, approximately 60% of RBC Insurance earnings have been earned in the second half of the year, given annual actuarial updates generally take place in Q4, and we also expect to keep expenses well controlled.We highlight Investor & Treasury Services' results on Slide 10. Earnings of $151 million were down from strong results in the first half of 2018. Funding and liquidity revenue was down largely due to the impact of lower mark-to-market gains from lower short-term interest rates. In addition, the prior year also benefited from higher realized gains from the disposition of certain securities.Lower client activity, as seen across the industry, negatively impacted our asset services business, particularly in our global foreign exchange market execution services. We kept expenses fairly flat to last year and going forward, we expect expense growth to remain modest in this segment.Turning to capital markets on Slide 11. The segment generated record net income of $776 million, up 17% from last year. Benefiting from both strong revenue growth and lower effective tax rate. Global Markets revenue was up 13% year-over-year, largely driven by strong fixed income trading revenue.Credit trading was higher with improved client activity, reflecting more favorable market conditions, including the narrowing of credit spreads. Our equities trading businesses also performed well largely from momentum in equity derivatives and deeper client engagement. Corporate investment banking revenue remained flat despite lower global fee pools. Constructive market conditions, including narrowing credit spreads, benefited both debt and equity origination.Looking forward, while we close on some headline deals this quarter, our pipeline remains strong in the upcoming quarters. Overall, we are pleased with our performance against our financial objectives. We continue to execute on the strategy that we outlined at last year's Investor Day, namely delivering more value to our clients, while driving premium growth in a prudent manner.And with that, I'll turn it over to Graeme.

Graeme Hepworth
Group Chief Risk Officer

Thank you, Rod, and good morning, everyone. Starting on Slide 13, our total PCL on loans was $441 million this quarter equivalent to 29 basis points, which was comprised of $435 million in provisions on impaired loans as well as $6 million in provisions on performing loans. PCL on impaired loans increased by $12 million from last quarter, mainly due to higher provisions in Commercial Banking, which were partly offset by lower provisions in the capital markets. However, PCL on performing loans decreased by $87 million from last quarter. Here, provisions necessary to support volume growth were more than offset by the impact of more favorable macroeconomic variables, such as equity markets, oil prices as well as interest rates and unemployment rates relative to Q1.I'd now like to provide some color on 3 businesses starting with Canadian Banking. PCL on impaired loans of $363 million increased 7 basis points from last quarter, largely due to losses associated with 2 borrowers in our commercial lending portfolio, one in the public works and infrastructure sector, the other in the information technology sector.In Wealth Management, PCL on impaired loans increased by $6 million from last quarter may be due to higher provisions on a couple of accounts at City National. In Capital Markets, PCL on impaired loans decreased by $54 million as we had a large provision on 1 account in the utility sector in Q1.Turning to Slide 14. Growth impaired loans increased to $3 billion, up 3 basis points from last quarter largely due to new formations, which were partially offset by a number of impaired loan sales. Most notably this quarter, we saw an elevated level of new formations in the oil and gas sector, mainly in the U.S. While headline oil prices have strengthened in recent months, there's still critical headwinds impacting a number of our clients. This includes weakened financial situations persisting for the 2015 downturn and continued low natural gas prices.Impaired loans in this sector continue to be well structured with our seniority and collateral providing us good protection against loan losses. So despite the elevated level of impairments, we believe we are adequately provisioned. Additionally, we do not expect new oil and gas formations to persist at this level going forward.Aside from oil and gas, new impairments and loan losses on our wholesale portfolios have been relatively limited number and widely disbursed across geographies and sectors.Turning to Slide 16. Our Canadian retail portfolios were generally stable both in terms of provisions and new formations this quarter with the exception of our cards portfolio, where seasonal factors led to higher provisions in the quarter. Overall, the performance of our retail portfolios is as expected and we anticipate performance will remain so for the remainder of the year.In closing, we continue to be well disciplined in our loan underwriting process and are comfortable with the credit profile of our portfolios. While we have seen elevated levels of impairments and provisions at our wholesale portfolios relative to the exceptionally low levels experienced in 2018, we do not see that as indicative of a material credit trend. As we look to the remainder of the year, we expect our total PCL ratio, including both impaired and performing loans, to continue to be in the 25 to 30 basis point range based on the current macroeconomic environment and we do expect to see some quarter-over-quarter variability in our provisions.With that, operator, let's open the lines for Q&A.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Ebrahim Poonawala from Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

E
Ebrahim Huseini Poonawala
Director

I guess I just wanted -- I had a 2-part question for Rod on expense and operating leverage. One, I heard you, in terms of expense growth, slowing down in the back half. Was wondering if you could put some numbers around that, that we see first half expense growth of about 6.5%. I was just wondering does low-single digits mean more like 1% to 2%. And secondarily, in an environment where revenue growth could probably slow to low-single digits next year, can you talk about additional potential to reduce expenses like we have a period where expense growth could be flat or lower in a low single-digit revenue environment?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Sure. Thanks, Ebrahim. Thanks for that. And yes, as I mentioned, the low single-digit expense growth and as I mentioned, 1/3 of our growth or a little more than 1/3 of our growth this quarter was on variable compensation. So that does accommodate slightly lower revenue growth going forward than the 9% that we were able to achieve this quarter. So if our revenue growth does go back to that 9%, you'd see us more towards that mid-single-digit growth. But otherwise, low single digits is somewhere in the 1% to 4% range, all else being equal. Your question in terms of the slowing revenue growth, absolutely. Operating leverage does scale to revenue growth typically on a longer-term or medium-term basis. And if we just go back to 2016 when we acquired City National, if you strip out City National, you'll recall or you may recall that we had revenue growth of only 1% across the rest of the business that year and we were able to decrease expenses by 1% in that year. So that was a period where we did see the slower revenue growth and we were able to curtail the expense growth. We have been investing. We have been investing for the future. We have been investing in our talent. We have been investing in our technology and our marketing and our clients and in solutions for clients. And so our growth is at an elevated level, so the rate of growth should come down.

Operator

Our following question is from Meny Grauman from Cormark Securities.

M
Meny Grauman
MD & Head of Institutional Equity Research

Also on the expense side, interested in you expanding a little bit on what you mentioned in terms of not wanting to trade off long-term investment needs for shorter-term considerations. And just wondering is it become tougher -- is it becoming tougher to manage that to invest what you need in the business and make sure that you have the expense control that you need in a slowing revenue environment? Is that becoming tougher? Are there any practical implications to that statement that you made?

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

Meny, maybe I'll start and I'll hand it to Rod. Certainly, as you've heard us comment over a number of quarters that we plan on a number of factors. We felt that over the last couple of years, we've gotten ahead of the curve on a number of large program technology investments. You've seen the announcements we've made in the retail bank, on our mobile platform, on our back office capabilities, you've seen us invest in the capital markets and trading platforms and in I&TS. So we felt as you heard us say that we timed a lot of our large investments to the revenue tailwinds that we've had from interest rate increases and strong economy and we've been planning for an environment where things slow, as you would expect in a normal economic cycle. So we have a number of programs that we're working on that we feel we can slow investments without sacrificing the good work that we've done. So we feel that we're well positioned and that's been consistent with our strategy for an extended period of time and we feel we're in a good position.

M
Meny Grauman
MD & Head of Institutional Equity Research

And just as a follow-up, in terms of the guidance of slowing expense growth in the second half, kind of -- if you take that forward, that kind of slowdown, is that sustainable over a longer-term period or is that really based on an assumption that things will normalize on the revenue side of the equation in a year or in 2 years? Is there a sort of a time limit here where it does become tougher again to keep that expense growth slow, taking into consideration...

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

Given the size of our organization, this is where scale really plays to our strength. And we have significant scale, we have a significant ability to absorb, whether it's an AML program or regulatory requirements or building out a client-facing platform, our scale allows us to invest simultaneously across a number of platforms. And again, back to my previous comment, we've been doing this for a number of years. So we knew we had strong economic wins behind us. So we are planning to manage in a number of different economic environments. If there's continued positive economic growth in the market, we're prepared to balance our revenue expense growth. If we see slower volume growth and slower revenue growth as we hit a cycle, we have plans to manage as Rod mentioned in that type of cycle too, knowing how much we've invested already. So we feel, given our scale and our historic investments, we're well positioned to manage that.

Operator

Our following question is from Gabriel Dechaine from National Bank Financial.

G
Gabriel Dechaine
Analyst

I want to talk about ITS (sic) [ I&TS ] first and just take a crack at understanding the revenue trend there, where NII has been negative for the past couple of quarters. You talked about funding against costs. Just wondering if there's anything in the balance sheet mix of that business that maybe detracted from profit growth there? I see the deposit growth has been, in dollar terms, much larger than the asset growth over the past couple of years?

A
A. Douglas McGregor

Yes, it's Doug McGregor. The issue with that part of the business, the Treasury Services part of the business is we were getting much better spreads on our high-quality liquid asset portfolio. So that portfolio invests in Europe and Canada and it has to invest in sovereign and sovereign agency securities. And the spreads have really come off in the last couple of years. So it's really about what we can earn on the liquidity book that we hold for the bank in various places.

G
Gabriel Dechaine
Analyst

And presumably that liquidity helps you in other areas of your bank?

A
A. Douglas McGregor

Well, it's necessary. And it was just that we were earning twice the spread on that book a couple of years ago than we are now and we've kind of positioned ourselves short and I guess, reasonably conservatively in anticipation that we'll get another opportunity to earn more on that book going forward.

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

And then it's Rod, I'll jump in on your comment on the net interest income because that's a function unfortunately of the accounting where we -- where our cash staff us a series of transactions U.S. dollar and the swaps into other currencies. And unfortunately, the payments that go out of book into net interest income and then the revenue that comes in from the hedging is in the other revenue line, which is what you'll see when you notice that, that dropped off after Q2. That activity increased given our position in the marketplace, and so you would have seen a corresponding increase in the other line and a decrease in the net interest income line, specifically in I&TS. And that also impacts our all-in bank NIM, which is why that appears to start going down starting in Q3 of last year because of that structural change from the accounting.

G
Gabriel Dechaine
Analyst

Okay. Well, back to Doug, the trading -- and Rod had talked about trading and credit being a driver of the fixed income results that we saw. How much of an influence was the improved dynamics in the high-yield market this quarter? And then if you have any thoughts on the Fed's recent statements on the high-yield market and raising some concerns there. How you're positioned versus what they're worried about?

A
A. Douglas McGregor

Well, the -- there has been a very active high-yield new issuance business over the last couple of months, in particular. I think as investors saw term interest rates back off and anticipated it would come down, they were buying fixed income products. So there was money moving out of the loan market into high yield, so we've been active as a bookrunner in a number of high-yield deals. So that has helped. I think really credit products, including investment grade, leveraged loans, high yield, all improved dramatically in the second quarter and we participated, and I would say fixed income credit is a business that we really work to be continuously better and better, and I think that's where the opportunity is in fact. And so I think it's paying off. I think we did a good job. In terms of our participation high yields, it's really around just doing new issues. Our participation and leverage finance, which I think is what the Fed is more concerned about, we would be a 9th or 10th market player and we've been quite consistent in terms of our underwriting risk right through the cycle and we're very comfortable with it.

Operator

Our following question is from John Aiken from Barclays.

J
John Aiken
Director & Senior Analyst

A couple of quick questions on the domestic residential mortgage growth, if I may. Was there any geographies that provided outsized growth or was it basically the inflows were pretty much in line with the current portfolio as it stands?

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

It's Neil McLaughlin. Across the book, we would say Ontario is leading the way. Softer out west, both in Alberta and the prairies. And Québec is a little bit slower. Everything else is kind of about the average.

J
John Aiken
Director & Senior Analyst

And how would you characterize the competition in the quarter and how did it change, I guess, one of the -- I guess, one of the things is that the growth that you received on the residential mortgage side was a little bit higher than I had anticipated.

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Yes. I think I mean, every -- we always would say the competition is quite fierce this time of the year. We're really getting into the heavy spring market. I think we do expect we will compare well versus some of our competitors. We made some changes in the business both in terms of operational efficiencies, getting back to customers more quickly, just being more I think -- more competitive on price. There has been a fragmentation in the market that we needed to adjust to. And then I'd say the last part is we mentioned in a couple of calls, we made some changes last year both in terms of process as well as a new digital tool and that's really helped our retention and we're seeing all-time highs in terms of the retention of the mortgage book. So it's all coming together to give us a little bit of premium growth.

Operator

Our following question is from Steve Theriault from Eight Capital.

S
Stephen Gordon Theriault
Principal & Co

If I could start on City National, Rod you talked a bit about the margin, we were surprised to see it go down after what we talked about last quarter, but it sounds like there's a delay there. But you also mentioned unexpected wholesale funding. So can you give us a bit more detail around that? Was that just around stronger loan growth or was it around -- I see the deposit balances were down in the quarter, they just have to maybe use some short-term wholesale funding to -- just some color on that. And you mentioned the go-forward margins. Should we think of it as it's between 3.48% and 3.56% for the next few quarters? Just some detail around that would be great.

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Sure. Yes. And we had planned for the wholesale funding that we tapped into. I'd say we expect us both to resume, again, on a go-forward basis. But we have been growing the loan book faster than the deposit book. We had enjoyed a very favorable loan to deposit ratio, now we're getting back towards market levels at about a 90% level. So the wholesale funding, there's plenty of opportunity there and very low usage of that. And our margins continue to be quite strong on a relative basis to our peer group. But with the Fed now more likely by October, December to decrease than increase, we just don't see the expansion that we've been able to enjoy over the last year or 2. And the deposit pricing has been intense in the U.S. as the value of those deposits has gone up. Now that the interest rate increases have paused that is expected to pause as well. And so we think we're well positioned. We are also planned to continue growing the loan book and resume growth of the deposit book.

S
Stephen Gordon Theriault
Principal & Co

But am I -- but did I hear you correctly that the sort of the accounting adjustment that was going to favorably impact NIM in this quarter, do you still expect to see that in half 2?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So it's actually nonaccounting, so it's an actual recovery on some old FDIC loans that are coming out of the financial crisis. We thought we were going to close on the deal in Q2, we're going to close on it in Q3. It's going to give a onetime benefit. It's not a PCL item, it goes through net interest income and that's a onetime bump up, but then we would expect to be back to the levels that we've been at in Q1 and Q2. Again, absent of Fed decrease.

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

Steve, it's Dave here. Just a little comment around some of the outcomes from our new deposits, the strategies are taking a little longer to materialize, but we do have ability to move more sweeps on. We are working actively to build out low-cost, low-beta transaction account momentum in a number of different ways. And we're competing harder for mid-beta deposits with our customers. So these are all taking time to come to fruition, but as Rod pointed out, we expect to see better traction with that going forward and an better opportunity to fund the double-digit loan growth that we expect to continue.

S
Stephen Gordon Theriault
Principal & Co

Okay. And then just last thing for me. Rod, I missed what you said or maybe didn't understand what you said on Q1 2020 in terms -- did you size that RWA impact from some of those anticipated changes?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Not directly. I said it would be covered by 1 quarter of retained earnings, which is looking back historically, our internal capital generation net of dividends has been in the 30 basis points. So I basically said, it was less than 30 basis points, but it's probably in the middle to higher end of that than at below -- it's going to be more than 50 and below 30, I'll say that much.

Operator

Our following question is from Robert Sedran from CIBC Capital Markets.

R
Robert Sedran
MD & Head of Research

Rod, I guess, sticking on the risk-weighted asset question, I didn't fully appreciate in your answer whether some of the items you discussed that moved the risk-weighted assets down a little bit were timing related and might kind of go back the other way. I'm trying to understand the 11.8% CET1 ratio. Is there a chance that in the next quarter that, that edges down rather than the continued capital generation or are we kind of re-based here at 11.8%?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Well, I don't know that we're re-based. I'd say, we enjoyed our internal capital generation of 33 basis points. We, excluding foreign exchange, our RWA went down by almost $2 billion, so that was 4 basis points. I would not expect a repeat of that. I would expect our trailing 4 quarter growth has been in the $10 billion versus the $2 billion decrease. So $10 billion is usually 20 basis points. I don't know if that we're going to get back to that level. Although, historically Q3 has been higher from a retail bank growth standpoint, given the mortgage market and our City National growth has been strong as well. So that will flip around. And then this quarter we enjoyed some unrealized gains on securities given the markets and kind of everything else added about 4 basis points and that can be anywhere from plus or minus 4 basis points. So I would not expect this to grow at this level, but I would expect this to be range-bound within a minus 10 or a plus 10 over the next quarter and I would not expect another growth of 40 basis points.

R
Robert Sedran
MD & Head of Research

And just thematically leaving aside the Q1 impact of IFRS changes, is that sort of 15 basis points a quarter of capital generation -- 15 to 20 basis points of capital generation still in play going forward? Or does business mix and business mix evolution shift the way we should think about the ability to generate excess capital?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I'd say, we've been in that mix shift already. We've been growing in City National where we're on the standardized approach and not the advanced approach. We've been growing the uninsured mortgage book much faster than the insured book, given the change in the regime there. We've been -- we had been growing until this quarter, capital markets, which tends to carry higher risk-weighted assets, that growth has slowed. Part of that was the pipeline was so robust over the previous year. So I would not expect that to structurally change. I'd say that 30 basis points guidance would hold.

Operator

Our following question is from Doug Young from Desjardins Capital Markets.

D
Doug Young
Diversified Financials and Insurance Analyst

Just on City National, I think Rod, you mentioned pretax pre-provision earnings were up 10% and then I look at your supplement, the adjusted earnings were down 16%. So I'm just trying to get a sense of how much of that related to credit and how much of that related to expense growth? Because I think -- and maybe you can give a little more color on the credit side because I think you had a few accounts impaired this quarter. I think there was 1 account that was impaired last quarter. So was just hoping to get some color on the divergence between that?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Sure, I'll start and then I'll hand it over to Graeme to talk -- to give more color on the credit. But in terms of U.S. dollars, in terms of kind of the revenue and expense growth when you look kind of through it all, we're around 10% growth on revenue and expense. As Dave mentioned, we continue to invest organically in that business and we plan to continue to invest organically in that business. We haven't done a bolt-on acquisition, so we will invest some of our earnings there for long-term strategic value. But the PCL in U.S. dollar terms had a recovery last year of $13 million, given the intricacies of IFRS 9. And then the -- this year was a charge of $23 million in U.S. dollars. That's a $36 million swing year-over-year. And then, I'll hand it over to Graeme to give a little bit more color on that.

Graeme Hepworth
Group Chief Risk Officer

Yes. I was going to reiterate where Rod left off there. One is, last year there were in a net recovery, which is not a norm by any means, both on Stage 1 and 2 and had very low levels of impairments and some significant recoveries in -- on the Stage 3 side of 2018. If we look at 2019 year-to-date there, City National is running I think in the kind of 24, 25 basis point range, about half of that is coming from performing loan side, the IFRS 9 Stage 1, Stage 2. That's probably running at a higher level than I'd expect as we have indicated overall. There is an amount there that would and should grow consistent with the overall loan growth there and their loan growth is obviously higher than overall RBC. But Stage 1 and 2 has been impacted there, just macro forecast changes and in other components in our portfolio. So over time, that should gray down to be more consistent with their overall portfolio growth, assuming the macro environment doesn't change. And Stage 3 has been running in the 12, 13 basis point range, again, I don't think that's outside of a normal amount for them. We have had a handful of accounts where you look at the portfolio, they've got a commercial portfolio that I think is a good quality portfolio. I don't think it's -- we haven't changed the nature of the credit profile and so we expect that to operate at a consistent, steady level going forward. And so I think, overall, the other piece we have in their portfolio is a growing res mortgage portfolio, which is a very high-quality portfolio that shifts the overall balance growth there a little bit down. I think those 2 portfolios, over time, would look similar to the Canadian portfolio, so that would be a bit of a guidance I'll give you there.

D
Doug Young
Diversified Financials and Insurance Analyst

So it just sounds like more abnormal bumps than anything that you're getting overly concerned with at this point in time and some of it related to IFRS 9?

Graeme Hepworth
Group Chief Risk Officer

That's correct. Yes.

D
Doug Young
Diversified Financials and Insurance Analyst

And then just maybe second on the City National. I think U.S. jumbo mortgage market I think has been an area that you plan to use to drive cross-sell. And it sounds like, and correct me if I'm wrong, that market has slowed considerably this year. Has that -- is that the case? Has that changed your strategy in new client acquisitions? Maybe just if you can flesh that out.

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

Thanks. It's Dave here. No. Certainly, as we think about growing our business over the next 4 or 5 years and diversifying our client base, diversifying by geography, the jumbo mortgage product and the acquisition ability that it has is very much integral to our expansion in the New York and Boston or Washington and maybe other areas in the south. So it's proven to be a very successful product for us. As Graeme mentioned, what the client segmentation that we're targeting is a low-risk, low-volatility product and 1 that we can cross-sell from. So you've seen that products grow year-over-year at around 20%. We expect that to continue but not accelerate. We've got a good foundation to do that and we're hiring bankers out there to really target clients with that product. So we think it's integral to our overall expansion and growth strategy.

D
Doug Young
Diversified Financials and Insurance Analyst

Is that 20% your growth or is that the industry growth?

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

That's our growth.

Operator

Our following question is from Sumit Malhotra from Scotia Capital.

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Sumit Malhotra
Managing Director of Canadian Financial Services

I will start with Dave, please, as I wanted to ask maybe a more philosophical question around the expense commentary. I think Dave, one of the factors the market has appreciated with Royal has been the consistency of the investment spend the bank has worked with for a number of years now and certainly, you've avoided taking any of the restructuring charges or onetime factors that some of your peers may have benefited from in the short term. So the commentary on expenses, I get, certainly, the tie into revenue. But as far as the enhancements that you have communicated to us for a number of years, the RBC Ventures build out and the professionals you've brought onboard, should we also read this reduction in expense growth going forward as some commentary on you've made the progress or you've built the systems and advantages out that you're looking for and now it's going to be a reduced level of allocation required? So I mean, I get the tie into revenue just kind of thinking bigger picture about where you wanted to take the bank and whether this reduction speaks to that as well?

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

I think you're absolutely on the right track. If you look at each of the functional business has very much a renewed focus on incrementally what's really important given all the accomplishments that we've had over the previous 5 years. So we're very focused on what we need net new and we're constantly looking for opportunities to recycle a spend that -- and a significant cost base that to new initiatives. So we're actively working on it, and when you're an organization of our size, you have to get ahead of these things and well before a cycle turns. So we're, as a management team, actively thinking about this all the time, where our priorities lie in planning for a potential environment, we don't know the timing, but you have to plan and get ahead of these things. So we feel that we're able to accomplish our regulatory needs, our safety and soundness around AML. Our customer-facing needs, our re-platforming of a number of areas in capital markets and manage into a potentially unknown timing, lower revenue environment. So this is actively how we're managing the business and how we talked about the business and it is the fast you can get of ahead of it, the easier it is to manage.

S
Sumit Malhotra
Managing Director of Canadian Financial Services

And then to relate this to maybe the year end, now for Neil. I think your segment, it would sound like, is the primary beneficiary of a lower level of expense growth. And at least from the comparisons we do, it seems like the operating leverage for Canadian DMC or Canadian Banking at Royal has been lower than industry levels. It's been consistently positive but lower. Are you of the view that with this step-down in cost, we will see the operating leverage performance in Canadian Banking now trend decently higher than what we've seen for over a 3- to 5-year basis?

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Yes. Thanks for the question. Yes, I mean, the operating leverage to date -- to your point, has been positive. We do expect it to improve in the second half of the year. One of the things we've been investing in is in our people and the technology to Rod's point earlier. On our people, we're going to start to see a flattening of the FTE profile. We've made the investments where we felt we needed to, whether that's in our commercial business or our mortgage business. So we're feeling confident that we've targeted the right roles in the right markets, and you'll start to see that level off. In terms of the other comment I make in terms of technology, we're also benefiting now from just the economies of skill. So the platforms we put in place and the people we've hired, they're actually able to put out more productivity per FTE in those technology initiatives than we did 2 or 3 years ago. And a good example would be our mobile team, they'd be able to put out about 1/3 more productivity this year versus 2 years ago in terms of the amount of code they're putting into the app. So that helps in terms of the efficiency around technology.

Operator

Our following question is from Mario Mendonca from TD Securities.

M
Mario Mendonca
MD & Research Analyst

One specific question and one more broad-based. First, the specific. You folks have referred to narrowing credit spreads on a few occasions is the reason why you say unrealized gains were a little higher and why underwriting was a little stronger. But did the narrowing credit spreads have any effect on the trading revenue, which looked awfully strong this quarter in terms of mark-to-market gains or any other accrual adjustments?

A
A. Douglas McGregor

Yes, it's Doug. Yes, certainly, improving credit spreads helped fixed income business. It wasn't so much mark-to-markets on inventories, it was just really trading activity with clients and even more so, new issue activity in investment grade and high-yield credits. So yes, a better credit environment was a lot of the -- were the source of a much better tech results for the quarter.

M
Mario Mendonca
MD & Research Analyst

To the extent that there were some mark-to-market adjustments that was not the driver of the strong results then?

A
A. Douglas McGregor

No. No. It wasn't this quarter. The mark-to-market results we're talking about earlier in the Treasury Services business was a year, 1.5 years ago where we had some longer-dated sovereign securities in a held-for-sale book and we sold them and marked them and so it contributed to the earnings a year ago.

M
Mario Mendonca
MD & Research Analyst

Okay. And then just a broad-based question. Dave and Rod, you folks have referred to guidance for the year at 7%-plus on the first half of the year, I mean, challenging in Q1, a little better now, but you've come awfully close at about 6% to 7%. There are just so many moving parts here, including what you said about expenses, PCLs, margins. Can you offer any outlook on what you think 2019 looks in totality from perspective EPS growth?

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

Yes, I think, we're in the latter half of the year, we're feeling that we've got good momentum. We're, as you said, going to bring our expenses down and we are operating in a strong economy with strong employment. Therefore, we feel the ability to continue to grow the business. We're not moving off of our medium-term objective.

Operator

Our following question is from Sohrab Movahedi from BMO Capital Markets.

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Sohrab Movahedi
Analyst

Just 2 quickies here hopefully. Rod, on Page 20 of your slide deck, you have a breakdown of the U.S. earnings or the U.S. operations. 17%, I think over the last 12 months of earnings and 23% of revenue. When you think 2, 3 years out, where do you think those percentages will go to and where will they converge on? Do you think the revenue and the earnings will kind of converge on some number, presumably with earnings going up as opposed to revenues coming down, but do you see just that higher growth outside of Canada or inside Canada?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Well, thanks for that. So we -- I would expect the share of revenue to be higher than the share of earnings because while we're growing scale in the U.S., we're not going to match the scale we have in the market share and market position that we enjoy in Canada. So while they might -- while that delta might narrow, I would ask not expect to see it be eradicated. In terms of the growth rate though, we continue to see higher growth prospects in the U.S., again, given the inverse of scale, we don't have the same market share, so we're able to grow market share and we have been across all of our businesses in the U.S., and that comes with higher growth rate than what we would expect in Canada, where we do have a #1 or #2 market share in most of our businesses. So therefore, although we might continue and we expect to continue to grow market share as we outlined at our Investor Day, that growth rate won't be at the double-digits, if the overall economy on a normal basis isn't growing at that sort of level.

S
Sohrab Movahedi
Analyst

So is it safe to say that the driver of the medium-term EPS growth is going to have to come from outside of the U.S.?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

I wouldn't say that. Our medium-term objective is 7%-plus and we should be able to achieve that in Canada and outside of Canada. Just might be higher outside of Canada.

S
Sohrab Movahedi
Analyst

Okay. And maybe for Neil, I don't know. Neil, when I look at the wholesale bank or the wholesale loan book breakdown, 2 industry groups that seem to be delivering pretty robust year-over-year growth are financial services and investments. What would be included in those and what businesses would they be supporting and in which geographies?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

It's Rod. I might take that. I think that's -- had been the growth in our repo book. And so that's where a lot of that is flowing into, but we would expect that growth rate to slow down.

Operator

Our following question is from Scott Chan from Canaccord Genuity.

S
Scott Chan

Just following up on the previous question. On the U.S. Wealth Management side, assets are pretty strong relative to kind of what I track with U.S. peers. And you kind of called out private client as one of the areas of growth. But is there anything outside of market appreciation that we should think about that's kind of driving this outsized asset growth in U.S.?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Scott, it's Rod. We've been adding advisers, we've been growing that business significantly, our margins in that business have improved off of relatively low levels versus the industry to now industry levels. So we've added -- we've been investing in technology. We've been adding advisers who are being attracted to the RBC culture, the RBC brand. And as a result, our margins have more than doubled in that business. And so that's been attracting new AUA as well as credit growth where we've been leveraging the City National franchise and the partnership between City National and the U.S. wealth business, the legacy business out of Minneapolis, the Dain Rauscher business has been quite strong, as has been the partnership with the Capital Markets business with the manufacturing and then the distribution through the U.S. wealth business. So that business is firing on all cylinders right now.

S
Scott Chan

And then what is the biggest driver of that double margin? Is it just the scale or is it something else?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Well, we've been able -- we have a very strong sweep balance down there, which we, as interest rates increase, we've been able to benefit from. That's been a big driver. But also the broker, the financial adviser productivity is up substantially and we've been driving strong operating leverage through that business. Again, back to Dave's earlier comments on scale, that's a business where we've been able to drive up good revenue growth with modest expense growth and that's a business where we've significantly increased the technology spend. We had been underinvesting in that business until the last 2 years and the result is that we have better tools for our advisers and for our clients.

Operator

Certainly, so I would now like to turn the meeting back over to Mr. McKay.

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

Before I conclude, I'd like to welcome Nadine Ahn, who is our new Head of Investor Relations. Nadine brings a wealth of experience gained over 20 years at RBC, including in her current role as CFO of Capital Markets and I&TS. Prior to this, Nadine held a number of positions of increasing responsibility in our corporate treasury group. Nadine's capacity for building trusted relations is coupled with her strong business and financial acumen will serve her well in her new role, so welcome, Nadine, to your first call.

Nadine Ahn

Thank you.

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

At the same time, I'd like to sincerely thank Dave Mun who you all know well, who has moved onto another role, continuing on his 20-year journey at the bank. We've all greatly valued Dave's insights over the years and his leadership was critical to both the success of our 2000 Investor Day and for RBC being recognized as having the best Investor Relations team in the Canadian financial sector for 2 years running. So congratulations to Dave and he's going to do great work for us in another role.And just summing up, I think you heard a story today and the results around great customer momentum and flow across all our businesses, market share gains. Our investments have really produced growth as stable to growing margins, in most cases, we have great activity and success in our capital markets business and our trading businesses. So I think that is one of the headline stories. Our NIE was elevated to drive some of that growth and position us well for the future, and I think you've heard a number of questions and comments that we are going to bring that NIE down quite significantly, as we have achieved a number of our objectives going forward and our run rates become a little easier. And you've seen a bit of few credit spikes. We don't think it's systemic, but as part of the diversification of our book that we've got a globally diversified book, a customer diversified book and diverse across businesses and you're going to see a credit here and there that's going to go the wrong way. So overall, we're feeling good about the business. Thank you for your questions, and look forward to talking to you next quarter.

Operator

Thank you. The conference has now ended. Please disconnect your lines at this time, and we thank you for your participation.