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Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2020-Q3

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Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to RBC's Conference Call for the Third Quarter 2020 Financial results. 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 good morning, everyone. 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. We also have with us in the room Neil McLaughlin, Group Head, Personal and Commercial Banking; Doug Guzman, Group Head, Wealth Management, Insurance and I&TS; and Derek Neldner, Group Head, Capital Markets. 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. I would also remind listeners that the bank assesses its performance on a reported and adjusted basis and considers both to be useful in assessing underlying business performance. To give everyone a chance to ask questions, we ask that you limit your questions and then requeue. With that, I'll turn it over to Dave.

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

Thanks, Nadine, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. We hope you and your loved ones are keeping safe and well in this period of uncertainty. Our main focus remains ensuring the health and well-being of our employees and standing by our clients and communities in these challenging times. Against the pandemic backdrop, we are actively supporting our clients through numerous relief options through financial advice and proactive client outreach to meet their needs. Since the onset of the pandemic, we've enabled over 500,000 clients globally through our various payment deferral programs. At the end of July, the outstanding exposure that's been deferred has reduced significantly as many of our clients rolled off the deferral programs during the quarter. Many clients took deferrals as a precaution, and we expect most to resume payments when deferrals expire. We had noticed last quarter that Canada's finances were well positioned should further actions be required. And since then, we have seen an extension of Federal income support programs. The combination of these government and client support programs, strong equity in homes and elevated savings rates, along with strong bank balance sheets, provide us with comfort around the transition to the next phase of the economic recovery. In Canada, in addition to client relief programs, we are also committed to supporting recovery in the small business sector, which is critical to the broader economic recovery. Through the launch of Canada United, we're bringing together government, business associations, and more than 50 of Canada's leading brands to rally consumers and give local businesses the support they need to reopen during these uncertain times. We also launched Points for Canada, a program to help stimulate local economies by giving increased RBC rewards to our clients as they dine and shop in Canadian restaurants and stores. We are optimistic the strength and breadth of our market-leading rewards proposition, coupled with strong partnerships, will provide value to clients and support businesses at the heart of our communities. I will now speak to our Q3 financial performance in the context of the macro environment and client activity. Today, we reported earnings of $3.2 billion, our strong pre-provision pretax earnings of over $4.7 billion added to our capital buffer this quarter, while absorbing the impact of higher PCL and lower interest rates. Our resilient earnings continue to support dividend payments, a commitment we've upheld throughout our 150-year history. This quarter, we paid $1.5 billion in dividends or nearly 1/2 of our net income to our over 1 million retail and institutional shareholders, the majority of whom are based in Canada. Our CET1 ratio of 12% now provides a $16.5 billion buffer over the current regulatory minimum of 9%. This is in addition to over $6 billion in allowances for credit losses. Our internal stress testing suggests that even under a severe pandemic scenario, our capital levels will remain well above the 10% minimum set by OSFI prior to the pandemic. It's important to remember that our businesses have already experienced a stressed event over the last 5 months, and our allowance, capital and liquidity ratios are all consistent or better than they stood at the end of January. And looking at economic drivers. As the Canadian economy slowly opens up, we are seeing signs of recovery in Canadian consumer spending. As stores continue to open, we have seen our over 9 million cardholders spend more this July than last year, the first year-over-year positive trend since mid-March. We are also seeing strong activity in housing markets across North America. In Canada, home sales, house prices and housing starts have shown surprising resilience, partly reflecting pent-up demand and low interest rates. We reported very strong mortgage growth of 10% year-over-year, picking up from similarly robust levels at the start of the year. Our e-signature solution is helping our mortgage specialists in the field and our clients are benefiting from investments we made in digital tools to allow for self-serve renewals. While it's too early comment on the sustainability of these trends, we will continue to help Canadian homeowners while supporting balanced growth in the market. As always, we place emphasis on the quality of the borrower, and we will not compromise our risk profile to add mortgage volumes. Although labor markets remained soft relative to the beginning of the year, they are showing a positive trend. The Canadian job market has recovered over half of the 3 million job losses since -- or seen in March, have outperformed the U.S. recovery on a relative basis. From a macro perspective, we've also seen rising oil prices and signs of recovery in the manufacturing sector. The combination of these factors have contributed to the rise of equity markets to record levels and the normalizing of credit spreads towards pre-pandemic levels. While we are seeing early and encouraging signs of an economic rebound from the depths of March, uncertainty remains over the timing and shape of the recovery. The real test of the recovery will come once government support programs start to wind down. We anticipate the fall will be a challenging time, and that's why we're proactively reaching out to clients to see how we can continue to be a help. In addition, we are cognizant of the potential economic threat of a second wave of COVID. Given these and other risks, we took prudent action in updating our economic scenario weightings to put a greater emphasis on downside scenarios under IFRS 9, Graeme will speak to our assessment of our allowance for credit losses. Let me now shift to what we're seeing in the corporate and institutional markets. This quarter, Capital Markets benefited from continued robust client activity at the end of Q2, resulting in record earnings for this segment this quarter. As credit markets continue to open following the extraordinary intervention by global central banks last quarter, we supported significant client financing demand, resulting in strong debt underwriting. Our commitment to our clients resulted in RBC Capital Markets winning Best Investment Bank in Canada for the 13th year in a row according to Euromoney Magazine. This quarter, we also saw strong equity underwriting activity, which continued into early August with RBC Capital Markets serving as an active bookrunner on Rocket Companies $1.8 billion IPO. Our strong trading performance, which highlights the countercyclical nature of some of our revenue streams benefited from elevated client activity in this period of market stress. In marked contrast, M&A activity generally remains muted as the macroeconomic and political uncertainty are giving CEOs pause in most sectors outside of health care and technology. Our wealth management business has maintained their #1 position in Canada and RBC Global Asset Management surpassed $500 billion in assets under management for the first time as our clients continue to trust us with their assets throughout the cycle. And our U.S. wealth management also performed well, with assets under administration rising to a near record high in U.S. dollar terms. City National continued to see very strong loan growth, with loans nearing $50 billion and also saw very strong deposit growth. While our core franchise continues to grow and add clients, the current low interest rate environment negatively impacted results this quarter. This impact was exacerbated by a shift in asset mix and material increase in enterprise-wide liquidity, which Rod will speak to. We've been a source of strength and stability for clients during this period. This is reflected in a significant 16% year-over-year growth in average deposits across our segments. Our retail and business clients are not only depositing government support payments in their checking accounts, but have seen a drop in cumulative cash outflows due to the bank support programs and social distancing requirements. These higher savings rates have positive implications for credit quality. Furthermore, we are seeing the benefits of our multiyear investments in digital and analytical capabilities in our custody business. We are seeing increased client deposits as midsized global asset managers face challenging conditions. To sum up, we are pleased with our results this quarter. Our strong performance has its origins in deliberate decisions made well before the start of the pandemic. The resiliency of our balance sheet is underpinned by our focus on strong underwriting standards and maintaining a high-quality portfolio in both Canada and the United States. Also following our global -- the global financial crisis, we exited a branch-heavy U.S. footprint and instead focused on consolidating our lead in Canada and growing our U.S. Wealth Management, Private Banking and Capital Markets franchises. Despite the challenging interest rate outlook, we are not changing our long-term strategy, which we highlighted at our last Investor Day. In Canadian Banking, we continue to execute our growth and technology strategy to capture a larger portion of personal checking accounts and residential mortgages. These are important anchor products, and they are an important driver of our premium ROE. Our leading Wealth Management platform adds to a continuum of offerings to our retail clients while also being accretive to ROE. Our deep relationships with our clients provide us with data insights that allow us to better understand their needs and help advise them on important financial decision. And knowing our clients well is also a great value for the purposes of risk management. And on this point, 85% of our mortgage clients had an existing relationship with us before requesting mortgage funding. Nearly 95% of our mortgage clients have more than 1 product with RBC, with the majority having a checking account; and 19% of our clients of all 4 transaction accounts, credit cards, investments and borrowing products with RBC. Our strategy also remains unchanged in the U.S., where we are well positioned to capitalize on our investments and the synergies across our capital markets, wealth management and city national platforms. In the U.S., wealth management platform, including City National, we expect to benefit from the growth of our jumbo mortgage portfolio, our recent expansion into new geographies and the hiring of experienced private bankers and financial advisers. Our global capital markets franchise provides yet another source of fee-based revenue as we increasingly emphasize deepening client relationships to drive growth in non-lending revenues. While we remain focused on creating the bank of the future, cost management will be an increasing priority as we look to deliver long-term sustainable value. I wanted to close by sharing some perspectives on how RBC is living our purpose of helping clients thrive and communities prosper in a time of social and economic disruption. There's no question the health crisis has put a spotlight on many challenges that make society less resilient and more vulnerable. Finding ways to build a stronger society from the crisis provides all of us with a once in a lifetime opportunity to reimagine tomorrow. We have every intention to seize the moment and continue to transform our company for those we serve, creating meaningful and long-lasting value. This focus includes our recently launched action plan to tackle the fact that black indigenous and people of color have been disproportionately disadvantaged for far too long. Our plan addresses significant factors impeding the ability of these communities to compete equally in opportunities for economic and social advancement. As part of this plan, we will increase our staffing targets for BIPOC executives from 20% to 30%. Another critical area is climate. We continue to push forward with RBC's Climate Blueprint. And just this month, we became the first Canadian bank to sign a long-term renewable energy power purchase agreement. And finally, for the 19th consecutive year, RBC has been named to the FTSE4Good index which measures the performance of companies demonstrating strong ESG practices. This year, our percentile ranking among the banking sector rose to the 98th percentile. And with that, I'll pass it over to Rod.

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Dave, and good morning, everyone. Starting on Slide 7, we reported earnings of $3.2 billion and EPS of $2.20, while absorbing $675 million of provisions for credit losses. Pre-provision pretax earnings of $4.8 billion were up 6% from last year, largely driven by significant strength in capital markets, with solid growth in our insurance and our non-U.S. wealth management businesses. Before I turn to the segment results, I will discuss 3 key topics of interest: Capital, net interest margins and expenses. Moving to Slides 8 and 9. We reported strong CET1 ratio of 12%, up 30 basis points from last quarter. Our capital build was underpinned by strong internal capital generation, adding 37 basis points to our CET1 ratio this quarter. In addition, we saw pay downs of credit facilities in capital markets in contrast to last quarter. We have also seen Canadian commercial lending utilization levels trend lower from last quarter in nearly all sectors. And as credit spreads continue to normalize from their elevated peak in March, we saw a partial recovery in the unrealized losses we recorded in OCI last quarter. These positives were partially offset by higher market risk RWA, underpinned by an update to the historical period used to compute stress VaR to more reflect the market volatility seen earlier this year. I will now spend some time on RWA migration in our credit portfolios. This quarter, we recorded a further $2 billion of credit downgrades, adding to the over $9 billion we recorded last quarter. The downgrades have largely been in our corporate portfolios and capital markets, with over half related to COVID-19 vulnerable sectors. Following a detailed review of the corporate portfolio last quarter, the rate of corporate credit downgrades slowed materially this quarter. We did see a slight deterioration in our Canadian commercial portfolios, and we expect the gradual impact of credit migration in these portfolios to continue in the coming quarters. Given government and bank support programs and the high-quality profile of our clients, we have yet to see any significant negative ratings migration in our Canadian retail portfolios. To provide some additional color, we stress tested our retail portfolios under client support programs to levels well beyond our expectations and current loss estimates. Even if our retail accounts under our deferral programs become delinquent at a 10% rate, the incremental impact to our CET1 ratio from RWA inflation would be manageable at less than 10 basis points. And as seen this quarter, our strong recurring earnings stream will continue to act as the primary absorber of any deterioration. So absent a further meaningful economic downturn, we expect our CET1 ratio to remain at approximately 12% by the end of the first quarter 2021, as capital generation is offset by risk migration and the reduction in OSFI transitional capital modification for ECL provisioning. Now moving on to net interest margins on Slide 10. Our enterprise NIM declined 12 basis points quarter-over-quarter, largely due to the impact of both the Bank of Canada and the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates by 150 basis points in March. Recall, we had previously disclosed an immediate and sustained 100 basis point shock would have a negative impact to our revenue of over $600 million over a 12-month period as of Q1 2020. The impact to our NIM this quarter from such an interest rate shock was increased by elevated liquidity levels at the enterprise level, with low-yielding cash and investment balances up $146 billion from last year. Our elevated LCR translates into a surplus of $127 billion over the regulatory minimum. At a segment level, Canadian Banking NIM declined 12 basis points quarter-over-quarter or 14 basis points over the last 2 quarters due to 3 main factors: first, the impact of lower interest rates and deposit margins was the largest driver of the compression in NIM. Our current mix of personal deposits has a greater proportion of noninterest bearing, low beta checking accounts, which do not reprice in parallel with movement in benchmark interest rates. Another headwind this quarter was the change in asset mix, underpinned by the decline in higher-yielding credit card balances as well as strong growth in lower spread Canadian mortgages to a lesser to extent. In contrast, deposit growth had a positive impact. Very strong double-digit growth in higher-margin checking accounts and business deposits far surpassed solid growth in interest-bearing GICs, which themselves were still up 9% year-over-year. Although our strong weighting to checking accounts and credit cards resulted in a drag to our NIM this quarter, both these products provide important strategic benefits and continue to underpin our leading Canadian banking net interest margin. Moving to City National, where NIM was down 33 basis points relative to last quarter, the impact of lower interest rates on low yields was more pronounced given the structure of the balance sheet, where the majority of our loans are variable rate. This was partially offset by lower deposit and wholesale funding costs. On an enterprise level, we expect liquidity to remain elevated over the near term, and we'd expect lower wholesale funding needs in the coming months given our strong deposit growth. Now moving to expenses, which were up 6% year-over-year, largely due to higher variable and stock-based compensation. Excluding these and foreign exchange, all bank expense growth would have been relatively flat to last year. Furthermore, COVID-specific costs added over $90 million of expenses in the quarter from special compensation cost for certain employees and increased screening. In contrast, marketing and travel costs were down $90 million as part of a 16% reduction in discretionary expenses from last year. On a segment basis, Canadian Banking limited expense growth to less than 2% year-over-year. Excluding COVID-specific cost, Canadian Banking expenses would have declined 2% from last year. Both insurance and I&TS expenses were down 6% from last year. And despite higher variable compensation, both Capital Markets and our non-U.S. Wealth Management businesses reported positive operating leverage. U.S. Wealth Management expenses were up 12% year-over-year in U.S. dollars or less than 3%, excluding the impact of our U.S. share-based compensation plan. And we expect City National's expense growth to continue to slow over time following elevated growth in our back office technology and regulatory costs in recent periods. We also expect to slow our recent accelerated hiring growth strategy. We remain diligent in managing our all bank cost base as we continue to balance project prioritization with our commitment to creating long-term value for our clients. Moving to our business segment performance, beginning on Slide 11. Personal & Commercial Banking reported earnings of $1.4 billion. Canadian Banking net income was $1.3 billion with pretax pre-provision earnings of $2.3 billion, down 8% from a year ago. Net interest income was lower year-over-year as solid loan growth of 6% and very strong deposit growth of 18% were offset by the impact of significantly lower interest rates. Fee-based revenue was also affected by the impact of COVID-19 as lower transactional activity resulted in lower service charges. Also, the decline in cross-border travel impacted FX fees. As we see a reopening of economies over time, we expect to see these revenue streams start to recover. Turning to Slide 12. Wealth Management reported earnings of $562 million, pre-provision pretax earnings of $803 million were down 5% year-over-year, largely due to lower interest rates. Canadian Wealth Management revenue declined 2% from last year as lower client transactional activity and lower interest rates offset higher average AUA. Global Asset Management revenue increased 7% year-over-year, with AUM up 13% from last year to record levels, mainly due to a combination of strong U.S. institutional and Canadian retail flows and constructive equity and bond markets. Canadian retail net sales were strong in short-term money market strategies in May and then long-term fixed income mandates in June and July. Very strong volume growth at City National was more than offset by lower interest rates. Loan balances increased $11 billion or 29% year-over-year in U.S. dollars. Loan growth, excluding the impact of PPP loans, was still up a very strong 17%. City National deposits were up $17 billion or 38% from a year ago. We also saw strong growth in our U.S. private client group with AUA up $28 billion in terms of U.S. from a year ago. The revenue benefits from very strong volume growth in our U.S. Wealth Management businesses were more than offset, again, by the impact of lower interest rates. This quarter saw favorable accounting volatility on interest rate swaps in City National, mark-to-market capital gains in Global Asset Management and our deferred compensation plans in the U.S. Wealth management, a partial reversal of last quarter's losses. On Slide 13, we discuss our Insurance segment, which provides an important diversified source of earnings that is less exposed to spread revenue and credit risk. Net income of $216 million increased $12 million or 6% from a year ago, mainly due to higher favorable investment-related experience and improved claims experience. These factors were partially offset by the impact of longevity reinsurance contracts in the prior year. On to Investor & Treasury Services on Slide 14, where net income declined to $76 million. As we guided in May, results were particularly challenged this quarter. Our funding and liquidity business was most impacted by the servicing of the bank's elevated liquidity position. In addition, lower revenue reflected the unfavorable impact from the prior period interest rate movements, partially offset by tightened credit spreads towards pre-COVID levels. These results do not reflect our expected run rate going forward. In contrast, our asset services custody business had a solid quarter as FX revenue benefited from increased client activity resulting from volatility in FX markets and lower expenses driven by disciplined cost management initiatives. Now turning to Slide 15. Capital markets reported record earnings of $949 million. Pre-provision pretax earnings of $1.3 billion were also the highest level on record, reflecting the strength of our global franchise. Corporate investment banking revenue was up 12% year-over-year to a near record $1.1 billion, partly due to recoveries in loan underwriting marks as we were able to sell off deals following the thawing of leveraged loan markets. The narrowing of high-yield credit spreads also helped in this regard. Also contributing were strong debt and equity underwriting fees, which benefited from low interest rates in constructive equity markets, respectively. These more than offset what remains a muted M&A advisory environment. As our corporate clients feel increased comfort around their own balance sheets and the stability of their operations, we have seen debt underwriting activity begin to slow. We have also seen material pay downs of previously drawn credit facilities. Global markets also had a very strong quarter with revenue up 60% from last year to $1.8 billion. Record performance in FICC was underpinned by strong credit trading, which benefited from narrowing credit spreads. Rates trading continued to benefit from client demand in the midst of continued global central bank actions. Equity trading was also robust, benefiting from continued market volatility and a recovery in our structured products business, following severe market dislocation last quarter. However, as volatility subsides, we would expect the trading performance to moderate. And with that, I'll turn it over to Graeme.

Graeme Hepworth
Chief Risk Officer

Thank you, Rod, and good morning, everyone. Starting on Slide 17. This quarter, we continued to build our allowance for credit losses on loans to $6.1 billion, up $200 million from last quarter. The increase in our reserves is mainly attributable to provisions on performing loans in our retail portfolio, reflecting the ongoing uncertainty related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Our ACL is based on macroeconomic forecasts that were generally unchanged from last quarter, though we did see some improvement in our equities, oil and housing price forecasts. Also, the actual Canadian unemployment rate in calendar Q2 was better than we had forecast last quarter. We also updated our scenario weights to put greater emphasis on our downside scenarios to reflect the increasing uncertainty about how the economy will perform through the fall as the number of government support and payment deferral programs roll off. Overall, our ACL represents 0.89% of all loans outstanding, up from 0.53% 6 months ago. This represents 4.3x our net write-offs over the last 12 months and positions us well for an expected rise in impairments. Let me now discuss PCL on impaired loans on Slide 18. Provisions of $398 million or 23 basis points were down 14 basis points from last quarter, largely reflecting lower provisions in Capital Markets and Personal & Commercial Banking. In Capital Markets, provisions were down $199 million from last quarter. While we continue to incur provisions in some of our more vulnerable sectors due to the pandemic, we took fewer provisions in our oil and gas and consumer discretionary sectors this quarter compared to last. In Canadian Banking, provisions were down $75 million from last quarter, reflecting lower provisions across our retail portfolios, mainly due to the impact of payment deferral and government programs. This was partially offset by higher provisions in our commercial portfolio. In Wealth Management, provisions were up $28 million from last quarter, largely reflecting higher provisions in U.S. Wealth Management, including the write-off of one account at City National in the industrial products sector. Turning to Slide 19. Gross impaired loans of $3.9 billion was up $328 million or 6 basis points from last quarter, reflecting higher impairments across our major lending segments. In Wealth Management, we had higher impairments on a couple of investment accounts. In our Canadian Banking commercial portfolio, we had higher new formations, mainly at our real estate, other services and consumer discretionary and staple sectors and fewer loans returning to performing. In our small business portfolio, we had higher new formations in sectors most vulnerable to the impact of COVID-19, mainly in the Greater Toronto area. Most of these loans are government guaranteed. And in our retail portfolio, we had lower new formations in our personal lending portfolio and fewer write-offs in our cards portfolio. In Capital Markets, we had lower new formations in the oil and gas sector, partially offset by higher repayments in utilities and oil and gas sectors and higher wright-offs in the industrial products sector. Turning to Slide 20. Our exposure to sectors most vulnerable to the impact of COVID-19 decreased by 7% from last quarter due to the pay downs of credit facilities by our clients. Overall, our exposure to the most vulnerable sectors represents only 7% of RBC's total loans outstanding. This quarter, 27% of PCL on impaired loans and 46% of impairments pertained to these sectors. We also saw a slowdown in credit migration related to COVID-19 as credit rating assessments in our Capital Markets portfolio mainly occurred throughout Q2. The credit rating assessment in our Canadian Banking commercial portfolio is over 1/3 complete, and we expect to have substantially completed our review by the end of the year. On Slide 21, we have provided some additional information in relation to the commercial real estate portfolio. Overall, this portfolio is well diversified across geographies and industry segments and has been unpinned by strong underwriting standards. The Retail Property segment represents 1.6% of our total loans and acceptances outstanding. This segment remains under pressure due to ongoing physical distancing measures and the rise of online activity. Due to headwinds that predate COVID-19, we have long been cautious in our client strategy and underwriting standards for this segment. A significant portion of this book is comprised of Class-A malls with strong backing from investment-grade clients as well as grocery-anchored retail properties, which have performed well during the pandemic. In the Office Property segment, strong rent collections continue for both large and small landlords. We expect that any impact of the work-from-home trend on this segment will play out gradually and our clients will have time to adapt given the typical term of an office lease is 5 to 10 years. And again, our underwriting standards have been strong, with less than 2% of our office portfolio having both an LTV greater than 75% and debt service leverage ratio of less than 1.25x. Overall, we believe the impact of COVID-19 on our commercial real estate portfolio is mitigated through prudent underwriting and sound loan structures including a combination of low LTVs, guarantees and debt service coverage requirements, built to withstand high vacancy rates. Let me now provide some color on our client payment deferral programs across Canadian Banking's retail and commercial portfolios, starting on Slide 23. As I noted earlier, we experienced lower delinquencies and impairments this quarter as clients have the ability to defer certain payments for up to 6 months. Overall, client demand for new deferrals has largely abated, and overall active deferral balances have declined as our broad client support programs come to an end. Slide 24 provides some context around both the performance and risk profile of our Canadian banking retail deferral program to date. Of the nearly $23 billion in retail deferrals that ended their deferral term since March, 80% have resumed regular payments. 19% have extended their deferral period for an additional 2 to 3 months, generally not exceeding a 6-month deferral period and only 1% have become delinquent. Additionally, we have seen clients continue to make payments during the deferral period. While we view this as credit positive and consistent with our expectations, the level of payment activity is materially driven by factors such as operational ease, the economic cost of the deferral for the client and the nature of the product. Substantially all of the remaining $39 billion in retail deferrals are set to expire by November. Based on the deferral performance to date, along with the insights we have around the level of client cash balances and the degree of income disruption, we are confident that we will continue to see the majority of our clients with active deferrals resume regular payments. However, there will be clients who are unable to resume regular payments due to loss of employment or income. And so we do anticipate an uptick in delinquencies and insolvencies once these deferrals expire, given the significant impact COVID-19 has had on the labor market and many businesses. With the significant level of security and guarantees supporting our deferred loan balances, we are well positioned to address this expected increase in delinquencies and impairments. Looking at our residential real estate portfolio, as an example, only 0.2% has a deferral, is uninsured, and has an LTV greater than 80%. Let me now discuss market risk on Slide 25. Overall, market volatility and credit spreads have improved since last quarter, which has helped reduce the risk profile of both the fixed income and equity portfolios. When combined with a reduction in our active loan underwriting commitments this quarter of -- by 58% to $1.7 billion, it contributed to a steady decline in VaR through the quarter. To conclude, our PCL on impaired loans and associated losses were muted this quarter given the continuation of deferrals and other client relief programs. As these programs roll off, we do anticipate PCL on impaired loans to trend higher in Q4 and through the first half of 2021. At this time, we believe our allowances for credit losses prudently reflect our current view of the difficult economic outlook as well as the quality of our portfolio. However, as I noted earlier, there is great uncertainty, which we reflected by putting greater emphasis on our more pessimistic scenarios. For context, our primary pessimistic scenario has the Canadian unemployment rate elevated at around 10% until June 2022 and house prices declining by 8% and remaining depressed until mid-2023. Should a scenario like this play out, we could see our ACL on performing loans increase by approximately 25%. However, our history of prudent underwriting, the prime nature of our retail portfolios and the diverse nature of our wholesale portfolio serve as strong mitigants against deteriorating macroeconomic conditions that have risen as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. And with that, operator, let us open the lines for Q&A.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The first question is from John Aiken with Barclays.

J
John Aiken
Director & Senior Analyst

Rod, in your commentary, you discussed the enterprise-wide liquidity to a fair extent, and wanted to find out -- you gave us an indication that you were expecting the liquidity to remain fairly high. But you also talked about the wholesale funding necessarily rolling off. Can we expect the liquidity level to stay at this balance on a relative basis? And then going forward, what would you need to see in order to actually reduce the liquidity level and try to ease some of the burden that's having on the margins?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, John, for your question. I mean part of this is the liquidity that's in the system, and RBC is going to take its fair share of that liquidity. And I think that will remain in the system as long as the Bank of Canada and Federal Reserve and other -- Bank of England and ECB continue to flush appropriate liquidity into the system to help with the economic turmoil caused by the pandemic. So I would expect that to continue for some time. And then as clients, both retail and commercial and corporate, start to utilize that cash and spend that cash and invest it and that cash starts to come down, then I would think some of that liquidity would come down. Obviously, we would like to replace it with good client assets, but we're not going to change our risk appetite to accommodate that. And so we will accept a little bit of margin compression. Again, this is not costing us a lot of money. A lot of these deposits are low-cost deposits. So the P&L impact is muted. The NIM impact, just because the math is higher because the denominator is greater, but you don't expect this to exit the system anytime soon, certainly not over the next 12 months, but we do expect to reduce our wholesale funding and then we expect margin to improve a little bit on the heels of our asset mix as well. But that said, the liquidity compression on our NIM is going to continue.

Operator

The next question is from Ebrahim Poonawala with Bank of America Securities.

E
Ebrahim Huseini Poonawala
Director

I guess just a question for Graeme around outlook on the impact to PCLs. If I heard you correctly, you mentioned expectations that these will go higher as delinquencies rise. Just talk to us, you mentioned 19% of the deferrals were again renewed in terms of deferral. What was the process of granting that additional deferral in your level of confidence that those borrowers because of this second deferral will go back to current? Just in terms of -- there's obviously a lot of concern around a cliff event when these deferrals come to an end and want to get some perspective on what led to that additional deferral and your thought process around the state of the consumer once the deferrals come to an end?

Graeme Hepworth
Chief Risk Officer

Sure. Thanks for the question. I think there's a few pieces there. One is kind of around the deferral programs and then, two, kind of how that's translating into expectations next year. I think there's a key piece to understand in terms of the deferral program on what we call the client treatment plan and how that was executed and rolled out to date versus what we would expect after that program comes to an end. And that's certainly why I referenced to kind of the some of the operational pieces around that. And so the program we rolled out starting back in March was really a broad-based program that was really there to support clients. It was not intended to really put a lot of friction into the system. And just really made it very much widely available and that program on the retail side is open and continues to be open until, I believe, at the end of September, and so I'll ask Neil to jump in here after I finish, if he's got any further comments. On the commercial side, that program came to an end in June. And so when we look at things like the early cohorts that we referenced here and how there's a portion of those where they've extended their deferrals, again, that was really a option of the client's discretion. So there wasn't a lot of friction when it came to that. When the program comes to an end and the broad majority of these deferrals will come to conclusion in Q4. On the retail side, I think the number there is 83% of them will conclude by the end of Q4. In commercial, it's something similar. Then the program changes in a very dramatic way. And further deferrals or further actions with respect to the client will be very much be based on an individual conversation with the client, will be very much based on their circumstances. And so the future deferrals that may happen there will be very different than kind of the pieces that we've seen up to date. So I would really differentiate kind of what we saw in this quarter in the early cohorts versus what we will see when we go into Q4 and the broad-based program comes to an end. And that's really tied to -- as we roll into the next stage of this, we really want to get to that point where we're having a very deep conversation with our clients. We're understanding their financial profile, what income they have, what their assets are and how we can work to develop solutions for them and really keep them in a solid position to the extent possible. The second part you kind of referred to is then what does this mean kind of going forward? I would again break that up into a couple of pieces. There's -- when you look at delinquencies and impairments. Certainly, these deferral programs and the government support programs have suppressed delinquencies and impairments in this quarter. And I think that was something we kind of have had indicated last quarter, that was our expectation. In Q4, I would say, you'll start to see delinquencies increase as these deferral programs end. But I think impairments will really start to kind of fall in a more material way kind of 90 days after the deferrals come to an end. And so when we kind of look forward, we do see impairments really starting to rise in 2021 and so kind of peaking out kind of mid-2021. I'm saying this all contingent on -- this is based on kind of the current forecast we have out there, which are highly uncertain. And so that's kind of give you a bit of background on what we've got to date versus what -- and why we're expecting kind of the time line that we put forward. But maybe I'd invite Neil to add any further comments on that.

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Yes. Thanks, Graeme. Maybe just to put some color on the point about the 19% that Graeme mentioned that had opted for a second deferral. Operationally, what we did early on in the pandemic is we created online tools, just for ease of use and sort of operational efficiencies, to allow customers to go online and then self-select a 1- or 2-month deferral on these products digitally. And so with those short-term deferrals, a couple of things we saw. We saw, because of the ease of it, some customers just did it out of abundance and prudence, sort of making sure they had as much cash flow as they could, just given the uncertainty. And the other reality was some of these customers, they could have walked into a branch or called the contact center, had a conversation qualified, obviously, for a 6-month deferral. They chose not to do that and went online for a shorter term. So when those shorter-term deferrals came up and they did require it, then that would have counted as opting for a second deferral. So I think some of that was operational. And I would just reiterate Dave's point in his opening comments that this is a top priority for us. We're reaching out to both our retail and our commercial clients. We're getting really good response from both of them in terms of the support they're getting and the advice they're getting. And we'll continue to do that through the fall and in Q4, and Graeme mentioned, October really being the peak and once the deferrals will start to expire -- when the majority of deferrals will expire.

Operator

The next question is from Steve Theriault with Eight Capital.

S
Stephen Theriault;Eight Capital, Research Division;Principal & Head of Research

I think for Rod. Rod, thanks for the additional disclosure on the NIMs. Could you give us a little bit of an outlook to the extent possible in terms of both Canadian Banking and City National? And in particular, do you expect a very strong mortgage growth, which I expect you would tell us is going to continue at least in the short term despite the uncertainty, if that is strong mortgage growth, do you expect that to weigh in any meaningful way in terms of mix on the Canadian margin?

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

So thanks for the question. Rod will talk about NIMs and Neil will talk about the mortgage growth.

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

Sure. Thanks, Steve, for that. So yes, I would expect the impact to be muted going forward. I think the biggest drop was this quarter because we had the full 3 months of the interest rate cuts in the results. And when you think through what the impacts are going to be going forward, the asset mix has certainly weighed on us this quarter in Canadian Banking. That should improve as credit card spending improves, the balance of credit card as a percent of total should improve, which would benefit the NIM. Also, I mentioned the less wholesale funding as our wholesale funding rolls down, we wouldn't need to replace it with more expensive wholesale funding, given the strength in our deposits that we see over the medium term. So all of those factors should benefit us, and but we will see on a year-over-year basis, we'll still see continued NIM compression. But on a quarter-over-quarter basis, it should be much more muted. Same thing with City National. The biggest impact was this quarter. The next few quarters, we would expect it to stabilize as well. So I think looking at all things considered such as that the wholesale funding should benefit us, the asset mix should benefit us. But on a period-over-period basis, the mortgage REIT pricing is going to bring it down a little bit. So the impact should be muted. Neil, on mortgage growth?

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Yes. In terms of mortgage growth, we had -- pre-pandemic, we had an awful lot of momentum. We've made, I think, some really foundational changes last year, and that really had a great start to the year. So in terms of our outlook, yes, high single-digit for the rest of 2020, we do see that starting to soften next year, more sort of falling down into the mid-single digit. We're seeing good demand across the country. Some of that, we'd say, was really delayed from very low volumes in April, May, beginning of June. So some of that, I would say, has been pushed back. But we see, I think, a real productive market. We're seeing really strong in Ontario, really strong in DC, 2 markets where we have a really good footprint, really strong team. So I think those would be kind of the outlook and, I guess, really just sort of the shape of that demand curve, which was really strong in terms of our originations and commitments up until April and then pandemic just put everything to a screeching halt. And now we've seen that sling shut back to really take up some of that demand.

S
Stephen Theriault;Eight Capital, Research Division;Principal & Head of Research

I guess, Neil, while I have you, you're clearly taking share in real estate secured lending. But the decline in HELOC started a few years ago. And I noticed the last couple of quarters, it's accelerating. Is there anything you can offer up there in terms of what's driving that?

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Yes. I mean it's just really client advice in terms of as rates have come down. More and more clients are saying, they want to lock into those lower rates. And so our advisers are talking to clients about that choice. And it's -- it has accelerated, to your point, and we think it's good advice and makes that client that much more sticky.

S
Stephen Theriault;Eight Capital, Research Division;Principal & Head of Research

Got you. Just more fixed versus floating.

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

That's right.

Operator

The next question is from Gabriel Dechaine with National Bank Financial.

G
Gabriel Dechaine
Analyst

I want to rotate back to the deferral stuff. And on one hand, we see a pretty big decline in the mortgage balances that are deferring payment, but commercial was up a bit. I would have expected that to be down because the deferral periods, as I understand it, were 3 months, not 6 months. What's going on there? Are you providing lot more extensions? And then in any cohort, I guess, that's coming off deferral? Do you have any stats on how many are current versus extensions versus impaired?

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Yes. Thanks for the question. It's Neil. I'll start. Yes, our deferrals for our commercial book was about 6 months deferrals, and they were -- yes. So that's what's driving that. We have seen about 25% of the clients already roll off of those deferrals. Again, the bulk of those will come in October. Now of those clients who are on deferrals, we have seen almost 30% of them still make payments. So we're still seeing, I think, some really good trends there. And the other point I would make, I think qualitatively, as we mentioned, we're reaching out to these clients. I think we're quite encouraged by the feedback we're getting from clients and their ability to resume these payments. So whether it's on mortgages and having clients ask if they can catch up on the payments they had deferred and generally just more -- a little bit more strength than we would have anticipated as we started to follow-up. But I don't know, Graeme, anymore...

Graeme Hepworth
Chief Risk Officer

Yes. No, I think that's the critical piece is that the program nature is such that, that's why we haven't seen the material decline there. But just to give context, again, some of the early proof points that you have, that we do expect those balances to dramatically shrink in Q4. Similar to retail, the kind of the early cohort that we have there that is less than 6 months, which is much smaller here than it was in retail. We saw, again, very similar -- well, there wasn't anyone that re-opted in the deferral sense, but the delinquency component of that was very small. And then the second piece, outside of deferral programs, which is what everyone is very focused on in a market context. We did have other parts of our client support program. And so one of those was we did provide clients with temporary increases to operating facilities -- operating lines that they had. And so that was largely a 3-month program for us. We do have the read on that as well as with a small program. Almost all of that has now been repaid, and clients have either didn't use it and no longer need it or paid down that incremental excess. So again, that's just another data point there that gives us that comfort and confidence that these programs, these client support programs we put in place back in March are kind of meeting back down to much more manageable balances that we can now engage with clients on a more effective basis with.

G
Gabriel Dechaine
Analyst

And my next question for Derek.

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

We ask you to requeue, we got a bunch, and we probably will go over. So we're going to give you some more time given the length of our speeches today. So please requeue. We'll try to get back to you.

Operator

The next question is from Doug Young with Desjardins Capital.

D
Doug Young
Diversified Financials and Insurance Analyst

Just back to Canadian Banking, and I guess it's probably for you, Neil. Pretax pre-provision basis, earnings down 8%. We talked about the NIM compression. And Rod talked a bit about the outlook. Just wondering what other levers do you have to pull here maybe on the mix or expense side to kind of support pretax pre-provision earnings? Because obviously, modeling out PCLs is a crapshoot. So I'm just trying to figure out what other levers you have to support this?

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Well, maybe I'll speak a little bit in terms of some of the trends that are really impacting NIM and which ones we expect to stick around and which ones will be more transient. Rod mentioned interest rates, so we don't -- that's going to be, obviously, is the biggest driver of the NIM decrease, and it's going to be a factor that's going to be in the book for quite a while. On the pricing side, and we talked about our mortgage book and just mortgage growth there. We're feeling better about the returns on the mortgage volumes we're booking. So we'd say, as that kind of rolls on, and if that market stays, it's still competitive, but I would say a lot more constructive than it was, that would help. In terms of -- I think Rod mentioned it in his opening comments, but definitely a transitory part of what's impacting NIM is the credit card business. So as part of our client treatment plan, we also did offer all those balances that went into the cards treatment plan, a 50% reduction in the rate that they pay. As those credit card treatment plans roll off, that margin will reset and go back. And then the other part, Dave mentioned in his opening comments, just about the velocity of spending by the consumer. So we are starting to see that pick up. Our card services revenue has been impacted quite a bit, obviously, as we -- as clients aren't spending, we're not creating that interchange that credit card service fee revenue. So we still have a couple of categories like travel, as an example obviously, that are way down, dining is way down. We're starting to see the everyday spend pick up, and now we're into a positive territory year-over-year. So I think those are some of the things that -- and then obviously, just volumes. I think we're feeling really good about the -- our ability to capture deposits and have clients make RBC their choice. And whether that's on a core deposit account or, again, on the strength of the mortgage business. And then the last one would be, Rod mentioned, where we are on our cost. And we have had COVID costs in the quarter, which we think are mostly behind us, some incremental compensation costs. And then if we take out those COVID-related costs, we would actually have had negative NIE year-over-year. So costs, to Dave's point, will continue to be another lever.

D
Doug Young
Diversified Financials and Insurance Analyst

And can you just quantify the credit card reduction in rate? And as that comes off, it will have a positive impact? And can you quantify how much that weighed on NIMs? Is it possible?

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Yes. It was -- if we look at the credit card as a category, both inclusive of the lower rate from the treatment plans as well as the business mix. So our -- just having lower balances, and we have seen a lower revolve rate with more liquidity in client accounts. That made up over 6 basis points of the NIM decline.

Operator

The next question is from Meny Grauman with Scotiabank.

M
Meny Grauman

Just a question on capital. Assuming no further spike in COVID, do you expect your CET1 to climb from here? How do you see the flight path?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

It's Rod. I'll take that, Meny. So I would expect us to have absent the downturn, as you mentioned, if you will. I would expect this to be an upward trajectory with the exception of Q1 next year as the OSFI modification on the Stage 1, stage 2 build starts to go back from a 70% relief to a 50% relief. That would impact us, as would any migration from Stage 1 to Stage 2 into Stage 3. As soon as it goes into Stage 3, there's no modification, it's an immediate hit for either the 70% this year or 50% next year. But absent that, our internal capital generation has been quite strong, and we expect it to continue to be strong. We saw a slight uptick in market risk. RWA this quarter, as I mentioned in my comments, we would expect a little bit of relief next quarter on that. And everything else should be equal. We took a big hit on pension. With the discount rate, I'm not sure how much lower the pension discount rate can go. So that shouldn't have a big impact. And I don't see a whole lot of RWA migration, we took our big increase in Q2 with a modest one this quarter. Obviously, we're planning for it, and we're taking into our capital forecast, but it's not going to be dramatic. So I would see a slight uptick in just about every quarter with the exception of the first quarter next year.

M
Meny Grauman

And just as a follow-up. So we've seen the biggest stress test ever and you're at 12%. So what lessons do you draw from that? Is it reasonable to say that you entered this crisis with just too much capital? Would you agree with that statement?

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

No. I would say you're appropriately reserved that, therefore, there was a lot of learnings from the first crisis that we went through 10 years ago. We needed more liquidity and more capital in the system. I think the investment we've made in risk management has helped. But we still have uncertainty ahead of us, like we're not out of this yet. We've got the fall to get through. We have re-contagion. And therefore, the capital is not burning a hole in our pocket. So rest assured that we will allocate capital judiciously, we have strong growth opportunities. As you see with strong momentum in all our businesses, that will consume some capital. To Rod's point, even with our normal growth perspectives and the momentum we have, we will likely have surplus capital that we'll build, and we'll be very careful with it. And therefore, if we carry excess capital for a couple of years and it depresses ROEs, I think that's a good. I think the overall kind of perspective is we're going to remain somewhat defensive and careful through still what I think will be a fairly challenging year.

Operator

Next question is from Mario Mendonca with TD Securities.

M
Mario Mendonca
MD & Research Analyst

I want to sort of try to get to the heart of the matter on impaired credit losses. I think what we're all trying to do is in asking the questions about the deferrals is make an estimate of where impaired PCLs could be. Graeme, could you offer an outlook perhaps a range, if you will, of where impaired loan PCLs could be over the next few quarters?

Graeme Hepworth
Chief Risk Officer

Thanks, Mario. So maybe just a few comments. I'll iterate a bit of, I think, some of the commentary I provided. I think, certainly, we're facing a lot of uncertainty. And so I think in the face of all that uncertainty, we're not inclined to provide a very specific forecast at this point in time. I think there's just too many factors that go into that. I think the general guidance I would provide, and just to confirm what I said before, certainly, the impaired loan situation and the PCL that come with that this quarter have trended down in large part because of all the deferral and government support programs that are out there. And I think that was kind of our view as to how this would play out last quarter, and we would expect a good part of that to continue to play out in Q4. And that's why we kind of really see the impaired situation really starting to kick in, in 2021 and really seeing it ramp up kind of through the first half and peaking kind of in the middle of 2021 next year. But that's all very much contingent on, again, that the macroeconomic forecast plays out consistent with -- the reality plays out with the forecast that we're operating under. But certainly, we don't see kind of future downturns associated with COVID and that the translation kind of that we have expected off the back of macroeconomic situation is consistent with what we're looking at. So really difficult to put a forecast out there at this point in time. And something, certainly, as we work through Q4 and kind of get better transparency on the transition into delinquencies and impairments, that I think we can have -- will be a better conversation with that at that time.

M
Mario Mendonca
MD & Research Analyst

Let me just go real quickly through. I think, Rod, you made the comment about 1/3 of a review of probability of default was completed. I didn't follow you there. What did you refer to when you said 1/3?

Graeme Hepworth
Chief Risk Officer

Sorry. Just we're talking about credit migrations. And so if you break that up into 3 broad chunks, the capital markets portfolio -- because of the kind of the real-time information we get there on our clients because they're public, we were certainly able to really reassess our credit ratings largely in Q2 to be consistent with the COVID-19 kind of environment. Our commercial, our mid-market, our smaller clients, that's a more difficult assessment to make. We don't have real-time information on those clients. We don't have financial statements every quarter or Bloomberg to give us kind of the insights there. It's that's a longer process that we go through with our clients. And so we're working through that now. And so that's the piece, I say, it's about 1/3 done. To give you context, we think RWA in that space could increase by $7 billion to $9 billion range, but we'd expect that to happen kind of over the next 6 months. And so that kind of feeds back to Rod's comments that, that's kind of built into that plan and the forecast on the capital side. And then the retail piece, the retail piece has been the side that has been interesting. Well, certainly, on one hand, we're seeing those more distressed and challenged clients and then the downgrades happening there in our rating models. The flip side is the broader client base is seeing an upgrade there, and that's just reflective of these cash balances and the lower spend that's really improving their credit ratings. And so that's really offset that piece of it. And so over time, we would expect there to be some ratings migration and some RWA inflation on the retail side, but we really are seeing that play out over a much longer horizon now than we had originally expected. And so again, to Rod's comment, we expect that to be much more really absorbed through ongoing earnings.

Operator

The next question is from Sohrab Movahedi with BMO Capital Markets.

S
Sohrab Movahedi
Analyst

Graeme, I don't know if you could give us some color on the deferrals, maybe pick the mortgages as to geographic breakdown, #1 and vintage year of the origination of those mortgages? And whether or not the 1% that you say have gone delinquent, if that also follows the same kind of pattern? Or is there something a bit more specific for geography or your origination?

Graeme Hepworth
Chief Risk Officer

Sure. Thanks for the question. I'll provide a few dimensions. I don't have all the pieces you're asking about on that. But if you look at -- again, I think a few things we're trying to make sure people are traveling with here is, on one hand, appreciating that this large balance is $57 billion that because of the open nature of that program that we really do expect that to compress to a much smaller, much more manageable number. And we provided the proof point there around the early cohorts and what we're seeing on that. When you look at the -- you asked about the regional segmentation on that, the -- you would see a bit of what you would expect kind of where we currently are affected. So kind of the highest deferral rates would be in Alberta, consistent with the kind of macroeconomic, the kind of dual impact that Alberta is facing, both with the pandemic and the impact on the oil and gas environment. GTA would be next highest there. And again, that's a reflection of 2 things I would say. One is kind of a lot of the service economy that comes out of Toronto, but also kind of the higher level of home prices. And then on the lower side, you'd see Québec and some of the other parts of Ontario outside of the GTA. Other segments that we would look at, when you look at kind of investor versus homeowner segmentations, we don't really see a differential there in deferral rates. So that's not really been a risk indicator at this point in time. And then you look at, say, condo and non-condo. Condos we're seeing a lower deferral rate on. So those are skewing better from a risk perspective than non-condos right now. So those are some of the dimensions, I think, we're seeing -- I might invite Neil though, if he's got any other kind of aspects he would want to call out here.

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Yes. I think just 2 other points I'd make is, if we look at the LTVs and the FICO scores on the uninsured book, I think that's a place we take a lot of comfort in, in terms of the underlying risk. LTV is in the sort of the mid-50s, sort of 56% and then average FICO at 758. I mean these are strong credit clients with a lot of absorption capability. The other thing we'd look at is just how long have we known these clients, and 75% of the clients with a mortgage deferral have been clients for more than 10 years, another 20%, somewhere between 3 and 10 years. So we know these clients well. There's a lot of capacity in these transactions, and we have a good history in terms of repayment from the FICO score. So I think that maybe the only other thing I'd add to Graeme's comment.

S
Sohrab Movahedi
Analyst

So just to clarify, Neil, about 5% -- if 75% is 10 plus; 20%, I guess is 3 to 10; then about 5% is less than 3-year relationships?

Neil McLaughlin
Group Head of Personal & Commercial Banking

Yes. That's right.

S
Sohrab Movahedi
Analyst

Okay. And the percentage that have gone delinquent, they would follow the same geographic pattern as well, the 1% that you say have gone delinquent?

R
Rod Bolger
Chief Financial Officer

I don't have that breakdown at hand. So we'd have to follow-up with you on that.

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

We've got a couple more to get to before we have to break here. So we'll try to get a couple more in.

Operator

The next question is from Mike Rizvanovic with Crédit Suisse Canada.

M
Mehmed Rizvanovic
Research Analyst

I have a 2-part question on the mortgage deferrals. More of a high-level question. But correct me if I'm pessimistic here, but what is that 12% of balances currently in deferral? What if that settle somewhere in the 3% or 4% range in the next few months? How would you view that with respect to the -- just the broader risk to the Canadian housing market if you get a lot of potentially foreclosed properties coming to the market? And my follow-up to that is, if there was a perceived risk and things were -- and there were legitimate concerns, should we even be thinking about a crisis then? Or should we maybe be thinking about the likelihood that maybe the banks get together with the government and perhaps figure out a way for a more gradual unwind of those problematic loans?

Graeme Hepworth
Chief Risk Officer

Yes. Thanks for the question. I think just maybe to kind of level set, I think, some key pieces here that there's a lot of focus on a big cliff event here. But to me, this is more just a transition from kind of one phase of how we're going to manage with our clients on this to the next phase. I think Neil brought up a pretty critical stat in his last comment there around the LTV. And so when we look at those deferral clients, as Neil said, they have a very high FICO, which indicates just a strong willingness to pay and they have a very low LTV on average. So we have an LTV in the kind of mid-50%. And so the clients having -- being distressed is going to be a critical challenge, but our ability to work with them and work with the equity that they have in their homes, work with the income they have, even it is diminished to make sure that we can reset and reprofile kind of a lending situation that works for them, but is also still consistent with our lending standards and appetite. Really, it's going to be critical to helping prevent kind of the pieces I think you're really worrying about and concerning yourself, which I think we all worry about at the end of the day. And so this isn't really kind of a cliff event that goes from deferrals into some broad-based set of foreclosures that there's a whole lot of tools in our tool kits and there's a whole lot of liquidity, cash, equity and income that clients have to work with that we can really extend this out over a much longer period of time and really not create that cliff event for the economy and the housing market that I think that you're pointing to.

M
Mehmed Rizvanovic
Research Analyst

Okay. And that 3% -- sorry, the 3% to 4% that I mentioned, is that something that you would see realistic in? I'm just trying to get a sense of at that level, would there be concerns on your end for just the overall sort of health of the housing market and confidence levels?

Graeme Hepworth
Chief Risk Officer

I -- I'm traveling with directly. So I have to think about that more specifically. But certainly, the expectations that we've built in our macros don't put us in a spot that we think the scenario you're describing is one that we're immediately worried about.

Operator

The next question is from Scott Chan with Canaccord Genuity.

S
Scott Chan

Graeme, you offered some advice on the -- perhaps the impaired loan trajectory over the next few quarters. What about performing loans? Can you maybe kind of talk about some of the stuff that we should think about? And I don't know if you have any guidance. I know your coverage ratios are probably peer high right now, but any guidance on that over the next few quarters would be helpful?

Graeme Hepworth
Chief Risk Officer

Sure, Scott. Thanks for the question. Yes. So I think what you've seen to date and kind of what you should expect going forward, just a few comments there. So certainly, we took a substantial -- took a substantial increase in our provisions and reset our ACL at a much higher level on performing loans in Q2. And that was really just reflecting the step change that we saw as COVID-19 came into play. And to do that, we undertook a lot of work to kind of reset the scenarios to make sure they were reflective of the COVID-19 world. We did a lot of work with our data and our analytics and our models to make sure that they were capturing kind of the unique features and elements of the macroeconomic situation we're facing reflective of two and including aspects like the CERB and the government's approved programs, the deferral pieces, et cetera. And so we reset that in Q2, as we moved into Q3, I would say we didn't take nearly the same level of provisions, and that's a factor of a number of things. One, the macroeconomic situation in our forecast were largely consistent with what we laid out in Q2. We did increase our weight a little bit, so that goes to the opposite direction. It just reflects the uncertainty how long this recovery could take. We did see a decline in balances, which would again influence the ACL down. And then the fourth factor was just the credit side of it and how we factored that into our provisions this quarter. It's really that last piece that caused us to take any further provisions this quarter, I think that plus the scenario we're waiting. And that was really just us kind of, I would say, fine-tuning and reflecting the impact of these government programs and deferral programs have had on effectively suppressing some of the delinquencies. And so we wanted to make sure we continue to reflect that in our reserves, particularly on retail. And so when you go forward, though, again, absent a real material change in one of those factors, we wouldn't see us having to materially change our ACL and performing loans in a significant way. And as you roll out further, over time, as we get much more certain in that economic recovery, assuming we're traveling along the path that we forecast now, we would expect that ACL to come down over time. But the timing of that is really difficult to kind of project. And that's really going to depend on how the macroeconomic situation and how the COVID situation plays out over 2021.

Nadine Ahn

Thank you. Operator, we're going to turn it back over to Dave now. We're running out of time. Thanks, everyone, for your questions.

D
David I. McKay
President, CEO & Director

Thanks, Nadine. Maybe I'll summarize some of the key themes, some of which came out in our speeches, but not necessarily in the Q&A. One is diversification of our business, again, through a challenging time, we saw the benefits of our diversified model. We had exceptionally strong results in our capital markets operation. We didn't get to touch on that in the Q&A, but again, helped us provide earnings buffer against any uncertainty around our credit position. We saw very strong client volumes across our businesses. As you saw from the retail bank, mortgages, core banking, capital markets, institutional, trading, equities, credit trading, great DCM volumes, we saw very strong volumes on the lending and deposit side in City National and very strong Wealth Management Canada performance. So client activity remains strong. We continue to take a prudent market share. And it's really the investment in technology we've made. We've increased our channel capabilities. We've increased our risk capabilities, our analytics capabilities, and that investment in technology is playing through all our capabilities and has really started to, I think, show the benefits, particularly this quarter. The strength and resilience of our balance sheet and our reserving and our risk management capability, I think, was strongly represented this quarter. We're being very prudent. As I said, we've seen strong recovery so far and whatever it is like Checkmark or Swish or whatever recovery scenario you're planning for. We've seen strong recovery, but we're not all the way back to where we were pre-COVID, obviously. And therefore, we're taking a prudent view. And it may take 1 or 2 years for us to get back to where we were before and recover all the jobs. And therefore, with that uncertainty, with the uncertainty of re-contagion, we are being cautious. We're being cautious with the strength of a strong balance sheet, strong liquidity. And as a number of you asked and the responses, Graham and Neil gave, with the ability to work with clients and be patient. The amount of equity Canadians have in their homes is quite significant, particularly those who have deferred payments with us and therefore, the ability for us to be patient and work with them, help them through this as a significant asset. And therefore, that combined with appropriate reserving for those situations that may not work out, we feel very good about where we are. Our ability to continue to grow the business, continue to manage our franchise in an uncertain time. So I think those are some of the themes that I wanted to reinforce. We really appreciate your questions and your comments. Thank you for attending our Q3 call, and we look forward to talking to you again in Q4. Thanks, operator. We'll close the call.

Operator

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