Impact of Commerce on the Bank's Consolidated Balance Sheet
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
TDBFG Consoli- dated, TDBFG TDBFG excluding Commerce Consoli-
Consoli- Commerce impact(1) dated dated (April (March (April
(October (millions of Canadian dollars) 30, 2008) 31, 2008) 30,
2008) 31, 2007)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assets Cash and cash equivalents $17,711 $408 $18,119 $16,536
Securities 122,670 25,167 147,837 123,036 Loans, net of allowance
for credit losses 190,393 18,034 208,427 175,915 Goodwill 8,099
6,114 14,213 7,918 Other intangibles (gross) 1,891 1,882 3,773
2,104 Other 105,749 5,503 111,252 96,615
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total assets $446,513 $57,108 $503,621 $422,124
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Liabilities Deposits $302,252 $47,271 $349,523 $276,393 Other
105,648 3,427 109,075 112,905 Subordinated notes and debentures,
liability for preferred shares, capital trust securities and
non-controlling interests in subsidiaries 14,428 - 14,428 11,422
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities 422,328 50,698 473,026 400,720
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholders' equity Common shares 6,671 6,147 12,818 6,577
Contributed surplus 120 263 383 119 Preferred shares, retained
earnings and accumulated other comprehensive income 17,394 - 17,394
14,708
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total shareholders' equity 24,185 6,410 30,595 21,404
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity $446,513 $57,108
$503,621 $422,124
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Commerce impact includes the Commerce assets and liabilities
acquired (shown in Note 20 to the Interim Consolidated Financial
Statements for the quarter ended April 30, 2008) and the purchase
consideration for the Commerce acquisition. Cash portion of the
purchase consideration is included in other liabilities. CREDIT
PORTFOLIO QUALITY Gross impaired loans were $909 million at April
30, 2008, $340 million higher than at October 31, 2007, largely due
to the addition of impaired loans in the Canadian Personal and
Commercial Banking and $97 million due to the acquisition of
Commerce. No allowance was initially recognized upon acquisition as
these loans are measured at fair value. Net impaired loans as at
April 30, 2008, after deducting specific allowances, totalled $654
million, compared with $366 million as at October 31, 2007. The
total allowance for credit losses of $1,369 million as at April 30,
2008 comprised total specific allowances of $255 million and a
general allowance of $1,114 million. Specific allowances increased
by $52 million from $203 million as at October 31, 2007. The
general allowance for credit losses as at April 30, 2008 was up by
$22 million, compared with October 31, 2007, mainly due to the
increase related to VFC. The Bank establishes general allowances to
recognize losses that management estimates to have occurred in the
portfolio at the balance sheet date for loans or credits not yet
specifically identified as impaired. Changes in Gross Impaired
Loans and Acceptances
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the three months ended ----------------------------- Apr. 30
Oct. 31 Apr. 30 (millions of Canadian dollars) 2008 2007 2007
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at beginning of period $818 $590 $511 Additions 575 387 461
Return to performing status, repaid or sold (234) (188) (158)
Write-offs (258) (202) (207) Foreign exchange and other adjustments
8 (18) (4)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at end of period $909 $569 $603
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allowance for Credit Losses(1)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
As at ----------------------------- Apr. 30 Oct. 31 Apr. 30
(millions of Canadian dollars) 2008 2007 2007
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specific allowance $255 $203 $231 General allowance 1,114 1,092
1,147
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total allowance for credit losses $1,369 $1,295 $1,378
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impaired loans net of specific allowance $654 $366 $372 Net
impaired loans as a percentage of net loans 0.3% 0.2% 0.2%
Provision for credit losses as a percentage of net average loans
0.49% 0.30% 0.41%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Certain comparative amounts have been restated to conform to
the presentation adopted in the current period. Non-prime Loans As
at April 30, 2008, the Bank's wholly-owned subsidiary, VFC Inc.,
had approximately $1 billion (October 31, 2007: $0.9 billion) gross
exposure to non-prime loans which mainly consist of automotive
loans originated in Canada. The credit loss rate, defined as the
average provision for credit losses divided by the average
month-end loan balance, which is an indicator of credit quality, is
approximately 6% on an annual basis. The Bank's portfolio continues
to perform as expected. These loans are recorded at amortized cost.
See Note 3 to the 2007 Annual Consolidated Financial Statements for
further information regarding the accounting for loans and related
credit losses. Exposure to Alt-A Securities As discussed in Note 20
to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements for the quarter
ended April 30, 2008, the results of Commerce are recorded on a one
month lag basis, therefore the balance sheet values of Commerce
assets recorded in the Bank's consolidated balance sheet as at
April 30, 2008, represent the fair value of Commerce assets at
March 31, 2008. As at April 30, 2008, due to its acquisition of
Commerce, the Bank had $3.7 billion (October 31, 2007: nil) gross
exposure to Alt-A mortgages in residential mortgage-backed
securities (RMBS) collateralized primarily by fixed-rate mortgages
with no rate reset features. These securities are hedged for market
risk in the context of the overall balance sheet, however, they may
expose the Bank to credit risk. Upon the acquisition of Commerce,
this portfolio was recorded at fair value. The Bank's Alt-A
exposures are fair valued using broker-dealer quotes. Based on the
Bank's analysis, the intrinsic value of the portfolio is considered
to exceed the fair value, net of a liquidity discount, in today's
market. These securities have public debt ratings of AAA and are
accounted for as available-for-sale-securities. The following table
discloses the fair value of the securities by vintage year: Alt-A
Securities Exposure by Vintage Year
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
As at --------- Apr. 30 (millions of Canadian dollars) 2008
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2003 $452 2004 825 2005 1,054 2006 553 2007 864
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Alt-A securities $3,748
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAPITAL POSITION The Bank's capital ratios are calculated using the
guidelines of the Office of the Superintendent of Financial
Institutions (OSFI). Effective November 1, 2007, the Bank began
calculating its regulatory capital under the new capital adequacy
rules included in Basel II. The top corporate entity to which Basel
II applies at the consolidated level is The Toronto-Dominion Bank.
Under Basel II, risk-weighted assets (RWA) are calculated for each
of credit risk, market risk and operational risk. Operational risk
is a new component of total RWA and represents the risk of loss
resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people and
systems or from external events. The Bank's RWA were as follows:
Risk-weighted Assets
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
As at As at Apr. 30, Jan. 31, (millions of Canadian dollars) 2008
2008
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Risk-weighted assets (RWA) for: Credit risk 147,617 $121,460 Market
risk 7,140 4,088 Operational risk 23,878 20,352
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total RWA 178,635 $145,900
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
RWA increased $32.7 billion over the prior quarter. Of this
increase, $29.3 billion was due to the Commerce acquisition which
produced $26.0 billion of credit risk RWA and $3.3 billion of
operational risk RWA. The Commerce acquisition had no impact on
market risk RWA. OSFI's target Tier 1 and Total capital ratios for
Canadian banks are 7% and 10%, respectively. As at April 30, 2008,
the Bank's Tier 1 capital ratio was 9.1% and the Total capital
ratio was 12.7%, computed under Basel II. Under Basel I, the Bank's
Tier 1 capital ratio and Total capital ratio were 10.3% and 13.0%,
respectively, at October 31, 2007. The Bank continues to hold
sufficient capital levels to ensure that flexibility is maintained
to grow operations, both organically and through strategic
acquisitions. The strong capital ratios are the result of the
Bank's internal capital generation, management of the balance sheet
and periodic issuance of capital securities. For accounting
purposes, GAAP is followed for consolidation of subsidiaries and
joint ventures. For regulatory capital purposes, insurance
subsidiaries are deconsolidated and reported as a deduction from
capital. Insurance subsidiaries are subject to their own capital
adequacy reporting such as OSFI's Minimum Continuing Capital
Surplus Requirements. Currently, for regulatory capital purposes,
all the entities of the Bank are either consolidated or deducted
from capital and there are no entities from which surplus capital
is recognized. During the quarter, the Bank issued $250 million of
its Class A First Preferred Shares, Series R. Also during the
quarter, the Bank issued $500 million of medium term notes
constituting subordinated indebtedness which qualify as Tier 2B
regulatory capital. For further details of debt and equity
issues/repurchases, see Notes 6, 7 and 8 to the Interim
Consolidated Financial Statements. For further details of
regulatory capital, see Note 9 to the Interim Consolidated
Financial Statements. MANAGING RISK EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Financial
services involve prudently taking risks in order to generate
profitable growth. At the Bank, our goal is to earn a stable and
sustainable rate of return for every dollar of risk we take, while
putting significant emphasis on investing in our businesses to
ensure we can meet our future growth objectives. Our businesses
thoroughly examine the various risks to which they are exposed and
assess the impact and likelihood of those risks. We respond by
developing business and risk management strategies for our various
business units taking into consideration the risks and business
environment in which we operate. Through our businesses and
operations, we are exposed to a broad number of risks that have
been identified and defined in our Enterprise Risk Framework. This
framework outlines appropriate risk oversight processes and the
consistent communication and reporting of key risks that could
hinder the achievement of our business objectives and strategies.
Our risk governance structure and risk management approach have not
changed from that described in our 2007 Annual Report. Certain
risks have been outlined below. For a complete discussion of our
risk governance structure and our risk management approach, see our
2007 Annual Report. WHO MANAGES RISK We have a risk governance
structure in place that emphasizes and balances strong central
oversight and control of risk with clear accountability for, and
ownership of, risk within each business unit. Our structure ensures
that important information about risks flows up from the business
units and oversight functions to the Senior Executive Team and the
Board of Directors. HOW WE MANAGE RISK We have a comprehensive and
proactive risk management approach that combines the experience and
specialized knowledge of individual business units, risk
professionals and the corporate oversight functions. Our approach
is designed to promote a strong risk management culture and ensure
alignment to our strategic objectives. It includes: - Maintaining
appropriate enterprise-wide risk management policies and practices
including guidelines, requirements and limits to ensure risks are
managed to acceptable levels; - Subjecting risk management policies
to regular review and evaluation by the Executive Committees and
review and approval by the Risk Committee of the Board; - An
integrated enterprise-wide risk monitoring and reporting process
that communicates key elements of our risk profile, both
quantitatively and qualitatively, to senior management and the
Board of Directors; - Maintaining risk measurement methodologies
that support risk quantification, including Value-at-Risk (VaR)
analysis, scenario analysis and stress-testing; - Annual
self-assessments by significant business units and corporate
oversight functions of their key risks and internal controls.
Overall significant risk issues are identified, escalated and
monitored as needed; - Supporting appropriate performance
measurement that allocates risk- based economic capital to
businesses and charges a cost against that capital; - Actively
monitoring internal and external risk events to assess whether our
internal controls are effective; - Independent and comprehensive
reviews conducted by the Audit Department of the quality of the
internal control environment and compliance with established risk
management policies and procedure. Basel II Basel II is a framework
developed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, with the
objectives of improving the consistency of capital requirements
internationally and making required regulatory capital more risk
sensitive. Basel II sets out several options which represent
increasingly more risk-sensitive approaches to calculating credit-,
market- and operational-risk- based regulatory capital. Under the
more sophisticated approaches, banks develop their own internal
estimates of risk parameters, which are used in the determination
of RWA and calculation of regulatory capital. The Bank has
implemented the Advanced Internal Ratings Based (AIRB) approach to
credit risk for all material portfolios, with some exemptions and
waivers in place to use the Standardized approach as outlined
below. We do not use the Foundation Internal Ratings Based
approach. - Exemptions are available for non-material portfolios to
remain under the Standardized approach indefinitely. We have
exemptions in place covering some small exposures in North America.
The continued appropriateness of the Standardized approach will be
reconfirmed annually by Risk Management. - Waivers are available to
use the Standardized approach for a defined period of time where
there are clear plans in place to implement the AIRB approach. We
have received waivers for our Margin Trading Book, some small
Retail portfolios and the majority of our TD Banknorth portfolios.
Detailed plans are in place to implement the AIRB approach for
these portfolios within timelines agreed with OSFI. Commerce
portfolios are reported using the Interim Approach to Reporting,
moving to the Standardized approach in 2009. We are compliant with
the market risk requirements as at October 31, 2007 and are
implementing the additional market risk requirements within the
OSFI- established timelines. For operational risk, the Basic
Indicator Approach is used primarily for TD Banknorth and Commerce.
For the rest of the Bank, we use The Standardized Approach. Certain
sections of this MD&A represent a discussion on risk management
policies and procedures relating to credit, market and liquidity
risks as required under the Canadian Institute of Chartered
Accountants (CICA) Handbook Section 3862, Financial Instruments -
Disclosures, which permits these specific disclosures to be
included in the MD&A. Therefore, these sections form an
integral part of the unaudited interim consolidated financial
statements for the quarter ended April 30, 2008. These sections,
which are included non-continuously below, are shaded on pages 21
to 27 of the fully formatted version of this second quarter 2008
Report to Shareholders, which can be found on the Bank's website at
http://www.td.com/investor/earnings.jsp. CREDIT RISK Credit risk is
the potential for financial loss if a borrower or counterparty in a
transaction fails to meet its obligations in accordance with agreed
terms. Credit risk is one of the most significant and pervasive
risks in banking. Every loan, extension of credit or transaction
that involves settlements between the Bank and other parties or
financial institutions exposes the Bank to some degree of credit
risk. Our primary objective is to create a methodological approach
to our credit risk assessment in order to better understand, select
and manage our exposures to deliver reduced earnings volatility.
Our strategy is to ensure central oversight of credit risk in each
business, reinforcing a culture of accountability, independence and
balance. Who Manages Credit Risk The responsibility for credit risk
management is enterprise-wide in scope. Credit risk control
functions are integrated into each business to reinforce ownership
of credit risk, reporting to the Risk Management Department to
ensure objectivity and accountability. Each business segment's
credit risk control unit is primarily responsible for credit
adjudication, and is subject to compliance with established
policies, exposure guidelines and discretionary limits, as well as
adherence to established standards of credit assessment, with
escalation to the Risk Management Department for material credit
decisions. Independent oversight of credit risk is provided by the
Risk Management Department, through the development of centralized
policies to govern and control portfolio risks and product specific
policies as required. The Risk Committee of the Board ultimately
oversees the management of credit risk and annually approves all
major credit risk policies. How we Manage Credit Risk Credit Risk
is managed through a centralized infrastructure based on: -
Centralized approval by the Risk Management Department of all
credit risk policies and the discretionary limits of officers
throughout the Bank for extending lines of credit; - The
establishment of guidelines to monitor and limit concentrations in
the portfolios in accordance with the Board approved, enterprise-
wide policies governing country risk, industry risk and group
exposures; - The development and implementation of credit risk
models and policies for establishing borrower and facility risk
ratings to quantify and monitor the level of risk and facilitate
its management in our Commercial Banking and Wholesale Banking
businesses. Risk ratings are also used to determine the amount of
credit exposure we are willing to extend to a particular borrower.
- Approval of the scoring techniques and standards used in
extending, monitoring and reporting of personal credit in our
retail businesses; - Implementation of management processes to
monitor country, industry and counterparty risk ratings which
include daily, monthly and quarterly review requirements for credit
exposures; - Implementation of an ongoing monitoring process for
the key risk parameters used in our credit risk models.
Unanticipated economic or political changes in a foreign country
could affect cross-border payments for goods and services, loans,
dividends, trade- related finance, as well as repatriation of the
Bank's capital in that country. The Bank currently has counterparty
exposure in a number of countries, with the majority of the
exposure in North America. Country risk ratings are based on
approved risk rating models and qualitative factors and are used to
establish country exposure guidelines covering all aspects of
credit exposure across all businesses. Country risk ratings are
managed on an ongoing basis and subject to a detailed review at
least annually. As part of our credit risk strategy, we establish
credit exposure limits for specific industry sectors. We monitor
industry concentration limits to ensure the diversification of our
loan portfolio. Industry exposure guidelines are a key element of
this process as they limit exposure based on an internal risk
rating score determined through the use of our industry risk rating
model and detailed industry analysis. If several industry segments
are affected by common risk factors, we assign a single exposure
guideline to those segments. In addition, for each material
industry, the Risk Management Department assigns a maximum exposure
limit or a concentration limit which is a percentage of our total
wholesale and commercial exposure. We regularly review industry
risk ratings to ensure that those ratings properly reflect the risk
of the industry. Credit derivatives may be used from time to time
to mitigate industry concentration and borrower-specific exposure
as part of our portfolio risk management techniques. Credit Risk
Exposures under Basel II Gross credit risk exposures include both
on- and off-balance sheet exposures. On-balance sheet exposures
consist primarily of outstanding loans, acceptances, non-trading
securities, derivatives and certain repo-style transactions.
Off-balance sheet exposures consist primarily of undrawn
commitments, guarantees and certain repo-style transactions. The
calculation of gross credit risk exposures differs under each of
the two approaches we use to measure credit risk: the Standardized
approach and the AIRB approach. Gross credit risk exposures,
measured before credit risk mitigants, are given below: Gross
Credit Risk Exposures(1) by Counterparty Type - Standardized and
AIRB Approaches
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
As at April 30, 2008 ---------------------------------- (millions
of Canadian dollars) Standardized AIRB Total
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Residential secured $7,849 $124,927 $132,776 Qualifying revolving
retail - 41,019 41,019 Other retail 15,375 20,040 35,415 Corporate
45,019 99,646 144,665 Sovereign 724 42,261 42,985 Bank 6,841 84,982
91,823
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gross credit risk exposures $75,808 $412,875 $488,683
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
As at January 31, 2008 ---------------------------------- (millions
of Canadian dollars) Standardized AIRB Total
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Residential secured $4,071 $117,856 $121,927 Qualifying revolving
retail - 40,353 40,353 Other retail 11,903 19,589 31,492 Corporate
24,305 98,039 122,344 Sovereign 1,276 34,440 35,716 Bank 1,299
92,347 93,646
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gross credit risk exposures $42,854 $402,624 $445,478
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Gross credit risk exposures exclude equity and securitization
exposures. Gross credit risk exposures increased $43.2 billion over
the prior quarter. Of this increase, $30.3 billion was due to the
Commerce acquisition and is included under the Standardized
approach. Credit Risk Exposures subject to the Standardized
approach Under the Standardized approach, used primarily for TD
Banknorth portfolios, balance sheet exposures (net of specific
allowances) are multiplied by OSFI-prescribed risk-weights to
calculate RWA. Risk-weights are assigned based on certain factors
including counterparty type, product type and the nature/extent of
credit risk mitigation. External credit ratings from Moody's
Investors Service are used to determine the risk-weight of our
Sovereign and U.S. Bank exposures. For off-balance sheet exposures,
the notional amount of the exposure is multiplied by a credit
conversion factor to produce a credit equivalent amount which is
then treated in the same manner as an on-balance sheet exposure.
Commerce exposures are currently subject to the Interim Approach to
Reporting. This approach is similar to the Standardized approach,
with the exception of Small business entities, which receive a
higher risk-weight under the Interim Approach to Reporting than
they do under the Standardized approach. Credit Risk Exposures
subject to the AIRB approach Banks adopting the AIRB approach to
credit risk are required to categorize banking-book exposures by
counterparty type, each having different underlying risk
characteristics. These counterparty types may differ from the
presentation in our financial statements. Our credit risk exposures
are categorized into two main portfolios, non- retail and retail.
For the non-retail portfolio, exposures are managed on an
individual basis, using industry and sector-specific credit risk
models, and expert judgement. We have categorized non-retail credit
risk exposures according to the following Basel II counterparty
types: corporate (wholesale and commercial customers, and certain
small businesses), sovereign (governments, central banks and
certain public sector entities), and bank (regulated deposit-taking
institutions and securities firms). For the retail portfolio
(individuals and certain small businesses), exposures are managed
on a pooled basis, using predictive credit scoring techniques. We
have categorized three sub-types of retail exposures: residential
secured (e.g. individual mortgages, home equity lines of credit),
qualifying revolving retail (e.g. individual credit cards,
unsecured lines of credit and overdraft protection products), and
other retail (e.g. personal loans, student lines of credit, small
business banking credit products). Risk Parameters Under the AIRB
approach, we have developed internal risk rating systems based on
key risk estimates; first, probability of default (PD) - the degree
of likelihood that the borrower will not be able to meet its
scheduled repayments; second, exposure at default (EAD) - the total
amount we are exposed to at the time of default; and third, loss
given default (LGD) - the amount of the loss when a borrower
defaults on a loan, expressed as a percentage of EAD. Application
of these risk parameters allows us to measure and monitor our
credit risk to ensure it remains within pre-determined thresholds.
Non-retail Exposures Credit risk for non-retail exposures is
evaluated through a two- dimensional risk rating system comprised
of a borrower risk rating and a facility risk rating, which is
applied to all corporate, sovereign, and bank exposures. The risk
ratings are determined through the use of industry and
sector-specific credit risk models designed to quantify and monitor
the level of risk and facilitate its management. All borrowers and
facilities are assigned an internal risk rating which must be
reviewed at least once each year. Each borrower is assigned a
borrower risk rating that reflects the PD of the borrower. Key
factors in the assessment of borrower risk include the borrower's
competitive position, industry, financial performance, economic
trends, management and access to funds. The facility risk rating
maps to LGD and takes into account facility-specific
characteristics, such as collateral, seniority of debt, and
structure. Internal risk ratings form the basis of several
decision-making processes within the organization, including the
calculation of general allowances for credit losses, regulatory
capital and economic capital. Internal ratings are also integral to
portfolio monitoring and management, and are used in setting
exposure limits and loan pricing. Retail Exposures Our retail
credit segment is composed of a large number of customers, and
includes residential mortgages, unsecured loans, credit card
receivables and small business credits. Requests for retail credit
are processed using automated credit and behavioural scoring
systems or, for larger and more complex transactions, directed to
underwriters in regional credit centres who operate within
designated approval limits. Once retail credits are funded they are
monitored on an ongoing basis using quantitative customer
management programs which utilize current internal and external
risk indicators to identify changes in risk. Retail exposures are
assessed on a pooled basis, with each pool consisting of exposures
that possess similar homogeneous characteristics. Pools are
segmented by product type and by the forward-looking one-year PD
estimate. Credit risk is evaluated through statistically derived
analytical models and decision strategies. Proprietary statistical
models have been developed for each retail product portfolio based
on a minimum of 10 years of internal historical data. Credit risk
parameters (PD, EAD and LGD) for each individual facility are
updated quarterly using the most recent borrower credit bureau and
product-related information. The calculation of LGD includes an
adjustment to reflect the potential of increased loss during an
economic downturn. Validation of the Credit Risk Rating System
Credit risk rating systems and methodologies are subject to
independent validation to verify that they remain accurate
predictors of risk. The validation process includes the following
considerations: - Risk parameter estimates - PDs, EADs and LGDs are
reviewed and updated against actual loss experience and benchmarked
against public sources of information to ensure estimates continue
to be reasonable predictors of potential loss - Model performance -
estimates continue to be discriminatory, stable and predictive -
Data quality - data used in the risk rating system is accurate,
appropriate and sufficient - Assumptions - key assumptions
underlying model development remain valid for the current portfolio
and environment The Risk Management Department contributes to the
oversight of the credit risk rating system in accordance with the
Bank's model risk rating policy. The Risk Committee of the Board is
apprised of the performance of the credit risk rating system, at a
minimum, on an annual basis. The Risk Committee must approve any
material changes to the Bank's credit risk rating system. Stress
Testing Sensitivity and stress tests are used to ascertain the size
of probable losses under a range of scenarios for our credit
portfolios. Sensitivity tests are performed using different market
and economic assumptions to examine the impact on portfolio
metrics. Stress tests are also employed to assess client-specific
and portfolio vulnerability to the effects of severe but plausible
conditions, such as material market or industry disruption or
economic downturn. Credit Risk Mitigation There are documented
policies and procedures in place for the valuation and management
of financial and non-financial collateral, for vetting and
negotiation of netting agreements, and other credit risk mitigation
techniques used in connection with on- and off-balance sheet
banking activities which result in credit exposure. The amount and
type of collateral and other credit enhancements required depend on
the Bank's internal assessment of counterparty credit quality and
repayment capacity. Non-financial collateral is primarily used in
connection with retail exposures. Enterprise-wide standards for
collateral valuation, frequency of recalculation of the collateral
requirement, documentation, registration and perfection procedures
and monitoring are in effect. Non-financial collateral taken by the
Bank includes residential real estate, real estate under
development, commercial real estate and business assets, such as
accounts receivable, inventory and fixed assets. Non-financial
collateral is concentrated in residential real estate and business
assets. Financial collateral is primarily used in connection with
non-retail exposures. Financial collateral processes are
centralized in the Treasury Credit group within Wholesale Banking
and include pre-defined haircuts and procedures for the receipt,
safekeeping and release of the pledged securities. The main types
of financial collateral taken by the Bank include cash and
negotiable securities issued by governments and investment grade
issuers. Guarantees may be taken in order to reduce the risk in
credit exposures. For guarantees taken in support of a pool of
retail exposures, the guarantor must be a government agency or
investment grade issuer. The Bank makes use of credit derivatives
and on-balance sheet netting for the purposes of credit risk
mitigation. Derivative counterparties are investment grade
financial institutions with the additional benefit of netting
agreements and collateral support agreements. Credit policies are
in place that limit the amount of credit exposure to an entity
based on the credit quality and repayment capacity of the entity.
Off-balance sheet transactions with qualifying financial
institutions are subject to netting agreements and collateral
agreements. Residual credit exposure, after the effects of
collateral, are calculated and reported daily. This represents a
substantial portion of credit risk mitigation used in connection
with off-balance sheet items and related credit exposures. MARKET
RISK Market risk is the potential for loss from changes in the
value of financial instruments. The value of a financial instrument
can be affected by changes in interest rates, foreign exchange
rates, equity and commodity prices and credit spreads. We are
exposed to market risk in our trading and investment portfolios, as
well as through our non-trading activities. Market Risk in Trading
Activities The four main trading activities that expose us to
market risk are: - Market making: We provide markets for a large
number of securities and other traded products. We keep an
inventory of these securities to buy from and sell to investors,
profiting from the spread between bid and ask prices; - Sales: We
provide a wide variety of financial products to meet the needs of
our clients, earning money on these products from mark-ups and
commissions; - Arbitrage: We take positions in certain markets or
products and offset the risk in other markets or products. Our
knowledge of various markets and products and how they relate to
one another allows us to identify and benefit from pricing
anomalies; - Positioning: We aim to make profits by taking
positions in certain financial markets in anticipation of changes
in those markets. Who Manages Market Risk in Trading Activities
Primary responsibility for managing market risk in trading
activities lies with Wholesale Banking with oversight from Trading
Risk Management within the Risk Management Department. How we
Manage Market Risk in Trading Activities Trading Limits We set
trading limits that are consistent with the approved business plan
for each business and our tolerance for the market risk of that
business. The core market risk limits are based on the key risk
drivers in the business and can include notional limits, credit
spread limits, yield curve shift limits, price and volatility shift
limits. Another primary measure of trading limits is Value-at-Risk
(VaR) which we use to monitor and control overall risk levels and
to calculate the regulatory capital required for market risk in
trading activities. At the end of each day, risk positions are
compared with risk limits, with excesses reported in accordance
with established market risk policies and procedures. Calculating
VaR We estimate VaR by creating a distribution of potential changes
in the market value of the current portfolio. We value the current
portfolio using the most recent 259 trading days of market price
and rate changes as well as the market value changes associated
with probability of Debt Issuer rating migrations and defaults. VaR
is then computed as the threshold level that portfolio losses are
not expected to exceed more than one out of every 100 trading days.
A graph that discloses daily VaR usage and trading-related income
within the Wholesale Banking segment is included on page 24 of the
fully formatted version of this second quarter 2008 Report to
Shareholders, which can be found on TD's website at
http://www.td.com/investor/earnings.jsp. Value-at-Risk Usage
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the quarter ended
--------------------------------------------------- (millions of
April 30, 2008 Jan 31, April Canadian dollars)
-------------------------------- 2008 30, As at Average High Low
Average 2007 Average
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interest rate and credit spread risk $23.6 $26.3 $31.6 $19.0 $15.8
$7.0 Equity risk 11.1 10.2 14.5 4.5 5.3 10.3 Foreign exchange risk
2.2 2.4 6.7 1.0 2.5 2.0 Commodity risk 1.7 1.6 3.0 0.7 1.0 1.6 Debt
specific risk 35.0 31.2 41.7 19.8 19.1 13.1 Diversification
effect(1) (30.3) (29.8) n/m(2) n/m(2) (19.9) (17.4)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Value-at-Risk $43.3 $41.9 $54.1 $27.0 $23.8 $16.6
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------- For the six months ended
----------------- (millions of April April Canadian dollars) 30,
30, 2008 2007 Average Average -------------------------------------
Interest rate and credit spread risk $21.1 $7.3 Equity risk 7.7 8.7
Foreign exchange risk 2.5 2.0 Commodity risk 1.3 1.6 Debt specific
risk 25.2 13.6 Diversification effect(1) (24.9) (16.1)
------------------------------------- Total Value-at-Risk $32.9
$17.1 -------------------------------------
------------------------------------- (1) The aggregate VaR is less
then the sum of the VaR of the different risk types due to risk
offsets resulting from portfolio diversification. (2) Not
meaningful. It is not meaningful to compute a diversification
effect because the high and low may occur on different days for
different risk types. Stress Testing Our trading business is
subject to an overall global stress test limit. As well, each
global business has a stress test limit, and each broad risk class
has an overall stress test limit. Stress tests are produced and
reviewed regularly with the Market Risk and Capital Committee.
Market Risk in Investment Activities We are also exposed to market
risk in the Bank's own investment portfolio and in the merchant
banking business. Risks are managed through a variety of processes,
including identification of our specific risks and determining
their potential impact. Policies and procedures are established to
monitor, measure and mitigate those risks. Who Manages Market Risk
in Investment Activities The TDBFG Investment Committee regularly
reviews the performance of the Bank's own investments and assesses
the success of the portfolio managers. Similarly, the Merchant
Banking Investment Committee reviews and approves merchant banking
investments. The Risk Committee of the Board reviews and approves
the investment policies and limits for the Bank's own portfolio and
for the merchant banking business. How we Manage Risk in Investment
Activities We use advanced systems and measurement tools to manage
portfolio risk. Risk intelligence is embedded in the investment
decision-making process by integrating performance targets,
risk/return tradeoffs and quantified risk tolerances. Analysis of
returns identifies performance drivers, such as sector and security
exposures, as well as the influence of market factors. Market Risk
in Non-trading Banking Transactions We are exposed to market risk
when we enter into non-trading banking transactions with our
customers. These transactions primarily include deposit taking and
lending, which are also referred to as "asset and liability"
positions. Asset/Liability Management Asset/liability management
deals with managing the market risks of our traditional banking
activities. Market risks primarily include interest rate risk and
foreign exchange risk. Who is Responsible for Asset/Liability
Management The Treasury and Balance Sheet Management Department
measures and manages the market risks of our non-trading banking
activities, with oversight from the Asset/Liability Committee,
which is chaired by the Chief Financial Officer, and includes other
senior executives. The Risk Committee of the Board periodically
reviews and approves all asset/liability management market risk
policies and receives reports on compliance with approved risk
limits. How we Manage our Asset and Liability Positions When Bank
products are issued, risks are measured using a fully hedged
option-adjusted transfer-pricing framework that allows us to
measure and manage product risk within a target risk profile. The
framework also ensures that business units engage in risk-taking
activities only if they are productive. Managing Interest Rate Risk
Interest rate risk is the impact that changes in interest rates
could have on our margins, earnings and economic value. The
objective of interest rate risk management is to ensure that
earnings are stable and predictable over time. To this end, we have
adopted a disciplined hedging approach to managing the net income
contribution from our asset and liability positions including a
modeled maturity profile for non-rate sensitive assets, liabilities
and equity. Key aspects of this approach are: - Evaluating and
managing the impact of rising or falling interest rates on net
interest income and economic value; - Measuring the contribution of
each Bank product on a risk-adjusted, fully-hedged basis, including
the impact of financial options, such as mortgage commitments, that
are granted to customers; - Developing and implementing strategies
to stabilize net income from all personal and commercial banking
products. We are exposed to interest rate risk when asset and
liability principal and interest cash flows have different payment
or maturity dates. These are called "mismatched positions." An
interest-sensitive asset or liability is repriced when interest
rates change, when there is cash flow from final maturity, normal
amortization, or when customers exercise prepayment, conversion or
redemption options offered for the specific product. Our exposure
to interest rate risk depends on the size and direction of interest
rate changes, and on the size and maturity of the mismatched
positions. It is also affected by new business volumes, renewals of
loans or deposits, and how actively customers exercise options,
such as prepaying a loan before its maturity date. Interest rate
risk is measured using various interest rate "shock" scenarios to
estimate the impact of changes in interest rates on both the Bank's
annual Earnings at Risk (EaR) and Economic Value at Risk (EVaR).
EaR is defined as the change in our annual net interest income from
a 100 bps unfavourable interest rate shock due to mismatched cash
flows. EVaR is defined as the difference in the change in the
present value of our asset portfolio and the change in the present
value of our liability portfolio, including off-balance sheet
instruments, resulting from a 100 bps unfavourable interest rate
shock. Valuations of all asset and liability positions, as well as
off-balance sheet exposures, are performed regularly. Our
objectives are to protect the present value of the margin booked at
the time of inception for fixed-rate assets and liabilities, and to
reduce the volatility of net interest income over time. The
interest rate risk exposures from instruments with closed
(non-optioned) fixed-rate cash flows are measured and managed
separately from embedded product options. Projected future cash
flows include the impact of modeled exposures for: - An assumed
maturity profile for our core deposit portfolio; - Our targeted
investment profile on our net equity position; - Liquidation
assumptions on mortgages other than from embedded pre- payment
options. The objective of portfolio management within the closed
book is to eliminate cash flow mismatches, thereby reducing the
volatility of net interest income. Product options, whether they
are freestanding options such as mortgage rate commitments or
embedded in loans and deposits, expose us to a significant
financial risk. Our exposure from freestanding mortgage rate
commitment options is modeled based on an expected funding ratio
derived from historical experience. We model our exposure to
written options embedded in other products, such as the rights to
prepay or redeem, based on analysis of rational customer behaviour.
We also model an exposure to declining interest rates resulting in
margin compression on certain demand deposit accounts that are
interest rate sensitive. Product option exposures are managed by
purchasing options or through a dynamic hedging process designed to
replicate the payoff on a purchased option. The Bank's policy sets
overall limits on EVaR and EaR based on 100 bps interest rate shock
for its management of Canadian and U.S. non-trading interest rate
risk. A graph that shows our interest rate risk exposure (as
measured by EVaR) on all non-trading assets, liabilities and
derivative instruments used for interest rate risk management
instruments is included on page 26 of the fully formatted version
of this second quarter 2008 Report to Shareholders, which can be
found on TD's website at http://www.td.com/investor/earnings.jsp.
The Bank uses derivative financial instruments, wholesale
instruments and other capital market alternatives and, less
frequently, product pricing strategies to manage interest rate
risk. As at April 30, 2008, an immediate and sustained 100 bps
increase in interest rates would have increased the economic value
of shareholders' equity by $51.4 million after tax. An immediate
and sustained 100 bps decrease in interest rates would have reduced
the economic value of shareholders' equity by $124 million after
tax. The following table shows the sensitivity by currency for
those currencies where the Bank has material exposure. Sensitivity
of After-tax Economic Value at Risk by Currency
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
As at As at (millions of Canadian dollars) April 30, 2008 Jan 31,
2008
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
100 bps 100 bps 100 bps 100 bps Currency increase decrease increase
decrease
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Canadian dollar $16.1 $(53.4) $(3.9) $(30.1) U.S. dollar 35.3
(70.6) 3.7 (27.4)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Managing Non-trading Foreign Exchange Risk Foreign exchange risk
refers to losses that could result from changes in foreign-currency
exchange rates. Assets and liabilities that are denominated in
foreign currencies have foreign exchange risk. We are exposed to
non-trading foreign exchange risk from our investments in foreign
operations, and when our foreign currency assets are greater or
less than our liabilities in that currency, they create a foreign
currency open position. An adverse change in foreign exchange rates
can impact our reported net income and equity, and also our capital
ratios. Our objective is to minimize these impacts. Minimizing the
impact of an adverse foreign exchange rate change on reported
equity will cause some variability in capital ratios, due to the
amount of RWA that are denominated in a foreign currency. If the
Canadian dollar weakens, the Canadian-dollar equivalent of our RWA
in a foreign currency increases, thereby increasing our capital
requirement. For this reason, the foreign exchange risk arising
from the Bank's net investments in foreign operations is hedged to
the point where capital ratios change by no more than a tolerable
amount for a given change in foreign exchange rates. LIQUIDITY RISK
Liquidity risk is the risk that we cannot meet a demand for cash or
fund our obligations as they come due. Demand for cash can arise
from withdrawals of deposits, debt maturities and commitments to
provide credit. Liquidity risk also includes the risk of not being
able to liquidate assets in a timely manner at a reasonable price.
As a financial organization, we must always ensure that we have
access to enough readily-available funds to cover our financial
obligations as they come due and to sustain and grow our assets and
operations both under normal and stress conditions. In the unlikely
event of a funding disruption, we need to be able to continue to
function without being forced to sell too many of our assets. The
process that ensures adequate access to funds is known as the
management of liquidity risk. Who Manages Liquidity Risk The
Asset/Liability Committee oversees our liquidity risk management
program. It ensures that a management structure is in place to
properly measure and manage liquidity risk. In addition, a Global
Liquidity Forum, comprising senior management from Finance,
Treasury and Balance Sheet Management, Risk Management and
Wholesale Banking, identifies and monitors our liquidity risks.
When necessary, the Forum recommends actions to the Asset/Liability
Committee to maintain our liquidity position within limits in both
normal and stress conditions. We have one global liquidity risk
policy, but the major operating areas measure and manage liquidity
risks as follows: - The Treasury and Balance Sheet Management
Department is responsible for consolidating and reporting the
Bank's global liquidity risk position and for managing the Canadian
Personal and Commercial Banking liquidity position. - Wholesale
Banking is responsible for managing the liquidity risks inherent in
the wholesale banking portfolios. - TD Commerce is responsible for
managing its liquidity position. - Each area must comply with the
Global Liquidity Risk Management policy that is periodically
reviewed and approved by the Risk Committee of the Board. How we
Manage Liquidity Risk Our overall liquidity requirement is defined
as the amount of liquidity required to fund expected cash outflows,
as well as a liquidity reserve to fund potential cash outflows in
the event of a disruption in the capital markets or other event
that could affect our access to liquidity. We do not rely on
short-term wholesale funding for purposes other than funding
marketable securities or short-term assets. We measure liquidity
requirements using a conservative base case scenario to define the
amount of liquidity that must be held at all times for a specified
minimum period. This scenario provides coverage for 100% of our
unsecured wholesale debt coming due, potential retail and
commercial deposit run-off and forecast operational requirements.
In addition, we provide for coverage of Bank-sponsored funding
programs, such as Bankers' Acceptance notes we issue on behalf of
clients, and Bank-sponsored Asset-backed Commercial Paper. We also
use an extended liquidity coverage test to ensure that we can fund
our operations on a fully collateralized basis for a period up to
one year. We meet liquidity requirements by holding assets that can
be readily converted into cash, and by managing our cash flows. To
be considered readily convertible into cash, assets must be
currently marketable, of sufficient credit quality and available
for sale. Liquid assets are represented in a cumulative liquidity
gap framework based on settlement timing and market depth. Assets
needed for collateral purposes or those that are similarly
unavailable are not considered readily convertible into cash. While
each of our major operations has responsibility for the measurement
and management of its own liquidity risks, we also manage liquidity
on a global basis to ensure consistent and efficient management of
liquidity risk across all of our operations. On April 30, 2008, our
consolidated surplus liquid asset position up to 90 days was $5.7
billion, compared with a surplus liquid-asset position of $7.8
billion on January 31, 2008. Our surplus liquid-asset position is
our total liquid assets less our unsecured wholesale funding
requirements, potential non-wholesale deposit run-off and
contingent liabilities coming due in 90 days. Contingency Planning
If a liquidity crisis were to occur, we have contingency plans in
place to ensure that we can meet all our obligations as they come
due. At the time of preparing this report, global debt markets were
experiencing a significant liquidity event. During that time, we
continued to operate within our liquidity risk management framework
and limit structure. OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS The Bank
carries out certain business activities via arrangements with
special purpose entities (SPEs). We use SPEs to obtain sources of
liquidity by securitizing certain of the Bank's financial assets,
to assist our clients in securitizing their financial assets, and
to create investment products for our clients. SPEs may be
organized as trusts, partnerships or corporations and they may be
formed as qualifying special purpose entities (QSPEs) or variable
interest entities (VIEs). When an entity is deemed a VIE, the
entity must be consolidated by the primary beneficiary.
Consolidated SPEs have been presented in the Bank's Consolidated
Balance Sheet. Securitization of Bank-originated Assets The Bank
securitizes residential mortgages, personal loans, credit card
loans and commercial mortgages to enhance its liquidity position,
to diversify sources of funding and to optimize the management of
the balance sheet. All products securitized by the Bank were
originated in Canada and sold to Canadian securitization
structures. Details of these securitization exposures are as
follows:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Outstanding Exposures Securitized by the Bank as an
Originator(1),(2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(millions of Canadian dollars) As at April 30, 2008
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Significant Significant unconsolidated QSPEs unconsolidated SPEs
----------------------------------------- Carrying Carrying Securi-
value of Securi- value of tized retained tized retained assets
interests assets interests
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Residential mortgage loans $- $- $20,497 $322 Personal loans 8,500
88 - - Credit card loans 800 3 - - Commercial mortgage loans 155 5
- -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
$9,455 $96 $20,497 $322
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(millions of Canadian dollars) As at October 31, 2007
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Significant Significant unconsolidated QSPEs unconsolidated SPEs
----------------------------------------- Carrying Carrying Securi-
value of Securi- value of tized retained tized retained assets
interests assets interests
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Residential mortgage loans $- $- $20,352 $289 Personal loans 9,000
71 - - Credit card loans 800 6 - - Commercial mortgage loans 163 5
- -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
$9,963 $82 $20,352 $289
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Certain comparative amounts have been restated and reclassified
to conform to the presentation adopted in the current period. (2)
In all the securitization transactions that the Bank has undertaken
for its own assets, it has acted as an originating bank and
retained securitization exposure. Residential mortgage loans The
Bank may be exposed to the risks of transferred loans to the
securitization vehicles through retained interests. There are no
expected credit losses on the retained interests of the securitized
residential mortgages as the mortgages are all government
guaranteed. Personal loans The Bank securitizes personal loans
through QSPEs, as well as single-seller conduits via QSPEs. These
structures are used to enhance the Bank's liquidity position, to
diversify its sources of funding and to optimize the management of
its balance sheet. As at April 30, 2008, the single-seller conduits
had $5.1 billion (October 31, 2007 - $5.1 billion) of commercial
paper outstanding while another Bank-sponsored QSPE had $3.4
billion (October 31, 2007 - $3.9 billion) of term notes
outstanding. While the probability of loss is negligible, as at
April 30, 2008, the Bank's maximum potential exposure to loss for
these conduits through the sole provision of liquidity facilities
was $5.1 billion (October 31, 2007 - $5.1 billion) of which $1.1
billion of underlying personal loans was government insured.
Additionally, the Bank had retained interests of $88 million
(October 31, 2007 - $71 million) relating to excess spread. Credit
card loans The Bank provides credit enhancement to the QSPE through
its retained interests in the excess spread. As at April 30, 2008,
the maximum potential exposure to loss was $3 million (October 31,
2007 - $6 million) through retained interests. Commercial mortgage
loans As at April 30, 2008, the Bank's maximum potential exposure
to loss was $5 million (October 31, 2007 - $5 million) through
retained interests in the excess spread and cash collateral account
of the QSPE. Securitization of Third Party-originated Assets The
Bank administers multi-seller conduits and provides liquidity
facilities as well as securities distribution services; it may also
provide credit enhancements. All Bank-sponsored third
party-originated assets are securitized through SPEs, which are not
consolidated by the Bank. The Bank's maximum potential exposure to
loss due to its ownership interest in commercial paper and through
the provision of global style liquidity facilities for multi-seller
conduits was $12.4 billion (October 31, 2007 - $12.7 billion) as at
April 30, 2008. Further, the Bank has committed to an additional
$2.4 billion (October 31, 2007 - $2.5 billion) in liquidity
facilities for asset-backed commercial paper that could potentially
be issued by the conduits. As at April 30, 2008, the Bank also
provided deal-specific credit enhancement in the amount of $73
million (October 31, 2007 - $59 million). Note 25 to the Bank's
2007 Annual Consolidated Financial Statements provides detailed
information about the maximum amount of additional credit the Bank
could be obligated to commit. All third-party assets securitized by
the Bank were originated in Canada and sold to Canadian
securitization structures. Details of the Bank-administered
multi-seller, asset-backed commercial paper conduits are as
follows:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Outstanding Exposures Securitized by the Bank-Sponsored Third
Party-originated Assets(3)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(millions of Canadian dollars) As at April 30, 2008 As at October
31, 2007
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Signi- Ratings profile of Signi- Ratings profile of ficant SPE
asset class ficant SPE asset class unconsol- ------------------
unconsol- ------------------- idated idated SPEs AAA AA+ to AA-
SPEs AAA AA+ to AA-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Residential mortgage loans $3,337 $3,284 $53 $3,046 $2,998 $48
Credit card loans 507 507 - 486 486 - Automobile loans and leases
5,207 5,203 4 5,593 5,589 4 Equipment loans and leases 644 643 1
701 700 1 Trade receivables 2,749 2,722 27 2,833 2,805 28
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
$12,444 $12,359 $85 $12,659 $12,578 $81
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) Certain comparative amounts have been restated and reclassified
to conform to the presentation adopted in the current period.
Liquidity Facilities to Third Party-sponsored Conduits The Bank has
exposure to the U.S. arising from providing liquidity facilities of
$453 million (October 31, 2007 - $427 million) to third
party-sponsored conduits of which none has been drawn. The assets
within these conduits are primarily comprised of automotive-related
financing assets, including loans and leases. In the event that the
facilities are drawn, the Bank's credit exposure will mainly be AAA
rated. Other Investment and Financing Products Other Financing
Transactions The Bank enters into transactions with major U.S.
corporate clients through jointly-owned VIEs as a means to provide
them with cost efficient financing. Under these transactions, as at
April 30, 2008, the Bank provided approximately $1.9 billion
(October 31, 2007 - $3.0 billion) in financing to these VIEs. The
Bank has received guarantees from or has recourse to major U.S.
banks with credit ratings from AA to AA+ on an S&P equivalent
basis fully covering its investments in these VIEs. At the
inception of the transactions, the counterparties posted collateral
in favour of the Bank and the Bank purchased credit protection to
further reduce its exposure to the U.S. banks. At April 30, 2008,
the Bank's net exposure to the U.S. banks after taking into account
collateral and CDS was approximately $900 million (October 31, 2007
- $1.5 billion). As at April 30, 2008, the Bank's maximum total
exposure to loss before considering guarantees, recourse,
collateral and CDS was approximately $1.9 billion (October 31, 2007
- $3.0 billion). The transactions allow the Bank unilateral
discretion to exit the transactions every 30 to 90 days. As at
April 30, 2008, these VIEs had assets totalling more than $9.6
billion (October 31, 2007 - $12.0 billion). Exposure to
Collateralized Debt Obligations Since the decision was made in 2005
to exit the structured products business, the Bank no longer
originates Collateralized Debt Obligation vehicles (CDOs). As at
April 30, 2008, the Bank had approximately $583 million (October
31, 2007 - $ 677 million) of run-off notional exposure where the
Bank purchased credit protection via CDOs which it originated. In
addition, as at April 30, 2008, the Bank had approximately $2.4
billion (October 31, 2007 - $2.1 billion) of gross notional
exposure where the Bank sold credit protection via CDOs, of which
$1.6 billion (October 31, 2007 - $1.5 billion) was hedged on a
back-to-back basis by buying credit protection on the same CDOs,
which resulted in a net position of $0.8 billion (October 31, 2007
- $0.6 billion). The Bank does not have any exposure to U.S.
subprime mortgages via the CDOs. The CDOs are referenced to
primarily investment-grade corporate debt securities. The
back-to-back hedges are not entered into with monoline insurers;
rather they are entered into with global financial institutions,
such as universal banks or broker-dealers. All exposures are
managed as part of a trading portfolio with risk limits that have
been approved by the Bank's risk management group and are hedged
with various financial instruments, including credit derivatives
and bonds. Counterparty exposure on hedges is collateralized under
Credit Support Agreements (CSAs) and netting arrangements,
consistent with other over-the-counter (OTC) derivative contracts.
The Bank's CDO positions are fair valued using valuation techniques
with significant non-observable market inputs. A sensitivity
analysis was performed for all items fair valued using valuation
techniques with significant non-observable market inputs, and
disclosed in the Bank's 2007 Annual Consolidated Financial
Statements. Leveraged Finance Credit Commitments The Bank enters
into various commitments to meet the financing needs of the Bank's
clients and to earn fee income. Included in 'commitments to extend
credit', in Note 25 to the Bank's 2007 Annual Consolidated
Financial Statements, are leveraged finance commitments. Leveraged
finance commitments, are agreements that provide funding to a
wholesale borrower with higher levels of debt, measured by the
ratio of debt capital to equity capital of the borrower, relative
to the industry in which it operates. The Bank's exposure to
leveraged finance commitments as at April 30, 2008, was not
significant, except for its commitment to provide funding in the
amount of $3.3 billion (October 31, 2007 - $3.3 billion) to a
consortium led by Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan in their bid to
privatize BCE Inc. These products may expose the Bank to liquidity
and credit risks. There are adequate risk management and control
processes in place to mitigate these risks. Note 25 to the Bank's
2007 Annual Consolidated Financial Statements provides detailed
information about the maximum amount of additional credit the Bank
could be obligated to extend. Funding commitments on loans that the
Bank intends to syndicate are recorded as a derivative at fair
value with changes in fair value recorded through income.
RELATED-PARTY TRANSACTIONS During the quarter ended January 31,
2008, the Bank purchased certain securities with a notional value
of approximately $300 million at par from a fund that is managed by
the Bank. The Bank immediately recognized a securities loss of $45
million that was recorded in the Wholesale Banking segment.
QUARTERLY RESULTS The following table provides summary information
related to the Bank's eight most recently completed quarters.
Quarterly Results(1)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the three months ended
------------------------------------------------- (millions of 2008
Canadian dollars) Apr. 30 Jan. 31 Oct. 31 July 31 Apr. 30
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net interest income $1,858 $1,788 $1,808 $1,783 $1,662 Other income
1,530 1,816 1,742 1,899 1,882
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total revenue 3,388 3,604 3,550 3,682 3,544 Provision for (reversal
of) credit losses (232) (255) (139) (171) (172) Non-interest
expenses (2,206) (2,228) (2,241) (2,216) (2,297) Provision for
income taxes (160) (235) (153) (248) (234) Non-controlling
interests (9) (8) (8) (13) (27) Equity in net income of an
associated company, net of income taxes 71 92 85 69 65
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income - reported 852 970 1,094 1,103 879 Items of note
affecting net income, net of income taxes: Amortization of
intangibles 92 75 99 91 80 Gain relating to restructuring of Visa -
- (135) - - TD Banknorth restructuring, privatization and
merger-related charges - - - - 43 Restructuring and integration
charges relating to the Commerce acquisition 30 - - - - Change in
fair value of credit default swaps hedging the corporate loan book,
net of provision for credit losses (1) (25) 2 (30) (7) Other tax
items - 20 - - - Provision for insurance claims - 20 - - - Initial
set up of specific allowance for credit card and overdraft loans -
- - - - General allowance release - - (39) - -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total adjustments for items of note, net of income taxes 121 90
(73) 61 116
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income - adjusted 973 1,060 1,021 1,164 995 Preferred dividends
(11) (8) (5) (2) (7)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income available to common shareholders - adjusted $962 $1,052
$1,016 $1,162 $988
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Canadian dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Basic earnings per share - reported $1.12 $1.34 $1.52 $1.53 $1.21 -
adjusted 1.33 1.46 1.42 1.61 1.37 Diluted earnings per share -
reported 1.12 1.33 1.50 1.51 1.20 - adjusted 1.32 1.45 1.40 1.60
1.36 Return on common shareholders' equity 13.4% 18.0% 20.8% 21.0%
17.1%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------- For the three
months ended ----------------------------- (millions of 2007 2006
Canadian dollars) Jan. 31 Oct. 31 July 31
----------------------------------------------------- Net interest
income $1,671 $1,714 $1,623 Other income 1,834 1,604 1,688
----------------------------------------------------- Total revenue
3,505 3,318 3,311 Provision for (reversal of) credit losses (163)
(170) (109) Non-interest expenses (2,221) (2,211) (2,170) Provision
for income taxes (218) (175) (235) Non-controlling interests (47)
(48) (52) Equity in net income of an associated company, net of
income taxes 65 48 51
----------------------------------------------------- Net income -
reported 921 762 796 Items of note affecting net income, net of
income taxes: Amortization of intangibles 83 87 61 Gain relating to
restructuring of Visa - - - TD Banknorth restructuring,
privatization and merger-related charges - - - Restructuring and
integration charges relating to the Commerce acquisition - - -
Change in fair value of credit default swaps hedging the corporate
loan book, net of provision for credit losses 5 8 5 Other tax items
- - 24 Provision for insurance claims - - - Initial set up of
specific allowance for credit card and overdraft loans - 18 -
General allowance release - - -
----------------------------------------------------- Total
adjustments for items of note, net of income taxes 88 113 90
----------------------------------------------------- Net income -
adjusted 1,009 875 886 Preferred dividends (6) (5) (6)
----------------------------------------------------- Net income
available to common shareholders - adjusted $1,003 $870 $880
-----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------- (Canadian
dollars) -----------------------------------------------------
Basic earnings per share - reported $1.27 $1.05 $1.10 - adjusted
1.40 1.21 1.22 Diluted earnings per share - reported 1.26 1.04 1.09
- adjusted 1.38 1.20 1.21 Return on common shareholders' equity
18.2% 15.7% 16.8%
----------------------------------------------------- (1) Certain
comparative amounts have been restated to conform to the
presentation adopted in the current period. ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND
ESTIMATES The Bank's unaudited Interim Consolidated Financial
Statements, as presented on pages 32 to 46 of this Report to
Shareholders, have been prepared in accordance with GAAP. These
Interim Consolidated Financial Statements should be read in
conjunction with the Bank's audited Consolidated Financial
Statements for the year ended October 31, 2007. The accounting
policies used in the preparation of these Consolidated Financial
Statements are consistent with those used in the Bank's October 31,
2007 audited Consolidated Financial Statements, except as described
below. Changes in Significant Accounting Policies Capital
Disclosures Effective November 1, 2007, the CICA's new accounting
standard, Section 1535, Capital Disclosures, was implemented, which
requires the disclosure of both qualitative and quantitative
information that enables users of financial statements to evaluate
the entity's objectives, policies and processes for managing
capital. The new guidance did not have an effect on the financial
position or earnings of the Bank. Financial Instruments Disclosures
and Presentation Effective November 1, 2007, the accounting and
disclosure requirements of the CICA's two new accounting standards,
Section 3862, Financial Instruments - Disclosures, and Section
3863, Financial Instruments - Presentation, were implemented. The
new guidance did not have a material effect on the financial
position or earnings of the Bank. Accounting for Transaction Costs
of Financial Instruments Classified Other Than as Held For Trading
Effective November 1, 2007, the Bank adopted EIC-166, Accounting
Policy Choice for Transaction Costs. This abstract provided clarity
around the application of accounting guidance related to
transaction costs that is codified in Section 3855, Financial
Instruments - Recognition and Measurement. More specifically, the
abstract contemplated whether an entity must make one accounting
policy choice that applies to all financial assets and financial
liabilities classified other than as held for trading or whether
these transaction costs may be recognized in net income for certain
of these financial assets and liabilities and added to the carrying
amount for other financial assets and liabilities. The new guidance
did not have a material effect on the financial position or
earnings of the Bank. Critical Accounting Estimates The critical
accounting estimates remain unchanged from those disclosed in the
Bank's 2007 Annual Report. CHANGES IN INTERNAL CONTROL OVER
FINANCIAL REPORTING During the most recent interim period, there
have been no changes in the Bank's policies and procedures and
other processes that comprise its internal control over financial
reporting, that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely
to materially affect, the Bank's internal control over financial
reporting. INTERIM CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (unaudited)
INTERIM CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET (unaudited)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
As at ------------------- April 30 Oct. 31 (millions of Canadian
dollars) 2008 2007
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASSETS Cash and due from banks $2,520 $1,790 Interest-bearing
deposits with banks 15,599 14,746
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
18,119 16,536
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Securities Trading 83,084 77,637 Designated as trading under the
fair value option 2,043 2,012 Available-for-sale 53,929 35,650
Held-to-maturity 8,781 7,737
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
147,837 123,036
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Securities purchased under reverse repurchase agreements 33,067
27,648
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loans Residential mortgages 67,137 58,485 Consumer installment and
other personal 75,114 67,532 Credit card 6,166 5,700 Business and
government 60,661 44,258 Business and government designated as
trading under the fair value option 718 1,235
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
209,796 177,210 Allowance for credit losses (Note 4) (1,369)
(1,295)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loans, net of allowance for credit losses 208,427 175,915
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Customers' liability under acceptances 10,848 9,279
Investment in TD Ameritrade 4,829 4,515 Trading derivatives 37,602
36,052 Goodwill 14,213 7,918 Other intangibles 3,773 2,104 Land,
buildings and equipment 3,715 1,822 Other assets 21,191 17,299
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
96,171 78,989
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total assets $503,621 $422,124
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
LIABILITIES
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deposits Personal $185,490 $147,561 Banks 8,773 10,162 Business and
government 102,704 73,322 Trading 52,556 45,348
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
349,523 276,393
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Acceptances 10,848 9,279 Obligations related to securities
sold short 23,546 24,195 Obligations related to securities sold
under repurchase agreements 14,850 16,574 Trading derivatives
37,730 39,028 Other liabilities 22,101 23,829
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109,075 112,905
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subordinated notes and debentures (Note 6) 12,466 9,449
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Liabilities for preferred shares and capital trust securities (Note
7) 1,428 1,449
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-controlling interests in subsidiaries 534 524
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY Common shares (millions of shares issued and
outstanding: April 30, 2008 - 802.9 and Oct. 31, 2007 - 717.8)
(Note 8) 12,818 6,577 Preferred shares (millions of shares issued
and outstanding: April 30, 2008 - 45.0 and Oct. 31, 2007 - 17.0)
(Note 8) 1,125 425 Contributed surplus 383 119 Retained earnings
16,864 15,954 Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (Note
10) (595) (1,671)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
30,595 21,404
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity $503,621 $422,124
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certain comparative amounts have been reclassified to conform to
the current period's presentation. The accompanying notes are an
integral part of these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements.
INTERIM CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF INCOME (unaudited)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the three For the six months ended months ended
--------------------------------------- April 30 April 30 April 30
April 30 (millions of Canadian dollars) 2008 2007 2008 2007
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interest income Loans $3,240 $3,117 $6,636 $6,191 Securities
Dividends 242 189 502 462 Interest 929 919 1,904 1,905 Deposits
with banks 159 111 273 158
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
4,570 4,336 9,315 8,716
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interest expense Deposits 2,056 1,989 4,310 4,037 Subordinated
notes and debentures 159 124 317 232 Preferred shares and capital
trust securities 23 32 46 62 Other liabilities 474 529 996 1,052
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2,712 2,674 5,669 5,383
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net interest income 1,858 1,662 3,646 3,333
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other income Investment and securities services 544 619 1,123 1,199
Credit fees 108 103 209 199 Net securities gains 110 102 262 172
Trading (loss) income (104) 192 56 408 Income (loss) from financial
instruments designated as trading under the fair value option 5 5
(44) (4) Service charges 258 244 518 493 Loan securitizations (Note
5) 91 97 167 231 Card services 116 107 235 216 Insurance, net of
claims 250 251 436 505 Trust fees 36 38 70 69 Other 116 124 314 228
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1,530 1,882 3,346 3,716
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total revenue 3,388 3,544 6,992 7,049
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Provision for credit losses (Note 4) 232 172 487 335
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-interest expenses Salaries and employee benefits 1,137 1,169
2,308 2,326 Occupancy, including depreciation 188 185 369 360
Equipment, including depreciation 148 153 292 297 Amortization of
other intangibles 117 112 239 230 Restructuring costs (Note 13) 48
67 48 67 Marketing and business development 102 111 212 224
Brokerage-related fees 63 57 122 111 Professional and advisory
services 118 108 229 234 Communications 48 49 95 98 Other 237 286
520 571
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2,206 2,297 4,434 4,518
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income before provision for income taxes, non-controlling interests
in subsidiaries and equity in net income of an associated company
950 1,075 2,071 2,196 Provision for income taxes 160 234 395 452
Non-controlling interests in subsidiaries, net of income taxes 9 27
17 74 Equity in net income of an associated company, net of income
taxes 71 65 163 130
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income 852 879 1,822 1,800 Preferred dividends 11 7 19 13
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income available to common shareholders $841 $872 $1,803 $1,787
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average number of common shares outstanding (millions) (Note 14)
Basic 747.7 719.1 732.9 718.7 Diluted 753.7 725.9 739.0 725.4
Earnings per share (in dollars) (Note 14) Basic $1.12 $1.21 $2.46
$2.49 Diluted 1.12 1.20 2.44 2.46 Dividends per share (in dollars)
0.59 0.53 1.16 1.01
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certain comparative amounts have been reclassified to conform to
the current period's presentation. The accompanying notes are an
integral part of these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements.
INTERIM CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
(unaudited)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the three For the six months ended months ended
--------------------------------------- April 30 April 30 April 30
April 30 (millions of Canadian dollars) 2008 2007 2008 2007
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Common shares (Note 8) Balance at beginning of period $6,632 $6,417
$6,577 $6,334 Proceeds from shares issued on exercise of options 29
19 71 53 Shares issued as a result of dividend reinvestment plan 22
21 43 40 Impact of shares (acquired) sold for trading purposes(1)
(12) (2) (20) 28 Shares issued on acquisition of Commerce 6,147 -
6,147 -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at end of period 12,818 6,455 12,818 6,455
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Preferred shares (Note 8) Balance at beginning of period 875 425
425 425 Share issues 250 - 700 -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at end of period 1,125 425 1,125 425
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contributed surplus Balance at beginning of period 121 68 119 66
Stock options (Note 11) (1) 4 1 6 Conversion of TD Banknorth stock
options on privatization (Note 11) - 52 - 52 Conversion of Commerce
stock options on acquisition (Note 11) 263 - 263 -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at end of period 383 124 383 124
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Retained earnings Balance at beginning of period 16,499 14,375
15,954 13,725 Transition adjustment on adoption of Financial
Instruments standards - - - 80 Net income 852 879 1,822 1,800
Common dividends (473) (382) (883) (727) Preferred dividends (11)
(7) (19) (13) Other (3) - (10) -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at end of period 16,864 14,865 16,864 14,865
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss), net of income taxes
(Note 10) Balance at beginning of period (1,187) (268) (1,671)
(918) Transition adjustment on adoption of Financial Instruments
standards - - - 426 Other comprehensive income for the period 592
174 1,076 398
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at end of period (595) (94) (595) (94)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total shareholders' equity $30,595 $21,775 $30,595 $21,775
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Purchased by subsidiaries of the Bank, which are regulated
securities entities in accordance with Regulation 92-313 under the
Bank Act. DATASOURCE: TD Bank Financial Group CONTACT: PRNewswire -
- 05/28/2008
Copyright