BANK OF MONTREAL $30 (Toronto symbol BMO; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Finance sector; Shares outstanding: 503 million; Market cap: $15.1 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 0.8; SI Rating: Above Average) is Canada’s fourth-largest bank, with assets of $416.1 billion.
AIG buy probably a bargain
Bank of Montreal continues to focus on its retail banking business and shrink its corporate-lending and stock market-related activities. This should give it more stable revenue streams. The bank also aims to spur growth at its insurance operations, which currently supply just 2% of its revenue. It recently agreed to pay $375 million for the Canadian life insurance business of troubled U.S. insurer American International Group Inc. Bank of Montreal earned $2 billion, or $3.76 a share, in fiscal 2008, down 7.2% from $2.1 billion, or $4.11 a share, in the prior year. The latest results included $419 million of after-tax writedowns of securities, as well as a $977-million increase in loan-loss provisions. The prior year included $787 million in unusual charges. Revenue rose 9.2%, to $10.2 billion from $9.3 billion. Bad loans now stand at 0.4% of Bank of Montreal’s total loans. The U.S. accounts for 28% of its loans, so the struggling U.S. economy could limit Bank of Montreal’s growth in 2009. Still, the stock trades at a reasonable 7.3 times its projected 2009 earnings of $4.13 a share. The $2.80 dividend yields 9.3%. Bank of Montreal is a buy.