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DATE

Thursday, May 28, 2026 at 7:00 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • President & Chief Executive Officer — David McKay
  • Chief Financial Officer — Katherine Gibson
  • Chief Risk Officer — Graeme Hepworth
  • Head, Canadian Personal and Business Banking — Sean Amato-Gauci
  • Group Head, Wealth Management — Erica Nielsen
  • Group Head, Capital Markets — Derek Neldner

TAKEAWAYS

  • Net Income -- $5.5 billion reported and $5.6 billion adjusted, attributed to revenue growth of 11% and operating leverage over 3%.
  • Return on Equity (ROE) -- 17.2% driven by a 13.5% common equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio and internal capital generation of 75 basis points.
  • Earnings per Share -- Diluted EPS of $3.85; adjusted diluted EPS of $3.90, up 25%.
  • Operating Leverage -- All-bank adjusted operating leverage of 2% supported by expense discipline.
  • Pre-provision Pretax Earnings -- Up 15%, led by strong Capital Markets and diversified revenue mix.
  • Capital Markets Net Income -- Record $1.5 billion, with Investment Banking revenue up 27% and Global Markets revenue up 16%.
  • Wealth Management Net Income -- $1.2 billion, a 28% increase; assets under administration exceeded $1 trillion in Canada and nearly USD 800 billion in the U.S.
  • Personal Banking Net Income -- $1.9 billion, with Canadian business up 18% and operating leverage of 4%.
  • Commercial Banking Net Income -- $854 million, up 43%, with deposits up 3% and 12 consecutive quarters of share gains in balances.
  • Insurance Net Income -- $218 million, up 3% on higher investment results and 17% growth in premiums and deposits.
  • Shareholder Returns -- Dividend increased by $0.12 from previous quarter, a 14% year-over-year rise, and 7 million shares repurchased at a 2% annualized pace.
  • AI Investments -- Over 200 AI models deployed, supporting an enterprise value target of $700 million to $1 billion and 500% increase in LLM token usage since 2025.
  • PCL (Provisions for Credit Losses) -- $899 million (34 basis points), down $169 million quarter over quarter, reflecting lower provisions in multiple segments.
  • Gross Impaired Loans -- $9.8 billion, a $623 million sequential rise, mostly in Capital Markets and Wealth Management, with a notable increase from a large U.S. commercial real estate file.
  • Expense Growth -- Adjusted noninterest expense up 9%, with half due to higher variable compensation and the remainder to staff costs, technology, legal, and marketing.
  • Buyback Authorization -- Announced normal course issuer bid to repurchase up to 45 million common shares, pending approvals.
  • U.S. Efficiency Ratio -- Improved from 83% in 2024 to 75%, with a regional target in the low 70s.
  • Net Interest Income -- All-bank NII up 6%, driven by volume/margin growth, partially offset by lower HSBC Canada-related purchase price adjustments.

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RISKS

  • Chief Risk Officer Hepworth stated, “the uncertainty around our forecast has increased,” leading to retention of elevated downside scenario weightings and additional severity in macroeconomic assumptions.
  • Gross impaired loans increased by $623 million, primarily from real estate and consumer exposures, with the “GIL ratio increase,” and management indicated this could continue due to slow resolution rates.
  • Canadian credit cards portfolio “has seen a sustained increase in PCL over the last few quarters driven by regional pressures, particularly in Ontario.”
  • Management flagged that “headwinds from the conflict in the Middle East, U.S. tariffs, trade policy uncertainty and a shrinking population will likely keep economic risk elevated.”

SUMMARY

Royal Bank of Canada (RY +0.34%) reported significant adjusted EPS growth and robust net income, bolstered by exceptional results in Capital Markets and Wealth Management. Strategic allocation of capital supported both dividend growth and share repurchases, while investments in AI and technology improved efficiency and client engagement. Management noted that heightened geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainties have resulted in a more cautious outlook, reflected in credit allocations and allowance modeling.

  • Personal Banking experienced higher deposit rotation from savings to investments, with internal migration contributing to mutual fund net sales and market share gains.
  • Cross-segment lending activity was propelled by growth in health care, agriculture, and service sectors, alongside elevated transaction banking demand.
  • Management reaffirmed mid-single-digit full-year guidance for both net interest income (excluding trading) and expense growth, targeting ongoing positive operating leverage.
  • Wealth Management attracted over $10 billion in net new Canadian assets and USD 5 billion in U.S. assets, augmented by ongoing advisor recruitment.
  • M&A and capital raising mandates evidenced strong client activity, supported by marquee transactions in technology, energy, and infrastructure.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • CET1 (Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio): Core measure of a bank's financial strength, focusing on tier-one capital relative to risk-weighted assets.
  • NCIB (Normal Course Issuer Bid): Program allowing a listed company to repurchase its own shares from the market subject to regulatory limits.
  • PCL (Provisions for Credit Losses): Charges set aside for potential loan losses from impaired credits on the balance sheet.
  • LLM (Large Language Model): Advanced AI model for natural language processing, underlying AI-powered business applications.
  • ATOM Foundation model: Proprietary AI model referenced by Royal Bank of Canada, driving personalized client experiences.
  • GIL (Gross Impaired Loans): Total value of loans with evidence of impairment, often indicating weakening credit quality.
  • PPA (Purchase Price Adjustment): Accounting adjustment to value acquired assets and liabilities post-acquisition, often impacting reported earnings.

Full Conference Call Transcript

David McKay: Thanks, Asim, and good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Today we reported earnings of $5.5 billion and adjusted earnings of $5.6 billion, our second highest quarterly performance on record. As you'll see on Slide 4, pre-provision pretax earnings were up 15% from last year, benefiting from strong revenue growth of 11% and all bank operating leverage of over 3%. Our performance this quarter delivered a 17.2% return on equity on the foundation of a robust 13.5% common equity Tier 1 ratio. These results were underpinned by the strength of our diversified business model benefiting from both a constructive environment for our market-related businesses and operating scale in our Canadian Personal Banking and Commercial Banking segments.

Capital Markets reported record net income reflecting strong performance in both Global Markets and Investment Banking. Wealth Management continued to report strong results across our North American advisory and asset management businesses. Personal Banking results were driven by an operating leverage of 3% and growth of in-money balances. Commercial Banking generated an ROE of over 17%. Moving to Slide 5, starting with Capital Markets, where Global Investment Banking improved their last 12-month market share to over 2% as we saw record levels of fee-based revenue from strong M&A advisory activity as well as debt and equity origination. In Global Markets, our ongoing investments in talent and technology are strengthening our equities franchise, which also reported record revenue this quarter.

Our strong FICC franchise also reported solid results. We also saw solid growth in our financing transaction banking businesses as we continue to support our clients' growth aspirations. With the leading Canadian franchise as well as the a 10 ranked global business, we are in a great position to support and grow alongside key macro trends, including AI, energy, digital infrastructure and aerospace and defense around the world. In AI and related infrastructure, we advised CPPIB on its U.S. $4.2 billion acquisition of atNorth, a Pan-Nordic data center operator, as well as acted as joint active book runner on Alphabet's $8.5 billion inaugural Maple senior unsecured notes offering, the largest bond offering ever in the Canadian market.

In the energy space, RBC acted as an exclusive financial adviser to Arq Resources on their sale agreement with Shell, and a transaction valued at $22 billion. In the United States, RBC acted as joint lead book runner to Fervo Energy on their recent $2.2 billion IPO. Wealth Management continued to drive strong performance in a volatile environment. Clients are coming to us for trusted advice as they move money back into investments across our distribution network, including our full-service Dominion Securities and PH&N Investment Council channels as well as through our Personal Banking network.

Our leading Canadian Wealth Management business with assets under administration of over $1 trillion benefited from both market appreciation as well as $10 billion in net new assets this quarter. U.S. Wealth Management AUA of nearly USD 800 billion included USD 5 billion in net new assets this quarter and over USD 2 billion in recruited assets benefiting from our continued adviser recruitment. Furthermore, credit and lending balances were up 16% from last year, reflecting growing demand from U.S. clients for our full-service capabilities. Loan growth in City National was also strong, up 9% year-over-year in U.S. dollars.

RBC Global Asset Management assets -- sorry, assets under management, surpassed $800 billion this quarter, benefiting from leading mutual fund net sales as we continue to capture money-in-motion in our Canadian retail channels amidst changing client preferences. In this context, the combined Personal Banking Canada average deposits and AUA were up 5% or $34 billion year-over-year, with spot Personal Banking AUA surpassing $300 billion for the first time. We maintained very high retention rates as clients moved between deposits and investments. As always, we're guided by doing what we think is right for them given interest rate and equity market conditions.

Mortgage growth continued to be impacted by macro uncertainty and moderating house prices, with funded volumes largely driven by an increase in switch activity. Importantly, approximately 90% of home equity balances had a multiproduct relationship. Commercial Banking growth remains resilient despite facing 2 structural demand headwinds with Ontario seeing the greatest impact. Firstly, tariff-driven uncertainty is having a disproportionate impact on the growth in trade-exposed sectors such as supply chain. Secondly, we continue to see moderating demand in commercial real estate, particularly in condo development. Nonetheless, we have delivered 12 consecutive quarters of market share capture in leading balances -- and lending balances as of last quarter.

We're seeing growth in health care and other service-oriented sectors and regions such as the Prairies. And we're also beginning to see increased FX and cash management-related activity. I'll now shift to the macro environment. We are operating in a world of competing signals. Equity markets are hitting record highs, driven in part by expectations of rising corporate profits and an AI-enabled future. At the same time, bond yields tell a different story, reflecting the risk of monetary tightening as inflation pressures build from both the direct and indirect impacts of the energy shock. Throughout this period of volatility, the Canadian economy has remained resilient with an annualized GDP growth tracking at 1.7% in Q1 2026.

Core inflation, excluding energy, has stayed broadly stable and our own card spending data shows consumers are still spending in service-related sectors despite the energy disruption. So far, weakness in tariff-exposed sectors has not spread to the broader economy, with growth seen in several sectors, including energy and agriculture. However, uncertainty remains elevated. The near-term outlook for Canada hinges on how CUSMA negotiations unfold and how long the Middle East conflict persists with impacts yet to be fully felt on input costs. The outcome of these factors will have implications for client demand, supply chain stability and the direction of monetary policy. Looking further out, there are emerging opportunities that are creating optimism.

We believe the resolution of CUSMA uncertainty, new trading relationships and the advancement of major nation-building projects can meaningfully expand the Canadian economic ecosystem, creating a multiplier effect on the near -- over the near to medium term. RBC Research sheds light on enormous opportunity for Canada. The country can become an energy superpower, strengthen its presence in the critical mineral supply chain, expand power infrastructure and build a stronger strategic defense posture. We encourage policymakers and all levels of government to continue to work together to secure Canada's future prosperity. As Canada's largest bank, we're well positioned to support the future, with a strong balance sheet and leading franchises. We backed that commitment with action.

We recently announced an Indigenous advisory and finance practice within RBC Capital Markets to help expand access to capital for indigenous-owned major projects and investments. Beyond Canada, global fee pools have maintained their momentum as the macro environment continues to support growing corporate activity and strategic boardroom discussions. Our own investment banking pipeline remains healthy, in part due to our ongoing investments in talent to build bench strength in high priority areas. Moving to Slide 6. We constantly strive to optimize long-term shareholder value through increased profitability, client-driven growth and returning capital to shareholders. We have increased our return on assets to approximately 90 basis points by executing against key strategic initiatives.

We have increased our revenue productivity through our diversified fee-based businesses and by leveraging our technology and operational scale to improve cost efficiency, all while continuing to grow our businesses. We've improved our U.S. region efficiency ratio from 83% in 2024 to 75% this quarter. We continue to make significant progress in bringing together our strong U.S. franchises as we drive towards our target of a regional efficiency ratio in the low 70s. We're also committed to our bold ambitions when it comes to generating $700 million to $1 billion in enterprise value from AI.

We've developed over 200 leading-edge AI models, rethinking how we operate, streamline workflows and delivering more hyper-personalized client experiences by leveraging our proprietary ATOM Foundation model and our increasing data scale within our Lumina platform. Since 2025, LLM token usage has increased by over 500%, reflecting the speed at which AI is being integrated into daily workflows and critical business processes. Our digital assistant uses AI for intent detection and orchestration, navigating clients to digital capabilities or the best adviser across the network, allowing our people to focus on deepening client relationships. We've also deployed AI to deliver significant time savings. An AI-powered search of policy procedure articles for 2 advisers is processing approximately 2 million searches per month.

Commercial Banking, our clients' financials are being ingested and spread using AI. AI is also accelerating how we're building our technology platform of the future. To date, AI has contributed to the development of over 24 million lines of code and facilitated over 120,000 code reviews. Given the importance of combining technology with talent, we continue to invest in our people to accelerate client-driven, profitable growth opportunities, which remains our priority. We're hiring senior talent in key sectors and capital markets, growing our adviser base in North American and wealth advisory businesses while adding relationship managers across our Commercial Banking businesses in Canada and City National Bank.

Beyond these strategic investments, we remain committed to returning capital to shareholders in a balanced way. Our total payout ratio has increased from 51% in 2024 to 65% in the first half of 2026. This morning, we increased our dividend by $0.12 from last quarter, a 14% increase year-over-year as we look to drive our dividend payout ratio towards the midpoint of our 40% to 50% medium-term objective. Buybacks remain an important avenue for returning capital to shareholders. We increased our buybacks to 7 million shares this quarter at an annualized pace of 2% of our common shares outstanding.

Furthermore, we announced our intention this morning subject to relevant stock exchange and regulatory approvals to commence a normal course issuer bid to repurchase for cancellation up to 45 million common shares. We plan to continue buying back our shares as we believe their intrinsic value remains higher than current valuations given the opportunities to improve both profitability and growth while maintaining a strong balance sheet in an uncertain environment. However, we remain disciplined. We will look to optimize not only ROE and EPS growth but also the compounding of our book value per share growth, which is also an important driver of long-term shareholder value. And with that, Katherine, over to you.

Katherine Gibson: Thanks, Dave, and good morning, everyone. Starting with Slide 8. This quarter, we reported strong results with diluted earnings per share of $3.85. Adjusted diluted earnings per share of $3.90 was up 25% from last year, reflecting solid revenue growth and all bank operating leverage of 2%. FX trends, including U.S. dollar weakness, reduced earnings by $85 million from last year, and earnings were sequentially impacted by 3 fewer days this quarter. Turning to capital on Slide 9. The CET1 ratio of 13.5% was down 20 basis points from last quarter. Our strong ROE of 17.2% was underpinned by 75 basis points of internal capital generation this quarter.

Net of both dividends and client-driven RWA growth, we generated 23 basis points of capital, which was mostly offset by repurchases of 7.4 million shares, for approximately $1.7 billion. Retail parameter changes, which we guided to in Q1, and the impact of market movements on OCI balances also had a modest negative impact. Moving to Slide 10. All bank net interest income was up 6% from last year, reflecting volume growth and higher spreads. This was partly offset by lower purchase price adjustments, or PPA, related to the acquisition of HSBC Canada. All bank net interest margin was up 3 basis points from last quarter.

All bank NIM, excluding trading revenue, was down 2 basis points sequentially, including the impact of lower lending spreads in Capital Markets, which partly reflects a shift toward investment-grade loans. As a reminder, the cost of funding of certain transactions, particularly in Capital Markets, is recorded in interest expense, while related revenue is recorded in other noninterest income. This was particularly evident on a year-over-year basis this quarter. Canadian Banking NIM was flat relative to last quarter, including a 4 basis point impact from lower HSBC Canada acquisition-related PPA and increased competitive pricing pressures for term deposits.

These were offset by continued benefits from our structural hedges and seasonally higher spreads within our lending portfolio, which in the past has included items such as higher credit card revolve rate. Moving to Slide 11. Reported noninterest expense was up 8% from last year. Adjusted expense growth was 9%, of which approximately half was driven by higher variable compensation consistent with higher revenues in Wealth Management and Capital Markets. The remainder of the increase was largely driven by a combination of growth-related initiatives, including higher salaries and other staff-related costs, as well as ongoing technology initiatives, marketing and business development. Legal provisions of $84 million in corporate support also contributed to the increase.

Our adjusted all-bank operating leverage of 2% helped lower our all-bank adjusted efficiency ratio by 1 percentage point from last year, as we continue to focus on expense discipline. This includes optimizing our multichannel distribution network and leveraging both digital and AI-driven initiatives across multiple workflows and businesses. Moving to taxes. As per our guidance, the adjusted non-TEB effective tax rate of 22.5% largely reflected changes in earnings mix. I'll now turn to our Q2 segment results beginning on Slide 12. Personal Banking reported strong earnings of $1.9 billion this quarter. Net income in Personal Banking Canada was up 18% from last year.

Revenue growth was 6%, benefiting from the strength of our leading scale in money and franchise, as client balances shifted between core banking accounts, term deposits and our diverse investment offerings, including within our Wealth Management business. Net interest income was up 6% from last year, reflecting solid average volume growth and higher margins. Noninterest income was up 5% from last year, reflecting double-digit growth in mutual fund revenue, partly offset by lower service charges, including impacts from regulatory changes we guided to in Q1. Volatility in card service revenue also impacted the quarter. Operating leverage was strong, 4%, benefiting from continued expense management. Turning to Slide 13.

Commercial Banking reported strong net income of $854 million, up 43% from last year, which included elevated PCL on both performing and impaired loans. Pre-provision pretax earnings were up 5% from last year, driven by higher net interest income growth, reflecting higher volumes and a favorable deposit mix as well as higher margins. Deposits increased 3% from last year and flat sequentially, largely driven by higher nonmaturity deposits despite seasonally higher tax payment activity by our clients. Amidst continued tariff-related uncertainties, loans were up 3% from last year or 1% sequentially. Turning to Wealth Management on Slide 14. Net income of $1.2 billion was up 28% from last year, reflecting strong revenue growth.

Noninterest income was up 10%, reflecting higher fee-based client assets driven by market appreciation, particularly in North American equity markets, and net new asset growth. In RBC Global Asset Management, we continue to see positive retail net sales with $5.2 billion in long-term retail, largely distributed across equity and balance mandates. This was partly offset by outflows in institutional mandates, which can be lumpy in nature. Transaction revenue, reflecting increased client activity in Canadian Wealth Management also contributed to the increase. Net interest income was up 10% from last year, benefiting from higher spreads, reflecting higher mortgage roll-on rates and loan growth in U.S. Wealth Management, including City National Bank.

Canadian Wealth Management also contributed to the increase, reflecting deposit growth. Turning to our Capital Markets results on Slide 15. Record net income of $1.5 billion increased 23% from last year, underpinning a strong ROE of 14.8% and an efficiency ratio of 53.2%. Strong pre-provision pretax earnings of $1.8 billion was up 30% from last year, reflecting strong revenue growth. Global Markets revenue was up 16% from last year, reflecting continued momentum in cash equities and derivatives and a rebound in credit trading from a challenging market backdrop last year. This was partly offset by market headwinds for rates trading in Europe this quarter. Corporate and Investment Banking revenue was a record, up 17% from last year.

Investment Banking revenue was up 27% from last year and lending and transaction banking revenue was up 10%, driven by higher volumes. Turning to Slide 16. Insurance net income of $218 million was up 3% from last year, reflecting strong insurance investment results from lower funding costs as well as lower expenses. This was partly offset by lower insurance service results on unfavorable claims experience, offset partly by the favorable impact of reinsurance contract recaptures. Premiums and deposits were up 17% from last year, reflecting strong segregated fund and group annuity sales. Corporate Support reported a net loss of $102 million.

Segment net interest income and expenses represented a modest 2% and 1% of all-bank results, respectively, underscoring our disciplined approach to transfer pricing and expense allocation. We are similarly disciplined when it comes to allocating capital internally, including a 12.1% capital attribution rate to our business segment, which we increased last year. We also allocate the leverage required to each business segment's attributed capital. In conclusion, I'll now spend a few minutes updating our outlook for the remainder of 2026. We continue to expect that annual all-bank net interest income growth, excluding trading, to be in the mid-single-digit range, including over $250 million of lower PPA benefits.

We expect portfolio mortgage spreads to be marginally higher by the end of 2026 as roll-on spreads are expected to be slightly higher than roll-off spreads. However, any changes in competitive intensity could provide headwinds. We also maintain our guidance of full year all-bank expense growth in the mid-single-digit range, and positive all-bank operating leverage, including higher variable compensation and costs associated with growth-related initiatives and continued investments in our safety and soundness framework. Lastly, given the uncertain environment, we intend to maintain capital levels closer to the higher end of our targeted CET1 range, while returning capital to shareholders through dividends and share buybacks. With that, I'll now turn it over to Graeme.

Graeme Hepworth: Great. Thank you, Katherine, and good morning, everyone. I'll now discuss our allowances in the context of the current macroeconomic environment, evolving geopolitical tensions and ongoing trade uncertainty. As Dave noted earlier, while North American economies continue to show resilience, we are also seeing soft underlying conditions with geopolitical risks and trade uncertainties pushing inflation and interest rate risk higher, imposing potential headwinds to growth. Currently, our Canadian GDP growth and unemployment rate base case forecasts are a little changed from last quarter. However, the base case is conditional on the conflict in the Middle East being resolved in the near term and the core of CUSMA largely remaining intact.

While our base case outlook remains cautiously optimistic, the uncertainty around our forecast has increased. As a result, we have incorporated a modest amount of additional severity into our downside macroeconomic scenarios. Furthermore, consistent with the last 4 quarters, we've also retained elevated weightings to our downside scenarios. These scenarios incorporate potential impacts from inflationary and geopolitical headwinds. Turning to Slide 18. We took a total of $18 million or 1 basis points of provisions on performing loans this quarter. This was driven by unfavorable macroeconomic impacts, which were partially offset by changes in credit quality and updates to our retail models. Moving to Slide 19.

Gross impaired loans of $9.8 billion increased by $623 million or 4 basis points from last quarter, primarily driven by Capital Markets and Wealth Management. In Capital Markets, impaired loans increased by $321 million driven by formations across a few sectors, including real estate, forest products and consumer discretionary. The increase in real estate is predominantly driven by one larger commercial real estate file in the U.S. In Wealth Management, impaired loans have increased by $224 million, predominantly in City National, and driven by names in utilities, real estate and other services sectors, as well as our consumer mortgage portfolio.

Recall that in the first quarter of 2025, we had increased performing provisions on select mortgages at City National due to the California wildfires. This quarter, we've identified a small subset of higher-risk clients, most of which were subject to deferral programs, that we have now moved into impaired status. While impaired loans remain elevated, new formations decreased quarter-over-quarter across most segments, including Capital Markets. Turning to Slide 20. PCL and impaired loans of 34 basis points or $899 million was down $169 million or 6 basis points quarter-over-quarter, reflecting lower provisions across Capital Markets, Personal Banking and Commercial Banking.

In Capital Markets, PCL and impaired loans totaled $113 million, down $132 million quarter-over-quarter due to the absence of any larger losses on new individual impairments, partially offset by incremental provisions on some existing impaired names. In Personal Banking, PCL on impaired loans totaled $488 million or 36 basis points, down $28 million quarter-over-quarter driven by lower provisions in residential mortgages and personal loans, partially offset by higher provisions in credit cards. The credit cards portfolio in particular has seen a sustained increase in PCL over the last few quarters driven by regional pressures, particularly in Ontario. In Commercial Banking, PCL and impaired loans totaled $246 million or 53 basis points, down $27 million quarter-over-quarter.

While we saw a reduction in new provisions, impairments remain elevated due to softer economic conditions in Canada, especially in economically sensitive sectors and regions. In Wealth Management, PCL and impaired loans totaled $52 million or 16 basis points, up $18 million quarter-over-quarter, with new provisions in both the utilities and other sectors. To conclude, while we are pleased with the credit performance this quarter, we continue to have a cautious outlook on credit. For the Canadian economy, we are seeing signs of stabilization and we expect to see continued modest economic growth. Sectors exposed to U.S. tariffs have experienced job losses, but those losses have not spread to the broader economy.

Internally, credit indicators have generally been stable or improving. This includes a stabilizing delinquency rates across most retail products as well as moderate improvements in wholesale indicators such as watch list exposure and files moving to our workout team. In terms of the external environment, headwinds from the conflict in the Middle East, U.S. tariffs, trade policy uncertainty and a shrinking population will likely keep economic risk elevated. Despite heightened uncertainty, we remain confident in the overall quality, diversification and resilience of our portfolios. Our robust provisioning framework and monitoring allow us to assess a wide range of [indiscernible] outcomes and impacts to our portfolio.

We continue to expect our full year 2026 provisions on impaired loans to remain within the range we previously guided to. And now back to Dave.

David McKay: Thanks, Graeme. So to close, we continue to execute against our strategic priorities and look to drive improvements in our profitability metrics while deploying capital for client-driven growth and returning capital to shareholders. Our underlying strength is built on a foundation of a strong brand, a robust balance sheet and one RBC diversified business model where we have leading scale in our home market while having a diversified footprint at scale beyond Canada. This combination was underpinned -- or has underpinned the resilience of our earnings through several shocks over the recent cycle, generating an average ROE of 16% from 2020 onwards and over 17% over the last 12 months. With that, operator, let's open the lines for Q&A.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] And your first question comes from the line of Ebrahim Poonawala with Bank of America.

Ebrahim Poonawala: Maybe, Dave, for you, just listening to your prepared remarks on the macro and then Graeme kind of handicapping credit risk tied to the war, the trade uncertainty, I guess the question from an investor standpoint is, is the risk of things breaking negatively over the next 6 to 12 months higher, than things moving in the right direction and a year from now looking a lot more constructive? As you look at both those, one, is that the right frame through which to think about where the macro could go either well or negatively?

And within that, like do you have enough confidence based on what you're hearing from either the Prime Minister Carney and his administration where USMCA negotiations might be going, just at least -- and what you're seeing in terms of the ground reality in Canada today, that things have actually stabilized and are ready to improve? Or is it still too early to make a call there?

David McKay: Yes. Ebrahim, a very good question. So I feel good about where we are. I think I'm really impressed by the resilience of the Canadian economy right now. When you think about the positive growth that we're looking at, our forecast might be on the more optimistic side in our economics group, but we're thinking 1.5% to 1.6% GDP growth over the coming 4 quarters. And that's in the face of very little residential real estate activity, very little commercial activity. The fact that's such a big part of the Canadian economy, and we've shown an ability to grow through that, the consumer is still spending and the consumer is saving as well.

So I see so many positive trends in the Canadian economy that's allowed us to be resilient to what we have. Notwithstanding that, we should be eyes wide open about the Section 232 impacts that have had on the Ontario economy in particular, it's led to credit weakness that we've recognized in our portfolio in Stage 3 and Stage 1 and 2 builds, as you know. So there is a little bit of caution there that we're not through the Section 232. But I still come back to this is an important trade deal for both countries. It's pursuing along a track that's not dissimilar to the track that happened the last time.

And I'm optimistic we'll get to something that's good for both countries. So I'm impressed by the resilience, notwithstanding the Section 232s have impacted the Canadian economy and then created some weakness there. And then there's the longer-term investment. You saw the risk on Canada. You saw the investment flows shifting. You saw Canada moving in. These are going to still take a while to get shovels in the ground, but they're moving at a pace and in parallel that we haven't seen before. And I'm getting -- I'm excited about the opportunity to deploy RBC capital into that, and we have a significant balance sheet to do that.

The investment -- we're going to have an investment forum again with the Prime Minister in the fall, and we're going to showcase some of these and a number of these energy opportunities, rare earth minerals, infrastructure opportunities, electricity grid. You go through the fence build, you go through the opportunities for this country to deploy capital, that creates value for our partners around the world and diversifies our economy, it's really, really significant. And I haven't seen it in my kind of 40 years in this organization.

So the resilience in the short term, the meaningful opportunities in the long term, and part of that resilience I should mention is we are running a structural fiscal deficit as well across provinces and governments. And therefore, like the U.S. economy, that's significantly bolstered by a structural fiscal deficit at the government level. So at the Canadian economy, that's going to help us absorb some of the uncertainty in the short term. So I hope that answers your question, but I think resilience in the short term, growth in the medium term.

Ebrahim Poonawala: I think that's well put. And maybe a follow-up, Dave. The other thing here that investors are sort of actively thinking about is disruption risks to banks, legacy revenue streams and margins. As we think about like AI and the effort by the OSFI to sort of accelerate fintech charters, just frame that for us. When you think about -- I mean, you all have been at the forefront or ahead of the pack, I would argue, on all things AI. One, the opportunity, is that meaningful, do you think, in a market like Canada that can fall to the bottom line?

And secondly, the risk from fintechs being able to scale up at a much faster rate due to AI and how you think about disruption risk?

David McKay: I do think it's a really meaningful opportunity. We gave you some data points as we continue to -- we've built over 200 models. We have our employees that are making great use of this. You see the productivity lift that's making our employees more efficient, more effective. The ability for us to serve I think 25 million customers with the same cost base is our objective.

So when you look at the opportunities to marry this AI capability with our commercial account managers, with our private bankers, with our wealth managers, with our asset managers, you look at -- our investment bankers, you look at the productivity lift and the ability to make -- to be more efficient, but more effective as well in front of the customer, it's a significant lift. And it's really exciting. I think it's going to make our employees better and it's going to make our employees more effective in front of the customer. It's going to allow them to serve more customers at the same time.

And therefore, we're super excited about that across every single business, including right into the back office. So I think this is meaningful. We put that $1 billion target out there. We fully intend on meeting that target over the next 18 months as we put in the Investor Day. And then we'll take it from there. I just see the pervasiveness of the technology capability throughout the bank. To your second point, on disruption. I've seen this model in this scenario run throughout my career. And I always come back to the basic foundation is, are we capable of building the same thing? Is there anything inherent in a patent or a capability that we can't do?

And the answer is absolutely not. In fact, we have enormous scale to create these technologies and accelerate their deployment into our business model. So there's nothing that we see out there that we can't do just as quickly. The other advantage and moat that we have is in this complex world fraught with risk and fraud and uncertainty, trust and brand and security become paramount. And therefore, I don't think customers are going to choose nonregulated financial institutions for their savings if they're -- what is the cyber risk of that institution? What is the capital base of that institution to absorb errors and fraud and operational risk? So we talk about customers will move their money freely.

No, I think customers are going to be judicious in trust and brand and scale and capability and price. And I think that all goes together. It's not just going to be on price. And we've seen that through our history at the end of the day. So we're competing, I think, with moats as well that are not going to disintermediate. And then if there is a competition, we are fully capable of building this. You've seen our response with GoSmart and our ambition to build that out into a much bigger capability for our clients and we can respond. So I think that's the premise I keep coming back to.

I always ask and make sure, can we build it? Can we deploy this? Is there anything different between our product and theirs? No. Okay. Is this a price issue? Okay, then let's talk about price. So I think that's how I would look at it. We feel fully confident in matching any of the tools out there.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Gabriel Dechaine with National Bank Financial.

Gabriel Dechaine: Question to start on the credit picture here. You had gross impaired loans going up, a couple of conflicting data points. I guess, gross impaired loans going up and then you had lower loan losses. And part of the lower loan loss figure was because performing provisions were quite low. I'm just wondering, can you explain that? But I'm just wondering why you wouldn't feel compelled, given the macro outlook, the uncertainty vis-a-vis CUSMA, the inflation risk, all that stuff, that you weren't a little bit more aggressive on the performing build this quarter? Coverage ratios.

Graeme Hepworth: Yes. Good question, and it's Graeme. What I would point to that, so the build we did do related to kind of that uncertainty. We certainly acknowledge it, I would say we did increase the severity of our downside scenarios. Roughly speaking, that would have added about $80 million to our Stage 1 and 2 provisions, all else being equal. But kind of the counter to that, what played out this quarter is the credit quality side of it, right? As I noted in my comments, we've seen more stability, if not some improvements, in a lot of our kind of credit indicators, if you will, ratings migration, watch list, delinquency trends.

And so credit has for the last, I think, since the beginning of 2025, we've been adding about $80 million a year to our performing loan loss allowances for credit quality, just reflecting kind of those increasing trends around delinquencies, et cetera. And so this -- with that stability playing through this quarter, we actually released $20 million on credit quality rate. So that's just you're seeing that credit quality, that stability playing through into our performing loan loss calculations. And so that's what kind of countered that build on that severity and kind of left us in a bit more of a neutral status there.

And then maybe just kind of to support that, I mean you did note the increase in the GIL ratio. Again, I think more importantly is just noting the new formations. I think that's a better indicator of kind of some of the trends we're seeing -- we've seen in generally improving trends on new formations. The GIL ratio itself, it's getting higher. I would expect it to increase going forward. That's just reflecting a few things. There's new formations kind of stabilize, workouts are just taking longer, right? When you look at, say, res mortgages, there's a fixed capacity in the system, and we're at that fixed capacity.

And so until that starts to balance better, we'll just see THAT GIL ratio increase. Likewise, on the wholesale side, again, while we're seeing some better trends there, it's still very uneven. And workouts, when we look at some of the bigger names in our GIL balances on the wholesale side, I wouldn't expect we'll see resolution on those files, so probably closer to the kind of tail end of this year. So there's a timing part of when resolutions ultimately play out in those GIL ratios.

Gabriel Dechaine: Okay. And then on the margin side of the discussion, excuse me, I think that HSBC purchase accretion is behind us now. So steady state now. Your tractors are a tailwind, I suppose, the mortgage refinancing in the back half, it sounds marginally positive. Is that a little bit less spread-enhancing than you thought previously? Just throwing a few things together, but I want to get your general outlook for NIM going forward.

Katherine Gibson: Gabe, it's Katherine. I'll take that question, and then I'll get Erica to just step in because we've also got the money-in-motion which is playing a key part in our results and expect it to as we go forward. So you probably have heard me say this before, like for the all-bank NIM, we feel that it's got a lot of moving parts. And so actually I'll guide you to the guidance on the net interest income, excluding trading, which I said, remains in the mid-single digits. I feel like it's a better construct for Canadian Banking.

So if I take it to the CB NIM level, we are expecting it to be largely stable over the back half of the year. As I mentioned in my remarks, there is a little bit of seasonality that played into Q2. So we'll likely see some volatility between the quarters in the second half of the year as that seasonality rolls off. But the key drivers, as you've called out will have a tailwind would be the tractor. So that will continue to play out for the rest of the year. We'll have some of that mortgage roll on and roll off that Erica can touch on as well.

And then I would say the unknown is really the competitor actions and then the client actions as well, just to the degree that as we've see term deposits roll down, how much will move into demand deposits and how much will move into investment products? But even as it moves into investment products, yes, that's a compression to NIM. But overall, just a reminder, it's still positive to revenue for the organization. With that, I'll turn it to Erica.

Erica Nielsen: Yes. Thanks, Katherine, and thanks for the question. So on mortgages, in particular, as we look to the back half, Gabe, you're quite right that on the roll-off dynamics on that portfolio, we do see lower spread mortgages rolling off. So as we think about the back half, there's a couple of different dynamics we're watching. One is the competitive intensity as it relates to price as we go into the latter half of the spring/summer market and into the fall. And of course, we want to compete effectively, but we want to balance the margin that we're going to earn on the volume that we're competing for. So that will play a role.

The second dynamic that's happening in there is, of course, how we think about hedging and the cost of that hedging, which has been more volatile in the last quarter than it has been in prior quarters. And sometimes, we have to -- that's a cost to the business that we have. And so we'll see where markets are as we go through the back half of the year to determine how that -- those hedge costs perform for us.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Matthew Lee with Canaccord Genuity.

Matthew Lee: Maybe a bigger picture one. Just given the fact that you're already operating at a premium ROE and a bit above guidance, how should investors think about the next leg of EPS growth if ROE is stable from here? I mean is the growth algorithm now more about organic deployment of capital, fee income growth, productivity, capital return? Maybe touch on those pieces.

David McKay: Yes. Maybe I'll take that. It's Dave. And thank you, Matthew, for your question. Certainly, as we look across our businesses, to capitalize on growth, it is an organic story for us. We obviously have done a great job in integrating HSBC, and we have growth opportunity from those clients, and we're well on our way to meeting our cross-sell commitments of $300 million and a little over halfway there already. So we're seeing growth out of the HSBC portfolio. You're seeing strong growth coming out of City National. We reported 9% growth out of that business. So we're adding account managers. We're seeing strong demand on that side. We're seeing geographic expansion.

So City National is on its front foot. So you're seeing good client flow. You're seeing the Capital Markets, and maybe I'll turn it to Derek next to talk about his pipeline and what's going on. But we're seeing very strong client flow activity through our advisory businesses, our equity capital markets businesses. Obviously. It's a lot of corporate-driven activity, which is good to see as well and a balance there. And then you're seeing an opportunity for the residential mortgage business to restart. You're seeing green shoots, as Erica mentioned. And that provides a foundation for growth.

And the Commercial Banking demand from hopefully, the uncertainty alleviating in cross-border trade, all of that before we get into the major projects that we can fund. And then there's a cost opportunity. There's a very significant opportunity for us to continue to be more efficient in this organization, deploying AI as part of that. And those benefits are really just starting to accrue as we deploy those 200 models across the organization and embed them in our flows. So you've got growth, you've got costs, and all those are very supportive of structural ROEs. And we don't even really need margin expansion. Margin stability gets us there.

But some of our businesses are operating at historically low margins as well. And therefore, you heard us mention that we're hopeful, given how tight funding is for many organizations, that you get back to a little more reasonable margins and better hurdles than you're seeing today. So I'll stop there. I'll provide some more comments in my summary. But maybe, Derek, just on the Capital Markets side, to talk about kind of the opportunities for growth you're seeing.

Derek Neldner: Sure. Thanks, Dave, and thanks for the question. I mean just a few observations I would make. Obviously, we had a very strong quarter. Importantly, we continue to see that activity as we look forward. Our pipelines on the investment banking side remain at record levels. I think the conditions that have driven very high levels of client activity in our sales and trading in Global Markets business continue to be in place. And we're seeing very good demand from clients for lending and financing capital to help support those initiatives. And so certainly, as we look forward, we continue to see a very constructive environment for our clients.

Against that backdrop and consistent with our Investor Day messaging, we see lots of opportunities for organic growth across all 4 of our major businesses in Capital Markets. So in Global Markets, we're investing in our sales teams, we're investing in building out new capabilities around our equities, FX and commodities platforms as well as broader financing platforms. In Investment Banking, we continue to make very good progress on hiring and building out our sector capabilities. And then importantly, in Corporate Banking, the loan growth to support both our markets clients and our Investment Banking clients against their most important strategic initiatives is critical.

And then finally, obviously, we're seeing great progress in our global transaction banking and cash management build-out, and we continue to see opportunities to deploy capital to invest in those product capabilities. And finally, I would just say, Dave touched on it a little bit earlier, but when I bring a geographic lens to us, we're very optimistic about the levels of activity we have seen and we anticipate going forward in Canada in line with a number of the major government-supported initiatives. The U.S. as our second home market is obviously a very large opportunity for us, and we've got a -- it's the largest part of our business today, but significant growth ahead.

And then increasingly, we see some very good opportunities to continue to invest and expand our footprint in Europe. So right across the businesses and our 3 core geographies, we see very good opportunities for organic capital investment.

David McKay: Okay. I think we should go to the next question. Thanks, Derek.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Sohrab Movahedi with BMO Capital Markets.

Sohrab Movahedi: Okay. Dave, I just want to go back to ROE for a second. I think in response to one of the questions, you said that some of the businesses are actually not quite operating at capacity or I think you said something closer to historically low margins. So can I get a sense of which businesses do you think are not quite where you would like them to be?

And as we think about the outlook that you've presented, not necessarily over the next 6 months, but over the medium term, is it going to be a case of retaining this resilient ROE is going to be in and around where you are with the return on assets, and the capital levels are going to drift closer to the bottom end of the range that Katherine talked about? Or how do you see the capital ROA dynamic kind of playing out and in which business segment?

David McKay: There's a lot in that question. So let me start on macro, at your last question. Yes, we're absolutely targeting an ROA of 1%, as you saw in our Investor Day, moving it there. So I think from that perspective, we want to continue to move that higher. And I think from all the levers that we have, from growth, from efficiency and productivity capabilities are driving us to aspire to a higher ROA.

And as that filters through into our overall decisions to deploy capital and return capital to shareholders, I think where our posture is today is that we're a little bit conservative and that we're going to keep our capital levels towards the higher end of that range. You saw us deploy 2% share buyback. And that was a use of [ what about ], cap -- and 30 basis points of capital -- RWA capital, roughly. So I think from that perspective, we'll keep it closer to the higher end in the short term as we get through the conflicts in the war and the uncertainty around trade agreement on Section 232 impacts.

But then as we look at our commitment to keep returning capital to you above that is an important kind of marker for us is we'll continue to do buybacks. And you saw us announce an NCIB to do that, up to 3% of our shares. So returning capital to you will be a constant trend. And then we'll look for opportunities to accelerate that as we did in Q2 to get higher into that range more towards that 2% to 3%. So I think it's not a change in how we've articulated, Sohrab.

It's being strategic and tactical, I might call it at the same time, that there's a constant level of return and then there's going to be an acceleration and our desire to do that. And yes, we do feel we can operate this bank over the medium term at a lower target CET1 ratio in that range. And therefore, we're not saying that we're always going to be at 13.5%, but we want to be there now. But I would -- I do say that I can see running this bank at a lower capital level and returning that capital to you.

And we're generating such significant capital through our profitability and we think we're going to enhance our profitability going forward. So we're going to generate even more capital. But from that range, we do see ourselves moving into the mid-range or lower end of that range over time and continuing to return capital through organic and capital returns. So I hope that helps. It's like tactical in the short term, but it's continue to be strategically align towards that. And where the ROEs end up, we're committed to exceeding as best we can our target ROE that we gave you of 17-plus percent.

We had a very strong ROE this quarter and a shortened quarter, that tells you the earnings power and the capital efficiency of this organization continues to improve, and we expect it to continue to improve. I've also guided that we balance growth, and growth and EPS are really important. And therefore, why would you turn -- if you can -- a 13% or 14% ROE opportunity down, if you can continue to drive an overall balance and mix in your organization of 17-plus, plus percent going forward. So we're always trying to balance growth and EPS growth with book value growth per share along with target ROEs.

And I think the capital efficiency and the operational efficiency opportunity is going to allow us to do all of that. I think that's the magic in our business model, that we'll continue to improve on all those metrics. I think that gives us enormous shareholder value creation opportunity.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Mario Mendonca with TD Securities.

Mario Mendonca: Real quickly on some dynamics on the loan side. So commercial loan growth, it's good at 3% year-over-year in Canada, but it's light relative to what we're seeing from some of your peers. So maybe a comment on that? And then the $12 billion increase in wholesale lending this quarter, that's a big number, not something I'm used to seeing. So could you speak to those 2?

Sean Amato-Gauci: Yes. Thank you, Mario. It's Sean. On the commercial side, we've -- 3% year-over-year, 1% on a quarter-over-quarter basis. I would say we've been pleased with our commercial growth for an elongated period. We've taken share capture for 12 consecutive quarters, as Dave mentioned, leading into Q1. We don't have the full results for Q2 yet. And going forward, we're really starting to see some nice tailwinds. Our pipelines are really strong. We've seen continued growth and resilience in some of the sectors that have been less impacted by tariffs, like agriculture, public sector, services, health care, seniors housing, et cetera. We've seen some really strong month-over-month momentum.

In March and April, we've seen the largest month-over-month growth rates that we've seen in about 6 months also in the business. And then we're also starting to see some pickup in Ontario real estate directly correlated to the HST announcements and some early wins in the defense sector. So I've got some confidence that we're going to continue to pick up share and grow into the second half of the year. And that's further amplified as Dave mentioned, with the medium-term benefits that we'll see from the infrastructure spend, the impact of the new global trade agreements as well as the eventual CUSMA resolution.

David McKay: Derek, do you want to talk to Capital Markets?

Derek Neldner: Sure. Thanks for the question, Mario. Yes, we obviously saw a very good growth in the corporate loan book quarter-over-quarter, as you highlighted. A few things I would highlight. One, that really reflects some of the broader activity we're seeing amongst clients, both in terms of strategic M&A, which sometimes requires term loans or bridges that are shorter term in nature as they fund into those acquisitions, as well as some of the organic capital build that we're seeing across major infrastructure investments and otherwise. In addition, we had very good success this quarter adding some new large clients.

And so these were larger investment-grade names that we've been building relationships with across the platform and finally have the opportunity to come into their core banking group, which was a very nice win for us. So it really reflected growth across those 3 areas. Broadly, we're being very disciplined in how we're managing risk and capital allocation around it. That incremental growth you saw this quarter skewed more heavily investment-grade than our broader book. So it's actually increase the overall credit quality of the book, notwithstanding the higher level of growth you saw in the quarter.

David McKay: I think we have a few more questions to go.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Paul Holden with CIBC.

Paul Holden: I was going to ask the question on the commercial loan growth, but we already got an answer for that. Maybe I'll try, quickly, a different one. Derek, you gave a pretty good update and outlook on sort of the near-term growth for Cap Markets. What about kind of -- I guess, one of the things we're struggling for the group, not just for RBC, is kind of like can you build revenue and earnings in Cap Markets off of what's shaping up to be a very good 2026, which was projecting to be growth off a very good 2025? Like how much longer can this growth continue?

Derek Neldner: Paul, very good question. I'd really break it into 3 pieces. As I mentioned, in terms of the near-term visibility of our pipelines that we see, we continue to be very encouraged by the level of activity. And so that certainly will carry us through a number of quarters. To your question, when we think sort of medium term and how sustainable is the level of client activity, there can always be macro shocks or other things. But our base case is, we think some of the structural dynamics that are really fueling activity amongst both our corporate and private assets and institutional asset management clients really remain intact.

And so touching on those, obviously, some of the geopolitical uncertainty, the uncertainty that's creating around the economy, inflation, commodities, et cetera, these are all driving heightened levels of run rate trading activity in our markets business. We think a lot of those trends in terms of the environment we're in over likely the next few years stay intact. They'll ebb and flow a little bit quarter-to-quarter, but the volatility and the level of uncertainty that we're seeing from a variety of different factors probably persists. Within the Investment Banking and Corporate Banking business, usually when you see that uncertainty, you might see lower activity. But what we're seeing is some multiyear strategic trends that are driving activity.

So when you think about shifts to supply chains, benefits of scale, obviously, very constructive regulatory environments that are facilitating transactions and consolidation, energy transition, digital infrastructure spending, these are all multiyear trends that we think will continue to drive activity and capital required for investment. And then finally, I would just say we can't control the environment. We're optimistic on the outlook.

But if there was some shock and we saw a slowdown, we take a lot of comfort in the incremental growth strategies we have that can outperform irrespective of what the market environment brings, and the core stability and quality of our franchise that I think you've seen play out over many years in terms of lower volatility of results than many of our peers.

David McKay: Okay. I think we have one more question from Mike.

Operator: Your final question does come from Mike Rizvanovic with Scotiabank.

Mehmed Rizvanovic: I'll keep this quick. Just a quick one for Erica. Can you provide some color on deposit flows? So I'm looking at the bottom left quadrant of Slide 24. I do find it interesting that it's the first time in a while we've seen personal and savings come off. I understand the GIC dynamic going to mutual funds. But what about the personal and savings side? Is that something that -- was there any anomaly in the quarter? Does it go back to positive in the near term? Any thoughts on that would be helpful.

Erica Nielsen: Yes, Mike, thanks for your question. Just a couple of reflections. Like I think when we think about the Personal Bank, we play a very large role in the growth of our clients across all of our businesses. So if you think about the -- we talked about it in the last quarter, some of the accelerated movement of money from the Personal Bank into Wealth Management. So when you look at those figures at the bottom left of 24%, that is also us supporting rotation back into equities both in our broker GICs and RISA business as well as in our core personal banking business going over to our direct investing and DS channel.

And then as well, some of the rotation that's happening within our own -- on our own balance sheet as clients are coming out of term deposits and going into mutual funds. And we had a stellar quarter from a mutual funds perspective in Q2. We saw February was our second highest month ever in mutual fund sales, and our market capture at about 25% of the bank market capture was tremendous. And so we know we're supporting clients as they rotate into their long-term positions of having the balance between savings and equities, and we'll continue to support that as the organization for our clients.

David McKay: Okay. Thanks, Erica. So that brings our call to a close. Again, we had a very strong quarter. You saw strong client flows across all our businesses, you saw really good margins and enhanced profitability from that. And I think the theme that you should hopefully take away from this is very good growth opportunities across all our businesses: Commercial, Capital Markets, the Consumer Bank, Insurance, Wealth Management, not just in Canada, but the United States and in Europe, which we didn't get to touch on as much as well today. So thank you very much for your questions, and look forward to seeing you next quarter. Thank you.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.