BMO’s $16.3 Billion Bank of the West Deal Wins US Regulatory Nod

Bank of Montreal has received approval from the Federal Reserve to acquire San Francisco-based Bank of the West, a combination that will create the 15th-largest US lender.

(Bloomberg) — Bank of Montreal has received approval from the Federal Reserve to acquire San Francisco-based Bank of the West, a combination that will create the 15th-largest US lender. 

After the transaction, Bank of Montreal US subsidiary BMO Financial Corp. will have consolidated assets of $286.8 billion, about 1% of those held by insured depository institutions in the US, according to the Fed. The bank’s entire US segment, which includes other subsidiaries, may have about $424 billion in assets after the closing, the firm said in a presentation when the deal was announced.

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency also said it green-lit the merger. Bank of Montreal said it expects the deal will be completed on Feb. 1.

“We look forward to working with communities across our expanded U.S. footprint to help drive meaningful change at the local level through a strong combination of financial and community-driven investment,” David Casper, the bank’s US head, said in a statement.

Bank of Montreal shares rose 0.7% to C$132.88 at 10:09 a.m. in Toronto. The stock is down 11% in the past 12 months, compared with a 14% drop for the S&P/TSX Commercial Banks Index. 

Seller BNP Paribas SA will unveil the final impact of the deal on Feb. 7, along with its fourth-quarter earnings, the lender said in a statement on Wednesday. The French bank has said it would dedicate about €4 billion to stock repurchases.

The $16.3 billion deal, the largest ever by a Canadian bank, expands Bank of Montreal beyond its stronghold in the Midwest, across the western US and into California, giving it an active presence in 32 states. When it announced the acquisition, the Canadian bank estimated it would get 1.8 million new customers and $105 billion in assets.

Bank of Montreal struck the deal when it was flush with capital because regulators had prevented Canada’s big lenders from buying back shares or raising their dividends for more than a year. More recently, Bank of Montreal was forced to sell $2.33 billion in equity to top up its capital levels after Canada’s banking regulator increased the industry’s required capital buffers.

Toronto-Dominion Bank is still awaiting regulator approval for its own major US deal, the $13.4 billion acquisition of First Horizon Corp.

–With assistance from Alexandre Rajbhandari.

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