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AmericasAugust 1 2004

Marriages face a rocky future

A newly-elected minority Liberal government has left the prospects for Canadian bank mergers looking uncertain. Sheldon Gordon reports from Toronto. Canada’s general election on June 28 produced the worst possible outcome for the country’s banking sector. Prime minister Paul Martin’s Liberals were returned to office but, with only a plurality of the seats, they will have to cater to two smaller, left-wing parties in order to command a majority in parliament. Bankers would clearly have preferred the stability of a clear-cut victory by either Mr Martin’s Liberals or their main opponent, the Conservative Party.
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Minority government almost certainly means a continued moratorium on Canadian bank mergers. Mr Martin had blocked two proposed mergers in 1999 while finance minister, thwarting a Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) union with Bank of Montreal (BMO) and another marriage between Toronto-Dominion Bank and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC).

Disappointing result

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