Canada's six biggest banks, entrenched as the dominant players in their home market, desperately want to make their presence felt elsewhere on the planet.
The six banks are often accused of holding an oligopoly within Canada's close-knit financial system. While that may be an exaggeration, they do hold about 60% of personal deposits, control just under half the mortgage business, and manage about a quarter of mutual-fund assets.
The six are led by Royal Bank of Canada, with total corporate assets of C$246 billion (US$177 billion) at July 31, a network of 1,500 branches and 51,000 employees. A close second is Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) with assets of C$240 billion. Bank of Montreal, Bank of Nova Scotia and Toronto Dominion Bank fall third, fourth and fifth. National Bank of Canada is the smallest of the so-called big six, with assets of C$61 billion. ...