History of The Business Development Bank of Canada
History of The Business Development Bank of Canada
the Business
Development
Bank of Canada
The FBDB period (1975-1995)
Donald Layne
For the men and women
who worked and work
at Canada’s business
development bank,
FBDB and BDC
Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec and Library and Archives Canada
Title: History of the Business Development Bank of Canada: The FBDB period (1975-1995)
Issued also in French under title:
Histoire de la Banque de développement du Canada : La période BFD (1975-1995)
ISBN 978-0-9953184-4-1
Published by the Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC).
All rights reserved. Printed in Canada.
Also available in electronic format.
In the event of any discrepancies between the English and French versions, the English version shall prevail.
Legal deposit – Library and Archives Canada, 2016
Cover picture: Stock Exchange Tower, Montreal. BDC’s Head Office was located here from 1969 to 1997.
Table of Contents
Preface 06
Chapter 9 Rebuilding 94
Preface
It is the author’s intention to present a history that is more interesting than a dry
rehashing of facts and figures. As such, there may be certain views, conclusions
and inferences that are solely those of the author and may not be shared by the
Bank or its directors, officers or employees, past or present.
Former Bank presidents Guy Lavigueur and François Beaudoin figure prominently
in this history as chief decision-makers. Along with their Boards of Directors, they
provided the directions for the rest of the Bank to implement. If they had given
different directions or taken different decisions, the Bank would not have achieved
what it did. Indeed, the Bank’s evolution might have taken a different path and BDC
would not be what it is today.
This book would not have been possible without the contributions of many
former and current Bank employees (identified in Appendix 2). The author is very
grateful that they took time from their busy schedules to be interviewed and
that they mined their memories for the details needed to fill out this history. It
would not have been practical to interview every former and present employee
of the Bank, although each could have probably provided an interesting story
about challenges they faced and how they were overcome. As seen with those
interviewed, many employees, past and present, take pride in their achievements
at the Bank, especially in growing Canada’s small and medium-sized businesses. It
is particularly rewarding when a Bank employee can walk down a street and point
to a business he or she helped years ago, a business that is still flourishing. This is
one of the most gratifying experiences one can have.
8
1944
The
genesis
As an independent crown corporation, FBDB had its own President and Chief
Executive Officer and its own Board of Directors. These officers were all appointed
by the government of the day. IDB, on the other hand, had been established as a
wholly owned subsidiary of the Bank of Canada, another crown corporation. Its
President had been the Governor of the Bank of Canada, its Board of Directors
was the same as the Bank of Canada’s, but its operations were run by a Chief
General Manager. In 1975, the Governor of the Bank of Canada was Gerald Bouey
and the Chief General Manager of IDB was E. Ritchie Clark.
IDB was created to finance small manufacturers. Many of these businesses had
to convert from wartime to peacetime production following World War II. Over the
years, IDB had its mandate expanded periodically to finance more sectors of the
economy. IDB also added equity financing and advisory services to its offerings in
later years. But financing Canada’s small business manufacturing sector with term
loans remained the main focus, and market, for IDB.
Ritchie Clark joined the Bank as a credit officer in 1947, not long after its
founding, and so was witness to almost the whole life story of the Industrial
Development Bank. After IDB was taken over by the newly created FBDB in 1975,
Clark stayed on briefly as Vice President and Chief General Manager to assist the
new President, Richard Murray, in the Bank’s transition from IDB to FBDB. After
retiring from the Bank, Clark authored an excellent, informative history of IDB1 . This
book, referred to herein as Clark’s History and quoted in the paragraphs below,
follows IDB from the discussions and debates in the federal government that
gave rise to the Bank in the early 1940s to the takeover by FBDB in 1975. Some
key events documented by Clark are worth recounting because they illustrate
the genetic make-up of the Bank. They also give credence to the maxim plus ça
change, plus c’est pareil – the more things change, the more they stay the same
– one of history’s fundamental lessons. The hearings on Parliament Hill when IDB
was being created and the manoeuvres by government departments to remove
IDB from the Bank of Canada are worth recollecting.
1 E. Ritchie Clark, The IDB: A History of Canada’s Industrial Development Bank, University of Toronto Press, 1985. Quotes cited
in this chapter are taken from pages 19 to 39 of Clark’s book.
The genesis | 11
House on August 11, 1944, passed by the Senate of Canada the same day and
received Royal Assent on August 14, 1944.
Clark writes in his History that when Parliament considered the IDB Bill, the
name of the new institution “provoked about as much debate as any other part
of the proposal.” In its early drafts, the new legislation used the name Industrial
Credit Bank. However, after “eight or nine” drafts of the Bill, the name Industrial
Development Bank was adopted.
The other section of the 1944 IDB legislation receiving much attention dealt with
the Bank’s supplementary role. To quote Clark’s History: “According to the act, the
Bank was not to displace other lending organizations but rather ‘to supplement’
their activities; this was said in the preamble to the act. It was provided in section
15 that financing was to be extended only ‘if in the opinion of the Board, credit or
other financial resources would not otherwise be available on reasonable terms
and conditions.’” Clark goes on to state: “The problem of determining beyond doubt
whether the funds applied for were available elsewhere was never completely
solved to the satisfaction of the Bank’s critics, and other financial institutions were
often sceptical as to the respect paid by the Bank to this particular requirement.”
According to Clark, during the debates creating IDB, one Member of Parliament,
representing the affluent bastion of Rosedale in Toronto, said, “I think this bank
should never be set up. I think there is no need for it whatsoever.”
The amount of losses the Bank would incur was another issue attracting much
discussion during parliamentary hearings on IDB’s legislation. The raison d’être
for IDB was to make loans that would not attract private interests because the
chances of profit were small and the risk of loss, high. Thus, it was natural to
conclude large loan losses would result. But IDB’s proponents, while conceding
losses on individual loans would occur, expected the new bank to earn a modest
profit. Clark writes that the then Deputy Minister of Finance (Dr. W.C. Clark) stated
during the 1944 parliamentary hearings: “It seems to me appropriate that the
type of institution you set up to perform this function should be essentially a
non-profit-making institution which goes out to render a service that is needed
12 | Chapter 1
rather than to make profits primarily ... If we get a reasonably efficient management,
what I would expect is that there would be a modest or relatively moderate profit
rather than large profits.” He conjectured, in 1944, IDB might write off loans
to the extent of 1.5% of loans per annum, approximately double the rate then
experienced by chartered banks.
Another cause for concern among Members of Parliament was the new bank’s
susceptibility to political interference. As Clark’s History recounts, there was a
lot of trust placed on the then Governor of the Bank of Canada (Graham Towers)
to not only set up the Bank on a sound footing, but also to protect it against
political pressures. This trust was not misplaced as the Bank of Canada has been
and is, arguably, the most independent of government institutions. But this did
not deter some Members of Parliament from believing IDB would be unable to
withstand political pressures and with that also bring political involvement into
the Bank of Canada “from which it should be aloof.” As one Member saw it, with
245 constituencies in the Dominion of Canada, there would be political pressures
from all regions “because you are a public institution for the assistance over a long
period of certain industries, the giving of capital assistance from this government
bank.” Clark’s History states some Members of Parliament thought it might have
been better to set up the new bank as a private institution owned by the chartered
banks and other private financial institutions. But IDB’s proponents did not think a
private enterprise would do what was not done in the past, which was to take on
higher risk loans at the expense of making an acceptable profit.
These views were offered during the process of moving the Industrial
Development Bank legislation through Canada’s Parliament in 1944.
Placing IDB as a subsidiary of the Bank of Canada went a long way in creating
and guarding its independent nature. Another key factor was the location of
its operational management. IDB’s legislation fixed the site of its head office in
Ottawa, consistent with the location of the Bank of Canada’s head office. However
IDB made its operational headquarters in Montreal. This was not considered ultra
vires of the IDB Act, likely since the President of IDB, the Governor of the Bank
Construction of
the Bank of Canada
building, Montreal
14 | Chapter 1
of Canada, was located in Ottawa. Why Montreal? As Clark states in his History:
“There developed a tradition in the IDB that it arose from the fact that S.R. Noble,
the first general manager of the Bank, had a home there and had no intention
of living anywhere else.” A sound tradition as office location theory at one time
cited the main factors in deciding where to locate a head office as personal rather
than economic. It was where the chief decision-maker of the company wanted
to live or more likely, where the spouse of the chief decision-maker wanted to
live. Factors such as livability and the arts – symphony, opera, galleries – became
more important than economic ones. Furthermore, in 1944, Montreal was Canada’s
financial centre and though IDB would not be part of the big boys’ (chartered
banks) club, it was located in the same neighbourhood. As Clark states, the
decision to locate the management of IDB in Montreal “proved to be one of those
small acorns from which great oaks grow.”
The IDB had its supporters and detractors although the latter group, as is
common, were more vocal and received more attention. But the cover provided by
the Bank of Canada kept detractors at bay. To get to the IDB, one would first have
to penetrate the Bank of Canada shield. And so it became clear to anyone wanting
to change the way IDB operated, it could best be or, more realistically, only be
accomplished by removing IDB from the Bank of Canada.
Clark’s History states that as early as 1959, a new member of the Bank’s Board
of Directors suggested IDB be removed from the Bank of Canada. The suggestion
was discussed at the Board of Directors but nothing came of it. By the early 1960s,
the question was raised again in political discussions involving the Bank. And again
the Bank or, more likely the Governor of the Bank of Canada, managed to ward off
detractors. But he could not resist the tide of change forever.
Chapter 2 | 15
1970 to 1975
Creating
FBDB
A s early as 1970, IDB learned that the Department of Industry, Trade and
Commerce had been asked by the government to conduct a study of all
forms of government assistance to industrial development in Canada, including
the Industrial Development Bank. A few months later, it was learned that the
Department of Finance was also looking at IDB as part of its study on foreign
investment. Not long after, the government directed the Minister of Finance to
bring forward a review of IDB indicating possible changes in its operations. These
manoeuvres were taking place behind IDB’s back.
In the early 1970s, the Deputy Minister of Finance was Simon Reisman, a powerful
figure (and in many quarters feared) in Ottawa. He had a reputation for toughness
and intellectual brilliance, in addition to being abrasive. Before being appointed
Deputy Minister of Finance, he had negotiated the 1967 Auto Pact with the United
States, been Deputy Minister of Industry, Trade and Commerce, and Secretary
(Deputy Minister) of the Treasury Board of Canada. (Later in his career, he would
also successfully negotiate Canada’s Free Trade Agreement with the U.S., and in the
process earn the wrath, it is claimed, of the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.)
It was known Simon Reisman did not like the idea of IDB being outside the
purview of his department. Perhaps too, he did not look kindly on IDB’s refusal
to assist the Adjustment Assistance Board. This board had been created to help
Canadian manufacturers in the automotive industry adjust to the new Auto Pact
he had negotiated with the U.S. Holding the purse strings of government, the
Department of Finance together with the Treasury Board of Canada had their
fingers in the financial and policy affairs of every government department, agency
and corporation, save the Bank of Canada, where IDB resided. All indications
therefore led to the conclusion that the Department of Finance was likely the
driving force behind the removal of IDB from the Bank of Canada. Unbeknownst to
IDB’s management in Montreal, it was a fait accompli – only a matter of time.
The intention of the Department of Industry, Trade and Commerce (IT&C) was
made clear in a report prepared at the time by a working group of officials for
their Minister, the Honourable Herb Gray. One proposal in the report envwisaged
removing the financing of manufacturers from IDB entirely and combining it with
the General Adjustment Assistance Program, the heavily subsidized flagship
business financing program in IT&C. Removing the financing of manufacturing
enterprises from IDB would have collapsed the backbone of the Bank, and most
certainly sent it into oblivion. Fortunately, this was too big an undertaking to
engineer, even for IT&C officials.
Creating FBDB | 17
All the studies on IDB were taking place in Ottawa with little or no involvement
by Bank personnel. They were kept in the dark. Clark’s History2 states: “It was
surprising for senior operational management [at IDB] that such studies did
not necessarily involve discussions with them on the part of the departmental
officials making the studies.” This is, of course, the flip-side to insisting on strict
independence from government – ‘you run your show while we run ours.’ Even
when it became known that the Department of Finance, under Simon Reisman, was
given the directive to conduct a review of IDB, the Bank arranged to have its own
response to the government’s directive, “apart from anything the Department of
Finance itself might say.” And while IDB did have its day before the government’s
Cabinet Committee (of Ministers) on economic policy, the meeting turned into a
cross examination on the Bank’s policies and practices. Towards the end of 1972,
another interdepartmental committee on small business programs was struck. This
time, the Bank was represented on the committee by IDB’s Secretary to the Board
of Directors.
2 E. Ritchie Clark, The IDB: A History of Canada’s Industrial Development Bank, University of Toronto Press, 1985. Quotes cited in this chapter are
taken from pages 352 to 361 of Clark’s book.
18 | Chapter 2
In 1972, the writing was on the wall; in 1973, the deal was done. IDB was going
to be removed from the Bank of Canada and become the nucleus of a new crown
corporation. Gone would be the days when, as was said by a former employee, if
we needed money we would just go downstairs to the vault and get some – an apt
metaphor. Or, as put more directly by the Deputy Minister of Finance, you won’t be
able to get your money from Big Daddy anymore. By implication, the Bank would
have to go through the Department of Finance to finance its activities.
Once this realization set in, the Bank’s management moved conscientiously and
wholeheartedly into planning the transition to the new corporation, not without
some agony. And agony it was in trying to rationalize between what the Bank
was doing, and what seemed like the whims and fancies of Ottawa officials. As
Clark’s History describes: “Senior officers with long experience in the Bank were
surprised to hear proposals about the smallest and most delicate aspect of policy
or practice put forward by someone who had had no previous direct contact with
the Bank. As a result, the Bank’s representatives had to discuss patiently and at
length matters that they believed the Bank’s experience had settled long ago.
Unfortunately, the situation occasionally got the better of patience, and one of
the Bank’s representatives once gave vent to this exasperation by demanding of a
startled departmental official: ‘When did you last loan five bucks?’”
Under its new operations, the Bank was to greatly expand its advisory services
and equity financing to small business. Advisory services were to grow into a
wide offering of management services including business information services,
training and counselling. The latter would absorb the Counselling Assistance for
Small Enterprises program which was being run by the Department of Industry,
Trade and Commerce. CASE, as it was known, was a small business counselling
service utilizing the talents of retired businesspeople. These people, more or less
volunteers, provided their expertise at a very low cost to the program to make its
services affordable for small business owners. The Bank was envisaged as the
one-stop shop for small business. If it couldn’t help directly with its own financial
and management services, it could at least direct an enterprise to the right source
of assistance through its business information service.
That the Department of Industry, Trade and Commerce was willing to give up
voluntarily its CASE program to the new Bank was an obvious sign the program
was not operating well within the Department. This was given credence when, in its
first year of operation at the new Bank, small business enquiries for CASE services
tripled in number.
Creating FBDB | 19
The second area of expansion was equity financing. Although IDB had done
equity financing in the past, principally on a piece-meal basis, a full blown equity
financing service was envisaged for the new Bank.
And so, despite IDB’s apprehensiveness to all the task forces, working groups,
committees and the like swirling around it, the end result was that the Bank was
actually going to expand its operations and become a bigger institution.
The delay placed extra strain on IDB as it was approaching legislated limits on
its lending activity. With no way of telling when new legislation would be passed
by Parliament – which could be delayed for a long time if a new party were
elected to form the government following the elections – the Bank had to prepare
procedures to implement the dreaded act of credit rationing. Fortunately, there
was no change of government and when Parliament reconvened right after the
summer, the Federal Business Development Bank’s legislation was fast-tracked.
20 | Chapter 2
Although the Bill to create FBDB received Royal Assent in December 1974,
only those sections pertaining to increasing the Bank’s total lending authority
were immediately proclaimed, thus removing the spectre of credit rationing.
Proclamation of the remaining sections was delayed, ostensibly to allow IDB
to complete its fiscal year and to allow for implementation of administrative
processes needed to transition smoothly from the IDB, a subsidiary of the
Bank of Canada, to a new stand-alone crown corporation, the Federal Business
Development Bank. But adding to the delay was a major deterioration in the
country’s economy and government finances.
In the mid-1970s, Canada was reeling under the twin setbacks of rising
unemployment and high inflation, a non-textbook situation. Thus was coined
the term ‘stagflation.’ In 1975, unemployment had jumped to 6.9% from 5.3% the
previous year, while inflation was hovering around 11%. During the 1974 federal
election, the leader of the Conservative Party of Canada, Robert Stanfield, called
for a 90-day wage and price freeze to break the momentum of rapidly rising
inflation. This position quickly became a major campaign issue and was ridiculed
by the Liberal Party of Canada which went on to win the election. Once elected,
however, the Liberal government, under Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, did a
complete reversal and instituted a system of wage and price controls in Canada.
It tightened monetary and fiscal policies and imposed severe limits on federal
expenditures. This led to major program cuts and delays and brought into question
the outlays needed to start up the Federal Business Development Bank. It was
reported in the media that FBDB would require some $150 million to commence
operations. This figure, as often happened with media reporting, seemed to be
taken out of the blue since its composition and source were unknown.
In fact, IDB had $44 million worth of debentures falling due on October 1, 1975
along with $21 million of accrued debenture interest for a total funding
requirement of $65 million. If, as was expected, FBDB was proclaimed to be in
business on October 1, 1975, one day after IDB’s fiscal year-end, the federal
government would have had to fund this $65 million. If the proclamation was made
effective October 2, 1975, it would remain the Bank of Canada’s responsibility to
fund the $65 million. And so, FBDB was proclaimed into being on October 2, 1975,
contributing in small part to the health of the government’s finances – a bit of
smoke and mirrors. A one-day financial year, October 1, 1975, occurred between
IDB’s fiscal year-end of September 30, 1975 and the beginning of FBDB.
outside of Ottawa. In 1973, soon after the Minister of Industry, Trade and
Commerce announced to IDB the government’s plans to create a new crown
corporation, the famed Western Economic Opportunities Conference took place.
This conference of First Ministers was pivotal in the history of federal-provincial
relations as it brought to the fore, in an emphatic way, the reality of western
alienation from central Canada, and in particular from the central government
in Ottawa. At the conference, IDB, albeit a small cog in the vast wheel of federal
economic programs, came in for criticism from western First Ministers for its
alleged failure to assist small businesses in western Canada. They saw IDB as
too conservative and wanted it to make riskier loans in addition to providing
more equity financing and management services to small business. These views
mirrored sentiments felt by most federal politicians. Thus, the political class not
only supported the need for a government bank to provide financing to small
business but also saw it as one that would take more risk than the IDB had done.
This position was contrary to what some private lenders as well as some
bureaucrats were saying. In the Departments of Finance and Industry, Trade
and Commerce, there were officials who held the view a financing gap did not
exist in the market, other than for equity financing. So, there was no need for a
government small business financing institution that provided term loans. This is
understandable coming from the Department of Finance given its responsibility
for creating the rules and regulations governing Canada’s national financial
institutions, principally chartered banks. To say these institutions were not
providing adequate financing to small business could lead to the conclusion that
the Department of Finance’s own rules and regulations were lacking. Department
of Finance officials did, however, see a need to improve small business
management skills so that such firms could qualify for conventional bank loans.
The views coming out of Industry, Trade and Commerce were perplexing
considering the Department itself had set up a number of business financing
programs including the Small Business Loans Act (SBLA) which guaranteed
small business loans made by chartered banks. Nonetheless, politicians had
their way and created FBDB to absorb IDB and to take on more risk, make equity
investments and provide an array of management services. This was the policy
environment when FBDB started out in business.
Murray knew Kanee from his Winnipeg days when he, Murray, was managing
director of the Hudson’s Bay Company. Kanee’s knowledge of IDB was critical but
even more important was his political influence in the Liberal Party establishment
and his capacity to get things done in Ottawa. Kanee was one of very few who had
access to the Prime Minister. The Bank had lost its Bank of Canada shield so it was
important to have friends in high places to provide protective cover when needed.
Murray was also well connected to the higher-ups in Ottawa’s political circles. How
else would he have been appointed President of FBDB, a crown corporation, and
as such, a coveted position among senior officials in Ottawa? He was also on a first
name basis with the powerful Michael Pitfield, Clerk of the Privy Council, a position
known as deputy minister of deputy ministers.
In 1975, that senior official was the department’s Senior Assistant Deputy
Minister, Policies, Programs and Finance, Guy Lavigueur, who was also the
Department’s appointee on the board of the government-owned Canada
Development Corporation. Lavigueur’s appointment to the Board would prove to
be a fateful development. As will be seen, he would preside over some tumultuous
years at the Bank as the longest sitting President in FBDB’s history.
Chapter 3 | 23
1975 to 1978
Early days
at FBDB
O n October 2, 1975, FBDB hit the road running. The Bank’s Board of Directors
had already met the previous month to sign the delegations of authority
and by-laws needed for Bank personnel to continue operations seamlessly. The
FBDB Act gave all the powers of the corporation to the Board of Directors with the
facility that the Board could delegate whatever powers it saw fit to employees of
the Bank. Without a specific delegation of authority from the Board, a credit officer
or a manager could not authorize loans.
‘Streamline the loan authorization process’ and ‘increase lending’ were the
mantras of the day when FBDB started out. But streamlining and expanding the
lending operation had already begun in the early 1970s at the IDB. These facts did
not make an impression on the politicians in Ottawa who kept insisting the Bank
needed to increase its lending to small business.
Indeed, from the outset, it was clear the Bank’s primary mandate was to increase
the amount of loans it was extending to small business while implementing the
new functions of management services and venture capital. At the time, one of
its Directors, Jack Poole (the man later credited with bringing the 2010 Winter
Olympics to Vancouver), reported on a meeting he had with the Honourable
Ron Basford, a senior Liberal cabinet minister from Vancouver. The Minister told
him the entire cabinet felt FBDB should be more daring and more risk-taking in
its endeavour to help small business. He also said the Bank was not widely known
among constituents and that Members of Parliament and provincial Members of
the Legislative Assembly were ignorant of the Bank’s role.
The Bank was seen, even by many of its new Board members, as being too
bureaucratic with too many levels of approvals needed before a loan could be
authorized. In-house engineers represented a popular target considered to
be slowing down the loan authorization process. Each region had a corps of
professional engineers who had a say on loans before they made their way up the
line for authorization. In essence, the engineers were the repository of the Bank’s
Early days at FBDB | 25
But while engineering reviews were good for the backbone of the Bank’s
business, the manufacturing sector, they did not serve much usefulness when
it came to clients in the service sectors. And as the economy and the Bank’s
clientele shifted from manufacturing to service industries, the need for Bank
engineers was brought into question. The engineering units survived into the
FBDB era and, while they were eventually phased out, they were replaced with
regional Project Analysis Groups concentrating on large credits.
Expansion
In the early 1970s, IDB made further moves to expand its lending and opened new
branch offices at a rapid pace. From 30 branch offices in 1970, there were 75 by
1975. Publicity expenditures increased as radio and television advertising spots
were taken out by the Bank. The TV ads caught the attention of finance companies
who pointed to the ads as further evidence the Bank was aggressively marketing
its loans. As Clark3 points out: “Energetic publicity efforts by the Bank always ran
the risk of arousing the criticism that it was breaking away from its statutory role of
complementing” commercial sources of financing. Around the same time, the Bank
wanted to update a film about itself which showed a series of short episodes on
the various kinds of businesses it assisted. Scripts were submitted for the new film.
3 E. Ritchie Clark, The IDB: A History of Canada’s Industrial Development Bank, University of Toronto Press, 1985. Quotes cited
in this chapter are taken from pages 301 to 303 of Clark’s book.
26 | Chapter 3
One of the first scripts, proposed by an employee, was for the film to open with a
bevy of ‘go-go’ dancers tossing dollar bills out of their costumes. The proposal
was rejected but someone at the time obviously thought this was an attractive
sector for IDB financing.
The end result of these moves was a huge expansion in IDB lending just before
it became FBDB. Between 1970 and 1974, there was an almost three-fold increase
in loan authorizations. In 1970, 3,584 loans were authorized for $165 million,
followed by annual increases topping 20% each year and hitting a 33% growth
rate in 1973. By 1974, fully 9,712 loans were authorized for $470 million. This kind
of growth in lending was unheard of, even in boom times. There was a slowdown
in 1975 reflecting zero growth in the economy and loan authorizations dropped to
9,461 loans for $401 million that year.
Staff levels kept pace with the rapid expansion of the early 1970s, growing from
811 in 1971 to 1,546 in 1975. Staff increases were taking place at all levels in the Bank.
Head office staff more than doubled, from 110 in 1971 to 244 by 1975. The same was
true for regional offices where staff levels grew from 136 in 1971 to 286 by 1975. In
branch offices, staff almost doubled as well, from 565 in 1971 to 1,016 in 1975.
Three observations stand out with respect to the dramatic growth in IDB lending
during the early 1970s. First, as alluded to earlier, it seemed the p
oliticians in
Ottawa pushing for drastic change to the IDB may have been oblivious to this
expansion. In 1973, when the decision was made to move IDB from the Bank of
Canada, they were still calling for the Bank to be less conservative in its practices
and to lend more to small business. Secondly, the expansion took place without
any significant change in the Bank’s lending policies. Some emphasis on security
coverage was relaxed over the years but the basic credit criteria remained
the same. Thirdly, the level of risk taken was very manageable and may even
be considered low risk by later standards. For example, the ultimate loss rate
(the proportion of net loan authorizations ultimately written off) on loans made
between 1968 and 1975 averaged 2.12%, much lower than what was to come.
With rapid expansion, the experience level of the Bank’s credit officers
dropped so that by 1974, 40% had less than one year’s service. Also, as the
Bank grew, budgeting procedures had to be implemented. Budgets, however,
were restricted to operating costs and were based on numbers of loans made.
There were no budgets for net interest income, sundry income or provisions for
loan losses. The only statistical report received by branch offices reported on
the number of loans made. Within a branch, the important report became the
one showing the number of loans made by each credit officer. When the Chief
General Manager, attending a regional branch managers’ conference, stressed
his office was not using ‘numbers’ to assess a credit officer’s work, he was met
with the remark: That is all very well, but you are only out here for one day!
After Murray took over the reins of FBDB in 1975, the Bank continued on the
same lending path. FBDB’s first fiscal year of operation would only be six months
as the Bank changed its fiscal year-end from September 30 to March 31 in order
to coincide with the government’s fiscal year. (Throughout this history, a fiscal
year is the 12-month period ending March 31st of that year, except for fiscal 1976
Early days at FBDB | 27
which was a six-month fiscal year.) In the six months ending March 31, 1976, the
new FBDB authorized 4,776 loans for $217 million, a 33% increase over the same
six months of the previous year. The Bank also authorized 13 equity financing deals
worth $2.5 million in the six-month period.
George Kirkwood was Manager at the Bank’s Prince George, British Columbia
(B.C.) branch when he received the call to deliver one of the first small business
seminars put on by the Bank. With no specialized management services on staff
as yet, branch managers were initially asked to deliver the new seminars. In the
absence of screening as to who should deliver the seminars, some events were
sterling performances while others were not, given that public speaking is not
everyone’s forte. Kirkwood, however, had the gift of the gab. The first seminar he
was asked to deliver, basic bookkeeping for small service and retail businesses,
had been prepared by a firm of accountants and tested in the Lower Mainland
of B.C. Kirkwood arranged to hold the seminar in Terrace, B.C. at a popular local
hotel since it was the only one with a room suitable for holding a seminar. With
some advance advertising, the seminar was fully booked, with 35 entrepreneurs
scheduled to attend. But by the time the seminar started, 45 business people
had shown up. They were all allowed to stay but more kept turning up. Kirkwood
was obliged to remain in Terrace for an extra day to deliver the seminar to
40 additional participants. Such was the need for learning business p rinciples
among small business owners and operators at the time. Popularity was
28 | Chapter 3
probably helped by the open bar following each of the early seminars. A $10 fee
covered the seminar and post seminar activities. In its first (six-month) fiscal
year, over 200 FBDB small business training seminars were delivered, mostly in
smaller centres.
Later on, as manager of the FBDB Victoria, B.C. branch office, Kirkwood had
to start up the CASE counselling program in his area. He had a good friend,
Jack Baynes, who was just about to retire as a bank manager at the Main Office
of the Bank of Montreal. The bank manager’s knowledge of small businesses
and their competencies made him an ideal candidate for CASE Coordinator, the
program manager for the area. Although it took a lot of persuasion, he agreed to
become the local CASE Coordinator. This was a stroke of luck on FBDB’s part, as
he quickly rounded up a highly competent CASE counselling roster from among
his professional contacts. He knew the key players in all the big firms and it took
only a month to complete the full roster of counsellors. This essentially was how
the CASE program was implemented across the country. CASE counselling
became so successful in Victoria that Kirkwood was drafted to become the
Assistant Regional Director for Management Services in the B.C. and Yukon
regional office where he helped manage both the seminar and CASE counselling
programs for the entire region. He would later play another key role as Assistant
Vice President, Loans, when he assisted Ken Neilson in improving the quality of
FBDB’s loans portfolio in the late 1980s, before being appointed District General
Manager in Toronto.
From the very beginning, the CASE counselling program was popular among
small business owners and small business advocates, especially politicians. Even
Early days at FBDB | 29
critics of the Bank’s lending practices would always add that CASE was a very
good program. The program had not received much market exposure when it was
domiciled in the few IT&C offices across Canada, offices usually located on some
anonymous floor in a large office building. Also, IDB officers had not been the most
cooperative when IT&C program managers would stop by and ask for referrals
for the CASE program. With the program managed by FBDB, however, it was
actively marketed, clearly filled a need (lack of management skills) and was cheap.
For $200, a small business owner could call in a CASE counsellor who would
diagnose the business problem or opportunity, and provide advice on how to
proceed. Diagnostics and recommendations were presented in a full report given
to the client. At the start of the CASE program, an equivalent service at a major
consulting company would, at a minimum, cost upwards of $2,000. In its first year
of operation, the CASE counselling program had integrated 1,300 retired business
persons into its roster and undertaken 502 assignments.
It did not take long for the Bank’s new management services to reach
full speed. In its first full year, fiscal 1977, the Bank completed 2,840 CASE
counselling assignments. Business training also blossomed as 628 business
seminars were held in fiscal 1977, attended by 12,000 entrepreneurs. The
owner-manager courses taken over from the Department of Manpower were
upgraded and distributed to provincial ministries of education for use in
colleges. The Bank updated its Minding Your Own Business series of mini-books
and distributed them through the branch network. FBDB also responded to
some 13,000 enquiries for information through its Small Business Information
Service. These enquiries principally involved requests for information on
government programs.
It soon became clear that management services were not just an add-on to
the Bank’s financial services but a full blown business in their own right. Scott was
rewarded for the quick success of management services and promoted to General
Manager (Vice President), Management Services. The design and implementation
of the new management services were very sound and they continued to be
delivered by the Bank in their original structure well into the 1990s, with only minor
modifications and increases in prices to be consistent with the subsidy received
from government.
The FBDB Act also called for the creation of Regional Advisory Councils. There
was no action on this front until 1976 when the Bank was told Ministers wanted to
fill out all five Regional Advisory Councils. The regional council was a forum where
local views about FBDB’s operations could be expressed for the benefit of the
regional Board member and Bank management. Members were appointed by the
government of the day. Lesser in stature than a Board of Director appointment,
it was still a form of recognition given to prominent businesspeople in different
regions of Canada for their political efforts. Though a non-paying position, an
appointment to a Regional Advisory Council did include reimbursements for
expenses to attend meetings which took place at least once per year. It can
be said that unlike Board of Directors deliberations, meetings of the Regional
Advisory Councils brought little to the table and served more for getting
information about the Bank out to regional interests.
30 | Chapter 3
In 1975, the Government of Canada decreed that the nation would convert
its measures to the metric system. The government realized there would be
substantial costs for small businesses to adopt the metric system and requested
FBDB to administer a financial assistance program in this regard. As with previous
requests to deliver a government financial assistance program, the Bank declined,
arguing that since the metric conversion program would provide financing to those
who could not get financing from private sources and FBDB, administering the
program would be ultra vires to the FBDB Act. A rather convenient interpretation
of the Act as, later in its evolution, the Bank with the same governing FBDB Act,
did deliver such programs. The Bank suggested the Adjustment Assistance Board,
created to assist the automotive sector, would be a better vehicle for the metric
conversion program. Gratuitously, the Bank offered to lend resources to the
program and to advertise it through its Small Business Information Service. The
Bank was still IDB at heart, jealously guarding its independence and not in the
mode of building bridges to government departments in Ottawa.
In its first six months, the new FBDB continued to expand its branch network
with five new branch office openings. However, for the first time, branch openings
were challenged. Board members asked whether there had been any cost benefit
analyses done on the new branch openings. None had been done but it was
emphasized by management that the openings would expand the Bank’s presence
across Canada, an implicit part of its new mandate. Just as important, it was posited
that to stop opening new branch offices would be detrimental to staff morale.
With all the changes occurring at the Bank, the President, Murray, felt it was
necessary to introduce a policy to stop loans from being extended to certain
sectors. Specifically, it was decreed that approaches for financing from nightclubs,
cabarets and similar businesses should not to be encouraged. While the intent of
the policy was clear, it was difficult to interpret in practice. For example, should a
restaurant with ethnic dance performances be classified as a cabaret or simply a
restaurant? The policy was toned down to allow the regional office to rule on the
interpretation of the policy in individual circumstances. Despite the spirit of this
policy, loans were extended to strip clubs and this led to one of the darker sagas
in FBDB’s history as will be recounted later on.
Borrowing requirements
At the close of 1975, financial and economic burdens were weighing heavily on the
federal government. As a result, FBDB and other crown corporations were asked
to limit their borrowings from the Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF). The CRF is
the federal government’s bank account so to speak. All government revenues are
deposited into the CRF and all payments by the government are paid from the
fund. FBDB was asked to limit its drawings from the CRF to $330 million annually.
This was soon reduced to $245 million. The government suggested that if the Bank
could not stay within its limit, it should consider using loan guarantees as a means
of financing its small business clients.
At the time, FBDB’s loans portfolio was growing on a net basis (new lending
less repayments) at around $125 -$150 million a year, debt rollovers were around
$175 million and capital requirements were around $20 million to support a
Early days at FBDB | 31
growing portfolio. Thus, it appeared the $330 million limit could accommodate
the first year’s needs. But the Bank’s loans portfolio was expanding and so FBDB
would soon have to tap financial markets to meet its borrowing requirements. This
meant borrowing costs would increase since the Bank would not be able to borrow
at the same rate as the Government of Canada (even though its debt obligations
carried the Government of Canada guarantee). Compared to the cost of borrowing
from the CRF in Ottawa, it was thought that borrowing directly in financial markets
would cost a quarter percentage point more. This extra cost would have to be
passed on to clients or the marginal profit the Bank was making could become
a marginal loss. In any event, FBDB had to make preparations to tap financial
markets in Canada and abroad. The Bank commissioned investment houses (as
they were then called) Wood Gundy and Burns Fry to do its debt structuring and
bidding in financial markets.
On first arriving in Ottawa, Lavigueur had planned to stay in the government for
a maximum of five years. Just as he was preparing to pursue opportunities in the
private sector, Sol Kanee and others on the FBDB Board put pressure on
Lavigueur to consider leading the FBDB, recognizing that his stellar credentials
and reputation as an astute strategist would be assets to the Bank. As it turned out,
Lavigueur’s experience and lessons learned in the federal government would be
applied to good use at FBDB.
An offer was made and accepted, and in December 1976, Lavigueur was hired to
be Executive Vice President at FBDB, effective March 1977, with the understanding
that he would be appointed President and CEO when Murray left in 1978. Clark,
appointed Executive Vice President and Chief General Manager for the interim
period December 1976 to March 1977, elected to retire in February 1977. One
chapter in the Bank’s history was closing and another was about to begin.
Mandate challenges
In 1977, the Bank also grappled with various issues that touched on its legal
mandate. FBDB’s principal legislated mandate was to provide financing ‘not
otherwise available on reasonable terms and conditions.’ This led to the Bank
being constantly referred to in the media and business circles as lender of last
resort, a phrase abhorred by Bank personnel who considered organized crime
the true lender of last resort. They preferred the term supplementary lender
to describe FBDB’s role in the market. The mandate was carried over from IDB
that had instituted procedures requiring letters of refusal to ensure the Bank’s
financing met this statutory condition. Before any loan could be authorized, FBDB
Early days at FBDB | 33
required a letter of refusal from the borrower’s usual financial institution. Since this
procedure proved impractical in many cases (private bankers were too busy to
write these letters), the Bank would instead send a letter to the borrower’s financial
institution notifying them of the approach to FBDB. For loans over $250,000,
potential borrowers were required to have a second letter of refusal from another
financial institution before FBDB could authorize the loan. In the opinion of IDB’s
Board, this was how the legal mandate of ‘not otherwise available on reasonable
terms and conditions’ could be put into practice. The same practice continued
with FBDB. For Bank personnel, getting the necessary letters on file was, at
the very least, a hindrance if not a pain. But the law was written as it was, and
procedures had to be followed.
In 1977, the Bank also dealt with other issues. The first was its interest rate
structure. IDB policy had been to charge higher interest rates on large-sized loans
and lower rates on smaller loans. This was the inverse of what arithmetic would
dictate since, on a per dollar earnings basis, it was much more expensive to book
a small-sized loan than a large one. In 1977, management questioned this inverse
relationship, a holdover from IDB days.
At the time, the average loan size outstanding (earning power) was decreasing
in real terms and larger sized loans were being prepaid at a higher than average
pace. In fiscal year 1977, three of every four new loans were for amounts under
$50,000. More importantly, operating expenses, formerly 2.3% of the average
amount of loans outstanding in fiscal 1971, rose to 2.9% in fiscal 1977. In absolute
terms, with the Bank’s expansion, operating expenses had increased from
$11.8 million in 1971 to $39.6 million in 1977. Clearly, the expansion of branch
offices, regional offices and staff overall was outstripping growth in the portfolio.
Given that branch managers and credit officers were being evaluated on the
number of loans made rather than the productive portfolio (earnings base), this
evolution should not have been unexpected. Nevertheless, the Bank had to get
more large-sized loans on its books for the resources it was employing. Reducing
interest rates was seen as the enabling factor.
intervening in small business lending, that is, to offset higher administrative costs
associated with making small loans. As will be seen later, this line of reasoning
turned out to be crucial in describing the financing gap in Canada. It was decided
to maintain a higher interest rate (one half of a percentage point) on loans over
$250,000 but with the caveat that lower rates could be charged at the discretion
of head office, the Executive Committee or the Board of Directors.
When word got out that FBDB had changed its interest rate policy and that
this could lead to lower rates for large loans, a private sector lender immediately
voiced opposition. They thought that the new interest rate structure at FBDB
would make it impossible for them to compete with FBDB. This issue would
continue to arise from time to time over the years.
The other issue that brought the ‘supplemental lender’ role into consideration
was the view of some Directors that FBDB remained the ‘best kept secret in
the land.’ (This was typical of the role of Directors. They would raise issues that
concerned them and then ask management to respond.) In the population at
large, and even within the small business population, the Bank was an unknown
entity and, when perceived as another government institution, would naturally
attract negative, albeit uninformed, views. Was more advertising the answer?
Senior management believed the Bank was already doing sufficient publicity.
There were advertised visits to rural communities outside the areas where FBDB
branch offices were situated and there was a fair amount of advertising of the
Bank’s management services, especially upcoming seminars, in local newspapers.
While acknowledging there was a relatively low level of advertising for the Bank’s
financial services, this was justified principally on the grounds of the Bank’s
supplemental role. If it advertised its financing services too much, management
felt financial institutions would complain about FBDB competing with them.
Furthermore, at the time the ‘best kept secret’ comment was made, the Bank was
barely in a breakeven position and could not afford, even if it wanted, to put more
money into advertising. It could also have been that if the Bank advertised its
financial services too heavily, there would have been a greater demand for higher
risk loans, many of which would have been rejected, thus leading to more negative
views from the business community and politicians. As a result, the Bank continued
on the path IDB had taken over the years and restricted advertising of its financial
services except when it came to announcing visits to rural communities.
4 E. Ritchie Clark, The IDB: A History of Canada’s Industrial Development Bank, University of Toronto Press, 1985. Quotes cited
in this chapter are taken from pages 312 and 313 of Clark’s book.
Early days at FBDB | 35
were now attached to the regional offices.” In addition, Clark writes: “Regions
also developed their own books of ‘circular’ directives outlining routines and
procedures to be followed within a particular region… The instructions for the
Ontario region were famous all over the Bank, not only because they reflected
the inimitable personality of the regional general manager, W.C. Stuart, but
also because of their attractive acronym CROONS (Central Region Office
Organization Notes).”
That a region would have its own version of operating directives was tantamount
to having an independent operation. As Clark states: “Growth in the size of
regional offices as a result of regionalization ... was a visible reflection of the
growing importance of these offices.” He also notes that as a result of this
regionalization and rapid growth, by 1975 the Ontario region had reached the size
the whole Bank had been in 1966. British Columbia region was the size the Bank
had been in 1967.
Regional general managers had higher job grades than those of many head
office general managers who, on paper, were in charge of overall services and
policies at the Bank. And some were not shy to pull rank on their head office
counterparts when it suited them. They would openly remind head office managers
that they (the regions) were paying the salaries of head office personnel. Such
was the schism that head office personnel wishing to meet with someone in
the regions had to have prior permission from the regional general manager,
explaining in detail the purpose of their trip. Without prior permission, the visitor
stood the chance of being thrown out of the regional office. In actual fact, such an
eviction occurred at least once.
36 | Chapter 3
In FBDB’s first year, authorizing limits of regional managers were increased and
new branch offices were opened, continuing the trend that started in the early
1970s. By the end of the decade, 16 more branch offices were opened bringing
the total number of branch offices to 96. These new offices had to be staffed and
more resources were needed to manage them. Between 1976 and 1980, branch
office staff increased from 996 people to 1,448, a 45% increase over four years.
Regional office staff increased from 289 to 336, a 16% increase over the same
period. With regional staff and activity increasing at such a pace, a new position of
Deputy General Manager was created in each regional office to assist the general
manager. FBDB’s rapid staff increases prompted one Board Director to ask, in
early 1978, for a report on why staff was growing so quickly. Management gave its
justification. The regions had the authorities and the resources to do their job.
The rise of a vibrant small business economy in Canada was a major contributor
to the Bank’s rapid growth in the 1970s. The government could not ignore this
trend and, in 1976, created a new Cabinet position, Minister of State for Small
Business, with Len Marchand, a status Indian from Kamloops, B.C. as Minister.
Chartered banks were also seeing their loans to small business increase rapidly,
more so than FBDB’s, as well as loans made under the Small Business Loans Act
(SBLA), the government loan guarantee program for small business loans under
$100,000. It was shown by an economic consultant to the Bank, Charles Schwartz,
that loan enquiries to FBDB, rising in the latter part of the 1970s, were a leading
economic indicator for the Canadian economy. The economy was growing, small
business was growing and so was FBDB lending.
This period of growth was helped by an easing in the Bank’s credit requirements.
As an example, the Bank became more accommodating when it came to financing
leasehold improvements. Although there was no real estate security behind
these transactions, they were done if the business was thought to have sufficient
earnings to service its loan. It was argued that financing leasehold improvements
was no different from financing a sawmill in the middle of nowhere since the latter
also had little property value. Another analogy was the financing of specialized
equipment. It too might have little or no value in liquidation yet the Bank was
perfectly at ease in financing such projects. So why not leasehold improvements?
As many small businesses were operating in leased premises, the ability to do
these types of loans opened a large market including countless restaurants and
small retail stores.
There was another, and perhaps more important, internal factor at work that drove
the record number of new loans at FBDB. With the message that the government
wanted more lending done by FBDB being delivered directly by the President,
Early days at FBDB | 37
$700.0 16,000
14,000
$600.0
Numbers of loans
12,000
$500.0 Dollars
10,000
$400.0
8,000
$300.0
6,000
$200.0
4,000
$100.0
2,000
$0.0
1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980
Fiscal Year
Note: Dollars are in millions; fiscal 1976 annualized based on 6 months (conversion to fiscal year ending March 31).
When Lavigueur became President, the Board of Directors appointed Eric Scott
as Executive Vice President. At the time, the Board appointed senior officers of
the Bank at the Vice President level and above. Delegation of authority from the
Board to the President to appoint all officers below the rank of President did not
come until later. Such was the involvement of the Board of Directors in managing
the affairs of the Bank. Scott, in his role as Director, Management Services, had
done an outstanding job implementing the new programs across the country and
this impressed the Board. But the appointment must have caused consternation
among other candidates from the regions as well as head office.
Two other senior Bank officers resigned around the same time as Richard Murray:
John Millard as regional general manager for British Columbia and the Yukon,
and H.J. Russell, who was general manager Loans at head office. With the new
appointments, the nomenclature of general manager changed to vice president,
except for the regional general managers who wanted to keep the term ‘general
manager’ in their titles. This maintained their distinctiveness from the head office
crowd. (When Ritchie Clark was appointed Executive Vice President, his title
also included the term “and Chief General Manager.”) So the regional general
manager became known as Vice President and Regional General Manager.
Eric Bell was appointed Vice President, Financial Services, replacing Russell,
while Harry Baker replaced Millard. The Board also appointed Jack Nordin as
Vice President, Finance. Previously general manager of corporate development
in charge of the transition from IDB to FBDB and before that, general manager
of the Quebec region, Nordin was widely respected for his brilliance as ‘the
smartest guy in the Bank,’ but it might have been that Scott had less negatives
about him so was appointed to the number two position (Executive Vice
President) instead of Nordin.
Head office occupied four contiguous floors at Place Victoria. The Quebec
regional office was already located on the lofty 46th floor with the Montreal branch
office on the main floor. Head office staff sorely missed the Bank of Canada
premises mainly because they used to have access to the Bank of Canada
cafeteria where a 75 cent coupon purchased a three-course meal at lunch. Staff
could also cash their pay cheques at the teller wicket at the Bank of Canada
on the main floor. But leaving the Bank of Canada’s premises was part of the
evolutionary process and a final stage in the transition from IDB to FBDB.
40 | Chapter 4
1979
On the eve
of the great
recession
During the short-lived Joe Clark government, FBDB approaches
its legislated ceiling on assets and must consider rationing credit.
Management realizes the Bank is about to record its first operating
loss in history.
On the eve of the great recession | 41
A few years into FBDB’s existence, some ominous trends started to appear in
the Bank’s operations. As alluded to earlier, there was a decline of 7% in
new lending in the 1976-77 fiscal year, reflecting, according to President Murray,
sluggish economic conditions. Loan write-offs were $3.9 million in the year, up
from $1.6 million the preceding year. A charge of $19.9 million was made against
income for loan and investment losses, up from $5.8 million the previous fiscal
year, 1976, albeit only a six-month year.
In mid-1978, it became clear FBDB’s profitability was at risk. The average loan
size relative to inflation continued to decrease, loan and investment losses were
increasing, debt rollover was costing millions of dollars as interest rates were on
the rise, the Bank’s equity investment activity was being financed by borrowings
at an annual cost of $6 million, and Management Services’ appropriations from
government did not cover the full cost of services shared with the financial
services operations.
The effect of the average loan size not keeping up with inflation was cited
earlier when FBDB’s interest rate policy was changed to reduce the bias against
large-sized loans. It was reported that if the average loan size had kept pace with
inflation since 1973, there would have been a positive impact of some $19 million
on net income. The practical question in hindsight is if the Bank had had proper
financial modelling tools, would it have been able to quantify the consequence of
lower real loan sizes and done something much earlier to mitigate the situation?
And would it have even been possible to forecast that the flurry of loan and
investment losses was not temporary? Although the Canadian economy was
considered soft at the time, it turned out to be in much worse shape, as will be
documented later. This was the one big storm no one could have foreseen.
early 1970s. But this level of expenses was thought to be justified on the grounds
that certain functions such as information systems, personnel management,
inspection and internal audit, for the most part done by the Bank of Canada in the
IDB days, had to be expanded within an independent FBDB in order to provide
proper controls, especially in context of the Bank’s rapid expansion. In its first
three years of existence, FBDB had achieved remarkable growth and completed
a smooth transition as an autonomous crown corporation. But pressures on
profitability and a new regime in Ottawa were about to test the organization as
never before.
For FBDB, 1979 was a turning point in many respects. Both external and internal
pressures were mounting. Reviews were the order of the day to figure out how
to deal with the challenges to profitability. In the meantime, under optimistic
assumptions about future economic conditions over the medium term, 4% to 5%
real annual economic growth, declining unemployment and inflation rates, the
Bank projected that it would break-even on the bottom line for the next few years.
FBDB did declare a small profit of $0.5 million in fiscal 1979 (compared to
$1.1 million the previous year). This profit was made possible by reducing the
general reserve for losses by $2 million, that is, a reversal of provisions for future
loan losses. In effect, $2 million were added to net income by an accounting move
allowed at the time because there was no consensus or fixed guideline on what
the general reserve should represent. Should it be to cover all possible losses on
loans that were already in the portfolio but that were yet to be identified? Should
it cover only new loan losses that were expected to be identified in the next year?
Or maybe those to be identified in the first six months of the next year? And so
on. Answers on what the general reserve should represent thus kept changing to
accommodate current financial realities.
While the Bank was grappling with internal factors affecting its profitability, it
had to deal with other issues with potential negative effects. First was the legal
limit imposed by Section 20 of the FBDB Act on the total amount of liabilities the
Bank could have, which in turn limited the total amount of loans and investments it
could have on its books. In 1979, this limit was $2.2 billion – the maximum amount
of equity ($200 million) allowed plus 10 times that amount. The factor of 10,
referred to as the leverage factor, was the amount by which the Bank could lever
its capital.
In the first nine months of 1979, the Canadian economy grew at a brisk pace
– 4% real growth – and prime interest rates increased only marginally from 11.5%
to 12%. For most of 1979, FBDB’s lending activity continued its upward climb and
by mid-year, it seemed that loan authorizations could surpass the $1 billion mark
for the 1979-1980 fiscal year. At this pace the Bank could reach its legislated
$2.2 billion assets limit as early as October 1979. It was calculated that new loan
authorizations would have to be lower than $847 million to remain within the
$2.2 billion limit until March 31, 1980.
To complicate matters further, federal elections were called in June 1979 and
a minority Progressive Conservative government under the Right Honourable
Joe Clark was elected. With a new, minority government, the likelihood of swift
On the eve of the great recession | 43
Any formula for rationing credit is fraught with problems. Should credit
be rationed by size of loan, by region or by purpose of loan (working capital,
equipment financing, land and building)? Just as the Bank was coming to grips
with these issues, interest rates started another upward rise to 15% in the last
quarter of 1979. As a result, demand for FBDB loans slackened and the need for
credit rationing diminished.
The new government, acknowledging the grave impact credit rationing could
have on small business, started drafting new legislation to increase FBDB’s lending
limit. The Bank preferred to have the $200 million limit on capital increased,
allowing more capital to flow into the Bank and with it, more lending room. But
in the draft legislation, the government decided instead to change the leverage
factor from 10 to 12 and, if needed, to 15 by regulation, to allow for a $3.2 billion
limit on loans and investments in the portfolio. The Progressive Conservative
government clearly had no appetite for putting more equity capital into the Bank.
The draft legislation, Bill C-4, was never passed by Parliament, as the minority
government was defeated in December 1979. The President of the Treasury Board,
the Honourable Sinclair Stevens, wrote FBDB saying that, until the FBDB Act was
amended, the Bank could commit to loans beyond its $2.2 billion limit but not
disburse funds in order to remain within the legal limit.
loan portfolio, if necessary, to stay within its $2.2 billion legislated limit until the
FBDB Act could be amended, which was done in 1980. That amendment basically
followed the same formula proposed by the previous government. The total
amount of loans and investments the Bank could have on its books, previously
limited to 10 times its capital base, was increased to 12 times the capital base and
could increase further to 15 times by government regulation. A $3.2 billion ceiling
was effectively placed on the Bank’s total assets.
In 1979, the Small Business Financing Review was initiated in Ottawa, under
the auspices of the Department of Industry, Trade and Commerce. (This Review,
as will be later detailed, would place the Bank in a defensive mode in terms of
its government relations.) It was also the year of the second oil price shock. The
first took place in 1973 when the price of a barrel of oil jumped from $3 to $12
almost overnight. This game changer was seen as the root cause of the recession
and hyper inflation that plagued the 1970s – the era of stagflation. (A Saudi Oil
Minister at the time famously wondered why the fuss over the price increase since
a barrel of oil, at $3, was cheaper than a bottle of Scotch whisky.) This time, in
1979, the price increase was fuelled by the combined effects of the deregulation
of oil prices in the U.S., the Iranian revolution resulting in a sharp cutback in oil
production, and the taking of U.S. hostages in Iran followed by the U.S. embargo
on Iranian oil. The price for a barrel of oil jumped from $15.85 to $39.50, a 150%
increase between April 1979 and April 1980. The 1979 oil crisis was at the core of
the loss of confidence in all markets and led to an historic rise in interest rates.
With the economy spiralling downwards, the Bank realized its first operating
loss would be recorded for the fiscal year 1980. The first estimate of loss, made in
October 1979, was for $1.4 million. By December 1979, the actual loss accumulated
to date was $13.8 million. The final figure for fiscal year 1980 was a loss of
$29.3 million. This was just the beginning of a series of losses over the next four
years as the economy plunged into what would later be described as the Great
Recession. (This was the original Great Recession, later superseded by the Great
Recession of 2008.)
Chapter 5 | 45
1980 to 1983
Cost
recovery
Part I
F iscal year 1980 marked a major reversal in fortunes that started the Federal
Business Development Bank on a slippery slope towards oblivion. If it was
not a perfect storm that hit the Bank, it was near perfect. The confluence of rapid
expansion, taking on greater risk, absence of management information systems,
the mismatch of assets and liabilities, and the worst recession since the Great
Depression of the 1930s, led to the Bank recording its first ever operating loss.
The increase in interest rates and economic slowdown in early 1980 were
widely seen within and outside the Bank as a temporary setback. There was
general consensus the Bank would soon rebound, resume its growth path
and return to profitability. In fact, even as operating losses were evident, the
operating budget prepared for the following fiscal year, 1981, projected new loan
authorizations increasing by $150 million with a commensurate increase in staff of
about 150 people. Curiously, it also projected another loss, similar in amount to
fiscal 1980.
In the midst of this new experience of operating losses, two views as to their cause
emerged. One was that economic conditions were the cause. And since the economic
situation was temporary, so too were the losses. Hence, the first loss in fiscal year
1980 was considered a fluke and not to be repeated. Even after another loss the
following year, 1981, there remained optimism that a turnaround was imminent.
Another view held the economic recession had little to do with the loss and
the only contributing factor was the greater risk the Bank had taken on when it
became FBDB. This argument reasoned that IDB had operated through many
recessions since its creation in 1944 and emerged from all previous downturns
without posting an operating loss. Though not expressed publicly, there was
still a strong attachment among some IDBers to the IDB way of operations and
resentment of the criticism that IDB had been too conservative in its lending
practices. What was not known at the time, however, was that the looming
recession would be the worst since the Great Depression of the 1930s. The prime
lending rate at chartered banks was on the rise, hitting 18.25% by the end of 1980
before peaking at 22.75% in August 1981. This was not a loss of confidence in the
economy – it was a crash of confidence.
While the first loss in fiscal 1980 was a shock to the system, it was not totally
unexpected. As noted earlier, storm clouds began forming in 1979. When asked by
fellow members on the Board of Directors what he thought of the Bank’s portfolio,
the President, Guy Lavigueur, one year into his new job, gave an assessment
based on gut feel as he had no quantitative or analytical data. He expressed the
view the Bank would soon be in a loss position – how much and for how long,
he could not predict. One Board member thought if the Bank had taken on too
Cost recovery Part I | 47
much risk in its expansion, it would take at least five years to get out of a loss
position. This was based on his own experience at a chartered bank where he had
encountered a similar situation in one of the districts he was managing. Another
Board member stated he did not want to be associated with a Bank that was losing
money and soon resigned from the Board. The five-year prediction, as it turned
out, was right on the mark.
In 1980, the Bank faced two uncertainties: where were the economy and
interest rates headed and how much risk was in the loan portfolio? Numerous
prognosticators of the day (economists) took turns addressing the first uncertainty
and the vast majority turned out to be wrong in their predictions. With the
Governor of the Bank of Canada on its Board, it could have been assumed the
Bank had better knowledge of how the economy and interest rates would unfold
but the Governor knew better than to enter the forecasting game at a time of such
uncertainty, even in private. The second uncertainty, however, was something the
Bank could address. While it couldn’t change what was already in the portfolio,
it could change what was going into the portfolio. Losses already embedded
in the portfolio would have to be digested but there was no need to add to the
indigestion. The risk on new loans had to be controlled. The only problem here
was that the Bank needed better tools to quantify the risk of its loans. Thus started
what was perhaps the first real quantitative analysis of the Bank’s portfolio.
hard numbers around it. For him, theory was not sufficient without numbers to
back it up. Valdmanis had the fortitude to drill down and get to the bottom of the
numbers with lengthy algebraic calculations.
The ensuing analysis showed that for both the 1973 and 1978 loans, the
percentage of loans that ended up as write-offs or with a provision for loss varied
significantly by MES risk grade. Almost all loans had an A grading for management
– it would have been difficult to get a loan authorized by superiors if it was known
management was lacking. After all, weak management skills were often cited as the
reason small (or for that matter, big) businesses fail. Thus, for measuring loan risk,
three risk levels were delineated according to grades for earnings and security.
Low risk loans were those with AA grades (A earnings and A security); medium
risk loans comprised loans with AB and BA grades; and high risk loans were those
graded BB. The medium risk category was later refined to two sub-categories for
analytical purposes: low medium risk comprising those with A earnings grade, and
high medium comprising those with B earnings grade.
In addition to variance by risk category, it was found loss rates were significantly
higher among loans made for working capital purposes. There also were
indications of slightly higher loss rates among loans for refinancing and change of
ownership purposes, and for smaller-sized loans. The graded sample of fiscal year
1978 loans was eventually expanded to include all loans made in fiscal 1978 and
correlations done between loss rates and MES grades. The CRAC committee’s
Cost recovery Part I | 49
work on loss rates provided a major input to the Bank’s 1980 Cost Recovery Study.
Completed in October 1980, the study recommended actions needed to move the
Bank back to full cost recovery, that is, profitability.
Rampant inflation through the 1970s was also eroding the Bank’s ability to fully
offset costs. Operating costs, mainly salaries and premises, rose with inflation
but the earning power of individual loans did not. Between 1971 and 1980,
Canada’s Consumer Price Index (the basis for measuring inflation) more than
doubled. During the same period, the size of the average Bank loan outstanding
rose by only a quarter. In other words, while the earning power of the average
loan increased by about 25% during the 1970s, the cost of administering these
loans doubled.
Inflation had an even greater impact through its effect on interest rates.
Chartered banks’ prime lending rate, which hovered around 6% in the early
1970s, started rising to the 11.5% level in 1974. The rate then dropped back to
around 8.25% in 1977 only to start rising again to 16.75% in April 1980. After
a brief period of abatement, interest rates took off again and the prime rate
reached its peak in August 1981 at 22.75% triggering a crash of confidence in
financial markets.
The Cost Recovery Study thus concluded: There is little that can be done to
improve cost recovery on the Existing portfolio. The gross margin and average
loan size cannot be changed, and there is relatively little that can be done to
improve potential loan losses. Thus the study will concentrate on measures to
achieve cost recovery on New loans. If this is accomplished, these operating
losses will gradually reduce as the existing portfolio is replaced by new loans
made on a cost recovery basis. The Study also stated that the principal ways to
improve cost recovery were to increase income, principally through higher fees,
decrease expenses and change loan quality. There was little room to increase
revenue by increasing FBDB interest rates as its rates were already higher than
what small businesses were being charged by chartered banks.
50 | Chapter 5
24.0%
19.0%
14.0%
9.0%
4.0%
1980
1980
1983
1983
1982
1982
1979
1979
1975
1975
1976
1976
1972
1972
1973
1973
1978
1978
1977
1977
1974
1974
1981
1981
Source: Bank of Canada
The 1980 Cost Recovery Study made an interesting observation that fortunately
was not later seen by officials in Ottawa who thought there was no longer a
role for FBDB in the market. The Study observed: There has been an increasing
involvement of the private sector in term lending to small business in the past five
years. The private sector has naturally attempted to select the most attractive
risks. This has left the more marginal proposals for the Bank. It has also decreased
the Bank’s relative position in the market. These developments are not necessarily
contrary to the objective of the Bank as a supplemental lender, but there is a
negative impact on cost recovery.
The outlook for FBDB was bleak. Lavigueur knew he had to move swiftly to start
reducing losses. The Bank could do nothing about the economic environment.
Some fees were increased but the effect on income was minimal. This meant the
focus had to be on the two areas the Bank could control: the level of risk on new
loans and operating expenses.
One strategy to reduce risk and improve the bottom line would have been
to eliminate all small loans. It was calculated that to breakeven on loans under
$25,000, even if categorized as low risk, the Bank would have required a margin
Cost recovery Part I | 51
(the difference between interest income and interest expenses) of over 12.5%. In
1980, it would have meant charging these small businesses interest rates beyond
30%. The actual margin the Bank received on small loans was about 4.5% so it
was automatically losing at least 8% on all loans authorized under $25,000. While
this would have been a quick fix, it was also the Bank’s mandate to serve this
market. Almost half of the number of loans authorized by the Bank in this period
were for amounts under $25,000.
The focus therefore turned to discouraging loans with the least chance of
recovery, minimal economic impact and the greatest negative impact on the
Bank’s earnings. More specifically, loans for working capital and refinancing
purposes that were under-secured (less than 90%) were targeted, as were loans
for changes of ownership (except those with proven or A earnings). Exceptions
were allowed if approved by the next authorizing level.
The mandate to ensure new loans were of the quality that would eventually
return the Bank to full cost recovery fell on Yves Milette who was brought to head
office as Vice President, Financial Services. He was formerly the Vice President
and General Manager for Quebec region which had the best quality portfolio
in the Bank. This was primarily due to its favourable position in the market since
chartered banks were relatively less active in the province. It also helped that the
region was able to attract more finance and commerce university graduates onto
its staff.
The Bank’s operating expenses were mainly staff and premises costs. Little
could be done to reduce the cost for premises as the Bank was committed to
52 | Chapter 5
long-term leases. Reducing staff expenses (the number of staff) represented the
only meaningful action the Bank could take. At the same time, Lavigueur also
wanted to professionalize the staff in head office support functions. Apart from
some computer system analysts and managers, support services were staffed
principally by officers who came through the credit stream, and did not have the
training or background to provide the professional support services the Bank
needed. One of the first hires he insisted on was John Langlais who worked with
Price Waterhouse, FBDB’s external auditor. Langlais was brought in to address
improvements needed in the Bank’s financial reporting and budgeting systems.
As mentioned earlier, Don Allen was hired to head the Economics department.
And, with the Bank having to start borrowing funds in capital and money markets,
Lavigueur set up a new team of Treasury experts from outside FBDB. The
Bank’s planning system also needed to be ramped up and a number of MBA
professionals were recruited for the Planning department.
Neilson understood both the magnitude and consequences of his task. Major
staff cuts had to be made. Either this or the Bank would go on losing money and
become a target for closure by the powers in Ottawa.
How much to cut, and where, were the crucial questions. As part of the Cost
Recovery Study, Valdmanis, under the tutelage of Hugh Carmichael, head of
the Planning department to whom he reported, had done an analysis of loan
making and loan administration costs. By polling Bank officers with extensive
credit experience, he looked at each activity involved in the loan making and
loan administration processes, and assigned the amount of hours needed
for each activity. Loan making activities involved client enquiries, declined
applications and loans authorized at branch, region and head office levels. Loan
administration activities were delineated according to whether a loan was in
category 1 (performing), category 2 (temporary problems to be resolved), category
3 (downgraded with prospects of being written off) and category 4 (in liquidation
stage). Person-hours required for each of these activities were assigned. For
example, it was estimated that on average, category 1 loans required 6 hours of
credit officer administration per year while loans in categories 3 and 4 required
68 hours of administration per year. Dealing with a loan enquiry involved 1.5 hours
of credit officer time, a loan authorized at the branch would require 21 hours and
a loan authorized at head office, 64 hours of credit officer time. These figures
became known as staffing norms. By multiplying the volume of activities by the
person-hours required per activity, it was possible to project the number of credit
officers needed in branch offices.
The level of detail analysed to arrive at staffing norms was impressive for that
era. Even more impressive was that these intricate calculations were done with just
a simple calculator. The days of spreadsheets and personal computers were still a
few years away. When just one parameter was changed, all calculations had to be
redone, one calculation at a time. They also had to be re-typed as there was no
word processing.
With no other tool with which to manage staff reductions, Neilson used the
staffing norms to determine how much staff was needed where. The norms were
not readily embraced by the regions but it was the only method available to ensure
equitable staff cuts. Not by accident, the staffing norms proved they worked –
when applied to actual total loan activities for fiscal 1980, the norms produced
a staff requirement that virtually matched the actual staff level that year. To make
the match, some ‘fat’ (10%) was built into the norms. (Later on, when applying the
staffing norms the inevitable question would be: ‘Is that with or without the fat?’)
With loan authorizations down by about 50% in fiscal 1981, considerable cuts
had to be made to branch staff. Lavigueur insisted that cuts had to be made
at all levels in the Bank. While respecting the need to maintain proportional
representations of francophone employees, especially in Quebec, regional offices
and head office had to produce at least the same proportion of staff reductions
as that occurring in branch offices. Regional vice presidents were given the
responsibility to implement the necessary staff cuts in their respective regions.
This included both branch office staff and regional office staff. Head office cuts
were overseen by Neilson.
54 | Chapter 5
While the number of staff reductions at the branch level was determined by
applying the staffing norms, at the regional office the vice presidents and their
personnel managers had a more difficult task. To effect staff reductions, work
methods had to be changed. Regional office support functions with relatively large
staff counts were targeted. A case in point was the legal services function in the
Ontario regional office. Its head, Jim Hercus, was appointed Regional Counsel
in 1979. He had joined IDB in 1971 as branch solicitor in Saskatoon and moved
to the Regina and Prince Albert branches before becoming Assistant Regional
Solicitor for the Prairie and Northern region. When he arrived at the Ontario
regional office, there were about 40 people working in the legal section, including
staff in some branch offices. When the call came for staff reductions, Hercus set
about changing the way legal services did its work. It was not an overnight job
but by the time he left the regional office in 1984 to become General Counsel for
the Bank at head office, the regional legal services staff had been pared down to
about 10 people and shortly thereafter to about five people. Hercus changed his
department’s work methods in ways that were soon duplicated by other regions.
It did not take much deliberation to terminate some head office functions
completely. On this list was the Bank’s in-house health clinic, staffed by a nurse
and an assistant. Included too were the services of a medical doctor who would
visit the Bank each Thursday for appointments with Bank employees. Similarly, the
Bank’s in-house travel agency, whose staff arranged transportation and lodging
for staff business trips, was closed down. The Bank’s fully-equipped movie studio
that produced videos for management services’ training programs was also closed.
Two departments with relatively large staffs, Records and Insurance, were targeted
for major reductions pending a review of work methods. The Records department
essentially provided a centralized filing service for all head office departments
and had about 20 staff in 1980. By the time it was downsized and merged into the
Premises and Supply department (a.k.a. promises and surprise), it consisted of
one person, Maureen Pidgeon. Similarly, the Insurance department was merged
into Legal Services and later manned by one person, Brian Hammond.
As to be expected, there was much back and forth between Neilson and
department heads. Questions were asked along the lines of: ‘How can you
expect me to do my job if you cut my staff?’ or ‘why does my department have to
reduce by so much when such and such department has so many staff?’ Some
departments readily accepted reductions as they knew they had some ‘fat’ in their
ranks. One such case was the Economics department, headed by Allen who left
the Bank for personal reasons in 1980. He was replaced by the author, Donald
Layne, who had also worked with Lavigueur in Ottawa. When Allen left, there were
Cost recovery Part I | 55
about five employees, out of 15, who were part-timers. When asked what these
part-timers did and what their schedules were, no one could give a reasonable
answer and their contracts were terminated. Other staff cuts to Economics
followed later.
Cutting staff is arguably the most difficult task for a manager. The difficulty
lies not in the number of people to layoff but in dealing with the consequences,
reactions and emotions that surface when someone is told he or she no longer
has a job. As the one doing the telling, the manager takes on some responsibility
for the loss of one’s job. Some managers, unable to carry out the task of laying
someone off, would call on the Human Resources department for assistance.
This was the environment Yvonne Zacios walked into when she joined the
Bank as part of the professionalization of the human resources department at
head office in 1980. She was hired to work on improving employee relations. An
attitudinal survey of FBDB staff done a year earlier had shown this to be a pressing
need. Zacios had relevant experience from having worked at large companies,
General Electric and Hygrade Foods, which had large unions to deal with. But
her work priority quickly made a U-turn – from improving employee relations to
managing layoffs.
Even though Neilson may have wanted it to be, laying someone off is never
elegant. The protocol developed by Zacios was intended to avoid confronta-
tion by telling the affected employee his/her position was being eliminated as
the Bank had no choice but to downsize. She would then quickly acknowledge
the person’s contributions to the Bank and move on to the details of the sever-
ance package the Bank was prepared to provide. If the subject returned to the
56 | Chapter 5
inevitable question, ‘why me,’ Zacios would try to lift the burden of self-doubt by
de-personalizing the need for the layoff and emphasizing the Bank’s requirement
to reduce staff. Most discussions focussed on the financial aspects of the
severance package being offered.
While each situation was unique, there was sufficient guidance in the market as
to what severance packages were acceptable. FBDB was not the only company
faced with the need to reduce staff. The recession was hitting everyone and
many large corporations in the private sector had already started their layoffs.
As many cases had gone before the courts, there was a lot of jurisprudence
on severance packages. Based on salary, years of service and level in the
organization, one could consult external experts and jurisprudence to arrive at
a fair package. The objective was to offer the best severance package within
market norms for the affected employee. Sometimes the Bank’s package was
even slightly better than market.
Another concern arose when the person being laid off was close to being
eligible for pension benefits. This was critical not only for the pension itself but
also for post-retirement health benefits which pensioners received if they moved
directly from the employ of the Bank to the Bank’s pension benefits. Alphonse
Thibodeau, a recent professional hired in Human Resources for Benefits and
Compensation, had to be innovative in constructing severance packages that
would bridge the gap, when feasible, to pension benefits. He was assisted by
Richard Dupuis, the in-house expert on pension rules and calculations. If anyone
needed to know anything about the Bank’s pension plan, or for that matter about
government pension plans, and more specifically about their own potential
pension benefits, they would go to Dupuis. He was consulted by most in the Bank,
whether leaving or not. Having started his career at a clerical level in the Bank of
Canada, he was the model of the self-taught, self-made professional.
Cost recovery Part I | 57
Many times, the difficult task of laying off staff was handed over to Zacios. As
the bearer of bad news so often, she became known as the Axe Lady. During this
period, when an FBDB employee was asked to meet with Zacios, that person knew
what was in store. Several times, on the day of such an appointment, the person
would call in sick. When Zacios turned up on a floor, a groan could be heard as
employees discerned another co-worker would soon be leaving the Bank. In
addition to her head office assignments, Zacios provided assistance and counsel
to regional personnel managers, from Atlantic Canada to British Columbia, and 60
or 70 hour weeks were the norm for her. In such an environment, the day the Bank
achieved full cost recovery status could not arrive too early.
Between March 1980 and March 1981, the Bank’s term lending staff was
reduced by about 200, from 2,136 employees to 1,941 employees, with all
reductions occurring in branch offices. It took some months to work out the
staffing reductions for regional and head offices. By March 1983, total term lending
staff was reduced by another 468. Of these, 151 were reductions in regional and
head offices. Significantly, staff reductions over this period affected all levels as
vice presidents also left the Bank involuntarily.
By early 1983, there were signs the economy was recovering. Prime interest
rates had dropped to below 12% from the 22.75% peak of August 1981. There was
hope in many quarters that the layoffs were finally over. But losses persisted during
the early eighties. On top of this challenge, the Bank’s very existence was being
questioned in the government’s review of small business financing in Canada.
58 | Chapter 6
1979 to 1983
SBFR & a
new mandate
for FBDB
Much energy is expended proving to stakeholders that a financing
gap exists for small business. Prolonged (and sometimes heated)
deliberations culminate with a new FBDB mandate accompanied
by capital injections.
SBFR & a new mandate for FBDB | 59
The terms of reference for the Review were quite broad and general
in nature. The object, as stated, was to determine the extent of, and how
effectively, financing was being made available and delivered to small business
by non-federal government sources and by the panoply of federal programs.
The Review was to deal with most forms of financing while paying special
attention to long-term debt and venture capital. The Review was to provide
conclusions and recommendations with respect to the usual efficiency and
effectiveness of policies and programs. It was also supposed to comment
on the need for federal program additions, amendments, integrations or
eliminations, in order to deal with both wasteful duplication and significant
gaps for which government intervention may be warranted.
A study team was assembled within IT&C and headed by Jim Howe who was
a Director General in the department. He was given a significant budget and
was able to hire external consultants to assist, including Don McFetridge, a
professor of Economics at Carleton University, and Joe D’Cruz, a professor at
the University of Toronto’s business school.
IT&C’s Small Business Financing Review was not the only study of small
business financing going on at the time. The Canadian Bankers Association (CBA)
had also commissioned a study of small business financing in Canada in response
to the perennial criticism chartered banks were not providing sufficient financing
to Canada’s small businesses. The CBA study was contracted to two business
school professors at the University of Western Ontario to conduct, Larry Wynant
and Jim Hatch. And yet another study, dealing with the federal government’s
business financing programs, was being initiated at the Economic Council of
Canada (now defunct). Entitled Intervention and Efficiency, this study, headed by
Dr. André Ryba, reviewed all direct government interventions in the marketplace,
including the Federal Business Development Bank.
60 | Chapter 6
From 1980 to 1983, the Bank would have to deal with the consequences of
all these studies over which it had no control. In each case, FBDB was asked
to cooperate by providing Bank data and responding to questions. When the
studies were completed, the Bank could only react to their conclusions and
recommendations. Strategically, FBDB’s President commissioned his own study.
This way the Bank would be in a position to counter any controversial conclusions
and hypotheses that might arise from the other studies. It was the season for small
business financing studies in Canada.
Lavigueur hired the firm of Peat Marwick Associates (since merged into KPMG)
to conduct the Bank’s study of small business financing and FBDB’s role. The
partner at Peat Marwick overseeing the FBDB study was Guy Cousineau. He
knew the ropes in Ottawa and ‘how Ottawa thinks.’ Before retiring from the federal
government, he had been Chairman of the Unemployment Insurance Commission
when Lavigueur arrived in Ottawa and had served at the Assistant Deputy Minister
level in Treasury Board.
The University of Western Ontario’s study done for the Canadian Bankers
Association was the first to be completed, in early 1981. From FBDB’s point of view,
it described fairly how the small business financing market was functioning. The key
piece of analysis was a comparison of commercial lending risk for chartered bank
non-SBLA loans, SBLA loans and FBDB loans. Various characteristics were used as
components of loan risk as shown in Table 1.
Years of Relevant
9.9 6.0 5.2
Management Experience
The study also compared the size of firms receiving financing from chartered
banks and from FBDB. Its analysis showed FBDB made proportionately more loans
to new firms and to firms with annual sales under $250,000.
With respect to FBDB, the University of Western Ontario study stated: We can
conclude that the FBDB provides higher risk loans than do chartered banks. The
FBDB also undertakes a more in-depth analysis of loan requests, partly because
of the higher risk of their loan applications. FBDB lending officers also spend
more time evaluating each loan request. Our interviews suggest that the FBDB
has a customer relationship that is similar to that of chartered banks. The FBDB
is essentially a passive lender and does not take an active role in altering the
SBFR & a new mandate for FBDB | 61
business operations or activities. However, the FBDB is now beginning to link its
lending and management advisory (the CASE program) services. These findings
would be referred to frequently by the Bank in its dealings with Ottawa during the
early 1980s.
Next up was the Peat Marwick study. It found FBDB was producing significant,
measurable economic impacts. Personal and corporate income generated by the
Bank’s clients represented 2% of Gross National Product, and the Bank’s clients
were creating 3% of all new jobs in Canada. Further, the study found the federal
government received $91.5 million in direct tax revenues annually from incremental
projects financed by FBDB, more than enough to cover the $29 million of losses
the Bank recorded in fiscal year 1980. Peat Marwick found that while the market-
place for small business financing was changing, it still was not meeting all the needs
of small businesses. The study identified the following areas where private sector
sources were lacking: loan financing for higher risk projects, financing with flexible
terms catering to the cash flow of a business, fixed rate financing, loan financing
for social and economic development, equity and venture capital, information on
financing alternatives and packaging and finally, management skills development.
(The first two observations would, fifteen years later, be referred to as the risk gap
and flexibility gap.)
This dual role essentially mirrored the perspective espoused a year earlier by
Gordon Sharwood, a member of FBDB’s Board of Directors. In his view, a business
development bank had two separate markets and corresponding roles. The first
62 | Chapter 6
was to sustain the general level of business in the country and the second was
to back innovation, be responsive to industrial policy and respond to changing
economic forces. The first role, as much social policy as economic policy, was
associated with loans made to ‘mom and pop’ businesses such as the retail, hotel,
motel and restaurant sectors. These types of businesses were not expected to
show rapid growth and would therefore have limited economic contribution. They
were providing jobs for their owners and a few others and thus the reference to
social policy – that is, job creation.
The second market role comprised corporations whose sales were expected
to grow rapidly and, if successful (the key words), would make substantial
contributions to the growth of the economy through increased employment and
exports. Sharwood thought that while FBDB was doing both types of loans, it was
doing many more of the ‘mom an d pop’ variety, implying the Bank should be doing
more financing to the second group of potential ‘high flyers.’ He thought financing
proposals from the latter group should be dealt with differently from the Bank’s
regular procedures.
The Bank tabled the Peat Marwick results and conclusions with the Small
Business Financing Review (SBFR) team in Ottawa. The latter, however, completely
ignored the study’s research and findings. The SBFR team was travelling on a
different track; the Peat Marwick study was like another train passing in the night
– in the opposite direction. Even the results of the Canadian Bankers Association/
University of Western Ontario study were largely ignored by the SBFR. (The
Economic Council of Canada study, completed months after the SBFR was done,
provided no input to the SBFR team.)
Jim Howe managed the SBFR the way he saw fit. He commissioned what the
Bank considered to be theoretical papers from Professor Don McFetridge of
Carleton University. The Bank thought McFetridge was of the free market school
of economics, emanating from the Chicago School of Economics that was gaining
much attention and support in the early 1980s. Ronald Reagan had just been
elected President in the U.S. and he espoused free market economics, wanting
especially to remove government from the affairs of business. This was the new
wave in public policy. McFetridge concluded the market was the best judge of
which small businesses should get financing and which should not. Furthermore,
SBFR & a new mandate for FBDB | 63
he opined that financial markets in Canada were functioning efficiently and there
was no need for government intervention. This led the SBFR to conclude there
was no financing gap in Canada for small business and therefore questioned the
need for FBDB and IT&C’s own Small Business Loans Act (SBLA).
There were endless meetings with the SBFR team in Ottawa as the Bank’s
argument that a financing gap existed continually fell on deaf ears. The Bank’s
position was that chartered banks were willing to accept risks only up to a point
which was notionally equivalent to the maximum interest rate they were willing
to charge small business clients, prime plus 2%. FBDB’s interest rates, on the
other hand, started at around prime plus 2% to reflect the higher level of risk it
was accepting. This was confirmed by the University of Western Ontario study
when it produced hard data showing FBDB did take on higher risk in the market.
The Bank’s line of argument made no impact on the SBFR team. The elephant in
the room was the Bank’s operating losses. Can a gap be justified if filling it led
to operating losses? The fact the losses were the result of very extraordinary
economic circumstances and the Bank had already taken steps to return to full
cost recovery did not matter. To the SBFR team, the market was perfect so there
was no need for government intervention, FBDB and SBLA both. The presence
of operating losses in FBDB and SBLA only supported their conviction. Lavigueur
knew he had to return the Bank to a profitable status but also knew it could not be
done overnight and certainly not before the SBFR was completed.
64 | Chapter 6
It was clear where the SBFR team was headed when they requested forecasts
of the Bank’s operating income/loss under the assumption of no new lending.
Concerned about the high cost ensuing from an immediate closure of the Bank,
they wanted to see what the numbers would be if the Bank only administered its
existing loan portfolio until all obligations were fulfilled. They were provided with
the scenarios they requested but by then, Lavigueur had seen enough of where
the Small Business Financing Review was headed. He spoke with the Minister of
IT&C and with Bill Teschke, the Associate Deputy Minister of IT&C who was also a
member of FBDB’s Board of Directors. Neither the Minister nor Teschke was aware
of the direction the SBFR was headed and both were convinced there needed to
be a re-direction.
Frank Podruski was one of a small team of policy specialists (wonks) reporting
directly to R. Johnston, the Deputy Minister of IT&C. In April 1981, he was called to
meet with the Deputy Minister and Teschke and given his marching orders: go to
work with the SBFR team and recast its report so there would be a review of the
SBLA program and a restructuring of FBDB rather than scrapping them. It was a
tall order knowing the theoretical bent and stubbornness of the SBFR team. But
the job had to be done to avoid a confrontation between Jim Howe and his two
deputy ministers.
extra benefit of working with someone who had been a colleague of the head
of the Bank’s Economics department when they had worked together in the
policy branch at IT&C.
Podruski was briefed by the Bank’s team on FBDB operations and on the root
causes for its current losses – the economy, the mismatch problem (discussed
in Chapter 11 on the Bank’s treasury operations) and the mandate to make small
loans. Podruski quickly understood the Bank’s position. His challenge was to get
Howe to move off his convictions, that is, to be flexible, even if only slightly. So
he too spent a lot of time in endless meetings with him. Howe held a doctorate
degree in Economics but Podruski was the practical policy wonk, undoubtedly the
reason he was chosen to be on an exclusive policy team reporting directly to the
deputy minister.
Podruski had to convince Howe the market-driven solution was not the only
solution. In Podruski’s view, there was nothing magical or sacrosanct about the
market solution, nor was it a matter of it being right or wrong. In his reasoning,
if the social economic costs of the market solution were too great, there would
be a role for government intervention, directly or by regulatory means. That’s
what democratic governments were all about. For Podruski, the financing gap
in Canada was associated with the relatively high costs of transacting and
administering small-sized loans, especially when commercial lenders placed
an upper limit on how much they were willing to charge their small business
customers. He pointed out to Howe that there were some 40,000 businesses
out there borrowing money, creating jobs, paying taxes and repaying their loans
(a reference to the number of FBDB clients at the time). Why should they be
penalized because commercial lenders wouldn’t charge interest rates to cover
their costs? In Podruski’s view, government subsidies were justifiable if the
government found the social costs of the market solution were too high. One
needed only to look at the Enterprise Development Program in IT&C and the
Department of Regional Economic Expansion financing programs as examples.
With respect to FBDB, he felt that providing an adequate (free use) capital
base coupled with the preferential rate at which the Bank, as an agent of the
Government of Canada, borrowed its funds were justifiable for offsetting the
relatively high administration costs associated with making small-sized loans.
This was the same line of thinking put forward a few years earlier by the
Governor of the Bank of Canada, Gerald Bouey, when the Bank’s management
wanted to increase interest rates for small-sized loans and decrease them for
large-sized loans. But one key issue still remained – whether FBDB could return
to full cost recovery status or whether it would be floundering in a sea of losses
forever. The SBFR team had thought the Bank would not be able to return to full
cost recovery but the FBDB team was able to persuade Podruski it could. Whether
deep down he accepted the premise or not, he was not a skeptic and was willing
to give the Bank a chance to do so with proper capitalization.
At the end of the day, the spirit of Canadian compromise overcame the impasse.
Howe and Podruski came around to a position, or wording, they both could live
with. In the first iteration of the SBFR report, before Podruski arrived on the scene,
the conclusion was that there was no small business financing gap in Canada,
66 | Chapter 6
calling into question the existence of both the SBLA and FBDB lending programs.
In the second iteration of the report, the conclusion called for a review of the
SBLA and a restructuring of FBDB lending. The Deputy Minister and Associate
Deputy at IT&C could now accept the report.
With respect to FBDB and SBLA lending, the following were the main SBFR
conclusions, with some parenthetical commentary in italics:
• Significant changes in the term lending market in the last 10 to 15 years have
reduced the relative financing gap filled by government programs (the SBFR
had changed its position of no gap to a reduced gap);
• FBDB is a major participant in the term lending market but its share of the
market has been shrinking and loans are becoming riskier (the retort “it’s the
economy...” had not yet entered the lexicon);
• SBLA loans are not incremental but SBLA does encourage more favourable
terms (interest rates on SBLA loans were limited to prime plus 1% at the time);
• Financing gaps may exist for self-employment firms as well as in rural areas
and for start-ups (the ’may’ was typical compromise wording);
• Given the industry sectors in which small businesses are concentrated, little
economic impact can be expected from non-targeted subsidies;
At the end of the day, the Review accepted the fact that FBDB was going to stay
in business and thus concluded small businesses would be better served by the
Bank taking on more roles. Thus, the Review envisaged FBDB providing financing
to fill gaps, providing targeted development financing, delivering other government
SBFR & a new mandate for FBDB | 67
While the SBFR was being completed, the Ministry of State for Economic
Development (MSED) in Ottawa was conducting a review of program overlap and
consolidation. It too had recommendations affecting FBDB. It proposed to merge
IT&C’s Business Information Centres (BICs) with FBDB’s small business information
service into a Canadian government information centre operated by FBDB.
The Small Business Financing Review was not just another study being done
in Ottawa. Having been initiated by the Privy Council Office, the Prime Minister’s
department, it was given prominence and attention in several quarters including
Finance and Treasury Board, the two departments controlling the purse strings
in Ottawa. Lavigueur knew the importance and impact of the SBFR’s findings and
recommendations. They would have a large influence on the government’s decision to
provide the Bank with new capital to offset operating losses, capital that was needed
for the Bank to continue its operations. In effect, the SBFR findings could greatly
affect the Bank’s viability and indeed, its existence. The phone calls he had made to
the Minister of IT&C and to Bill Teschke were two of the most important calls he made
at the Bank since they led to the redirection of the SBFR. They not only kept the Bank
in business, but opened the door for an expanded mandate.
The SBFR final report was never widely circulated and was quietly filed away
in IT&C for future reference. It is likely that a first draft of the report had also
been filed as subsequent events would indicate. In any case, the Bank still had to
deal with the study of business financing underway at the Economic Council of
Canada. Policy makers in Ottawa were also looking to this study before deciding
on what measures should be taken vis-à-vis FBDB. Several meetings took place
with Dr. André Ryba, the study director, to brief him on FBDB’s activities and role in
the market. However, his study was not completed until 1983 and had no influence
on deliberations concerning FBDB’s new mandate. For the record, there were no
specific recommendations in the Economic Council’s study about FBDB but three
touched on the Bank indirectly (with author’s commentary in italics):
That study, Intervention and Efficiency, was one of the last done by the Economic
Council of Canada before it was closed. Its recommendations had little or no
impact on government policy. In fact, government was moving away from outright
grants to business and moving toward recoverable loans.
Soon after the Small Business Financing Review was completed, the Minister
of State for Small Business, the Honourable Charles Lapointe, launched FBDB’s
annual Small Business Week event in Montreal in the fall of 1981. He told reporters
covering the event he expected FBDB to become a bigger institution, with hints
the Bank could be the one-stop centre for the government’s business finance and
advisory programs. He expected a new federal policy on small business, resulting
from the Small Business Financing Review, to be ready by February 1982.
It was standard humor in those days that when a government report was promised
as imminent, one would say: give me the month it will be issued and I will give you the
year. So it was with the new FBDB mandate. Expected in February 1982, it was not
announced until April 1983.
assigned the task of drafting the Memorandum to Cabinet that would lay out a
new mandate for FBDB to Frank Podruski and his colleague Robin Butler. These
two worked with the FBDB team to craft the new mandate. On a late wintry Friday
afternoon in Ottawa, Podruski and Butler were called in to the Deputy Minister’s
management committee to discuss their draft Memorandum to Cabinet on FBDB.
The Deputy Minister was not totally impressed, saying the document did not
leave him with a warm and fuzzy feeling. Podruski and Butler were told to have a
new draft Memorandum ready for review by the following Monday morning. They
worked all Saturday, ‘cutting and pasting,’ called in their secretary Diane Sinclair
to retype the document on Sunday and presented the revised version to
their Deputy Minister, Robert Montreuil, on Monday morning. He declared the
document fabulous.
Montreuil had been involved with FBDB since its creation. He served as
alternate FBDB Board member and full Board member over the years. More
importantly, for many years Montreuil was on the Board’s Executive Committee
which reviewed large-sized loans before recommending them for full Board
approval. He knew how FBDB conducted its business and the role it played in the
market. His support for the Bank was evident when, as Deputy Minister in charge
of the file, he shepherded the Memorandum to Cabinet on FBDB’s new mandate
and funding through the Ottawa process.
The 1983 mandate for FBDB comprised various components. The first priority
for the Bank was to continue its term lending operation on a supplementary
basis but with emphasis on providing service to businesses in non-metropolitan
and rural areas. This was an affirmation of the Bank’s main line of business. The
second component was to improve services to small businesses with regards
to: i) providing business, industry and program information, ii) preparation and
presentation of business plans and iii) management training and counselling.
The final component was to develop a new investment banking capability,
incorporating the current venture capital activity, which would be targeted in
accordance with government economic development priorities.
Funding framework
Critically, the 1983 mandate included a funding framework for the Bank. FBDB
would be responsible for covering all of its operating expenses for term lending
from its interest and other income while government contributions would be
applied to cover loan losses. The Bank’s management services would continue to
be funded with annual appropriations (subsidies) but the government expected
the proportion of costs recovered for these services to increase. The investment
banking function would be funded by government equity but had to be structured
to meet the Comptroller General’s return on investment (ROI) targets at the end of
five years.
The monies the Bank would receive as part of this new mandate included a
capital infusion of $30 million to restore the term lending operation to a 10:1
debt-to-equity ratio. Budgetary allocations of up to $50 million a year were added
to offset loan losses. For Management Services, an additional $5 million were
made available to expand services including the new client services function to
70 | Chapter 6
be started in each province. For Investment Banking, $29 million were provided
to capitalize the existing venture capital portfolio and a further $60 million were
earmarked for new investments over three years.
1983 to 1986
Cost
recovery
Part II
W hen the first operating loss of $29 million hit FBDB in 1980, Lavigueur
was told by many senior managers it was a fluke and would be a one-time
occurrence. When an operating loss of $44 million was recorded for fiscal 1981,
it was felt again the worst had passed and full cost recovery was just around the
corner. The Bank had implemented measures to reduce risk in the loans portfolio
and had cut operating expenses through a series of staff reductions. When the
financial statements for fiscal 1981 were presented to the Board of Directors,
Chairman Harold MacKay asked whether the Bank had tried to bite the bullet
quickly enough. In other words, were all potential loan losses inherent in the
portfolio being recognized and taken into account? The Assistant Vice President
and Controller responded that while one should resist the attempt to take more
provisions for losses just for its own sake, the balance sheet had been cleaned
up. Which meant there were no hidden loan losses in the portfolio and the Bank’s
assets (primarily the loans portfolio) were indeed written down to their proper
value. He could, of course, not say otherwise.
In fiscal 1982, a report to the Board of Directors on the Cost Recovery Plan
showed the budget for the year was holding its own. The Bank’s Cost Recovery
Monitoring System (CRMS) was tracking the risk grades of new loans as well as
staff levels against established norms and objectives and nothing untoward was
raising its head. The mid-year budget review called for $26 million in operating
losses for the term lending operation in fiscal 1982, a small $2 million loss in fiscal
year 1983, and profits thereafter. Taking no chances, the President called in the
firm of Price Waterhouse to review the Bank’s five-year financial forecast. They
provided a range of forecasts, the mid-point of which matched the Bank’s internal
forecast. This was not surprising as they were working with figures provided by
the Bank’s forecasters. On a cumulative basis, over the five year forecast period,
Price Waterhouse found the Bank’s forecast could be understated by $19 million
or overstated by $20 million, depending on their range of assumptions.
Soon after the end of fiscal 1982, the Economics department made
a presentation on loan losses to the Bank’s management committee. In
attendance were head office managers as well as regional vice presidents.
The presentation projected provisions for new loan losses in fiscal 1983 of
$75.4 million. Furthermore, in spite of lower staff levels, operating expenses
as a percentage of loan amounts outstanding was increasing, not decreasing,
as the portfolio was shrinking more rapidly due to lower levels of new loan
authorizations and mounting write-offs. This key measure of costs was up to
3.5% in fiscal 1982 and was projected to keep on increasing if left unchecked.
The presentation concluded the Bank had not yet turned the corner, and losses
for fiscal year 1983 would be about the same as for 1982.
This presentation was met not with skepticism, but with resentment. The schism
between head office prognosticators and regional vice presidents deepened.
Lavigueur asked the presenter to leave the meeting and moved on to the
next topic on the agenda. Later in the year, the Vice President and Controller,
Yves Milette, presented a revised budget to the Board of Directors that forecast an
operating loss of $82 million for fiscal 1983, slightly more than the previous year’s.
When provisions for loan losses were tallied at the end of fiscal 1983, the
total was $76.1 million, $0.7 million higher than the Economics department’s
$75.4 million forecast rejected early in the year at management committee. FBDB
recorded an operating loss of $81 million of which $62 million was attributed to
the lending operation. The Bank had not yet turned the corner on losses, despite
controlling risk levels on new loans, cutting new loan authorizations by over 50%
and reducing lending staff by 31% between 1980 and 1983.
During the next year, fiscal 1984, the economy started to show signs of
recovery. Prime lending rates at chartered banks had declined to the 11% level
and there was 2.6% real growth in gross domestic product. But employment
lagged and the unemployment rate in Canada climbed to 12% that year. As a
consequence, FBDB lending volume was still on a downward slope. Further, the
recession that had gripped Eastern Canada between 1980 and 1982 was now
moving westwards as the Prairie and British Columbia regions continued to
experience fallout from the National Energy Program of 1980, which curtailed
oil and gas exploration in the western provinces, and a general weakness in
resource industries.
The 1983 mandate required the Bank to cover its operating expenses with net
interest income and to contain provisions for loan losses within the $50 million
74 | Chapter 7
level that the government had agreed to fund. From the government’s point of
view, it was putting a lot of money into FBDB and wanted assurances the new
mandate would be respected. It certainly did not want to see its money going
down the drain.
For the first year of its new mandate, fiscal year 1984, it was clear the Bank’s
lending operation would not be able to contain its loan losses within the
$50 million level and would barely be able to cover its operating expenses
with net interest income due to a rapidly declining portfolio. If trends
continued, it would not be able to cover its operating expenses the following
year. Not wanting to spring any surprises on the government at the last minute,
the Bank put forward a number of alternatives to deal with a potential scenario
wherein it would not be able to respect its new mandate. The first alternative
was to relax the financial conditions of its less than one-year-old mandate.
The second called for a major expansion of the Bank’s management services,
including the new Financial Planning Program scheduled to be implemented
in only a few test branches. This proposal would have involved a transfer
of about 200 staff from term lending to the Bank’s Management Services
Division as well as the division taking over some branch offices. Another
alternative was to relax the supplemental constraint placed on the Bank’s term
lending operation to allow access to more profitable loans. This alternative
would have required a change in the FBDB Act which, though not feasible at
the time, highlighted the difficult mission the Bank was pursuing – heroic if
Cost recovery Part II | 75
not impossible in the words of the SBFR. The Bank’s various proposals fell on
deaf ears. The only offer coming from Ottawa was that FBDB could lend the
Department of Regional Industrial Expansion some officers to help clear up a
large backlog of applications in its programs. The Bank had to figure out itself
how to meet the financial conditions of its new mandate.
Rupert Williams
became the Bank’s
Vice President, Human
Resources in 1983.
Williams flew in on the red-eye flight and was at the Bank’s head office in time
for his 8 a.m. meeting. On the way up to the 6th floor at the Bank of Canada
building to see Lavigueur, he ran into his superior, Eric Scott, who asked him what
he was doing in Montreal. Williams admitted that he did not know the purpose of
his meeting. A deep fear in Williams’ mind was that he was being called in to get
his termination papers. At their meeting, Lavigueur told him Ken Neilson was
moving to become Senior Vice President Loans and he wanted Williams to replace
Neilson as Vice President, Human Resources. Lavigueur apprised him of the
challenges he faced as the Bank had no choice but to return to full cost recovery
very soon and that meant bringing operating costs down to 3% or less of loans
outstanding, as allowed by the Cost Recovery Equation which set out the following
targets for the loans operations:
76 | Chapter 7
% of Average
Outstanding Portfolio
These were the minimum objectives to achieve cost recovery. The interest
spread comprised 3.0% built into the Bank’s base rate, that is, the spread over the
cost of funds as established by the Bank’s treasury operation. Loan operations
were expected to add a minimum 0.5% on average as a risk premium to arrive at
an interest spread of 3.5%. Sundry fees included standby and prepayment fees.
The 10:1 debt/equity (D/E) ratio and free use of capital in effect added about
1.0% to interest income. Operating expenses were set at 3.0% because for most
of its history, the Bank had operated at less than this ratio and only surpassed it
in the late 1970s and early 1980s. This left 1.5% of outstanding amounts for loan
losses. (This 1.5% of outstanding amounts on an annual basis is equivalent to a
6.5% ultimate loss rate. That is, for every $100 lent, the maximum loss that could
be accommodated would be $6.50.) By coincidence, the 1.5% per annum rate
was the same rate that was foreseen in 1944 for FBDB’s forerunner, the Industrial
Development Bank. Remember that when IDB was being created, the Deputy
Minister of Finance thought IDB would take more risk than private sector banks
and he proffered a loss rate of 1.5% per annum, or about double that of chartered
banks. At this rate, he projected IDB would still be able to post a modest profit. It
was time for FBDB to get back to basics.
In fiscal 1983, net interest income from the loans operation represented 4.4% of
average amount outstanding. The mismatching problem, as will be described later,
was still having a negative impact on net interest income. Operating expenses
however, represented 3.8% of average amount outstanding while provisions for
loan losses accounted for 4.0%.
The monies the government had set aside to cover loan losses, up to
$50 million a year, was considered by the Bank to be a temporary measure that
could not be depended on indefinitely. It was Neilson’s job in his new role to
bring the loans portfolio back in line with the cost recovery objective of having
loan losses within 1.5% of outstanding amounts. And it was Williams’ job, as Vice
President of Human Resources, to reduce operating expenses to less than 3% of
outstanding amounts. Concurrently, the Bank had to implement its new mandate
Cost recovery Part II | 77
When Williams assumed his position, the first thing he did was to solicit ideas
from the regions on how the Bank could go about reducing its costs. The regions
had just completed a round of staff reductions and were not prepared to do more.
Suggestions such as cutting travel and long distance telephone calls were readily
offered. The Bank had already reduced its term lending staff by 31% between
fiscal years 1980 and 1983 by ‘cutting the fat’ in the organization. Now there
was no fat left to cut, only muscle tissue. With few viable options coming from
field operations, Williams gathered his three directors in the Human Resources
department to start working on a plan of action. The three musketeers, as they
were called, were part of the professionalization of the department and had been
hired by Neilson. Alphonse Thibodeau was Director, Compensation and Benefits,
André Millette was Director, Corporate Personnel Services and Guy Corbeil was
Director, Organizational Planning and Development. Together, they came up with
a plan to flatten the organization, change work methods and consolidate branch
offices. They figured that with a new organizational structure, about 890 people
would be needed for the Bank’s term lending operation, including regional and
head office functions. On paper, this was not a complicated task. Getting it done
would be quite another challenge.
A head office reorganization led to the removal of the Executive Vice President’s
position. In its place, positions for a Senior Vice President, Loans and a Senior
Vice President, Management Services were created. Ken Neilson and Gerry Ross
were appointed to the respective positions. The Senior Vice President, Finance
was also replaced. In a matter of days, both senior positions below that of the
President had been vacated. The writing was clearly on the wall. No one in the
Bank was immune to being laid off.
Lists of potential layoffs were prepared by both regional offices and Human
Resources in head office. Human Resources was working solely with the results of a
performance evaluation system that left much to be desired. Neilson, now in charge
of the lending operations throughout the Bank, sent John McNulty to work with
Human Resources staff to vet the lists of potential layoffs. When McNulty compared
the lists provided by the regions with the list compiled by Human Resources, there
was little overlap. The buddy system was still prevalent in field operations. Many
managers had a group of colleagues with whom they had worked over the years
and befriended. A manager would not offer up one of his friends (or buddies) to be
laid off, regardless of that person’s performance on the job. McNulty had worked
in many different areas of the country throughout his career and he knew the
individuals on the lists or at least had a contact in field offices he could consult –
his own buddy system. Eventually a common list was agreed on and the second
painful round of layoffs began. Yvonne Zacios had more assignments coming her
way. In the Timmins branch, where Simone Desjardins started her career at FBDB,
everyone wondered whether the coming Friday would be another Black Friday. It
was always on a Friday that the regional personnel manager would come up from
Toronto to visit the branch office. It meant someone in the branch was being laid off.
78 | Chapter 7
As in 1980, FBDB was not alone in downsizing its staff and there was much
intelligence and jurisprudence on compensation packages for laid off employees.
And as he had said to Neilson earlier, the President told Williams he wanted
the cuts to be made at all levels of the organization, which meant head office
and regional offices would have to bear their proportionate shares. He did not
want ‘the head to be bigger than the body.’ Lavigueur also said he did not want
to see any adverse media publicity about FBDB layoffs and branch closures. To
this end, Williams undertook media training which proved its worth when he was
called by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) to explain why the Bank
was closing branch offices in the Edmonton area. It was obvious employees were
contacting the media to look into the Bank’s actions.
This time around, the task of reducing staff was complicated by obligations
to meet federal targets under the Official Languages Act and the Employment
Equity Act being implemented in all government departments and agencies,
FBDB included. The federal government had designated areas of the country
where its departments and agencies had to provide bilingual service. FBDB
had a good inventory of bilingual employees but they were located mostly in
the Quebec region. So while laying off workers in some areas, the Bank had to
concurrently backfill positions with bilingual employees. What made this process
more difficult was persuading staff to change locations, especially to ‘high rent’
areas such as Toronto and Vancouver. The Bank tapped into the Runzheimer
system which provided information to businesses on the amount of incentives
required to compensate for increases in costs-of-living due to a change in job
location. But differences in costs became so high in some cases (e.g. Vancouver),
even the Runzheimer system became meaningless. Getting employees to move
to head office in Montreal also proved problematic in some cases, partly due to
provincial laws governing the language of education for children.
made in office processes. This evolution kicked off a whole new support service
in the Bank, in-house training, as everyone had to be trained in the new work
methods and desktop computer technology (no laptops yet). New work methods
also meant the Policy and Procedures (Red Book) had to be continually changed,
in itself a complicated procedure due to the numerous sign offs required.
Moving from a total term lending staff of 1,473 in March 1983 to the objective
of 890 could not be done overnight. It took many tranches of layoffs over a
three year period to reach this target. During this time, it was often hoped the
layoffs were at an end. Then, soon after, another round would begin. (Recall that
the Bank had already gone through several rounds of staff reductions during
the three previous years, from the March 1980 level of 2,136 employees in term
lending.) As the workplace environment was being transformed, the Bank’s senior
managers kept an eye on who was adapting well to change and who wasn’t. They
would try to assist those having problems adapting but in many cases such
employees wound up on a subsequent list of layoffs.
Again, the toughest aspect in laying someone off was the human one. As the
vice president in charge of the downsizing, Williams had to live through several
disheartening phone calls. One was from a spouse of a laid-off employee who
spoke of kids in university. He would also receive calls late at night only to find no
one on the line when he answered. One morning he arrived to find a notice on his
office door: Out the Door in ‘84.
In the three fiscal years – 1984, 1985, and 1986 – branch office staff declined
from 924 to 595, a reduction of 36%. Over the same period, regional office staff
decreased from 227 to 97, a 58% decrease, and head office staff went from
322 to 199, a 39% decrease. At head office, many professionals hired in the post-
1980 period were de-hired. The Planning and Economics departments, who had
worked together to get a new mandate for the Bank and provide the blueprints
for the new services that came with the new mandate, at one time counted over
20 people on staff. By the end of fiscal 1986, there were 7. In the Controllers
department, there were about 75 people on staff at one time. By progressively
changing work methods and reducing layers of management, the department’s staff
was reduced by over 50%. Among all support functions, these questions were part
of the daily mindset: is there a way of doing things more efficiently? Why are we
doing these tasks, for whom and for what purpose? What if they were not done?
In total, FBDB term lending staff declined from 1,473 in fiscal 1983 to 891 in
fiscal 1986, a 40% cut. This was in addition to the 31% cut between 1980 and 1983.
At the height of the layoffs, job security became a foreign concept for everyone
80 | Chapter 7
The PMP was a major cultural change for the whole organization. Sitting across
from a subordinate staff member and telling him or her “here is what you did well
and here is what you did not do well” was not an easy task for managers. In the
good old days, many managers would merely inform their subordinates of their
salary increases without any discussion about job performance. The regional vice
presidents also resisted being included in the PMP evaluation process. “After all,
we all know what we’re supposed to do so we don’t need this process for us.” If
these were not the exact words offered by a regional vice president, they were
pretty close. This is not a knock against FBDB’s previous approach to evaluating
employees since it was standard practice in private sector companies at the time.
This was the era of three-hour martini lunches and expense accounts for the
managerial class.
keeping with the traditional way of doing things, would only deliver the news of a
subordinate’s salary increase without discussion of their performance evaluation.
Then there would be the more common occurrence where the manager would tell
a staff member to write the evaluation, promising to read and sign it.
In the PMP system, each Bank employee was rated on a scale of 1 to 7; the
lowest rating of 1 meant you were next out the door while 7 was reserved for only
the very best of the best. There was a direct relation between performance rating
and salary as the salary range for each position was split into seven rates. If an
employee was rated a 1, that person’s salary would be at the bottom of the salary
range. If rated a 2, the salary would be one-sixth up the salary range, a 3 rating
would be two-sixth up the range, a 4 rating would be at the middle of the range
and so on. With salary levels tied directly to performance, there was a natural
tendency to rate everyone as high as possible. Furthermore, if an employee’s
rating dropped from one year to the next, that person’s salary would remain at the
same level and would not be reduced. Game theorists could have a great time
playing the system.
In the end, despite the challenges and difficult circumstances, the Bank
succeeded in modernizing its human resources’ management tools while effecting
organizational changes and significant staff reductions. Further challenges lay
ahead as the Bank’s existence would again be called into question.
82 | Chapter 8
1984
Rock
bottom
F BDB loan authorizations bottomed out in fiscal 1984. During the year, only
1,663 loans were authorized for $237 million on a net basis (gross loan
authorizations less cancellations and reductions). This was an abyss compared
to the heydays of fiscal 1980 (only four years earlier) when 13,803 loans were
authorized on a net basis for $663 million. The Bank’s Ontario region experienced
the largest decline, 92% in the number of loans and 76% in amounts authorized
between fiscal 1980 and 1984. Not only did the Ontario region authorize only
8% of the number of loans it had authorized four years earlier, but with more
than a third of Canadian economic activity, it authorized fewer loans than both
the Quebec and British Columbia and Yukon regions in fiscal 1984. It was not
surprising then that FBDB’s relevance was often publicly questioned by Members
of Parliament (MPs) from Ontario, the most vocal of whom was Don Blenkarn,
Conservative MP for Mississauga.
Operating losses continued as the Bank recorded a loss of $64 million for
fiscal 1984, a reduction of $17 million from the previous year, but still a huge
loss. Almost all of this loss, $63 million, was in the term lending operation
with provisions for loan losses at $72 million. FBDB operations in Alberta and
British Columbia accounted for three-quarters of these losses as the recession
shifted westwards. In fiscal 1984, the Government of Canada lived up to the
commitment it made in the Bank’s new mandate of 1983 and paid-in $50 million
to offset loan losses and another $6.6 million to fund new investments by
the Investment Banking Division.
FBDB’s first corporate plan was sent to the government for approval in the
spring of 1984. At the time, there were no indications of a major turnaround in
the Bank’s fortunes. The plan therefore showed an operating loss not only for
fiscal 1984, but for all five years in its forecast, albeit on a declining basis. It also
showed the Bank adhering to the financial strictures of its 1983 mandate which
was to cover its operating expenses with net interest income and to contain
provisions for loan losses to under $50 million each year. The forecast of
continuing losses was made even though the Bank’s objective was to return to full
cost recovery as quickly as possible. Being conservative in its forecasts ensured
funds put aside for FBDB in accordance with the 1983 mandate would still be there
if the Bank needed them. Otherwise, these funds could easily be snapped up,
‘faster than the blink of an eye’ by another government program.
strategically located, was not helping small business with its high interest rate
loans. Furthermore, FBDB’s large decline in financings and its requirement for
continued government funding were of concern. Ministers wanted to see much
more cooperation between DRIE and FBDB in serving small business, an important
constituency and plank in any political platform. DRIE had programs and funding
but not the human resources and locations to service small business. FBDB had
locations and excess human resources in 1984 but no funds.
DRIE officials started working on two major initiatives involving FBDB. The
first was to consider FBDB as the delivery agent for the department’s flagship
program, the Industrial and Regional Development Program (IRDP). Under this
initiative, FBDB officers would process applications for IRDP funds, do any
necessary investigation and provide a report to senior DRIE officials who would
make the final decision on the application for funding. This initiative, however,
would have involved major organizational changes as well as dealing with
opposition by DRIE employees whose jobs would be affected. The initiative
got nowhere.
The other major initiative was to co-locate FBDB and DRIE offices and officers.
Officials in the department reported that the Minister, the Honourable Edward
Lumley, wanted co-location of offices or at least that offices be located in the
same building. Co-location of offices and officers was opposed by the Bank,
although not openly. Lavigueur did not want FBDB officers working shoulder to
shoulder with departmental officials who had a different culture, work habits and,
most of all, higher salaries. But this was the Minister’s wish, so planning started
down this path with departmental officials looking at potential moves when current
office leases expired. The last phrase (when current office leases expire) was a
condition FBDB insisted on as it could ill afford to break lease agreements and
pay associated penalties. The proposal to co-locate DRIE and FBDB offices and
officers was the subject of many discussions but was not implemented. It would,
however, come to the fore again in the late 1980s. The old IDB would never have
cooperated with such manoeuvres but then again, that is why it was pulled out
from the Bank of Canada.
In September 1984, a federal election was held and the Progressive Conservative
Party of Canada, under the leadership of Brian Mulroney, recorded a resounding
victory, electing its candidates in 211 out of a total 282 electoral ridings across
Canada. The party won 54 of 75 ridings in Quebec, Mulroney’s home province.
In the previous federal election, Conservatives had won only one riding in
the province.
The meeting was quickly arranged. It started after 9:00 pm one October 1984
evening at the top floor of the Metropolitan Life building in Ottawa. Lavigueur
arrived with his Ottawa team and a presentation on the past and current situation
of the Bank was made. It emphasized the number of small businesses supported
by the Bank each year – over 100,000 – mainly through its business information
and other management services, and the numbers of jobs its loan clients were
creating and maintaining throughout the economy, especially in non-metropolitan
areas. The Conservative Members of Parliament in attendance – Blenkarn was not
there nor were any Cabinet Ministers except for Bissonnette – were polite and
seemed somewhat impressed with what the Bank was doing. This was probably the
first realistic briefing they had ever received about the Bank. But at the end of the
night, most still maintained their view that less government was better government.
In their minds, the new Conservative government was elected to reduce the size of
government in Ottawa and that was what they were going to do.
86 | Chapter 8
Later on, Lavigueur would meet with Don Blenkarn in the latter’s role as
Chairman of the House of Commons Finance Committee. Michel Azam, the
Bank’s Vice President of Government Relations was also present. Blenkarn
repeated his view that the Bank should be closed and intimated the President
should not fear for his own job as another would be found for him in the
government. Of course, Blenkarn did not know that the last thing Lavigueur
wanted was another job in government. He firmly believed in the work FBDB was
doing for small business and that the Bank could return to a profitable status as
economic conditions improved.
Cutting government expenditures was not new to Ottawa. Each successive new
government since the 1970s would announce expenditure cuts and salary freezes
at the start of its mandate. And after those cuts were announced and implemented,
somehow the government’s deficit and debt still grew. With the arrival of a majority
Conservative government however, officials in Ottawa knew cuts were going to be
deep and permanent. Many feared for their jobs.
The Nielsen Task Force, as the Ministerial Task Force on Program Review quickly
became known, was a committee of Cabinet Ministers of major government
departments. They were charged with overseeing a number of study groups that
would evaluate and make recommendations on almost all government programs
and regulations. They would vet the study groups’ recommendations and take
them to the full Cabinet for approval. Conservative MPs opposed to FBDB saw the
Nielsen Task Force as the vehicle for closing down FBDB.
The Services and Subsidies to Business study group was led by Harry Swain.
Jack Walsh, a vice president at DuPont Canada representing the private sector,
was associate leader of the group. Just prior to this assignment, Swain had been
Assistant Deputy Minister, Plans, in DRIE. He knew the ins and outs of all business
programs in his department as well as those in other departments with which DRIE
competed for financial resources each year. He called Lavigueur and requested
the Bank to volunteer someone to work in his study group. Of course that person
could not be assigned to the FBDB file. Knowing it would be beneficial to get
information from the inside on how FBDB’s file would be handled, Lavigueur sent
Donald Layne, the head of his Economics department, to work with the study
group in Ottawa.
In the fall of 1984, there were 57 different subsidies and 155 programs providing
services to business in Canada. The 57 subsidy programs cost a total of
$4.5 billion in grants and contributions, $7.7 billion in federal revenues, and directly
involved 11,440 person-years of staff. The 155 service programs cost $713 million
in grants and contributions and directly involved 56,860 person-years of staff.
Their salary bill alone was $1.9 billion a year and another $1.5 billion was spent in
other operating costs. FBDB’s term lending operation was costing the government
a maximum of $50 million a year at the time.
The mandate for the study group on Services and Subsidies to Business –
hereafter referred to as the Study Group – was clear. It was to review a chosen
list of programs and provide advice to the Ministerial Task Force regarding
programs that might be eliminated, programs that could be reduced in scope,
groups of programs that could be consolidated, and programs whose basic
objective was sound but whose form should be changed.
88 | Chapter 8
All FBDB services to business were to be reviewed. The cost to the federal
government for FBDB, even with its losses in 1984, was miniscule compared to the
vast array of programs whose costs are cited above. Yet, it received perhaps the
most attention among all the programs reviewed by the Study Group. The reason
for this attention was clear. FBDB had a relatively high profile and was a favourite
target for many Conservative Members of Parliament, even before they were
elected in the September 1984 federal election. Further, there were still lingering
doubts in DRIE about the need for FBDB, especially given the $50 million of
budgetary appropriations set aside each year for FBDB at a time when there was
fierce competition for funds among and within departments of government.
Doubts about FBDB’s role had re-emerged in a review of small business policy
and programs conducted by DRIE just before the Study Group started its work
in 1984. When DRIE did its review, the Bank was not consulted and was unaware
another review was being done by the Department. The DRIE small business
review returned to the table the issue of whether there was still a financing
gap faced by small business in Canada. It seemed the first version of the Small
Business Financing Review (SBFR) findings from 1981 was still alive and well in the
Department. The DRIE review noted the SBFR failed to detect any major financing
problem. Furthermore, the SBFR had suggested that other federal and provincial
measures plus the increasing attention by private sector institutions to small
business financing needs meant small businesses were reasonably well served.
The DRIE review concluded that the rationale for FBDB’s financial services had
diminished considerably.
From a policy point of view, the DRIE review suggested a shift in emphasis from
measures designed to make term loans easier to obtain or to improve cash flow
by lowering tax rates, to measures directed towards improving the environment
for small business; for example, aiding small business to participate in large
projects, reducing red tape and regulation, encouraging innovation and export
promotion, etc. Would DRIE’s own Small Business Loans Act program be affected
by this change of emphasis? The review saw the $23 million annual cost of the
SBLA program as a marketing subsidy to the banks using the program and that its
macro effect was small. But it concluded the SBLA program ought to be renewed
(extended) the following year if changes were made to FBDB.
DRIE’s small business review provided options for the future of FBDB’s financing
portfolio and the small business counselling service. Citing again an SBFR
conclusion that there was no evidence of unsatisfactory financing service to the
small business sector, the first option put forward was to sell FBDB’s $1.6 billion
loan portfolio, at a discount if need be. A major benefit of this option was that
the substantial capital employed by the Bank could be put to higher priority use.
This option also meant separating the counselling services of FBDB and finding a
new home for them. The DRIE review went further and considered the process for
implementing such a move. It recommended the government make a statement
of intent in a Throne Speech or early budget, to be followed shortly after by the
Minister of DRIE announcing evaluation criteria and the bidding process for the
sale of FBDB’s loans and venture capital portfolios. Further, under this scenario,
the government would arrange House of Commons business so that the power to
Rock bottom | 89
sell part of FBDB and wind up the rest of the Bank, and the power to bring FBDB
employees into the Public Service of Canada through a priority but competitive
process, could be done early in the new session of Parliament.
Selling FBDB’s financing portfolio was one option. The other was to let FBDB
continue its financing activities but under more stringent guidelines to reduce
losses. The rationale for this option was based on the notion that selling the
portfolio would put FBDB’s clients at a disadvantage. But the DRIE review went
on to say this argument, while plausible in terms of optics, was not totally valid
as small businesses would continue to be well served by the SBLA program,
provincial programs and chartered banks as well as by the financial institution that
purchased the FBDB portfolio.
With respect to the Bank’s counselling service, the DRIE review favoured
increased emphasis on counselling and delivery of relevant commercial
intelligence and information on government programs. The issue would be
where to place these services. If FBDB were to continue its financing services,
they would remain with the Bank except, to signal a change, the Bank would be
renamed Enterprise Canada (that name again). If FBDB financing activities were
to be terminated, then the counselling service could be set up as a distinct crown
corporation or be given to DRIE to administer through its regional offices. The
former option was considered more attractive as it could then be structured to
become a one-stop centre for many federal business services, including those
of Revenue Taxation and the Canada Employment and Immigration Commission.
It would also mark a clear delineation between advice to business (Enterprise
Canada) and financial assistance to business, thereby eliminating potential conflict
of interest. FBDB was seen as having a mild conflict of interest in acting as both
advisor and lender to businesses.
The DRIE review concluded the preferred option was to sell the FBDB financing
portfolio and establish a new, independent small business advisory agency. Under
this scenario, the government would receive $200 million from the sale of the
portfolio and cancel annual payments of $50 million for loan losses, the amount
set aside for FBDB as part of its 1983 mandate. For such a major initiative to have
been proposed, there must have been some indication that the Minister of DRIE
would be on board.
When the Nielsen Task Force’s Study Group on Services and Subsidies to
Business did its work on FBDB, it had the DRIE small business review in hand. The
Study Group did not have the time or resources to do any in-depth research of
its own. It had to rely on external sources for data and analyses. The DRIE small
business review had a major influence on its findings.
The two-person team in the Study Group handling the FBDB file split
its review along the Bank’s principal product lines: term loans, investment
banking, financial planning, CASE counselling, management training, and
business information services. The main focus, as could be expected, was on
the Bank’s term lending operation. The other Bank services were reviewed but
options for their future evolution were dependent on the outcome for the term
lending operation.
90 | Chapter 8
With respect to the Bank’s CASE counselling program, the Study Group noted
wide acceptance amongst users and quoted from an evaluation carried out for
the Bank by Cousineau Professional Services. This is the same (Guy) Cousineau,
formerly of Peat Marwick Associates, who produced the Peat Marwick report for
FBDB at the time of the 1981 Small Business Financing Review. The Cousineau
evaluation found the CASE program was generally judged to be of excellent
quality, although it needed to be refined to delineate its activities to avoid
supplying counselling to those who could afford to pay professional fees. The
Study Group extended this thought to question whether the government should
be providing a service to small business available from the private sector, albeit
at a higher cost. After analysing different alternatives, it concluded that the CASE
program was the least-cost alternative available to government. When the study
team interviewed the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) and
the Canadian Organization for Small Business (COSB), both private sector lobby
groups were very positive in their attitude towards the CASE program. The Study
Group recommended that the program increase its cost recovery and that repeat
users, able to pay, cover the full cost of the service. The Study Group did not offer
suggestions on how to determine ability to pay.
With respect to the Bank’s Management Training program, the Study Group
again saw the need for these workshops and seminars and called for regular
consultations with provinces and industry associations to ensure no overlap
with the services offered by these groups. It also called for increased cost
recovery for the program and cited it as one that would fit well in a one-stop
shopping concept.
In terms of the Bank’s Business Information service, the Study Group saw
dissemination of information on government assistance programs for small
business as a necessary service. But FBDB was not alone in delivering such
information as many federal and provincial agencies provided this service in
one form or another, though on a specialized basis. The Study Group noted that
the Bank’s Automated Information for Management (AIM) system was still in its
developmental stage but was potentially a very powerful tool that could be of
great benefit to business and government alike. It recognized a considerable
amount of work remained to be done refining the software. Little did anyone know
the Bank was way ahead of its time in trying to build a search engine in 1985.
The Study Group recommended FBDB be made the primary stop for businesses
seeking information (and advice) on federal business programs.
Rock bottom | 91
The foregoing recommendations and options for the Bank’s various management
services and the future of the investment banking service depended on what the
government decided to do with the Bank’s term lending operation. In reviewing
the term lending operation, the Study Group’s report aptly reflected the mandate
and activities of the Bank. For example, it recognized the Bank was relatively
more active in less-developed regions of the country; its 22,000 clients were
employing between 250,000 and 300,000 persons with almost a third of
these being young people under the age of 25; in comparison to chartered
banks, FBDB’s term lending was more concentrated in the service industry and
offered more loans for working capital, equipment and leasehold improvements;
and FBDB offered longer repayment terms, etc. It also noted there were three
principles governing the loans operation that obliged the Bank to operate on a
knife’s edge. These principles were to provide financing not otherwise available
on reasonable terms and conditions, to recover its operating costs, and to not
compete with private financial institutions. The report then quoted from the Small
Business Financing Review that found it was difficult to avoid the conclusion that
either the Bank’s mission must be changed or constraints released or both. Like
DRIE’s small business review, the Study Group questioned the necessity of the
Bank’s term lending mission and observed that the evidence was not conclusive.
The SBFR had found that with the measures the federal government had in place
and with increasing attention paid to the financing needs of small business by
private sector financial institutions, most small businesses were reasonably well
served. Another reference taken from the SBFR was that the weight of available
evidence suggested the market niche available to FBDB had shrunk and would
likely continue to shrink.
As part of the Nielsen Task Force process, the teams reviewing the various
programs would meet with senior officials in charge of the programs as well
as interested parties in the private sector. The team and its leaders met with
Lavigueur in Montreal to get his views on the Bank’s situation and to verify the data
they had on FBDB. (Lavigueur had been briefed beforehand by his member on the
Study Group, who, when he had tried many times to intercede in the discussions
surrounding FBDB, was reminded of his conflict of interest.) The team came away
impressed with Lavigueur’s presentation of the issues. The team also sought input
from the CFIB and COSB, the presumed spokespeople for small business. While
both were supportive of the Bank’s management services, they were critical of the
term lending operation. CFIB, COSB and individual business people contacted by
the study team all questioned the need for FBDB’s loans operation.
The Study Group considered (it did not conclude) there was no longer a
general need for the federal government to provide direct financial services to
small business through the loans operation of FBDB. However, it noted that if
FBDB were to continue its loans operations, consideration should be given to
utilizing FBDB to deliver other federal lending programs. Mentioned as candidates
were lending programs in two departments, Fisheries and Oceans and Indian
and Northern Affairs. Also mentioned was the Farm Credit Corporation. And if it
were decided to close FBDB’s lending operation, the Study Group thought the
operation of the Farm Credit Corporation should also be questioned, even though
this corporation was not included in its area of review.
92 | Chapter 8
On the other hand, the Study Group concluded a good case could also be
made for keeping, even strengthening, FBDB as its bundle of services were worth
more together than separately and the Bank came closer to a one-stop shop
for small business than most federal institutions. This was seen as a role that
could be enhanced. Further, the Bank was recognized as having reservoirs of
high-mindedness and competence that should not lightly be dissipated. (This was
a novel observation and of a character that could typically be attributed to Harry
Swain, who wrote the summary report sent to the Task Force Ministers.) In this
option, the Study Group saw an enhanced FBDB delivering other federal financing
programs as mentioned earlier as well as substituting partial loan guarantees for
direct loans. Being a loan guarantor would place the Bank in a position of being a
partner of both the customer and chartered bank, as opposed to a competitor.
The ‘of two minds’ conclusion – lose it or use it, in that order – made it into the
final report of the Study Group on Services and Subsidies to Business published by
the Government of Canada. No recommendation was published. That came behind
closed doors.
It was reported Jack Walsh, the private sector representative who was associate
leader of the Study Group, decided the option to terminate FBDB lending was
the option that should be recommended to the Nielsen Task Force Ministers.
Jack Walsh and his private sector team had come to Ottawa to cut the size of
government and this option was consistent with that objective. It was quite likely
he would have discussed the options for FBDB with senior politicians in the
government before coming to his decision, a decision that was supported by other
private sector members in the Study Group.
Given that the decision was already going forward to Cabinet, immediate
action was necessary. Meeting the Minister of DRIE would have been time wasted.
Instead, Lavigueur contacted the chief of staff in the Prime Minister’s Office,
Rock bottom | 93
Bernard Roy, and apprised him of the situation. Roy quickly arranged a meeting
with the Prime Minister to argue the case for the Bank. Lavigueur went to Ottawa
and the Prime Minister was briefed on the impacts of closing the Bank on small
businesses, the Montreal economy where the Bank was headquartered as well
as all the other communities where FBDB was present. A phone call was made
to the Honourable Erik Nielsen who confirmed a recommendation to close down
FBDB’s term lending operation was indeed on the table and going forward. Nielsen
was asked not to proceed further. Following the intervention facilitated by Roy,
Lavigueur returned to Montreal.
Soon afterwards, Lavigueur received a call from Peter Meyboom who, by then,
had learned of the reversal of the move to terminate FBDB’s term lending operation.
Meyboom did not want to know how and why the decision was made. He simply
offered Lavigueur his congratulations on a job well done and the call ended.
The Bank had narrowly escaped doomsday. In a postscript, Harry Swain thought
the Bank was kept in business because it was seen as a Quebec institution. And
though Ritchie Clark could not have foreseen this event, the words in his History of
IDB were prophetic: “the decision [to locate the management of IDB in Montreal]
proved to be one of those small acorns from which great oaks grow.”5 The oak
tree was still standing and the bulldozer was back in the yard. It was speculated
that had FBDB been headquartered in Ottawa, terminating its activities would
have been a fait accompli. It would have been seen as just another government
program in Ottawa being cut, with its employees placed on priority lists for job
openings in other government departments – a common occurrence then and
through the years of successive program reviews carried out by the federal
government. At the end of the day, it was understood that the impacts and reach
of FBDB were too important to the Canadian economy.
FBDB had experienced near death, an event known to very few employees at
the Bank. Lavigueur had decided to keep the Nielsen Task Force deliberations
under wraps. Many times after the new Conservative government was elected,
he was asked by regional officers how things were going in Ottawa. Everyone
knew the Bank was not held in high regard by the new government, especially
when senior politicians were publicly making disparaging remarks about the
Bank. And most knew of the government’s desire to cut back its programs. At
these encounters with staff, Lavigueur would only say that nothing important had
occurred but that the Bank’s staff should focus on their tasks at hand – keep their
eyes on the ball. The Bank was close to its cost recovery goal and it was not the
time to be distracted.
With its ‘still in business’ sign up, the Bank now had to build itself back to
respectability and, most importantly, ensure it would never again be put in the
same potentially disastrous situation.
5 E. Ritchie Clark, The IDB: A History of Canada’s Industrial Development Bank, University of Toronto Press, 1985; page 35.
94 | Chapter 9
1985 to 1990
Rebuilding
B y the end of fiscal 1985, the agony of layoffs and reorganizations, the struggles
to get a new mandate and new capital, and the implementation of new credit
policies began to payoff. In his annual report, Lavigueur stated: “Fiscal 1985 was
a year in which FBDB returned to financial health. A sharp decline in losses, a
significant increase in the volume of loans authorized and a rapid expansion
of one of its more innovative services, the Financial Planning Program, made
it a turnaround year for the Bank.” For fiscal 1985, the Bank declared a profit of
$932,000 before an extraordinary item of $5.6 million related to staff cuts and
administrative reorganization. Technically, the Bank had a financial loss that year
but financial analysts normally discount extraordinary items, positive or negative,
when looking at the fundamentals of a company’s performance. So too did the
Bank in promoting its results to the public. The red ink was gone from the Bank’s
books and fittingly, the colour of the cover on that year’s annual report was black.
A big drop in provisions for loan losses was the principal factor in reversing the
Bank’s operating losses from $64 million in fiscal 1984 to a modest $0.9 million
profit in fiscal 1985. Provisions for loan losses, $72 million in fiscal 1984, declined
to $17 million in fiscal 1985. This led to a small net operating loss of $2.2 million for
the Loans Division, before the extraordinary item, that was offset by the Investment
Banking Division’s first profit of $3.1 million. (With the introduction of Investment
Banking, the nomenclature Division was introduced to demarcate the Bank’s three
groups of services: Loans, Investment Banking and Management Services.) The
large reduction in loan losses was evidence the Bank’s tighter credit policies were
taking hold but, more importantly, the Bank was aided by the Canadian economy
that grew at a 5% annual rate in real terms during fiscal 1985. Economic growth
remained uneven across the country and the western provinces were still in a
recession as reflected by regional operating results. The Loans Division’s loss of
$2.2 million in fiscal 1985 comprised a $0.3 million profit in the Atlantic region, a
$4.8 million profit in the Quebec region, a $6.5 million profit in the Ontario region,
a $3.2 million loss in the Prairie and Northern region and a $10.6 million loss in the
B.C. and Yukon region.
The staff count in the Loans Division at the end of fiscal 1985 was 925, a quarter
less than the previous year and 57% less from the high of 2,159 at the end of fiscal
1980. This led to a reduction in operating expenses which totalled $55 million in
fiscal 1985, or $13 million less than the previous year. For the year, however, the
key operating ratio (expenses as a percentage of loan amount outstanding) stood
at 3.4%, still above the 3% cost recovery target. But there was a positive sign
on this front as the annualized ratio was 3% in the last quarter of the year and
projected to continue improving. The Bank had reached an important milestone.
Further, with growth in the loans portfolio and reduction in costs related to the
mismatch problem, net interest income comfortably covered operating expenses,
thereby satisfying one of the strictures of the 1983 mandate.
The turnaround in the Bank’s financial results was the result of tough decisions
and difficult choices at all levels in the Bank, in addition to hard work and sweat.
While the President set the direction and goals for the Bank, it was staff at all
levels who delivered the goods. As Lavigueur emphasized in his Annual Report:
“the positive results of fiscal 1985 didn’t just happen. The perseverance and
96 | Chapter 9
expertise of the Bank’s staff which has been under severe stress are responsible
for the turnaround. Through a period of poor economic conditions, rapid change
and large staff reductions, the professionalism of FBDB personnel allowed the
Bank to come to grips with its problems and to solve them.” Facing seemingly
impossible situations and overcoming them has been a longstanding trait in the
Bank’s genetic make-up.
It was common practice in corporate annual reports for chief executives to thank
all staff for their contributions to company results, usually towards the end of their
reports. But in FBDB’s 1985 annual report, the thank you had special meaning – it
was sincere.
That the Bank had turned the corner on its operating losses was already evident
in early 1985, when it was dealing with the Nielsen Task Force program review.
While the Bank would point to this turnaround, it was not taken seriously. Not that
it would have mattered much as ideological push and bias were working against
the Bank. But to emphasize it meant what it said, the Bank returned $15 million to
the Government of Canada in March 1985. Under the terms of the 1983 mandate,
wherein the government would cover loan losses up to $50 million a year, the Bank
had received $22 million during the course of the year. With the turnaround in loan
losses and growing net interest income, it was deemed only $7 million was needed
by the Bank to offset a forecasted loss of $7 million. A cheque for $15 million was
written to the order of the Receiver General of Canada and delivered by hand to
the Assistant Deputy Minister in charge of small business at DRIE in Ottawa. The
accompanying letter stated that due to cost cutting measures and the improved
status of the portfolio, $15 million of the $22 million received during the year to fund
losses in the term lending operation were not needed and were being returned to
the government. The cheque was gladly accepted – it likely immediately went to
pay for overruns in some other programs – but there was no official or even verbal
recognition of the Bank’s achievement. In Ottawa, there were still lingering doubts
about the Bank’s turnaround. There were doubts too inside the Bank.
FBDB had endured five years of operating losses, from fiscal 1980 to fiscal
1984, before returning to profitability. By coincidence, five years of losses was what
had been predicted at the outset by the Board member who had experienced
first-hand a similar banking experience. Had the Bank not received capital
infusions from the government during the 1980 to 1984 period, it would have been
essentially bankrupt on paper. The cumulative losses suffered between fiscal years
1980 to 1984 amounted to $295 million. At the start of fiscal 1980, the Bank had
$181 million of equity.
Although a profit was declared for fiscal 1985, there was an overhanging cloud
at FBDB’s Board of Directors. Many directors had been on the Board in the early
1980s and could still remember being assured by management that losses would
soon end, which they did not. Now they were being assured of profits. Though not
broached directly, the concern was whether loan losses would rise again. Board
members recognized a rebuilding job had already started. The question was whether
the foundation was laid on sand or bedrock. The cloud became darker when the
Canadian Commercial Bank and the Northland Bank, both based in Alberta, declared
bankruptcy in 1985. The Canadian Commercial failure was the largest bankruptcy by
Rebuilding | 97
a chartered bank in Canada and the first in over 60 years. These bankruptcies had a
psychological impact on FBDB’s Board of Directors. If the economic recession in the
western provinces was having such an effect that Canadian chartered banks had to
declare bankruptcy, were there more losses to surface in FBDB, a lender of last resort?
FBDB’s senior management was often challenged by the Board to justify that the
turnaround had indeed taken hold. When Ken Neilson was asked by Yves Milette, who
had moved back to the position of Vice President, Loans, to get increased authorizing
limits for field and head office officers, he was told it was not the time to broach such
a subject with the Board of Directors. They needed more convincing that profits were
here to stay before giving out more lending authority.
Also creating angst on the Board were the losses they were seeing on large-sized
loans, loans they themselves had approved on recommendation by management.
They asked for a presentation on the performance of large loans. There were
25 clients in the portfolio whose loan authorizations exceeded $5 million. Of these,
8 were in category 4, that is, in liquidation stage, and another 3 were in category
3, that is, impaired. If one looked at loans authorized for $2 million or more, there
were 78 clients in the portfolio. Of these, 10 were in category 3 and 11 in category 4.
Large-sized loans were prized as they boosted the earning power of the portfolio
and were considered lower risk. These numbers showed otherwise. It was estimated
the ultimate loss rate for these large-sized loans would exceed 10%, well above the
cost recovery objective of 6.5% established for the whole portfolio. Little wonder
the Board of Directors did not want to give out higher authorizing limits to the staff.
personal guarantee. Reversal of provisions for losses such as these helped the
Bank return to profitability coming out of the recession.
Taking personal guarantees on its loans was important for the Bank even
though, to distinguish itself from private sector lenders, FBDB would promote
itself in Ottawa as the bank that would not realize on personal guarantees in
the event of loan default, along the lines of ‘We don’t throw people out of their
homes to collect our money.’ The official line was that these guarantees were used
primarily as leverage to ensure business owners repaid the amounts owing to
the Bank as much as possible. Otherwise, business owners would place FBDB, a
federal government agency, at the bottom of the list to be repaid in the event of
liquidation. Bank officers would refer to a case, real or imagined, wherein a bailiff
threatened to seize an owner’s Harley Davidson motorcycles if his FBDB loan
wasn’t repaid. The loan was quickly repaid. Though FBDB may have been less
inclined than chartered banks to realize on personal guarantees, they were called
on more than once to help reduce the Bank’s record levels of loan losses.
With the economic recovery underway in the mid 1980s and FBDB’s loan losses
dropping sharply, it became evident the recession of the early 1980s had been the
principal driving force behind FBDB’s record losses. Further, the Bank was not alone
in racking up record levels of loan losses. The following chart (Chart 3) was included
in FBDB’s fiscal 1985 Annual Report. It showed chartered banks also suffered heavy
loan losses during the early 1980s. (They did not have a Small Business Financing
Review to tell them that their losses were indicative of a shrinking market for their
lending operation and all they were left with were high risk borrowers.)
$1,600
$1,205
$629
$61 $1800
$44
$50
$400
$17
$0 $0
Table 3 below shows ultimate loss rates experienced by the FBDB and its
regions on loans authorized before, during and after the 1980-1982 Great
Recession. Recall the ultimate loss rate for a group of loans is the amount of loss
recognized for that group expressed as a percentage of the amounts authorized
to that group. A 6.5% ultimate loss rate would be consistent with a break-even
income position, as per the Cost Recovery Equation cited in Chapter 7.
Table 3 shows that even after FBDB had imposed stricter credit criteria with its
1980 cost recovery plan and loan authorizations had declined precipitously, loans
authorized in fiscal years 1981 through 1983 still had record loss rates. This clearly
was the impact of the recession. The table also shows the impact in western
Canada of a lingering recession attributed to the National Energy Program.
The profit declared in fiscal year 1985 marked the start of rebuilding FBDB.
Solidifying FBDB’s financial viability was of prime importance. But there were other
developments to be dealt with including the introduction of services emanating
from the 1983 mandate (the Financial Planning Program and Investment Banking),
and continuing ‘dialogue’ with the government. Before delving into the Bank’s new
services, another development is worthy of mention.
The mid-1980s saw more women opening their own businesses. Sensing the
trend, FBDB’s Board of Directors wanted to ensure the Bank was addressing the
needs of women entrepreneurs. Richard Kroft, a Director, asked for information
on how many loans were being authorized to women entrepreneurs. It was
common at the time throughout the banking industry that few loans would
fall into this category. It was more common that when a woman entrepreneur
wanted a business loan, the spouse was required to co-sign loan documents.
In response to the question at the Board, Ken Neilson said the Bank was not
collecting such data but committed to having the loan accounting system
programmed to record loans going to women entrepreneurs. The Bank started
giving special attention to women entrepreneurs. Seminars and workshops
were set up specifically for women entrepreneurs which, in turn, provided
100 | Chapter 9
opportunities to market all the Bank’s products, including term loans. The Board
also wanted data on women in management at FBDB. Moving more women into
management ranks proved a greater challenge for the Bank, an institution that
only a few years before had a Male Officers Performance Evaluation form.
The first product introduced under the Financial Planning Program (FPP) was
Packaging and Intermediation. As the program brochure described it: “if your
business requires funding, FBDB will complete a full assessment of the project and
prepare a report that will greatly facilitate the analysis of your needs by selected
financial institutions or government agencies. FBDB is also prepared to act as your
intermediary in presenting your request for funding.”
Exhibit 1 shows that the report prepared by the Bank would be quite comprehensive.
101
HISTORY
A record of the significant events in business history in chronological order.
OPERATONS
A description of the applicant’s products and/or services with an assessment of
the quality. A description of the principal materials and/or services purchased,
including sources and adequacy of supply, prices and terms, etc. Number
of employees, special skills, wage rates and availability. A description of the
production methods.
MARKETING
A complete review of the markets served, potential markets, and the company’s
marketing strategy and competition. A description of the pricing policy, credit
policy and advertising methods. A list of major customers with orders on hand,
if applicable.
Conclusion
As such, the cost of doing in-depth analyses of various aspects of the company,
preparing reports and acting as intermediary would be high. The Packaging and
Intermediation service therefore targeted, as its market, medium-sized and growth
businesses. For the very small “mom and pop” type small businesses that could
not afford the service, the Bank already had its training seminars, workshops and
CASE counselling program to service their needs, and it added a series of Do-It-
Yourself Kits.
Five Do-It-Yourself Kits were published and sold by the Bank through its branch
offices. The first title followed directly from the packaging concept. It was called
Arranging Financing. The other four titles were: Forecasting and Cash Flow
Budgeting; Analyzing Financial Statements; Evaluating the Purchase of a Small
Business; and Credit and Collection Tips. Each kit was sold for $10 and a bound
set of the five kits was available for $45.
Do-it-yourself kits
Rebuilding | 103
Another observation made in the small business financing studies of the early
1980s was the lack of equity capital for small business. It was noted that, on
one hand, private investors were saying there was no shortage of investment
capital in Canada, only a shortage of good projects in which to invest. On the
demand side, small businesses were saying they couldn’t find equity capital.
This led to FBDB creating a second product under the FPP umbrella – Financial
Matchmaking, an intermediary service matching individual investors with small
business owners seeking equity capital. Its principal tool was a computerized
data base listing, firstly, potential investors in small business and what they
were looking for, and secondly, small business owners looking for equity
capital. Although it was a national data base, its application was mainly at the
local level, trying to match local investors with local businesses. Most potential
investors were looking not only for attractive investment opportunities but
also for situations where they could contribute their particular expertise to the
management of the investee business. They knew they had to be an active
participant in the management of an investee company in order to have a
chance of getting a return on their investment.
The final product added to FPP was Strategic Planning. The firm ADM
Pragma had done some corporate consulting work for the Bank and, through
this assignment, saw what the Bank was achieving with its Financial Planning
Program. They had done consulting assignments in strategic planning for
large-sized firms and they proposed to the Bank that their methodology could
be adapted and applied to smaller firms. ADM Pragma was hired by the Bank
to produce the structure of a strategic plan for medium-sized firms. They also
trained a few FBDB employees on how to work with businesses to produce their
strategic plans. These trained employees, in turn, trained others in the Bank. As
the FPP brochure stated: “the Strategic Planning service will help you see how
your business stacks up against the competition, where your weak points are,
and how well-poised you are to take advantage of opportunities now existing
or soon to come up in your marketplace.” The Strategic Planning product was
so well structured it was often used internally by Bank management to improve
market presence and for planning purposes.
The 1983 mandate for FPP envisaged the program being implemented initially
as a pilot project since no one knew exactly what the market was for the service.
It was understood that full implementation across the country and related funding
would be approved at a later date if an evaluation of the pilot project showed
positive results. FPP was introduced first in one branch per region, then later
extended to 10 branches and eventually to 20 branch offices. John Ryan was
given the job to implement the program in the selected branches.
Ryan had joined the Industrial Development Bank in 1972. He first applied to
the Bank’s Halifax branch for a job as credit officer. Although he was turned down
by the branch manager, he was soon hired by Ken Powers, the regional general
manager, as a financial analyst in the regional office. Not long after, he was sent to
the Halifax branch office as a credit officer – to work with the same manager who
had turned him down earlier. He produced outstanding results and was appointed
branch manager in various Atlantic region branch offices before moving to
104 | Chapter 9
Montreal as special assistant to the Executive Vice President, Eric Scott, in 1983.
Ryan rose through the ranks of the Bank over the years and was Chief Operating
Officer by the time he left the Bank in 1997 to take on the position of President of
the Farm Credit Corporation.
If many FBDB officers thought the packaging and intermediation role was a
curious one for the Bank, they were not alone. After financial packages were
completed by FBDB Financial Planning officers, they would be ‘shopped’ with
chartered banks. The private sector banks saw this to be very unusual – why would
FBDB be bringing loan proposals that looked bankable to them? What was being
hidden? After careful analysis and due diligence they found the packages put
together by FBDB were indeed bankable. They went ahead and financed them. In
Rebuilding | 105
many cases, projects were financed jointly with FBDB. But something even more
curious occurred. In some cases, the FPP-prepared financial package would
be shown to FBDB loan officers and they would refuse to finance the proposed
project. The same package would then be shopped with a chartered bank where
it received financing. There was no plausible explanation for such occurrences
except that the Bank had become too risk averse, in some quarters, after
experiencing large losses and layoffs. Another explanation was that some FBDB
officers could not handle complex proposals.
In this regard, the Financial Planning Program had a long-term positive effect
on the Bank. It introduced the Bank to a new market that was more upscale in
terms of growth potential. To be sure, the proposals coming from these companies
were more complex than average but they enabled the Bank to learn how to deal
with complex financing proposals and the management style of high-growth
companies. In a way, the financial packaging service was another “acorn from
which great oaks grow” to quote Ritchie Clark.
In fiscal 1985, the first full year the FPP was operational, the Bank sold
12,313 Do-It-Yourself Kits and completed 125 Packaging assignments, 30 equity
matchmaking deals and 15 strategic plans. The equity matchmaking data base
contained a listing of 435 potential small business investors and 620 business
opportunities seeking equity capital.
In 1985, the level of FPP activity was sufficient for the Bank to commission
evaluations of its new products. The government had indicated the FPP could
be expanded following a favourable evaluation of the pilot. Government funding
for the FPP pilot was about $2 million annually and the Bank wanted this amount
increased in order to provide the service more widely across the country.
The FPP evaluation concluded the Packaging and Intermediation service had
done well in terms of objectives achievements; the incrementality ratings on these
products were high compared to comparable government assistance programs
to industry; the research confirmed there was a need for the packaging and
intermediation service; and the equity matchmaking service was addressing a
real need in the small business sector. The evaluation determined the Strategic
Planning service was too new to be evaluated. However, one client company from
each of the five regions was surveyed. In all five cases, companies were supportive
of the service they received and had instituted changes they considered would
increase sales and profitability. The Do-It-Yourself Kits were not evaluated but
the CPER report stated the sales of the Kits spoke for themselves. By Canadian
publishing standards, the Kits were bestsellers.
106 | Chapter 9
By the end of the 1980s, the Financial Planning Program was still operating
in a pilot project mode. On an annual basis, about 300 financial packages
and 100 strategic plans were being completed and 26,000 copies of the
Do-It-Yourself Kits were being sold. The cost recovery rate for the program,
or proportion of costs recovered, was about 44%, higher than the rest of the
Bank’s management services which had an overall cost recovery rate in the
20% range for much of the 1980s.
Prior to the creation of the Investment Banking Division, the Bank made
equity investments in an eclectic mix of companies. About two in three of these
companies were in the manufacturing sector, the sector where growth companies
for the most part resided. Up until the 1980s, manufacturing was considered the
engine for economic growth. High technology had not yet entered the economic
development landscape. In fact, top mandarins in Ottawa spent much intellectual
and financial capital trying to find ways to grow the manufacturing sector. They
Rebuilding | 107
wanted Canada to move away from being a resource-based economy or, in their
words, ‘hewers of wood and drawers of water.’ This was and continued to be the
main focus of Canada’s industrial policy. As the costs of manufacturing in Canada
became internationally uncompetitive during the 1980s, the policy focus shifted
in the 1990s to promoting knowledge-based, high technology companies. (All
the while, natural resources continued to be the sector generating much of the
country’s investments and foreign exchange.)
In its peak year of activity, fiscal year 1980, FBDB authorized 83 new equity
investments for a total $14.3 million. Many of the investments the Bank made prior
to 1983 proved successful and some investees went on to become public compa-
nies. An example is Winpak, a packaging company that grew and became listed on
the Toronto Stock Exchange. Others did not.
There were cases where the Bank would have a term loan with a company
experiencing major difficulties and the FBDB loan was converted into an equity
position in the hope that, with the passage of time, the company would rebound.
The Bank prided itself in being more patient than its private sector counterparts.
One example was a paperboard manufacturer in Ontario. It received several
rounds of FBDB financing that were converted to equity participation before it
eventually closed. But in one noteworthy case, the patience shown by the Bank
paid huge dividends to the economy. This was the case of Blackcomb ski resort in
British Columbia.
In 1976, FBDB had in its possession the assets of Snowridge Ski Development
following foreclosure proceedings. The Bank joined Aspen Skiing Corporation,
operator of the famed American resort and interested in investing in skiing in
Canada, to evaluate what could be done to resurrect the Snowridge operation.
The ski mountain was located in the Kananaskis region of Alberta, arguably the
most scenic area in Canada. Aspen saw potential in the site and agreed to form a
50-50 partnership with FBDB. The Bank would put up the assets it possessed and
Aspen Corporation would invest $1 million to upgrade the mountain’s facilities. A
new company, Fortress Mountain Resorts Limited, was created to reflect the new
Aspen-FBDB partnership.
In 1978, following a call from the Government of British Columbia for proposals
to develop a new ski area at Blackcomb mountain in British Columbia, Aspen
Corporation had been looking and was aware of Blackcomb’s potential. Conversely,
the Government of British Columbia saw in Aspen the right mix of operating
experience, management skills and financial resources to carry through with the
development. But while Aspen was keen to take on the Blackcomb project, it
needed a Canadian partner and FBDB agreed to be a 50-50 partner with them.
The Bank’s Board of Directors agreed to co-invest with Aspen Corporation to
develop Blackcomb mountain and the crown lands attached to the development
plan. Hugh Smythe, who was the general manager of the Fortress operation
in Alberta and originally from the Whistler area, was brought in to manage the
Blackcomb ski development. He would later be credited with having a very
large role in building what is arguably the best ski facility in North America,
Whistler-Blackcomb.
108 | Chapter 9
In 1986, Aspen Corporation, by then part of Twentieth Century Fox, the movie
behemoth, decided not to invest further in the Blackcomb development and
its share was bought out by FBDB. After looking for a new partner, the Bank
sold the Aspen share to Intrawest Properties Limited. Intrawest was founded by
Joe Houssian, a native of Manitoba who became one of Canada’s more successful
entrepreneurs. He knew little about the ski business but his company brought
to the table expertise and experience to develop the lands at the base of the
mountain that were part of the package Aspen and FBDB had procured from
the provincial government. Soon after, Intrawest bought out FBDB’s share in
Blackcomb. With Intrawest in the picture, development of Blackcomb mountain
ski facilities and the whole of Whistler village took off. In 1996, Intrawest merged
with the Whistler Mountain ski operation and propelled the combined Whistler
Blackcomb resort to the top ski resort in North America. (It was host to the 2010
Winter Olympics.) And to complete the circle, Intrawest, then a public company,
was bought out in 2006 by the U.S. hedge fund, Fortress Investment Group.
Blackcomb is one of many enterprises financed by the Bank over the years
that eventually expanded into a large Canadian corporation. Perhaps the one
that grew the most was Rogers Communications. Its founder, Ted Rogers, is
considered one of Canada’s greatest entrepreneurs. And he got his start with an
IDB loan to finance an FM radio station in Toronto, at the time when these stations
were coming on line. Rogers had a great idea but insufficient money. The Bank’s
credit officer handling the file was Mike Rudkin who later rose through the ranks to
become Regional Vice President, Atlantic Region before retiring. Although there
was little collateral to support the loan, Rudkin worked to get the loan approved
by his superior. (A personal guarantee and a second mortgage on a property were
essentially the collateral on the loan.) Later, while on a stint at head office, Rudkin
would open the Rogers loan file to see what had become of the loan. In the file
was a remark inserted by the General Manger that suggested the loan should
probably never have been made. The rest is history. Rogers parlayed his radio
station and IDB loan to create Rogers Communications.
The new Investment Banking Division was not going to simply take over the
existing venture capital operation and continue its operations. It had to be a different
kind of outfit to fulfill its proactive development role focussing on companies with
high-growth potential. In planning the operations for the new Investment Banking
Division, Hugh Carmichael and Dick Bradbury, under the watchful eye of Jack Nordin,
looked at what others were doing in the U.S. to provide equity capital to companies
with very high growth potential. They focussed on the operations of Hambrecht &
Quist as the model for the new Investment Banking Division.
Hambrecht & Quist operated in California’s Silicon Valley and promoted itself
as a provider of the full range of investment banking services to both emerging
and threshold-level companies. The firm provided the same services to smaller
growth companies that Wall Street investment banks were providing to large
public companies. Reproducing a Hambrecht & Quist operation in Canada would
have meant providing an all-encompassing set of financial services to Canada’s
growth companies. Included would be packaging and intermediation, underwriting,
joint ventures, syndications, equity financing, venture capital, mergers and
Rebuilding | 109
The Bank knew this vision could not be accomplished overnight. It would start
with the basics, providing equity capital, and grow from there. But a crucial objective
had to be accomplished first, and that was to establish the Bank’s credentials in
Canada’s financial and business communities. This could not be done with the mar-
ket reputation as a money-losing lender of last resort. So, the Investment Banking
Division was created and promoted as a separate entity from the rest of the Bank.
Roger Lafond, who had been head of the Investments group before the new 1983
mandate, was selected to head the new Investment Banking Division.
The division started with a clean slate. The equity portfolio transferred from
financial services included only potential winners. The rest was left with the
Loans Division to administer. Before the Investment Banking Division was created
there were 116 customers in the Bank’s investment portfolio. Only about 50 were
transferred to the new division. In addition, the transferred portfolio was fully
capitalized with $29 million received from the Government of Canada as part of
the 1983 mandate. This mandate included a commitment to inject further capital
amounting to $60 million over the next three years to fund new investments.
Starting out with a mature portfolio fully capitalized by the government, the
Investment Banking Division was able to declare profits in its second year of
operation, fiscal 1985, profits that allowed the Bank to declare an overall profit and
signal its long sought turnaround. Also, with its early profits, the division had more
capital than it could invest and the $60 million earmarked for new investments
were continuously re-profiled to later years.
new partnerships with Canada’s venture capital industry. This he did with personal
visits, backed by an operation that was profitable, and by promoting the Association
of Canadian Venture Capital Companies, of which he was elected president.
Vaillancourt also hosted an annual event that would assemble venture capital fund
managers from across the country. The event would coincide with a FBDB Board
meeting. Invitees would attend seminars during the day followed by a dinner with the
Board of Directors and some noted speaker in attendance. Change at the division
had arrived, change that was punctuated by an FBDB advertisement in Venture mag-
azine with Vaillancourt’s name featured prominently. Bankers from the staid IDB did
not place their names in corporate advertising. But Vaillancourt achieved the goal of
positioning FBDB as a respected member in Canada’s venture capital community.
Decentralizing decision-making
The first profit following the Great Recession of the early 1980s, declared for fiscal
1985, was the starting point for rebuilding the loans portfolio. With a yoke over
their shoulders – loans could only be made if they were not otherwise available
elsewhere on reasonable terms and conditions – Ken Neilson and his team of
regional and head office vice presidents set about building a profitable loans
portfolio as well as an efficient delivery system. With Neilson in charge of Loans,
the princedoms dismantled themselves. To achieve the goals Lavigueur had set,
everyone had to be singing from the same song sheet, working as one team. To be
sure, regional vice presidents still carried much weight in major Bank decisions but
they could no longer be perceived as autonomous princelings.
There were some snags along the way to sustained profitability. One was the
lack of new capital to keep the term lending operation at a 10:1 debt-to-equity
basis, the ratio used for planning the financial objectives for the Loans Division.
On the operational side, one temporary setback was the implementation of the
PDM concept. A PDM was a Project Development Manager and conceived as
the first person a client would meet at an FBDB office. The PDM would respond
to the client’s needs, be they for financial or management services. The PDM was
seen as the ‘Renaissance Man’ who would carry the Bank into its new age. (In the
mid-1980s the Bank, like society in general, was slow to add the word ‘person’ to
its lexicon.) The PDM concept did not improve productivity at the branch level. It
was quickly recognized as a step backwards and was scrapped. There would be
separate loan officers and management services officers in branch offices.
To grow the portfolio, the Bank had to be more responsive to clients’ demands
and decision-making was decentralized. As cited earlier, District offices, headed
by a District General Manager, were created to bring decision-making authority
closer to the client. The District General Manager was assisted by a District
Manager, Loans and a District Manager, Management Services. Seventeen district
offices (designated ‘A’ branches) were created across the country, each having ‘B’
and ‘C’ branches reporting to them. The five regional offices were kept in place
but with far fewer staff to handle financial, human resource, administrative and
legal matters. The Bank renamed its credit officers Senior Account Managers and
Account Managers, following the practice in chartered banks. PDMs were gone,
SAMs were in. Almost every FBDB staff member a client would deal with was now
Rebuilding | 111
a manager. When asked to speak to the manager, the FBDB officer could say, “you
ARE speaking with the manager.” In later years, in dealings with chartered banks,
small business owners upped the ante by asking to speak with the vice president
in charge. Chartered banks responded by appointing scores of vice presidents in
their branch offices. The Bank eventually followed suit.
The benefits of the decentralized structure and new directions were quickly
realized. In fiscal year 1986, FBDB authorized term loans totalling $545 million
on a net basis, that is, the amount authorized after cancellations and reductions
by clients. This was about double the amount authorized on a net basis two
years earlier. The following year, fiscal 1987, net loan authorizations reached a
peak of $732 million and they stayed around the $700 million level for the three
subsequent years before the next recession altered the economic landscape.
Returning to profitability
Although FBDB had declared an operating profit for fiscal 1985 before extraordinary
items, the Loans Division had recorded a loss of $2.2 million offset by a profit
from the Investment Banking Division of $3.1 million. The next year, fiscal 1986, the
Loans Division recorded a small profit of $1.4 million, to which was added another
$3.4 million from the Investment Banking Division. The Loans Division’s profit, the
first in seven years, was made possible by a decrease in operating expenses in
the amount of $4.4 million, the third consecutive year of decline in expenses. In
subsequent years, profits for the Loans Division were as follows: $1.4 million in
fiscal 1987; $2.9 million in fiscal 1988; $2.6 million in fiscal 1989; and $7.2 million in
fiscal 1990. These levels were similar to profits FBDB and its predecessor IDB had
recorded before the 1980-1982 recession and were seen to be reasonable since
the Bank had to walk a tightrope when it came to its profit/loss position. If it had
recorded exorbitant profits, it would have been criticized for not doing enough to
help small business – not taking enough risk. If it had recorded losses, as in the
1980 to 1984 period, it would have been criticized as another money-losing crown
corporation. Profits in the $5 million range seemed just right for FBDB, in the sense
of political correctness. But they masked another of Lavigueur’s objectives, which
was to prepare the Bank for another, inevitable economic recession.
112 | Chapter 9
In the years prior to fiscal 1986, the provisions for loan losses charged against
income would be similar to the actual amount of new loan losses recognized
during the year, referred to as the actual loan loss experience. This changed
in fiscal 1986 when the Bank charged a greater amount for provisions for loan
losses against income than the actual loan loss experience (LLE). And this
practice continued until fiscal 1990. In effect, the Bank changed its accounting
for provisions for losses to reflect an averaging type of methodology that would
dampen fluctuations through economic cycles.
Under the new accounting practice, provisions for loan losses charged against
income were added to a general provision account. As actual loan losses became
recognized, they were deducted from the general provision account. To justify this
method of accounting, the Bank pointed to a decision of the Treasury Board that
directed the Bank to earn an annual surplus and to continue to place priority on
establishing an adequate provision for loan losses. Sometimes, directives from the
government conveniently reflected what the Bank wanted to do administratively.
More was happening backstage than met the eye.
Had the Bank recorded only the actual loan loss experience as a charge against
income, the declared profits would have been higher and perhaps not politically
correct. Table 4 illustrates the hypothetical case if actual loan losses were charged
against income for the Loans Division.
From fiscal 1986 to 1990, the cumulative difference between the actual loan
loss experience (LLE) and the provisions for loan losses charged against income
amounted to $139.3 million (or $190.5 million less $51.2 million). This amount was,
in effect, put away for rainy days which were sure to come.
Rebuilding | 113
On April 1, 1989, the beginning of fiscal 1990, the Auditor General of Canada
became FBDB’s auditor. According to the Financial Administration Act, the Auditor
General of Canada was to be the auditor or joint auditor for crown corporations
on or after January 1989. The Bank elected to have joint auditors and the firm of
Raymond, Chabot, Martin, Paré (RCMP) was selected. When RCMP arrived on
the scene, the first thing they wanted to audit was the provision for loan losses.
Though never stated openly, there may have been concerns about whether the
Bank, in declaring profits as a supplemental lender, was recognizing sufficient
provisions for losses in its income statements. After a short review, they quickly
realized the opposite – the Bank was providing for more than its actual loan
losses in its income statements. The Bank’s management then pointed to the
aforementioned Treasury Board decision to justify its method of providing for loan
losses. The next task was to convince the Auditor General of Canada that the Bank
was not hiding losses and the accounting method was appropriate. This task was
handed to RCMP as joint auditor.
A special study on provisions for losses was done by the two joint auditors.
They found that the accumulated provisions for losses on loans, guarantees and
venture capital investments, as determined by management, were acceptable.
The size of the provision for losses soon became a non-issue as the 1990
recession kicked in. The experience of the next few years showed that the Bank
had been prudent in its method of accounting for loan losses. In the mid-1990s,
the methodology was changed again as the Bank was obliged to implement an
impaired loans methodology prescribed by the Canadian Institute of Chartered
Accountants for all banks in Canada.
The RCMP auditors were not the only ones skeptical about the profits FBDB
was declaring in the post-1985 period. Many times, when officers of the Bank
would point to its profits in discussion with persons outside the Bank, there would
be expressions of doubt. With the Auditor General of Canada in place, the Bank’s
officers could now ask the skeptics if they would like to trade external auditors.
All would decline.
The Bank had rebuilt its loans portfolio and created a strong foundation on
which to build its next phase. This was achieved by the whole team at the Bank,
all staff at all levels working together to deliver the goods. Building this foundation
became even more important as the Bank was soon hit with major crises and
another economic recession.
114 | Chapter 10
1985 to 1990
Working
with
government
FBDB establishes a track record in delivering new programs on
behalf of government departments and is a conduit for a large
government investment. Several attempts are made to obtain a
new mandate.
Working with government | 115
A s part of its rebuilding effort, the Bank found opportunities to cooperate with
federal government departments for mutual good. In its first set of corporate
plans submitted to the government for approval, the Bank had a specific corporate
objective to “work with government.” Just over ten years earlier, at the Industrial
Development Bank, this objective would have been considered heresy. Times had
changed and indeed, not working cooperatively with the government could have
led to disastrous outcomes, considering the experiences of dealing with the Small
Business Financing Review, negotiating the 1983 mandate and the deliberations of
the Nielsen Task Force.
There were challenges in working more closely with the government but there
were opportunities as well. The latter stemmed from the desire of government to
make the elusive one-stop shop for small business a reality. As the Small Business
Financing Review and the Nielsen Task Force emphasized, FBDB was ideally suited
to deliver other government small business programs. It had an efficient delivery
network, systems, procedures and business expertise already in place. Plus,
surveys showed FBDB had a better reputation among business owners than any
other small business program run by government departments. In the second half
of the 1980s, delivering business programs on behalf of government could help
fill excess capacity in the Bank and contribute to overhead costs. This was part
of the mindset of FBDB’s President when Lavigueur first met with the Honourable
Sinclair Stevens, the Minister of DRIE and Minister responsible for FBDB.
Although Lavigueur had met several times with the Small Business Minister,
the Honourable André Bissonnette, early in the Conservative government’s
mandate, it took a while before a meeting could be arranged with Stevens, the
senior Minister. When the meeting was finally scheduled, it was relayed to the
Bank that the Minister wanted to see Lavigueur privately. The Ministerial briefing
book, maintained by the Bank, was updated and customized for this meeting. The
briefing book had statistics galore on the Bank’s various activities, including the
number of small businesses assisted and jobs created each year. The second
section had proposals for what the Bank could be adding to its repertoire, each
justified and costed.
When Lavigueur arrived at the top floor of the C.D. Howe building located at
235 Queen Street in Ottawa, the DRIE headquarters, he was ushered into the
waiting area and greeted with the perfunctory, ‘The Minister is running a little late
today but will see you shortly; would you like to have a coffee?’ Usually when FBDB
issues would be discussed with Ministers, there would be senior departmental
officials in the room taking part in the discussion. Others would be there to take
notes and answer any questions from the Minister. But there were no departmental
officials in the waiting area. It was going to be a private meeting with the Minister
after all. Lavigueur sensed something unusual was afoot.
Minister Stevens came through the back door to his office to greet Lavigueur
and led him directly into his office. He was in a pleasant mood, smiling as they
entered his office. Before Lavigueur could take out the FBDB briefing book, the
Minister went over to his desk, picked up a sheet of paper and handed it to
Lavigueur. There lay the purpose of the meeting. It was not to receive a briefing
on FBDB activities. It was to inform FBDB that the government had agreed to
116 | Chapter 10
invest $79 million in Cominco Ltd. and FBDB was to be the conduit for the
investment. The Department, DRIE, did not have the powers to make investments
in companies. However, Section 99 of the Financial Administration Act allowed
the federal government to give directives to crown corporations. (Directives
were needed when an activity would fall outside the corporation’s mandate and
normal activities.) And, of course, the government would bear any cost arising
from the directive. Lavigueur was taken aback, as Cominco, a giant Canadian
mining corporation, was not your typical small or medium-sized business. This
was not what the Bank had in mind when it set “working with government” as a
corporate objective.
Around the same time the directive was given to invest in Cominco, DRIE
officials sent a proposal to the Bank that would have FBDB invest in a new
company called TIEM Canada. The company, in conjunction with Control Data, a
U.S. information technology firm, had proposed to the Government of Canada that
it privatize its job creation efforts. Control Data had set up job creation projects in
Working with government | 117
the U.S. and saw an opportunity to export its know-how to Canada. The proposal
found favour with Minister Stevens, a proponent of privatization. In the previous
Conservative government of 1979, he had been Minister in charge of privatizing
government services.
The deal was envisaged as follows. TIEM would create a national network of
small business development centres, incubating small businesses so to speak.
These businesses, with the help of TIEM’s services, would then grow and create
permanent jobs for which TIEM would be compensated by the Government of
Canada. TIEM also expected to receive royalties from the companies it helped
build. To establish the TIEM centres, DRIE would provide $12 million to TIEM over
a two-year period as a repayable loan and some $28 million would be paid by
the Canada Employment and Immigration Commission (CEIC) for the new jobs it
was estimated TIEM’s clients would create. TIEM had raised $400,000 in capital
to start-up its business and DRIE officials communicated to FBDB that it should
consider an investment of $200,000 in TIEM for a 5% ownership position. It
was said Minister Stevens supported the project. This was not a directive. The
Bank would have to decide for itself, without external influence, whether or not to
make the investment under its own powers. After some discussion at the Bank, it
was decided to make the investment. It was an action consistent with the Bank’s
mandate and its corporate objective to work with government, but would also
provide knowledge about the relatively new concept of incubating businesses.
Unfortunately, the investment was later fully written-down.
The program started in 1985 and became an annual rite of summer at FBDB. The
Bank used loan guarantees to deliver the program. Typically, each summer FBDB
would authorize about $3.5 million in loan guarantees to about 1,200 students
who would go on to create around 2,400 summer jobs. There was an incentive of
a $100 cash rebate if loans were repaid in full before fixed dates each year and
about one in three students would take advantage of this option. Default rates
for the program were under 20%. For CEIC (which later morphed into Human
Resources Development Canada), this program was a cost-effective way to create
summer jobs. For FBDB and chartered banks, it was a way of encouraging the
next generation of Canadian entrepreneurs and coaching them in best business
practices. A study found students receiving loan guarantees under the program
were nine times more likely to become full-time business owners than others.
118 | Chapter 10
Under the program, 36 loans for working capital purposes amounting to over
$800,000 were authorized by the Bank. This was a small amount of loans but it
showed the efficacy of using FBDB to deliver business programs and generated
much support for the Bank at Treasury Board, the overseer of government
efficiency and effectiveness. The contact with Ron Crowley was an added benefit
to the Bank. After he retired from DFO, he became a valued member, as consultant,
of the FBDB team working on the Bank’s 1995 legislation.
The Bank began accepting loan applications under the CIDF in 1991. CIDF provided
unsecured loans for amounts between $20,000 and $500,000 although there
was a provision that the joint committee could consider requests up to $1 million. At
first, financing was made available to book and magazine publishers only. It was soon
followed by financings to the sound recording, film, and video sectors.
Working with government | 119
There were some within the Bank who were skittish about providing financing to
these high risk sectors represented by potentially vocal advocates. Bank officers
already had their hands full dealing with FBDB’s own clientele. Establishing the
program’s credibility both in the industry and FBDB was an important first step. In
announcing the program, the Bank’s representatives across the country, assisted
by departmental officials, carefully explained FBDB’s loan criteria. Bank officers
also took the opportunity to spend extra time at these meetings with the more
viable members of the industry. The CIDF had one principal attraction for these
companies – the lending rate was set at prime rate plus 1%, an attractive borrowing
rate for many. As the first wave of CIDF loans were being authorized, word quickly
spread inside the Bank that companies being financed by CIDF were not what
had been expected. There were, in fact, a number of viable companies in the
industry FBDB would lend to under normal circumstances. Thus the program’s
credibility within the Bank was quickly established. Clients also liked the way FBDB
was delivering the program. There was quick turnaround, much less red tape,
and dealings with the Bank were done in a businesslike fashion. Thus, FBDB’s
credibility within the industry was also quickly established.
The CIDF program ran throughout the 1990s. It was deemed a success both
in the Department of Communications and FBDB. Annual activity in the fund was
in the range of 60 loan authorizations for about $8 million. In addition, each year
between 150 and 200 businesses would take advantage of business counselling
offered under the program and delivered by the Bank’s Management Services
Division. While $26 million of the fund’s $33 million were originally earmarked for
financing, by fiscal 1997, loan repayments had allowed the fund to lend a total
of $52 million. In fiscal year 2000, the department, now called Heritage Canada,
transferred the whole CIDF portfolio to the Bank.
Student Business Loans, Mollusc Growers and CIDF were full-fledged programs
sponsored by a government department and delivered by FBDB. There were
other business programs where the Bank was requested to provide assistance
though was not responsible for their complete delivery. In the 1980s, the
government overhauled its regional development strategy and established a
number of new regional-based programs. There were delays in starting these new
programs and FBDB was asked to provide resources to get them underway. The
Atlantic Enterprise Program, the precursor to the Atlantic Canada Opportunities
Agency, the Western Diversification Office and the Northern Ontario Economic
Development Program were all assisted in their early stages by FBDB personnel in
project investigations and analysis, for which the Bank was compensated.
increase small exporters’ lines of credit. The loan guarantees were secured by
export receivables insured by EDC. Program take-up was limited. By 1992, only
80 loan guarantees for $16 million were issued by the FBDB. The activity level may
have been less than expected but it did bring to the fore an ingrained trait in the
Bank. For much of the Bank’s history, when an opportunity appeared, the Bank
would analyze it and if warranted, find a way to take advantage of the opportunity
to the benefit of the small and medium-sized businesses it served. And it would do
so in a way that did not compromise the bottom line.
There were other government programs with the potential for FBDB delivery
but ultimately, they were not taken on. At one time, the Bank considered delivering
the Small Business Loans Act on behalf of DRIE but this ran into much opposition
within DRIE.
Jim Rapino did not have a national network to implement his incubator
model and DRIE officials asked the Bank to look at this method of training.
Rupert Williams, who was Senior Vice President, Management Services at the
time, met with Rapino and negotiated an arrangement whereby the Bank would
have the rights to implement his business incubator model in other centres across
Canada. The Bank then negotiated with local CEIC offices to get funding from
their Jobs Strategy to support the formation of training groups. This was likely
more cost-effective for CEIC than the TIEM projects. FBDB named this service its
Community Business Initiative (CBI).
CBIs were highly regarded by users and had very positive impacts. They
were also cost effective. About 30 CBIs would be started each year, mostly
with CEIC funding.
More importantly, the amount of equity capital the Bank could receive from the
government was close to its legislated limit. The capital received for the Cominco
investment had all but used up the total amount the government could pay into
the Bank under Section 28 of the FBDB Act. With financings growing in the second
half of the 1980s, FBDB needed new capital to keep up with portfolio growth. In
essence, a new mandate was needed to confirm continuation of existing financial
and management services, provide funding for expanded services and get
authority to introduce new legislation to, inter alia, provide room for the Bank to
receive new capital in support of its expanding financial services.
122 | Chapter 10
In the latter half of the 1980s, a recurring process took place as the Bank
sought a new mandate. The process would start with the annual corporate
plan wherein the Bank would seek new funding for its various services and
emphasize the need for new legislation to increase its capital limit. The corporate
plan would be sent to the Minister of DRIE who would then send it on to
Treasury Board with his recommendations. Invariably, no new funding would be
recommended under the premise that such a request would be addressed in
an upcoming Memorandum to Cabinet dealing with a new mandate for FBDB.
There would be discussions about the new mandate throughout the following
year with officials from DRIE but nothing concrete would be accomplished. In
its annual corporate plan a year later, the Bank would again include proposals
for new funding to expand its services. Once again, the response would be that
the proposals would be dealt with in an upcoming Memorandum to Cabinet on
FBDB’s new mandate.
In the ongoing back and forth on a new mandate, new wrinkles were introduced
each year. One year, the Bank was requested to consider substituting loan
guarantees for its term loans. The Bank did its analysis and showed the cost of
loan guarantees would be much greater than supporting term loans with equity on
a 10:1 debt-to-equity basis. The Bank suggested a slightly cheaper alternative that
would have a two-tier guarantee system, with the first tier essentially subsuming
the SBLA program and a second tier providing guarantees for larger loan sizes.
But even this two-tier system of loan guarantees would have led to much higher
funding levels than what the Bank was requesting to support its term lending
operation. The problem with loan guarantees was that the financial institutions
being guaranteed benefited from the full interest spread to cover operating
expenses and produce profit margins, while the guarantor, or the government, was
left with loan losses far greater than guarantee fees.
authors did not understand the Bank’s business, were unaware that FBDB’s interest
rates exceeded those of the chartered banks, failed to recognize that FBDB’s term
lending program was cost recoverable, and that it had not received a cent from
the federal government since 1985. While repeatedly highlighting FBDB losses, the
Bank’s response indicated, the CBA submission did not mention that during the
early 1980s, all lenders had been burned with losses as the economy did a nose-
dive. Moreover, FBDB’s response pointed out that the submission avoided noting
that FBDB loan loss provisions were back to their pre-recession levels while the
banks’ loan losses continued to escalate.
Throughout its history, FBDB had an uneasy relationship with the Canadian
Bankers Association, even though there were several meetings over the years
with the changing presidents of the CBA in which the President of FBDB would
try to explain the differences between chartered bank lending to small business
and FBDB’s.
It was particularly distressing when the CBA supported a move to have the
Canadian Chamber of Commerce declare FBDB redundant at one of its annual
general meetings, which usually garnered much publicity in the media. The Small
Business Committee of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce had been lobbied
by one of its members to pass a resolution condemning FBDB and calling for its
closure. The resolution was supported by the CBA and slated to be presented to
the annual general meeting of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce. Lavigueur
intervened with the President of the Chamber, Roger Hamel, and the issue was
dropped from the agenda. This potentially embarrassing experience prompted
the move by FBDB to have more representation at local Chambers of Commerce
across the country.
In the spring of 1988, the Bank’s annual corporate plan was forwarded to the
Treasury Board of Canada for approval subject to certain modifications. This time,
there was Ministerial support for additional capital to return the term lending
operation to a 10:1 debt-to-equity ratio. Pending a decision, the Bank was asked
not to reduce its lending based on a scenario of no additional capital. With
respect to increased funding for management services, it was indicated it would
be dealt with in an upcoming Memorandum to Cabinet.
124 | Chapter 10
Treasury Board endorsed the recommendation that the Bank’s term lending
operation return to a 10:1 debt-to-equity ratio but did not provide the capital to
do so. To follow the letter of this decision, the Bank, in absence of new capital,
would have been obliged to reduce the size of its lending portfolio. The spectre of
credit rationing raised its head once again. Lavigueur, the Chairman of the Board
of Directors, William McAleer, and other Board Members worked with their Ottawa
contacts and eventually, in June 1988, the Bank was informed it would receive
$35 million of new capital to support its term lending operation. This was the first
tranche of new capital the Bank had received in five years to support its expanding
term lending operation. An innovative interpretation of the FBDB Act allowed the
Bank to receive this capital by way of an appropriation as the amount of capital
that could be paid-in to the Bank under Section 28 of the FBDB Act, the normal
channel for paying in capital, had reached its limit.
The 1988 attempt to procure a new mandate for FBDB was different from
previous approaches in that it was principally about instituting a National
Entrepreneurship Policy, of which the FBDB mandate would be a part. The
Entrepreneurship Policy, as proposed, was to harness entrepreneurship for the
economic, social and cultural development of all parts of Canada in partnership
with the private sector, provincial and territorial governments, and the academic
community. The objective of this policy was to create wealth and jobs. It was
also meant to promote and nurture entrepreneurship and remove obstacles to
entrepreneurship. It was a high water mark for penmanship and all-inclusiveness.
The National Entrepreneurship Policy went nowhere and neither did a new
FBDB mandate. Following several failed attempts with DRIE to get a new mandate,
the Bank decided at one time to draft its own Memorandum to Cabinet in the hope
of circumventing the bureaucracy. But this attempt too did not pan out. Mandate-
wise, the Bank was in a state of suspended animation that carried on into the first
half of the 1990s.
appointed Minister of DRIE in 1984 but was forced to resign from Cabinet following
code of conduct allegations in 1986. He was succeeded by the Honourable
Don Mazankowski in 1986, the Honourable Michel Côté in 1987, the Honourable
Robert R. DeCôtret in 1988, the Honourable Harvie André in 1989 and the
Honourable Benoit Bouchard in 1990. Such discontinuity no doubt contributed to
the recurring and failed attempts to procure a new mandate for FBDB.
An even greater hurdle was the negative view held of the Bank by its
stakeholders. With each attempt to procure a new FBDB mandate, DRIE would
undertake consultations with various stakeholders including the Canadian Bankers
Association as mentioned earlier. Consultations also took place with the two major
organizations representing small business in Canada, the Canadian Federation of
Independent Business (CFIB) and the Canadian Organization for Small Business
(COSB). Neither supported FBDB’s term lending operation. COSB stated the
Bank should drop out of the lending business and concentrate on management
services. Industry associations were also not supportive. FBDB was seen to
resemble chartered banks in its lending practices. The industry associations
consulted wanted the Bank to take more risk and in particular, provide more term
loans for working capital purposes, the greatest need by small businesses. The
SBLA program, with its legislated maximum prime plus one interest rate, was more
popular among industry associations who called for an expansion of the program.
Similar support was voiced for other government subsidy programs such as the
Industrial Research and Development Program (IRDP). The irony was that industry
groups wanted subsidy programs expanded but at the same time were calling
for government to cut or reduce its handouts, an approximation of the ‘not in my
backyard’ philosophy. Officials were getting one story from the Bank and quite
another from the business community. They told the Bank it was not getting its
message across to industry.
As described later, the Bank would not receive a new mandate until 1995 when it
became the Business Development Bank of Canada. In the meantime, FBDB would
endure further shocks and another economic recession. But before proceeding
to these developments, one specialized area of the Bank, its Treasury Operations,
warrants particular attention because of its role in solving the mismatch problem
and undertaking the Bank’s borrowings on capital markets.
126 | Chapter 11
1979 to 1995
Treasury
ops
I n the five fiscal years 1980 to 1984, FBDB’s net operating losses totaled
$295 million. Of this, about $50 million was due to a mismatch of maturities
between the Bank’s assets (loans to small businesses) and liabilities (borrowings
to fund these loans). Practically, it would be almost impossible for a bank such as
FBDB to have no mismatch between assets and liabilities as loan repayments to
the bank could never mirror exactly repayments by the bank to its lenders. The
objective therefore is to reduce the mismatch as close as possible to zero.
Between fiscal years 1976 and 1979, it was estimated that mismatch costs
totaled $18 million. In the post-1984 period, mismatch costs totaled another
$50 million. In each of these two periods, pre-fiscal 1980 and post-fiscal 1984,
FBDB reported small profits despite its mismatch costs. Taken all together, the
mismatch between assets and liabilities would cost the FBDB a total of $118 million
before the problem was resolved.
In the days of the Industrial Development Bank (IDB), all of the Bank’s
borrowings were done by and from the Bank of Canada, reflecting the allegory
“if we needed money we would just go down to the vault and get some.” These
borrowings were generally for five-year terms. IDB loans, on the other hand, were
fixed rate loans for varying terms which averaged out at around eight years. Many
loans involved terms of over 12 years, for example when IDB financed a building.
If $100 million were borrowed by IDB from the Bank of Canada and loaned out
to clients, $20 million in principal would be repaid to the Bank of Canada in
each of the five subsequent years. But in each of those years, on average of only
$12 million would be scheduled to be repaid to IDB by its clients. This meant
each year, to repay the principal on the $100 million borrowing, IDB would have
to borrow an extra $8 million at prevailing interest rates. This scenario assumes
all clients were repaying their loans according to schedule (almost never the
case) and therefore the amount of rollover, the $8 million, would be even greater.
This was the nature of the mismatch inherent in each borrowing done by IDB to
finance new loans. On a cumulative basis, it meant that after five years, the original
borrowing by IDB had been repaid but, at best, only 60% had been repaid by
its clients, leaving 40% that had to be rolled over through new borrowings at
prevailing interest rates.
After FBDB was created, it borrowed its funds from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund (Government of Canada) on eight-year terms. Though the term of these
borrowings matched the average term of the Bank’s loans, a mismatch was still
prevalent as the practice of extending fixed rate loans for varying terms, with many
over 12 years, continued. Even with eight-year term borrowings, at least 20% of the
amount originally borrowed had to be rolled over through new borrowings.
In the IDB era, as interest rates were fairly stable, the financial impact of the
mismatch was small and went unnoticed. In the latter half of 1978, however, when
interest rates started their upward climb, debt rollover costs were no longer small
and they impacted FBDB’s bottom line in a significant way. For instance, IDB debt,
contracted in fiscal 1974 at an average rate of 7.47%, was re-loaned to Bank clients
at 10.23% for a spread of 2.76%. But by 1978, 40% of that debt, which was now
FBDB debt, had to be rolled over at an average interest rate of 8.5%, reducing
the spread on the 1974 loans by one percentage point. As another example, FBDB
128 | Chapter 11
debt maturing in 1980 had interest rates of 8% but this debt was replaced by new
debt at 10.2%, a loss of over 2% on the spread from related loans. And matters
got worse well into 1981 when the prime interest rate peaked at 22.75%. This was
the nature of the mismatch problem that, as indicated, cost the Bank $118 million
before it was resolved.
In 1978, FBDB was told by the government it could access the Consolidated
Revenue Fund for a maximum of $245 million. This limit was imposed due to ever
increasing borrowings by the Government of Canada to fund its deficits. For all
additional funds required above this $245 million limit, the Bank was instructed to
do its own borrowings in capital markets. And since public markets in Canada were
already saturated with government debt issues, FBDB was restricted to private
placements with each borrowing having to be approved in advance by the Minister
of Finance. This meant in Canada, the Bank would have to deal with individual
institutions, primarily life insurance companies and large pension funds, who
added a premium of 20 to 30 basis points to their lending rates for the illiquidity
of FBDB debt obligations. When extra costs for commissions and legal fees
were included, at least another quarter percent was added to the cost of FBDB
borrowings as compared to borrowing from the Consolidated Revenue Fund, a
premium the Bank could ill afford at the time.
In 1979, the Canadian firm Wood Gundy was selected to manage FBDB’s first
borrowing in capital markets, a $15 million issue. Another Canadian firm, Burns Fry,
managed the second debt issue for $25 million. A total of $105 million was
borrowed in capital markets in 1979 in addition to borrowing all of the allowance
from the Consolidated Revenue Fund. Furthermore, pending development of
its own Treasury operation, FBDB used chartered bank (prime rate based) loans
to fund a large portion of its fixed rate term loans. This occurred at a time of an
inverted yield curve; short-term interest rates were higher than long-term rates.
In October 1979, the Bank was further advised by the government that starting
April 1980, it would no longer have access to the Consolidated Revenue Fund
for any borrowings. The only funds coming from the government would be annual
appropriations to subsidize its Management Services and equity capital for its
financial services.
Looking at the profile of debt the Bank had contracted and debt rollovers done
over the previous years, it did not take long for Charbonneau to realize there
was another, more challenging job that had to be tackled, one that was not even
mentioned when he was interviewed for the job as the Bank’s Treasurer. A serious
Treasury ops | 129
mismatch problem existed at the Bank which, if not resolved, would lead to a
continuing erosion of the Bank’s interest spread.
In early 1980, Charbonneau met with Guy Lavigueur and told him the Bank
was in deep trouble. Lavigueur initially thought there was a problem in finding
sources of funds to finance the Bank’s term loans. Instead he was told the deep
trouble stemmed from the mismatch between the terms of the Bank’s term loans to
clients and its borrowings. When asked by Lavigueur how serious the problem was,
Charbonneau said he could not give an answer as the data and analyses needed
to quantify the problem did not exist. He just knew a large problem existed and if it
continued, the Bank’s interest spread would continue to erode. He had asked the
head of the (Information) Systems Department to get the relevant data from the
Bank’s Loan Accounting and Processing System (LAPS) but was told it would take
months to obtain.
Pierre Charbonneau
was hired by FBDB
to be its Treasurer in
November 1979.
Charbonneau explained the root of the problem lay in the structuring of the
Bank’s term loans. He told Lavigueur the Bank’s lending policies had to change.
This struck a nerve and Lavigueur immediately called a meeting of his management
committee. He asked Charbonneau to explain the problem to the Bank’s senior
management. Simply put, the Bank could not borrow funds for terms of five years
and relend that same money for terms of 15 years. It had to change its lending
terms and conditions. As could be expected, the operations side of the Bank
questioned his proposition. First, they thought their new Treasurer could not find
money to fund the Bank’s operations – wasn’t that why he was hired? Charbonneau
was told the Bank never had problems finding money (just go down to the vault)
and further, never had to worry about cost of funds. But as he explained the
problem, it became clear changes had to be made or mismatch costs would
continue to mount and erode the Bank’s interest spread.
130 | Chapter 11
In April 1980, the Bank’s lending policy was changed. All new FBDB term loans
were to be made for a maximum fixed interest rate term of five years, regardless
of the term to maturity of a loan. This interest rate term matched the term the
Bank was able to get in capital markets on its own debt. The Bank could then
adjust interest rates every five years to reflect its current borrowing costs and
maintain its interest rate spread. (Almost, since not all loans are repaid according
to schedule.)
As interest rates continued to climb in 1980, FBDB clients did not want to be
stuck with high interest rates for five years and the demand for floating interest
rates grew. In October 1980, the Bank began offering floating rate term loans.
The Treasury department now had the twin objectives of sourcing funds for
the Bank at the lowest possible cost and eliminating the mismatch problem. With
respect to the latter, Lavigueur would constantly ask Charbonneau, “where are we
on the critical path (to resolving the mismatch problem)?” And for over a year he
would receive the same answer: “we don’t know – we don’t have the data.” That’s
how long it took to figure out the composition of the mismatch problem. Profiles
of the Bank’s debts were known. What was unknown was the profile of how the
Bank’s term loans would be repaid. Recognizing the Bank’s information system was
lacking, Lavigueur told Charbonneau to do the analysis loan-by-loan if that was
the only way to get the answers he was looking for. At the beginning of 1981, the
Bank had over 42,000 term loans in its portfolio.
methodology to help figure out the mismatch problem. By 1982, the gaps between
the profiles of the Bank’s debts and its term loans to clients were quantified. The
next step was to structure new borrowings to fund new loans and to correct the
existing mismatch. But just as this next step was initiated, new complications arose.
The Bank was still experiencing high loan losses and interest rates had started
to decline from their August 1981 peak. These events led to movements in the
loans portfolio that exacerbated the mismatch between the Bank’s assets and
liabilities. The first was the increase in delinquency rates for loans made in the
1980 to 1982 period. Losses amounted to about 15% of amounts authorized in
dollar terms (the ultimate loss rate). But in terms of numbers of loans becoming
delinquent and going off the books prematurely, the percentage was about
double, 30%, the difference being that when a loan went bad, the Bank was
still able to collect, on average, half of what was owed through liquidation of
pledged collateral. The second contributors to further mismatching were switches
from fixed to floating rate plans. In the 1979 to 1981 run-up in interest rates, the
yield curve was inverted; long-term rates were lower than short-term rates. Not
uncommonly, many FBDB clients opted for the lower fixed rate on their new loans.
But when short-term rates dropped lower than fixed rates later on, many opted to
switch to floating rates, even with penalty. And as the economy started to improve,
those who could find alternative sources of funds elsewhere simply prepaid the
full amount of their loans outstanding. Between March 1977 and March 1981,
FBDB’s loan portfolio had grown by close to $550 million or 47%; between
March 1981 and March 1985 it had shrunk by about $500 million, 23%. Loans
were going off the books faster than FBDB was repaying the debt used to finance
those same loans.
This changed the character of the mismatch. In the late 1970s, new debt at
relatively higher interest rates had to be contracted to fund loans already on the
books, the original mismatch problem. During the first half of the 1980s, the Bank
had too much debt contracted at relatively high rates for loans on its books. Put
another way, with the original mismatch problem the Bank had insufficient low rate
debt; now it had too much high rate debt. A “double whammy” in that the Bank got
hit coming and going through the interest rate cycle. The good news was that even
though the problem was made more complicated by the economic environment,
data and analyses were now in hand to know what had to be done. It took over four
years to bring down the mismatch problem to an acceptable level – not zero but
almost there.
John Langlais, one of the first professionals Lavigueur brought into the Bank
as part of his professionalization program, approached Clément Albert and told
him he had just read about a new financial strategy, defeasance, being deployed
in the U.S. and asked if there were applications being done in Canada. Albert
had not heard of any but immediately saw its use as a way to help remove excess
debt FBDB had on its books. With defeasance, a company can sell a specific
debt to a third party, and that debt can then be removed from its balance sheet,
with an appropriate footnote to its financial statements. With this strategy, the
Treasury department was able to rid the Bank of some of its excess debt and even
at a small profit. Three such deals were done: with Continental Bank (which later
132 | Chapter 11
became part of National Bank of Canada); and with two Alberta-based chartered
banks, Canadian Commercial Bank and Northlands Bank. The latter two became
insolvent in 1985 but (luckily) FBDB did not lose any money on the defeasance
deals. The Northland deal matured one month before they declared insolvency
and Canadian Commercial Bank went insolvent a few months later, after the FBDB
deal had matured. Only three defeasance deals were done by the Bank as rules
for using this strategy were soon tightened to require that counterparties be AAA
graded. These transactions are mentioned to exemplify the pioneering spirit of the
Bank’s Treasury operation in its early days.
In the 1980 to 1982 period, financial markets were in turmoil to say the least.
It seemed each day brought new challenges to funding the Bank’s financial
requirements. As borrowing markets tightened, availability of funds became an
issue and FBDB was faced with having to take what was available on the market.
For instance, a borrowing in this period was made for a three-year term even
though the funds were to be used to lend at five-year terms. It meant a mismatch
was built in to this borrowing. But the economy was in bad shape and large
portions of loans were going off the books prematurely. This tempered the impact
of the mismatch. Or maybe the mismatched borrowing helped, as the nature
and extent of the total mismatch was still unknown. The Bank also entered into
extendible debt contracts, where at the end of the term, the lenders had the right
to exercise the option of extending the term of the debt if interest rates were in
their favour. The market was such that even the Government of Canada had to
issue similar options to attract investors (buyers of its bonds). When interest rates
declined in subsequent years, investors in three of these FBDB contracts, totaling
$175 million, exercised their options. With the use of new market instruments, the
Bank’s Treasury operation was able to offset related costs.
It was not always a smooth ride in the futures market as interest rates fluctuated
wildly. One Friday, the Bank’s position in the market would show a (paper) loss of
$2 million but by the next Friday, it would be turned around to a $5 million (paper)
profit. When the mismatching problem was resolved, the Bank pulled out of its
hedged positions. Gundars Valdmanis, who was tracking the market, advocated
for the Bank to stay in the market a few more weeks to reap additional profits.
But the objective of fixing the matching problem had been achieved and true
to its objective of sourcing funds at the lowest cost to the Bank, the Treasury
department unloaded its hedged positions.
It was estimated, ex-post, that hedging interest rates offset about 50% of
potential mismatch costs at FBDB in the first half of the 1980s. Had Valdmanis’
recommendation to keep the hedges for a few more weeks been followed,
significant profits could have been realized. Then again, if markets had moved the
other way, well, hindsight is always 20/20. FBDB was not in the market to make
money, it was there to save money, a working philosophy that likely saved millions
in the long run. The Bank already had sufficient problems with the government
in trying to fund its operating losses and it certainly could not add the risk of
further losses arising from Treasury operations. Once the mismatch problem was
resolved, the Bank was able to set its interest rates in stable relation to those
offered by chartered banks. This removed one element of uncertainty when
dealing with clients on the frontline.
As financial engineering took hold in capital markets, FBDB and its advisors
tapped new sources of funds and concocted innovative structures – all towards
achieving the objective of sourcing funds at the lowest possible cost. Further, it
enabled the Bank to offer a wider range of terms to clients: floating rates, one-
year fixed rates, two-year fixed rates, etc., up to seven-year fixed rates. The
evolution of individual borrowings illustrates the progressive nature of the Bank’s
Treasury operations.
Locked out of the public domestic market for its long-term borrowings starting
in April 1980, FBDB looked overseas to source its funds. Wood Gundy, a principal
advisor to the Bank, had a prominent operation in London, England, that gave the
Bank access to “pockets of money” in Europe. The first borrowing was referred to
as a “plain vanilla Euro-Can” borrowing, that is, a borrowing in Europe in Canadian
dollars at a fixed rate for a fixed term. The Bank then tested the market in the
U.S. with a $100 million debt issue, lead-managed by Solomon Brothers, a major
Wall Street firm. As U.S. investors had no knowledge of the FBDB, cross-country
134 | Chapter 11
briefings were arranged for potential buyers of the FBDB debt issue. Jack Nordin
and Pierre Charbonneau did the briefings – in one day. They started with a
7:30 a.m. breakfast meeting with potential investors in Boston, followed by a
luncheon meeting in New York, followed by a mid-afternoon meeting in Chicago
and a dinner meeting in San Francisco. They could hardly speak at the end of the
day but the debt issue was successful. One weakness with respect to U.S. debt
issues pertained to legal costs (New York lawyers). Commissions were also very
high in the U.S. so the Bank looked to the European capital market to sell most of
its new debt issues.
FBDB was operating in a niche market so to speak. Its debt issues were
generally in the range of $50-$100 million. More importantly, as an agent of the
Government of Canada, it had an AAA rating that was very attractive to investors
looking for safe places to put their money. The Bank and its advisors also found
that with a little financial engineering and innovation, the cost of funds could be
reduced, even if only marginally.
A notable piece of engineering was the “Euro-Kiwi” debt issue done with
European investors. The Bank borrowed in Kiwi (New Zealand) dollars, not
Canadian dollars. The amount borrowed was the equivalent to $50 million
Canadian dollars at prevailing exchange rates. The borrowing rate was 17.75%. In
Canada comparable borrowing rates would be in the 10% range. Why borrow Kiwi
dollars at 17.75% to fund Canadian dollar loans? This was the territory for financial
engineers. Through a series of swaps and hedges, FBDB ended up in a position
where its original Kiwi dollar obligation to European investors at a 17.75% interest
rate was transformed into a Canadian dollar obligation at a 9.5% interest rate.
How? First of all, the Kiwi dollar was under severe pressure in international markets
and the market demanded a high premium to offset a likely decline in the value of
the Kiwi dollar. In the early 1980s, New Zealand was on the verge of bankruptcy,
close to running out of foreign exchange reserves. The situation became so dire
that at one time, New Zealand’s embassies and high commissions around the
world were told to stop spending.
The 17.75% interest rate was in fact a “good rate” when taking the market’s
view of the Kiwi dollar into account. FBDB simultaneously swapped this Kiwi debt
with the Royal Bank of Canada for a $50 million Canadian dollar borrowing at
9.5%. Under the swap, FBDB loaned the Kiwi dollars to the Royal Bank at 17.75%
and borrowed $50 million Canadian dollars at 9.5%. The Royal Bank repayments
on the Kiwi debt to FBDB would be passed on to the Bank’s European lenders,
thereby fulfilling FBDB’s obligations. The Royal Bank, for its part, did a further swap
with the Australia and New Zealand (ANZ) Bank under which ANZ would assume
the Kiwi dollar debt in exchange for U.S. dollar funds. In effect, ANZ Bank, flush
with Kiwi dollars, would repay the Royal Bank in Kiwi dollars (which were passed on
to FBDB and passed on again to the European investors), and Royal Bank would
pay ANZ in U.S. dollars in return. Royal Bank assumed the hedge between the U.S.
and Canadian exchange rates. Complicated for the era, but doable with all parts of
the deal taking effect simultaneously. The end result yielded an FBDB borrowing
of $50 million Canadian dollars at 9.5%, better than an equivalent Government of
Canada borrowing rate of around 10% at the time.
Treasury ops | 135
In terms of innovation, the Bank’s Treasury operations did not stop with the
Euro-Kiwi debt issue. It later issued debt where returns to investors were linked
to different products. One such issue was a straightforward fixed rate debt with a
warrant attached that allowed the investor to buy gold at $462 an ounce. That is,
if conditions were advantageous, the buyers of the debt could require FBDB to
sell them gold at $462 an ounce. The warrant was never exercised but the Bank
had nonetheless hedged against such an outcome. Even with hedging costs,
the cost of this borrowing to FBDB was lower than prevailing market rates. This
particular debt issue did not go unnoticed in industry circles. In September 1987,
the International Financing Review published an article entitled “Canada goes for
gold.” It said: “Federal Business Development Bank should have won a medal for
the first ever C-dollar issue with gold warrants.”
Another FBDB debt issue had returns linked to a stock market index. Again, after
fully hedging its exposure, the Bank ended up with a favourable interest rate. One
innovative debt issue that led to a remarkably low cost of funds involved tax breaks
for the lender in the United Kingdom. To ensure conformity with international tax
agreements, Revenue Canada had to be consulted before striking the deal.
In 1987, the Bank entered the Yen market in Japan. Working through the
Canadian Embassy in Tokyo, meetings were arranged with top Japanese
investment houses to brief them on the unknown Canadian entity, the FBDB.
Included were Daiwa, Yomura Securities, and Yamaichi, all top firms in the
Japanese financial services industry already lending to Canadian companies with
appetites for large sums of money – EDC (then known as Export Development
Corporation) and provincial Hydro companies. To brief potential buyers of
FBDB debt, Charbonneau arrived in Tokyo in October 1987 on the very day the
stock market had crashed. Japanese are renowned for their punctuality. He
knew the crash was having serious repercussions as all his appointments were
running late. Soon after, the Bank was tapping the Yen market for funding with
136 | Chapter 11
all the appropriate Yen-Canadian dollar hedges in place. The Bank later went
to Singapore to tap the Asian-Canadian market, seeking out savings wherever
they could be found. Each 20 basis points (0.2%) on a $2 billion dollar portfolio
produced $4 million in extra revenue a year, significant when compared to annual
profits of around $5 million in the second half of the 1980s.
In the annals of FBDB’s Treasury operations, the 1980 to 1984 period was one
of dealing with challenges. The Treasury function had to be built from scratch, the
Bank had to go abroad for its funds and a serious mismatch problem had to be
fixed. These challenges then led to profitable opportunities in the 1985 to 1990
period as the Bank became a pioneer in debt structuring. The Bank was innovative,
not only in its capital markets operation but also in its money market operation.
Charbonneau would remark that being thrown out of the Consolidated Revenue
Fund was, in the end, a good thing for the FBDB, since it was able to fund its
operations at a lower cost than if it had continued borrowing from the Government
of Canada.
Clément Albert eventually took over the reins of Treasury and essentially
continued the department’s activities on the same path, entering into even more
complex debt structures. But the market was telling borrowers and lenders alike
that more attention needed to be paid to risk factors, especially counterparty risk.
Clément Albert,
Treasurer of FBDB.
The Bank had an internal Assets and Liabilities Committee (ALCO) comprising
senior members of management. Established as a result of a comprehensive audit
of the Treasury operations, ALCO’s mandate was to oversee the operation, paying
special attention to risk factors. One factor that received constant attention was
Treasury ops | 137
interest rate risk. Given the Bank’s experience with mismatching, Treasury regularly
measured and reported on the impact of a sudden and permanent shift of 2% in
interest rates, both plus and minus 2%. Some presentations to ALCO were
complex, reflecting the structure of transactions Treasury was undertaking and, no
doubt, some members did not fully comprehend all presentations. It was up to the
Treasury department to identify problems and present them and their solutions
to ALCO.
One such problem occurred in 1994. FBDB had initiated swap transactions with
a subsidiary of Confederation Life Insurance Company, Confederation Treasury
Services Limited (CTSL), which, in 1992, was rated AAA. By early 1994, following
several downgrades of Confederation Life, CTSL was rated A+, which meant,
according to Treasury policy, all transactions with maturities over three years had
to be unwound immediately. By then, FBDB had five swap contracts with CTSL
totaling $156 million. As a group, FBDB was owed $5.8 million by CTSL under
these contracts. Two of the five contracts, totaling $75 million, had to be unwound
(sold to another counterparty). This did not pose much of a problem as the market
value of these contracts was $7.5 million; that was the amount owing to FBDB by
CTSL. In August 1994, however, CTSL filed for bankruptcy and, by court order,
stopped payments to all counterparties. When payments were halted, FBDB owed
CTSL $120,000 but was also owed $220,000 by CTSL, a shortfall of $100,000.
In effect, sound Treasury guidelines and strict application of policy had reduced a
potential loss of $5.8 million to $100,000. By the time CTSL went out of business
in 1995, the Bank was able to receive $140,000 from the remaining CTSL swaps.
The market had moved in a favourable direction.
CTSL was the only FBDB counterparty to go bankrupt. Following the CTSL
event, ALCO was regularly presented with a status report on transactions with
counterparties. Concern was raised about the amount of swaps the Bank had
entered with the firm AIG Reinsurance. ALCO was given the assurance AIG had
a top rating and besides was the largest financial institution in the U.S. – in effect
too big to fail. Much later, in the 2008 financial market crash, AIG did fail but was
bailed out by the U.S. Government. By then, the Bank was out of the market.
1989
Shocks to
the system
In 1989, major shocks rocked the world’s political systems. The fall of the
Berlin wall that had separated Germany into East and West, the toppling of
regimes in former Communist countries of Eastern Europe, and the occupation
of Tiananmen Square in the world’s most populous country all took place in
1989, a year that changed the world. That year was also memorable for FBDB
as it experienced two major shocks to its operations. The first occurred early in
the year – a drastic cut in its Management Services operations followed by the
second, later in the year – the strip club scandal.
In the spring of 1989, the federal government, in its annual Budget, announced
cuts to a series of government programs. FBDB was not spared. The Budget
stated that the government contribution to the Bank’s Management Services
would be reduced by $13 million per year. The reduction would be phased
in over the course of the year to allow the Bank to adjust its programs and
increase cost recovery. The cut represented half the amount received from the
government each year to support FBDB management services (counselling,
training and information).
The Vice President of Management Services, Claude LeBon, had only recently
joined FBDB from Simon Fraser University where he was a professor in its highly
regarded business school. On joining FBDB, LeBon’s priority task was to conduct
a strategic review and lay out a new plan for the Management Services Division.
He had just completed his review when the federal cuts were announced. He had
to throw out the plans he had crafted and figure out how to operate with half the
amount of subsidy the division received from the government.
The unexpected cut in the Management Services budget was a major blow
to the Bank, coming at a time when there was optimism for a new expanded
mandate. One-third of the Management Services staff, comprised of about
330 persons, had to be laid off as a result of the budget cut. Reminders of
earlier staff reductions in the Loans operations surfaced. Lavigueur wrote
to the Minister of DRIE to the effect that the severity of the cut-back had a
negative impact on the morale of the entire staff of FBDB and raised questions
about possible future cut-backs in other areas. Lavigueur also expressed
the hope that the activities discontinued by the Bank would not resurface
elsewhere in a government department under a different guise.
The Bank had to adapt to these cuts and adjust its operations quickly. It was
decided to concentrate the resources of the Division on in-depth management
assistance in the form of training, counselling and planning, and eliminate
services with the least amount of cost recovery. This led to the termination of
the Bank’s Information Services, including the promising AIM program. (More
on AIM will follow in Chapter 14 on Information Technology.) The Financial
Matchmaking service was also discontinued as it had not resulted in the
number of matches the Bank had planned. Increasing the cost recovery rate
for other management services led to the Bank terminating the availability of
management services through the Bank’s smallest (C) branches. The Bank’s
library in head office was also part of Management Services’ information
services and was slated for elimination. However, the President agreed to keep
a pared down version of the library and amalgamated it with the Economics
140 | Chapter 12
The 1989 Budget cut affected Management Services Division directly but there
was also an indirect financial impact on the Bank’s Loans Division. Reduced manage-
ment services activity meant less contribution to overhead expenses recorded in the
Loans Division’s books. But by 1989, the Loans Division was in a sound financial posi-
tion and managed to absorb the fallout from the Budget cut with some adjustment.
Later in 1989, another shock hit the Bank that would have far-reaching and
lingering consequences. It began one Friday afternoon in November. It was after
5 p.m. when Ken Cavanaugh, Director of Public Affairs at head office, received
a phone call from a newspaper reporter in Ottawa. The reporter wanted to
obtain some information about an FBDB loan to a strip club located in Gatineau,
Quebec, just across the river from Ottawa. Taken aback, Cavanaugh called the
Loans Department to get the requested information but on a cold Friday evening,
no one was around to answer the call. He then called Cora Siré to see whether
she could help. All she could do was repeat what was written in the Bank’s
policy circulars, the Red Book. Normally she could provide statistics on Bank
lending to any industry sector but could not in this case as there was no specific
industry classification for strip clubs. With no information to give to the reporter,
Cavanaugh tried to buy time. If the reporter could wait until Monday morning, he
would try to get the requested information.
Next morning, Saturday, it was front page headline news in the Ottawa
newspaper: FBDB was financing strip clubs. Prime Minister Mulroney was on a
highly publicized trip to Moscow and it was expected the front page headline
would be about his meeting with Mikhail Gorbachev, President of the Soviet Union.
Instead, news about his trip lay buried in the inside pages of the paper.
Shocks to the system | 141
The Ottawa headline had a huge, instant snowball effect as newspapers across
the country dispatched their reporters to find local strip clubs financed by FBDB.
Although the Mulroney Government had been elected to another majority just
recently, its approval rating was running low and the media was ready to pounce on
any news that would add to the woes of the government. All week, headlines kept
turning up about FBDB-financed strip clubs along with relentless comical cartoons.
Calling the Committee meeting to order, Sparrow asked the media to remove
all electronic equipment from the room. It was overflowing with cameras and other
recording devices. She then asked Lavigueur to introduce his colleagues at the
witness table and make his opening statement, noting that afterwards “we do have
some questions.”6
The President began by saying: “In recent weeks the FBDB has been the
subject of numerous reports in the media deploring loans the Bank has made
to businesses providing exotic entertainment. Speaking on behalf of the Bank,
6 House of Commons, Minutes of Proceedings and Evidence of the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology, Regional and
Northern Development, Issue N o . 20, December 13, 1989. Quotes cited here and in subsequent paragraphs are taken from pages 20:4 to 20:32.
142 | Chapter 12
I would like to state for the record that I deplore the situation in which we find
ourselves today. It has never been the intent of the Federal Business Development
Bank to extend loans or any of its business services to an establishment that, while
legal, may be considered to be conducting inappropriate activities and therefore
may be considered inappropriate for a crown corporation.” From that moment
onwards the Bank would not refer to “strip clubs.” Instead they were termed
“establishments that provided exotic entertainment” and loans to strip clubs were
referred to as “inappropriate loans.”
The session before the Standing Committee was supposed to be about how
and why inappropriate loans were made by the Bank. But some Opposition
members, bent on embarrassing the government even further, questioned
Lavigueur about the use of external lawyers, particularly the firm of Lapointe
Rosenstein that was engaged by FBDB to provide an interpretation of the FBDB
Act in respect of its capital ceiling, section 28 of the Act. Different interpretations
had led to different conclusions on how much more capital the Bank could receive
from the government. (Hence, the innovative interpretation of the FBDB Act that
allowed the Bank to receive new capital in 1989 by way of appropriations.) The
Lapointe Rosenstein assignment was intended to clarify the issue. This line of
questioning, however, was ruled out of order by the Committee Chair.
The Bank’s December 1989 appearance at the Standing Committee was theatre
of the highest order with a mass media presence and the questioning on how
and why loans were made to strip clubs. Some references from the session give
a flavour of the proceedings. One committee member stated, “in the (FBDB) brief
the word exotic is used every now and then. That is not a misprint for “erotic”, is it?”
At another point in the proceedings, the following exchange took place:
MacDonald: It does not make it right. I do not care what the percentage is.
Lavigueur: One would have been too many. I said that at the very
beginning and I still say it.
MacDonald: By saying it was 0.002% you are minimizing the fact that
what was wrong is still wrong, and I find that a little offensive.
Shocks to the system | 143
Lavigueur: I hope the honourable member does not take it that way,
because the purpose of telling you is to be able to detect it for the
department of inspection. I have a letter from our external auditor that I
would like to quote from.”
The President explained he had asked the Bank’s external auditor why loans
contrary to policy were not detected during inspections and audits. The auditor’s
response had been that with so small a proportion, it was unlikely they would have
been selected by inspectors and auditors for review. That was the context of his
reference to 0.002%.
The President continued: “For the record Madam Chair, one would have been
too many… I am not saying we are perfect. There is always a place for improvement.”
He would also say, as a crown corporation, “not only do we have to be pure, we
have to appear to be pure.”
Towards the end of the session the Bank did come in for some praise in its
handling of this very public scrum. A government member remarked: “I wish to
thank Mr. Lavigueur and his team for appearing before this committee. I have been
observing you for almost two hours. I have noticed that you are very well organized
and that the people with you are providing you with answers very quickly. The
Bank must be very well administered if one can go by the way you are answering
our questions.”
That was not an uncommon comment on the management of FBDB. The Nielsen
Task Force team that reviewed FBDB had doubts about its continuation but after
interviewing the President in his Montreal office, the team said they thought
the Bank was very well managed. Perhaps this impression contributed to the
Study Group’s remark about the Bank having reservoirs of high-mindedness and
competence that should not lightly be dissipated. In another instance shortly after,
a deputy minister from Ottawa, on leaving FBDB’s Board of Directors, remarked
that while there were doubts about the Bank’s relevance, in his view it was the best
managed crown corporation.
When Lavigueur left the Committee meeting room after responding to members’
questions, he was mobbed by the media, this time with cameras and recorders, all
pushing their equipment to his face. Trying to deflect their questions, he received
a quick kick to his knee. Perhaps one reporter thought this might be the only way
to stop him from walking away. The pain from this blow would linger for days.
After the Standing Committee meeting, the media moved on to other matters.
There was a subsequent mention of the scandal in Parliament two months later,
in February 1990, but it was in context of the shutdown of Cominco’s Sullivan
mine in Kimberley, British Columbia. Sid Parker, the MP for Kootenay East,
stated: “We recently learned that some disciplinary action may be forthcoming
144 | Chapter 12
within FBDB as a result of loans given to strip clubs. I would like to suggest to
the minister that handing over $79 million to a hugely profitable company with
no strings attached may constitute a more serious problem than strip club
loans.” 7 The disciplinary action referred to by the Member was one of the internal
repercussions of the scandal.
It took another month after the Standing Committee meeting for Jacques Lagacé
to collect and scrutinize all files related to inappropriate loans. It was found
there were 70 loan clients with businesses providing exotic entertainment. Loan
amounts authorized to these clients totaled $33 million, of which $28 million were
outstanding in December 1989. They represented 0.45% of the loans portfolio.
More files were discovered after Lavigueur appeared before the House of
Commons Standing Committee. Almost three of every four businesses identified
as inappropriate were “mixed” businesses, where exotic entertainment was only
a part of an otherwise appropriate business endeavour such as the provision
of accommodation and food services. Of the 70 businesses identified, 31 were
known at the time of loan authorization to be providing exotic entertainment. The
remaining 39 establishments were in other lines of business but converted to
providing exotic entertainment some time after they had received their FBDB loan.
In one case in Ontario, the FBDB loan was made to finance a restaurant operation.
The business fell on rough times and the owners sought help from the Bank. A
CASE counsellor was sent in to help turn around the business. It was the CASE
counsellor who advised the owners to introduce exotic entertainment to keep the
business alive.
The Bank’s position was that it could not have done anything about the 39 cases
that had converted their businesses after they had obtained their FBDB loan. But
it accepted culpability for the 31 cases known to be providing exotic entertainment
at the time of loan authorization.
When the news broke in the Ottawa newspaper about the strip club scandal,
it referred to an establishment in Gatineau, Quebec. As the number of cases
emerged, there was a misconception that most were located in the province of
Quebec. It turned out that the case cited in Gatineau was the only one in Quebec.
The majority of the establishments – 18 of the 31 known cases – were located in
Ontario. There were two others in the Prairie and Northern Region and 10 in British
Columbia and Yukon.
Another misconception was that these loans were profitable for the Bank.
In fact, they were more often in arrears than average. Businesses converting
operations to provide exotic entertainment had usually not been successful
and their financial health rarely changed after conversion. While 9% of all FBDB
accounts as at November 1989 were in arrears, 16% of the 70 customers identified
as providing exotic entertainment were in arrears.
7 House of Commons Debates, Second Session of the Thirty-fourth Parliament, February 5 th , 1990; Vol. 6, page 631; Library of Parliament.
Shocks to the system | 145
this file we should know of?” It was even doubtful cases authorized by the credit
committee at head office would have detailed documentation about the activities
of the business being financed.
The strip club scandal was a huge setback for the Bank, coming at a time when
it had worked very hard to build a solid financial foundation on which to expand
and received $35 million in new capital from the government to support its term
lending operation. Its image was now tarnished. One fallout from the scandal was
no new capital for the Loans Division would be forthcoming for the next six years
in spite of significant growth in its portfolio.
There were other major internal repercussions. First of all, the Bank’s lending
policy had to be changed immediately. Policy issues surrounding the granting
of loans to night clubs and cabarets had a long history in the Bank. When
the mandate of the Industrial Development Bank (IDB) was expanded in 1961
to include the service sectors, night clubs and cabarets were designated as
inappropriate businesses for IDB loans. This policy changed in 1968 when the
internal prohibition against these businesses was lifted, the rationale being that
the subtleties of morality were becoming progressively more difficult to rule
on, especially considering these businesses were receiving local and provincial
licences to operate. Then, in 1976, when the FBDB’s first President, Richard Murray,
expressed concerns about the Bank’s involvement in night clubs, cabarets and
similar businesses, the lending policy was changed again. Regarding these
businesses, the policy stipulated that because of the difficulty in determining
whether or not certain applicants may be dealt with, branches should not decline
an enquiry or application without first consulting the regional office.
To remove any ambiguity or room for misinterpretation, the lending policy was
revised in December 1989. It covered not only exotic entertainment but other
types of businesses the Bank could potentially be criticized for financing. The
new FBDB lending policy expressly excluded financing businesses or suppliers of
premises to businesses: a) that are perceived to be sexually exploitive, including
enterprises that feature sexually explicit entertainment, products or services.
Enterprises likely to fall into this category would include escort agencies, sex
boutiques and certain types of massage parlours, bars, nightclubs or video stores,
newsstands and cinemas specializing in x-rated material; b) businesses that fail
to conform to health and environmental standards; c) businesses that trade with
countries that are proscribed by the federal government; and d) businesses that
may be associated with or perceived to be associated with illegal activities.
The Bank also added a standard clause to all its new financings to the effect
that any unauthorized change to the nature of operations would constitute default
and the Bank’s loan would become immediately due and payable. This condition
for financing would ensure loan clients could not convert their businesses to
inappropriate activities. Unfortunately, it could only be applied to new loans made
after December 1989, as another news story, about biker gangs, illustrated a few
years later.
One of the objectives of Jacques Lagacé’s review of all 70 loan files with exotic
entertainment was to find out who in the Bank knew what, and when these loans
146 | Chapter 12
Back to the scandal, there were other reactions emanating from the media
coverage. An elderly lady called John McNulty, Vice President, Prairie and
Northern Region at the time, to tell him: you are all going straight to hell! Also,
Don Blenkarn, MP and Chairman of the House of Commons Finance Committee,
told the press his committee tried to get the Bank abolished in 1985 but the
government was persuaded to keep it by André Bissonnette, the Minister of Small
Business. This was the only public reference to the near closure of the Bank.
Blenkarn then told the media he was considering another run at the Bank through
his Parliamentary committee. Fortunately, this did not materialize.
In his 2002 book, John Crow, former Governor of the Bank of Canada and
member of FBDB’s Board of Directors at the time, writes he thought the Bank
overreacted to the strip club scandal. To quote: “BDC management overreacted
and proposed a new set of financing codes more suited to the stricter sort
of religious foundation than to the Canadian business environment. My view,
supported by Georgina Wyman, on the board as deputy minister of Supply and
Services and also familiar with how such things went in Ottawa, was that all the
attention was a nine-day wonder. We were able to persuade management to calm
down and consider necessary changes in a more measured and realistic way.”8
In the post mortem, many wondered why the Bank did not go to the media and
affirm the Bank did indeed extend loans to bars and nightclubs, including strip
clubs. This argument would have been that these were legitimate businesses,
licensed by local and provincial authorities. Like the chartered banks, with whom
all the businesses in question dealt, FBDB was not in the business of regulating
morality. But if the government wanted the Bank to stop making such loans, the
Bank would immediately comply. This strategy may have calmed down the media
but could not be carried out as the information on how many inappropriate loans
were made was not readily forthcoming. Lack of information led to the perception
of obfuscating which, in turn, led to the perception of a cover-up. Furthermore, if
the Bank had been placed in a situation by the media where it would admit it did
not know how many strip club loans were made, the uproar could have worsened.
8 John Crow, Making Money: An Insider’s Perspective on Finance, Politics, and Canada’s Central Bank, Wiley, 2002; page 58.
Shocks to the system | 147
A key to success was quick response. To this end, a system was put in place
whereby any senior officer in head office or in regional offices could be contacted
at any time, 24/7. These officers in turn would have their own means of contacting
any of their subordinates at any time. The system was implemented in an era when
Bank officers did not have mobile phones (the forerunner to cell phones).
The crisis management system was put to the test in the early 1990s when
the Montreal media reported that FBDB had loaned money to the Rockers
motorcycle gang, reputed to be a criminal gang. The news came into head office
around 3 p.m. A crisis management team was assembled by the Vice President,
Corporate Development and included the Vice President for Quebec region,
André Bourdeau. By 5 p.m. all the facts in the file were gathered and a position
crafted. The Bank had made a loan to a machine shop. The owner had passed
away and his widow had sold the shop to the biker club. The FBDB loan was
transferred with the sale. The Bank’s position was that it never lent money to
the biker club and it had no involvement in the sale of the business premises.
As far as the Bank was concerned, it had lent money to a machine shop. The
Bank issued a press release to this effect and sent it over the media wires. By
6 p.m. interviews with the Vice President, Corporate Development and the Vice
President, Quebec region were broadcast on local radio stations. There was
limited mention of the story the following day in some print media but there was
no mention of it in political circles. The story lasted for two days and proved the
crisis management system worked. Apart from limited media stories, there was
one small fallout. In the Bank’s press release picked up across the country, the
Bank made a statement to the effect it did not lend to biker clubs, a phrase that
could be interpreted in a pejorative way. That led a social club of motorcyclists
to stage a ride-in in front of the Bank’s Halifax office. They were coerced into
dispersing by Doug Artz, the district manager, just minutes before a local
television crew arrived.
Preparedness and a clear Bank position also helped later as the Fifth Estate
investigative program on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) television
network decided to do a story critical of FBDB. The Bank’s regional office in
Vancouver had been contacted beforehand by the CBC saying they were planning
a segment involving a business the Bank had foreclosed on. The CBC felt it had
a newsworthy item about an entrepreneur who had his business foreclosed and
livelihood taken away from him by a bank, a government bank to boot. It would be
part of the well known weekly Fifth Estate program.
148 | Chapter 12
A “SWAT” team was assembled within the Bank to deal with the issue. The
entrepreneur had received multiple loans from FBDB to refurbish a cruise boat.
From the Bank’s point of view, he kept overspending and after several missed
repayments, the Bank decided to call the loan. At the time the loan was called, the
cruise boat operator had failed to obtain the necessary Department of Transport
licences to operate a passenger cruise boat.
John McNulty, Vice President of the region was designated the spokesperson
for the Bank. He was assisted locally by Lois Campbell who was Manager,
Counselling and Training at the Vancouver Branch office but prior, had been
Manager, Public Affairs for the region (until that position was abolished as part of
what seemed to be annual cost cutting exercises at the Bank). Public Affairs at
head office played a supporting role.
McNulty and Campbell tried to persuade the producer of the CBC program
there was no story there. Someone failed to make his loan payments and after
several postponements the loan had to be called. The CBC was not persuaded.
Linden McIntyre, the on-camera reporter, was on his way out to Vancouver and
the story was not going to be cancelled. The Bank then hired a local media
specialist to prepare John McNulty for the TV interview. He went through a series
of potential questions and answers with the specialist and was totally prepared for
the interview with Linden McIntyre.
When the program aired, it mainly featured the reporter speaking with the
cruise boat owner in a public park as well as some clips of the interview with
John McNulty. After the program, the cruise boat, which by that time had been
repossessed by the Bank (after the owner had opened a fire hose on the bailiff),
sank at its moorage in the Vancouver area.
FBDB had emerged from the fallout of media scrutiny both wiser and better
prepared. But the strip club scandal cost the Bank dearly and was hard on
employee morale. Working for an organization being vilified in the press led to
assorted questions and comments by business contacts, friends and family. One
lingering effect of the scandal was that subsequent newspaper articles on FBDB
would often refer back to the incident, a tarnish that would only be removed, once
and for all, by changing the Bank’s name. That five year journey to new legislation
still lay ahead. In the meantime, the Canadian economy was about to contract just
as FBDB emerged from shocks of 1989.
Chapter 13 | 149
1990 to 1991
Another
recession
I n 1989, Guy Lavigueur was in his third five-year mandate as FBDB’s President
and had intimated to the Board of Directors it would be his last mandate at
the Bank. The Board established a Special Committee to find his successor
even though the decision on who is appointed President of the Bank is made by
Governor in Council (Cabinet). As in 1976, the Board of Directors likely felt it could
influence the choice of the next FBDB President. And, as in 1976, after looking
in-house for potential candidates, the Board committee decided to conduct an
external search.
In March 1990, François Beaudoin was hired as Executive Vice President and
Chief Operating Officer. He would have a good three years to prove his mettle
to the Board. Beaudoin would eventually become President and lead the Bank
through a substantial transformation and modernization. He had an MBA from
Columbia University and was formerly a Vice President at the Bank of Montreal
where he had held several executive positions in Quebec and Ontario, including
the position of Vice-President, Eastern Canada Region.
Beaudoin’s first challenge could not have arrived sooner. In the second quarter
of 1990, the Canadian economy entered another recessionary cycle.
The onset of the recession was not unexpected. In fact, Lavigueur had been
discerning early warning signs of an impending recession many months before it
actually (statistically) started. These were communicated to the Board of Directors
as well as to management in field offices and may have contributed to the slow
growth in lending in 1989. The experience of 1980 was still fresh in his mind when
FBDB had continued going full steam ahead with record loan authorizations just as
a deep recession was starting. By early 1990, the signs of an impending recession
were clearly visible to all. Prime lending rates at chartered banks had increased
during 1989 to 13.5% and were now at over 14%.
Another recession | 151
Heeding these signs, in January 1990 the Bank instituted a loan monitoring
system wherein head office reviewed every third loan authorized below the
regional limit. These reviews focussed on the quality of credit decisions, credit
assessments and presentations. There was feedback to the regions and districts
and, where applicable, credit training was provided. In the first two months of
1990, the loan monitoring system found about a quarter of loans reviewed were
marginal or weak credits and there were deficiencies in credit assessments and
presentations in about half the cases. Through feedback to the regions and
training, this situation was quickly turned around. By June 1990, marginal or weak
credits would drop to about the 3% level and deficiencies to about 20%.
Although Directors on the Board had not been at the Bank in 1980, they knew
full well the experience the Bank had lived in the 1980 to 1984 period and the
fallout of the losses during that period, the most critical being the near closure
of the Bank. They were quite concerned about a repeat of operating losses,
especially coming on the heels of the worst scandal in the Bank’s history. They
turned to management, and particularly François Beaudoin, to assure them the
Bank was well prepared to handle the recession and there would be no repeat of
the 1980 to 1984 experience. For most of 1990, this was the focus of management
and the Board of Directors.
The first action taken was to reduce objectives for fiscal 1991. The corporate
plan, approved by the Board of Directors and tabled with the government,
called for new loan authorizations of $785 million on a net basis for fiscal 1991.
After reviewing regional economic trends with the regional vice presidents,
Beaudoin, as chief operating officer, came up with revised objectives for new
loan authorizations. This led to a reduction in the Bank’s overall objective to
$585 million in net loans for the fiscal year. The reduction ensured that managers
throughout the Bank did not pursue marginal credits for the sake of attaining
their assigned volume objectives.
Beaudoin then introduced the concept of a “watch list.” There were two
objectives to this list. The first was to identify accounts having a probability of
being downgraded within six months. These would be the accounts on the watch
list. The second was to work with clients on the list to reduce the likelihood
of downgrading occurring. Watch list clients would have any of the following
characteristics: loan payments being returned for reason of Not Sufficient Funds
(NSF); requests for postponement of principal repayments; requests for working
capital loans; negative financial statement reviews or chartered bank feedback;
and, in general, any adverse trends in a client’s business.
to head office no later than the 15th of the month. Of the Bank’s 15,000 customers,
close to 1,000 were placed on watch lists during fiscal 1991. Working with clients
to resolve their problems paid off as some 79 accounts were upgraded in the latter
half of the year.
By October 1990, the Canadian economy was in recession and new loan
activity at the Bank was following suit. Although the fiscal 1991 objective for net
loan authorizations had been revised downwards from $785 million to $585 million,
it appeared that volume would be even less, around $360 million (half of what it
was the preceding year). Non-performing loans were also on the rise, increasing
rapidly from about $50 million in April 1990 to about $90 million by the month
of October. FBDB was not the only bank seeing a rise in non-performing loans.
Domestic non-performing loans at two chartered banks (for which data were
available) were more than double the levels of the previous year.
By the end of fiscal 1991, FBDB saw its net loan authorizations drop to
$426 million from $722 million the previous year. The staffing norms, which had
been refined and were still in use, suggested the Bank had a surplus of staff of
roughly 10%. In normal times, that surplus would lead to staff cuts. At the time,
there were about 900 employees in the Loans Division and it was calculated there
Another recession | 153
was an excess of 83 positions in the Bank when assessed against loan activity.
However, the Bank’s management convinced the Board of Directors it would be
beneficial to keep the excess staff as they would be needed when the economic
recovery arrived. It was predicted the recession would not be as severe as the
1980 to 1982 recession and the costs of laying-off and rehiring staff did not pass
the cost-benefit test. It was agreed to allow normal staff turnover to reduce staff
counts and to redeploy staff from low to high volume locations. The bottom line
was that the Bank could afford to carry excess staff through the recession.
The following charts show the comparison between the economic recessions
starting in 1980 and 1990 from the standpoint of growth in real domestic product
and interest rates.
2.5%
2.0%
1.5%
1.0%
0.5%
0.0%
-0.5%
-1.0%
-1.5%
-2.0%
1990
1990
1980
1980
1986
1986
1993
1993
1994
1994
1989
1989
1992
1992
1985
1985
1984
1984
1983
1983
1988
1988
1982
1982
1979
1979
1987
1987
1978
1978
1977
1977
1991
1991
1981
1981
24.0%
19.0%
14.0%
9.0%
Prime Rate
4.0%
1990
1980
1980
1986
1986
1993
1994
1989
1989
1992
1992
1985
1984
1983
1983
1988
1982
1979
1987
1978
1977
1977
1991
1981
Source: Bank of Canada.
Table 5 below shows the Loans Division was still able to post a profit in
spite of relatively high actual loan losses in the fiscal 1991 to 1994 period. This
was due to foresight in the late 1980s to build up general loan loss reserves.
As discussed in an earlier chapter, over the fiscal 1986 to 1990 period, the
cumulative difference between provisions for loan losses charged against
income and actual loan loss experience had amounted to $139.3 million. This
$139.3 million was now available to tide the Bank over the 1991 to 1994 period.
Table 5 also shows the differences between the provisions for losses charged
against income and actual loan losses during this time. The differences between
these two amounts came from the general loan loss reserves built up in the late
1980s. The objective to be profitable through all economic cycles was put to the
test, and the Bank clearly achieved its objective.
Table 5 Loans Division – Use of General Loan Loss Reserves Fiscal 1991-1994
($ in millions)
Provision Declared
Fiscal Year Actual LLE for Loan Losses Difference Profit
The foregoing table shows $38 million of the $139 million in general loan loss
reserves built up in the late 1980s were required for the Bank to post its small profits,
leaving $100 million of reserves with which to build the next phase of the Bank.
Loss rates on loans authorized in the 1989 to 1992 period were not as high as
those experienced in the early 1980s. But they were still above the cost recovery
objective of 6.5%, as the following chart shows.
Another recession | 155
Chart 6 Ultimate Loss Rate - FBDB Loans Year of Authorization 1978 - 1994
15.9%
16.0%
12.0%
Ultimate Loss Rate
9.7%
8.0%
6.5%
4.0%
0.0%
1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994
Vintage
Ultimate loss rate is the total amount lost as a proportion of amount authorized in a fiscal year.
As in the early 1980s, Ontario bore the brunt of the recession. Between fiscal
years 1990 and 1994, FBDB’s non-performing loans increased by a factor of 2.6.
Over the same period, the factor was 8.2 in Ontario followed by 3.8 in the Atlantic
region, 1.8 in Quebec and 1.1 in the Prairie and Northern region. In the B.C. and
Yukon region, non-performing loans increased slightly in 1991 and 1992, then
declined to about two-thirds of the 1990 level thereafter.
In the early 1990s, as FBDB was ‘sailing through the storm,’ the first priority was
to ensure proper management of the loans portfolio. But there were other issues
to be dealt with by the Bank and, as usual, with Ottawa.
Following a meeting Minister Wilson convened with the heads of all departments
and agencies reporting to him, a Prosperity Agenda was released by his office.
It called for, inter alia, new measures aimed at small business, an important
constituency. All the new measures were to be administered by the department,
ISTC. But it was in FBDB’s interests to be involved and, given the Bank’s delivery
network of offices, it was called on to contribute to various new ventures, many of
which never saw the light of day.
156 | Chapter 13
First, FBDB was required to participate in “Community Talks” which were the
part of the Prosperity Initiative, the Agenda having morphed into an Initiative. The
Talks were aimed at soliciting feedback from the business community on ways
to get the economy moving again and out of the recession. They also served to
promote services provided by the federal government. The Bank did not mind
being part of these Talks as local FBDB officers would bring into the room many of
the Bank’s supporters, including clients. Such involvement would show grassroots
support for FBDB and stem any criticisms of the type officials were receiving from
industry when they were crafting and re-crafting the elusive new FBDB mandate in
the latter half of the 1980s.
Other initiatives in which the Bank was asked by ISTC to participate financially
included a study by Price Waterhouse consultants to look into the feasibility
of establishing a national business information network. Once the study was
completed, it spawned a proposal to establish the Canada Opportunities
Investment Network (COIN). This initiative resembled FBDB’s former Matchmaking
service that was terminated when Management Services funding from Ottawa was
cut in half in 1989, two years earlier. At the time of the cut, FBDB’s President had
written to the Minister of DRIE saying he hoped the programs cut by FBDB would
not turn up in a different guise in a government department in Ottawa. COIN was
left on the drawing table.
Another proposal coming from ISTC requiring a response from the Bank was
the establishment of Community Venture Pools (CVPs). These pools of money
were to be targeted to start-up situations. It was thought “angel” investors (wealthy
individuals) would participate in CVPs. FBDB was asked to deliver the CVP
program. For the Bank’s part, its participation hinged on being compensated for
its administrative costs plus any liabilities that could arise from administering the
pools of money. CVPs, like COIN, were never implemented.
Then came the proposal for a Business Networks Initiative. The vagueness
of this proposal, which the Bank was asked to respond to, can be characterized
by a letter sent to the Bank by an ISTC official, along the lines of: Further to
our telephone conversation this a.m. on this subject, I am pleased to enclose a
notional concept of the concept, scope and funding of such a strategic initiative.
Another recession | 157
In its February 1992 Budget, the government called on all departments and
agencies to take all reasonable steps to provide government services in “clusters”
through common points of service delivery. This led to the creation of Canada
Business Service Centres and FBDB was expected to co-locate with government
departments providing services to business. This initiative, recall, was tried earlier
in 1983 when the Minister of DRIE mandated FBDB and DRIE to co-locate offices
where feasible. Calls for one-stop small business centres seemed to be a leading
indicator of upcoming general elections.
The Bank had been quietly reticent to the initiative in 1983 and was so again
in 1992. As in 1983, the Bank agreed to a co-location (same street address/office
tower) strategy but not co-habitation. At the time, the Bank was in the process
of moving its Bathurst branch office, coincidentally, to the same office complex
where other federal agencies were already located. For FBDB, the Bathurst office
became its poster office for cooperation in co-locating federal business services.
The Bank agreed to share the cost of a common receptionist but drew the line
at sharing other facilities. It was made known to other federal departments in the
building that the Bank’s meeting rooms, copiers and the like were already being
used to full capacity.
The Bank worked actively on some proposals coming from Ottawa. In early
1992, the U.S. Department of Commerce imposed a 14.5% countervailing duty on
imports of Canadian softwood lumber. The duty was challenged by the Canadian
government but it would take years to resolve. In the meantime, softwood lumber
exporters to the U.S. had to post bonds or cash deposits with U.S. customs for the
countervailing duty. FBDB was asked by the Department of External Affairs and
International Trade to assist those exporters unable to obtain bonds or make the
cash deposits. The Bank quickly developed a program to guarantee the bonds
when needed. The Bank’s only condition was that it be compensated for its costs.
Like others, this program was not implemented but it did show a strong willingness
on the Bank’s part to assist in special government initiatives.
FCC’s expansion proposal was strongly opposed by FBDB, which had the
majority of its clients in non-metropolitan areas. When FCC claimed FBDB was
not active in rural areas, the Bank sent them a cross-Canada listing of over
400 rural towns where it had loan clients. The potential problem for FBDB was that
FCC, which was not a supplementary lender and could compete for loans with
chartered banks, could easily make significant inroads to FBDB’s market since FCC
offered lower interest rates. The Bank was concerned FCC could lure its clients
away with lower interest rates even if it led to operating losses for FCC. History
158 | Chapter 13
had shown FCC’s operating losses were readily financed by the government. FCC
had strong political and industry support, support FBDB did not have. (It was often
joked if FCC was faced with closure, as FBDB had been, there would be crowds of
livestock demonstrating on Parliament Hill.)
FBDB’s position was that if the government wanted more small business lending
done in rural communities, FBDB was the best vehicle to get the job done. FBDB
was not alone in opposing FCC’s expansionary proposals as the Canadian Bankers
Association also registered opposition.
There was an added urgency to getting a new Farm Credit Corporation Act
passed in Parliament. The Minister of Agriculture wanted to move FCC’s head
office to Regina, Saskatchewan. Such a move would provide a major boost to the
local economy, not to mention the popularity of the politician who made it happen.
The government had agreed to the move but FBDB’s opposition to the expansion
of FCC’s lending mandate was a major stumbling block. Meetings at all levels of
government took place to resolve the FCC/FBDB issue. When senior officials were
meeting, Beaudoin attended on the Bank’s behalf.
Senior officials had high regards for Beaudoin as he gave them the view from
the private sector. In the meantime, the head of FBDB’s Corporate Development
group was keeping a key advisor to Minister Wilson abreast of events in the
file. The advisor was Rob Dunlop, a ministerial staff member. At the first meeting
of department and agency heads Minister Wilson had called, soon after he
was appointed to ISTC, Lavigueur noticed the Minister consulting with Dunlop
quite frequently. On returning to Montreal from this meeting, he told his head
of Corporate Development to contact Dunlop and brief him on FBDB matters.
Periodic meetings between the two took place, all without any agenda or
particular purpose in mind, just sharing of information. Through this contact, the
Bank ensured a key advisor to the Minister of ISTC was kept abreast of general
matters concerning the Bank.
FBDB’s position received much support in Ottawa from officials who did not
look favourably on: i) overlap that would be created between FCC and FBDB; ii)
more competition between FCC and private sector lenders; and iii) the potential
for federal-provincial conflicts. These were important policy conflicts the officials
would rather have avoided. FCC had strong support, however, from its Minister
of Agriculture.
Senior officials from the Privy Council office intervened. The Privy Council, as
noted earlier, is the Prime Minister’s department. The fact they had to intervene in
the file meant there was a serious problem, even by Ottawa standards. Eventually,
FCC pulled back from their position to expand into small business lending
and FBDB agreed to a slight expansion of FCC’s mandate to include lending
for “on-farm” diversification projects and to “off-farm” value-added agricultural
operations. The Farm Credit Corporation legislation was subsequently passed
before the 1993 general elections and its head office moved to Regina.
The debates over FCC would have been non-existent if the government had
followed the conclusions of the Nielsen Task Force in 1985. The Study Group
reviewing FBDB concluded that if the Bank were to be kept in place – recall they
Another recession | 159
While FBDB was responding to new ideas and initiatives for small businesses,
the Bank was still pushing for its own new legislation. But as in the 1980s,
discussions with Ottawa officials kept running into dead ends and action on new
legislation was continually postponed. By 1993, the Bank received somewhat
definitive word when it was told Parliament had a heavy workload and could not
consider any new Bank legislation.
to lead these successive groups. As a result of these mergers, two stalwarts took
early retirement: Hugh Carmichael who was head of the Planning department; and
Michel Azam, the head of Government Relations. Both had played major roles in
the transformation of the FBDB and in keeping it alive through the perilous years
of the 1980s.
Hugh Carmichael,
head of the Planning
department.
Hugh Carmichael’s exposure to the ways of Ottawa reached back to the 1970s
when negotiations were being conducted to transform the Industrial Development
Bank to FBDB. His enlightenments of government officials to the practical aspects
of small business financing were mini-lectures to behold. Ritchie Clark in his
History does not attribute the quote, “when was the last time you ever lent
five dollars?” but it certainly rings “Carmichaelian.”
Michel Azam had been recruited by Lavigueur in 1980 from the Department of
Industry, Trade and Commerce to head up the Bank’s Government Relations office
in Ottawa. Handling day-to-day enquiries from Members of Parliament, mostly
Another recession | 161
concerning loan refusals and foreclosures, as well as enquiries from officials were
standard parts of his job. His more important responsibilities required diplomacy
and subtlety. When critical issues arose, Azam bridged gaps between the Bank
and the government. Even more important was his unofficial role as confidant to
the President. In this role, he not only provided advice but was also a channel of
communication with senior officers.
The OECD conference was not the first international conference hosted
by FBDB. In 1989, it had hosted the annual meetings of the Association of
Development Financial Institutions of Asia and the Pacific (ADFIAP), and the
World Federation of Development Finance Institutions (WFDFI). FBDB was seen
as a leader among the world’s institutions providing development financing. The
Bank was often tapped by the World Bank to provide training to bank officers from
162 | Chapter 13
developing countries. For example, the World Bank sponsored a training visit to
FBDB by a team of officers from the China Construction Bank. Close to two dozen
officers from that bank came to FBDB to look at its systems and lending practices.
(China Construction Bank is now one of the largest banks in the world.)
In 1992, the Canadian economy was coming out of its recession and the
attention turned to growth, improving the efficiency of FBDB operations and
implementing new approaches in response to environmental and other issues.
Prior to the recession, FBDB had increased the size of its loans portfolio from a
low of $1.5 billion in 1985 to $2.7 billion in 1990. Coming out of the 1990 to 1991
recession, it was now up to Beaudoin and his team to get the Bank back on track
to increasing the loans portfolio, without incurring operating losses. He also had to
address the grave impacts environmental liability could have on the Bank.
The Bank had already identified 89 clients’ businesses that posed a potential
threat to the environment. There was one particular case causing much
concern. The Bank had taken possession of a gas station in Ontario as part of a
liquidation process. The gas station was found to be the source of groundwater
contamination in the area. Residents depended on the groundwater for domestic
use. Under the “deep pockets” provisions of the law, any owner of a business
causing damage to the environment, regardless of when that damage was done,
was responsible for liabilities arising from the damage. In the Ontario case, FBDB
Another recession | 163
did not cause the damage, its client had. But since it took ownership of the
property at one time, it became liable for the damage. The Bank supplied the
Ontario community with bottled water for a number of years.
When FBDB implemented its Environmental policy and procedures, it was one
of the first (if not the first) among lending institutions in Canada to do so and
it served as a model for those who followed. There were clear objectives to the
new policy: i) establish an environmentally minded staff; ii) minimize the Bank’s
environmental liability; and iii) establish efficient and workable review procedures
to implement the policy for existing and new clients. An Environmental Risk
Management Manual (ERMM) was produced to assist the Bank’s officers, most of
whom were non-scientific professionals, in administering the policy. The manual
identified and described various forms and sources of pollution such as waste
generation, waste water, atmospheric emissions, hazardous materials, and soil and
groundwater contamination. Special training was given to officers across the Bank
on how to apply the new policy and use the manual.
The operational review focussed on the amount of time spent on various job
tasks at all levels, the number of levels involved in approval processes, delegations
of authority, the amount of paperwork generated and training requirements.
Management Services was also conducting a review of its activities and its
164 | Chapter 13
The first result of the operational review was the creation of an independent
credit function in field offices. Eight assistant vice president (AVP) positions were
deployed across the Bank, reporting not to regional vice presidents, but directly
to the Loans Department in head office. The objectives for these positions were
related solely to creditworthiness and credit quality. Viewed another way, it was
a decentralization of the head office credit function with credit decisions being
brought closer to clients. The independent credit function allowed for the removal
of the district office layer of management and, with the AVP Credit position in place,
regional vice presidents would be less involved in routine day-to-day transactions
– or so the theory went. In this line of thinking, the Bank’s 17 district offices could be
removed from the organizational hierarchy and replaced with a structure that saw
43 branch offices reporting directly to regional vice presidents, and the remaining
35 smaller branch offices reporting to the 43 branch offices. This structure was
not implemented as it ran into stiff opposition. Instead, district offices became area
offices headed by an assistant vice president and area general manager. With the
AVP Credit position in place, however, 17 District Managers, Loans were removed
from the organizational structure. The operational review did not achieve the goal of
removing a layer of management but it would try again in a later round.
The greatest impact of the operational review was in the area of information
processing. For decades, the Bank (both FBDB and IDB) had come to rely totally
on its Form 4073. This was the form containing all information needed to decide
whether a loan was authorized or not. It was painstakingly typed on a typewriter
by typists, stenographers, secretaries and administrative assistants over the years.
If changes had to be made to a typed Form 73, as it was called, the form had to
be re-typed in full or, if feasible, pieces were cut and taped together. This was
standard procedure as changes were always being made to Form 73 information.
The only productivity improvements to this process over the decades were the
introduction of electric typewriters, notably the IBM Selectric, the introduction of
whiteout liquid over which revisions could be typed, and typewriter eraser tape.
The operational review changed the way the critical Form 73 could be prepared
with the introduction of an application known as The Manager. The development
of this software, which produced one of the largest productivity gains at the Bank,
is described in Chapter 14 in the context of the evolution of information systems at
the Bank.
The Manager allowed account managers to enter all relevant client data directly
to a computer data base (although many still relied on administrative assistants
to enter the data onto computers). It allowed for quick and efficient revisions to
Form 73s as well as electronic communication with other Bank officers. This led to
a reduced need for administrative staff whose main function, in many cases, was
the typing and re-typing of Form 73s and Form 4046s (the latter form used to
amend loan conditions). With the onset of The Manager, FBDB was able to convert
administrative staff to client service representatives (CSRs) with responsibilities for
Another recession | 165
administering loan accounts. CSRs also provided the benefit of being a continuing
contact person at the Bank for clients since account managers were frequently on
the move.
To develop a strategic plan for the division, McNulty used the same methodology
the Bank used to develop strategic plans for it clients. He had an external advisory
group consisting of independent practitioners who provided management training
and consulting to small business and were knowledgeable about market needs. The
group was a sounding board for new ideas and provided perceptions on how well
the Bank’s services were being delivered and received in the market. For example,
they pointed out the need to train CASE counsellors and to better match their
skills with client needs. While hiring a retired business person and sending him on
an assignment may have worked in the 1970s, it was not sufficient for the 1990s.
Assignments were more complex and there needed to be some specialization on
the roster. As one of the advisory group members said: you cannot bring old skills to
the new marketplace. The advisory group thought the Bank’s Community Business
Initiative (CBI) was its best product. It also offered the opinion that the Bank’s
long-running publication, Profit$, was dull and old-fashioned.
The strategic and operational reviews shifted the division’s emphasis from
being a retailer in the market, providing management services directly to clients,
to a wholesaler, selling its services through third parties. Instead of FBDB staff
members providing financial and strategic planning services, for example, they
would now be delivered by external professionals on the FBDB roster. The division
was moving to increase its leverage effect and revenues. ‘Training the trainers’
became the division’s mantra.
Management Services also became more client driven, rather than product
driven. The priority was to package products to fit client needs. In this vein, more
emphasis was placed on developing innovative products to meet emerging needs.
For example, the Bank developed a new product to assist businesses in obtaining
ISO certification. Then it developed a succession planning product for family-
owned businesses. Both products were seen as innovations in the market. Like the
Loans Division, productivity measures were introduced for Management Services.
Another recession | 167
Revenue per operational staff was a key measure. Norms were established such as
(revenue producing) person days of training and person days of counselling per
operational staff.
The Venture Capital Division was also subject to an operational review. The
Bank contracted the firm Price Waterhouse to conduct the review. After the
Venture Capital Division had been created in 1983, the most deals done in a year
was in fiscal 1988 when 32 new investments were authorized for $22.5 million.
After 1988, new investments declined to around 12 per year, one a month, for an
average of just under $1 million per investment. There were about 20 employees
in the division. Price Waterhouse concluded such productivity was at the low end
compared to firms used for benchmarking purposes. They recommended targets
should be set for account management as well as for new authorizations per
investment manager. Venture capital, however, is unlike the term lending business,
and the best practical advice Price Waterhouse could offer was to allow some
smaller investments to be authorized by a committee of vice presidents and fewer
by the Board of Directors. New investment authorizations continued at the same
level, about 12 per year, until fiscal 1996.
The Bank had already moved to improve relations with Members of Parliament.
An MPs visit program had been launched in the fall of 1992, wherein FBDB branch
managers were required to visit their local MPs, brief them on the Bank’s activities
in the local community and establish a direct line of communication with the MP.
If there was a complaint about FBDB, the MP was encouraged to call the local
branch manager directly to try and resolve the issue. Cabinet ministers were to
be visited by regional vice presidents. As part of the program, community activity
sheets were prepared and the Bank distributed press releases to local news media.
Business planning kits were left in MPs’ offices which they could hand out to small
business owners and managers. The MPs visit program, managed and coordinated
by Mary Grover-Leblanc in the Government Relations department, generated
positive feedback on the Bank.
The Bank was also asked to hold more meetings of Regional Advisory Councils
and it agreed to hold two each year plus a meeting with each individual council
member. For most of the Bank’s regional vice presidents, who were responsible for
organizing and attending these meetings, holding more regional council meetings
was unproductive and time-consuming.
With federal elections approaching in 1993, a televised debate was held for
aspirants to the leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada.
(Prime Minister Mulroney had stepped down as party leader.) Among them was
Garth Turner, an MP from Ontario. Before his leadership campaign he was known
for his public denunciations of FBDB. During the televised leadership debate he
repeated his opinion FBDB should be dissolved. His remarks did not go unnoticed
as several of the Bank’s customers wrote to chastise him for the position he had
taken. Their letters made the following points:
• We were able to survive the eighties thanks only to F.B.D.B. There are many
similar businesses operating successfully at present, that would be long
gone if not for F.B.D.B. For these reasons we take strong exception to the
remarks you made;
• There was one statement you made that disturbed me very much. That was
your intention, if elected, to abolish the F.B.D.B. Well sir, I cannot speak for
the rest of Canada, but in Newfoundland, I feel that the F.B.D.B. has been
responsible for the success of many, many businesses, my own included.
I wish you well in pursuit of your goal and I feel confident a man of your
intelligence will not make any rash decisions without asking the opinion of
those who have been involved on the battle field;
• After hearing your very disputable debate on T.V. I realized you certainly are
not the person that could have any real understanding of the many small
businesses in Canada that the Federal Business Development Bank has
helped with financial packages. I would be interested in facts, not just fast
political yap.
This was the kind of support the Bank knew it had among its clients but such
testimonials were rarely put in writing, much less sent to politicians. FBDB’s
President also wrote to Garth Turner describing the Bank’s achievements and
seeking a meeting on FBDB that would demonstrate the Bank’s role as a solution
to many of the economic problems facing Canada. Turner did not win the
leadership of his party. Kim Campbell won and was appointed the first female
prime minister of Canada after the Right Honourable Brian Mulroney resigned
from the post. Turner later crossed the floor in the House of Commons to join the
Liberal Party of Canada after it had formed the next government.
FBDB had endured the 1990/91 recession without operating losses and fended
off a potential market overlap with another crown corporation. Efficiency gains
were paving the way towards solid growth and these gains were largely related
to new information technologies. Before proceeding to the Bank’s rebirth as the
Business Development Bank of Canada, the next chapter describes the Bank’s
technology transformation.
Chapter 14 | 169
1975 to 1995
Information
technology
@ FBDB/BDC
The Bank seizes opportunities arising from new technologies
with innovations such as the Automated Information Management
(AIM) system and The Manager. As the new millennium
approaches, work begins on replacing legacy systems and critical
business applications.
170 | Chapter 14
“If you give bright people computers, some amazing things are going to happen.”9
So said Ed Roberts, father of the personal computer, in a statement that aptly
characterizes the Bank’s technology revolution.
In the mid-1970s, on entering a typical FBDB office, one would see a few
closed offices and rows of desks equipped with calculators the size of a boot
box, telephones without buttons (rotary contraptions used to spin-dial numbers),
ashtrays (often overflowing) which doubled as pie chart stencils for those required
to produce graphic presentations, and electric typewriters operated by full-time
typists. The ringing phones, calculators churning out columns of numbers on
looping spools of white tape, and the electric tapping of typewriter keys created
quite a racket. Noise pollution was not yet in the lexicon, not to mention the harm
associated with second hand smoke.
Adding machine.
9 Steve Lohr, Digital Revolutionaries – The Men and Women Who Brought Computing to Life, Roaring Book Press, New York, 2009; page 112.
Information technology @ FBDB/BDC | 171
Looking back, it’s easy to see the potential emerging technologies offered in
overcoming these problems and vastly increasing staff productivity. It was not so
clear at the time. Microsoft had just introduced its first software in 1975 and Apple
Computer was about to launch its first product. But these developments, centred
in Silicon Valley, California, had yet to impact businesses. Moreover, FBDB, like all
Canadian banks at the time, was a stodgy place, used to doing things a certain way
and resistant to change.
As mentioned earlier, outsiders brought into the Bank by Guy Lavigueur were
appalled at the lack of information systems that could produce relevant data
for analysis. Remember that when Pierre Charbonneau could not quantify the
magnitude of the mismatching problem because of the lack of data from the
LAPS system, Lavigueur told him to do the analysis manually, loan by loan. When
Don Allen wanted to measure the Bank’s economic impacts to offset negative
reaction to the Bank’s operating losses, he had to carry out his work on an external
172 | Chapter 14
computer system, and he had to hire his own computer analyst, Dac Nguyen,
to write the necessary computer programs. One of his innovations was the
acquisition of a Dun & Bradstreet computer tape listing all businesses in Canada.
The tape and its programs were housed on a mainframe computer at a service
bureau, IST. For the first time, the Bank could quantify its penetration rates by
region and industries, and its importance in financing, for example, businesses
in Quebec or in manufacturing industries across the country. When Allen tried to
build an in-house economic sub-system within the LAPS environment, it created
many internal conflicts and the project was eventually scrapped.
In the early 1980s, measuring risk in the loans portfolio and predicting loan losses
were the greatest management information needs. The earliest pioneers propelled
the development of applications like the provision sub-system, created off LAPS
to provide ongoing data for analysing loan losses and for new financial modelling
techniques. In order to rein in mounting loan losses and turn the Bank around, key
questions had to be answered: what was the ultimate loss rate on loans going to be;
how quickly were losses on loans recognized; and what were the best predictors of
risk? Without the spreadsheet applications that came later, every estimate had to be
calculated by hand based on assumptions and, when the assumptions changed, the
whole manual process had to be redone (and retyped by typists).
To improve its analysis of the loans portfolio, in 1981 the Bank acquired a license
to use the database software and Focus programming language from Information
Builders Inc. Amazingly, this software package was still in use at the Bank at
the time of writing. When the Bank acquired the software, Gilles Guillemette of
Systems was the initial in-house database and Focus language expert. A monthly
extract from LAPS, known as Infobase, was produced and Focus programs were
run on this extract to provide much needed data on the loans portfolio. Over
time, others in the Bank became adept at using the Focus programming language.
Sandy Mendelsohn used it and the Infobase extract to “slice and dice” the
portfolio and monitor loan quality for the Financial Services department tasked
with bringing the portfolio back to a cost recovery status. For financial forecasting,
Dac Nguyen in the 1980s, and Tomasz Koch in the 1990s, used Focus and the
extract file to analyse various factors such as loss recognition patterns and
security coverage ratios that would assist in predicting loan losses for the Bank.
The database was also used to measure the Bank’s economic impacts and provide
any special analyses the Bank needed in its dealings with Ottawa.
Information technology @ FBDB/BDC | 173
Some departments had very specialized needs. Treasury, for example, contracted
with external suppliers (such as Reuters) to obtain access to real-time data relating
to money and capital markets. As the Bank’s borrowing activities became more
sophisticated and the availability of data services grew, specialized hardware was
purchased. With its numerous monitors and extensive wiring, Treasury’s trading room
came to resemble a command and control centre worthy of a micro-NASA.
The acquisition of Wang machines led to the first wave of technology training
delivered to a large number of Bank employees, overriding a lingering chunk of
Luddite thinking at FBDB. An early application of Wang capabilities was done by
the Planning Department. Working in conjunction with the Controller’s department,
the Wang system was used to introduce an integrated budgeting/planning process
that dove-tailed into the first corporate plans produced by Hugh Carmichael.
Fax technology soon arrived on the scene. No longer could one tell a Minister’s
office the briefing or letter or submission “is on its way” by courier (buying a few
hours time until the 4 o’clock pick-up of the diplomatic pouch). No longer could
a regional office or branch take its time submitting a report or form to head office
and vice-versa. With fax, turn-around times accelerated from weeks to days, from
days to hours. Transmission of the early faxes, however, was costly and slow.
Special paper was required and feeding a longer document into the fax required
more patience than the most saintly FBDB employee possessed. Pages stuck
together, the document had to be re-transmitted and at the other end, the output
could be blurry. But the fax had the additional benefit of producing a receipt
stating the time and date of transmission. This was a pre-email first and helpful in
maintaining a paper trail.
174 | Chapter 14
In 1982, the PC made the cover of Time Magazine as “Machine of the Year.”
(Even the venerable Time Magazine called computers “machines.”) That same
year, FBDB purchased one of the first IBM PC’s in Montreal which, fully loaded
and including disk drives and printer, cost a whopping (1982) $10,000. FBDB was
in the midst of its record operating losses so, as previously mentioned, each new
purchase had to be justified on the grounds of immediate paybacks, paybacks that
were to be measured only by real dollar savings. The justification for purchasing
the PC was the cost savings associated with the financial modelling done on a
Burroughs minicomputer that cost about $14,000 per year in outside computer
services. Recall this was the result of the Bank repatriating the computerized
model from the Small Business Financing Review team. The Bank’s first personal
computer would pay for itself within a year.
Personal computers soon made their way onto the desks of secretaries, mainly
for word processing. No more whiteout, cutting and pasting before a document
was finalized. But it did require training in computer technologies to a wider group
175
Vintage personal
computer.
176 | Chapter 14
For all the PC’s usefulness in terms of spreadsheet and word processing
software, data were still being pulled off LAPS and the GL and re-entered onto
the PC. This re-entry of data continued until the PC’s memory and power were
expanded and PC versions of software such as Focus were purchased to allow for
automatic data transfers from mainframe systems.
The battle between the pro-Apple and pro-PC camps flared up in 1984 when
Apple introduced the Macintosh, the first affordable machine with point-and-
click, a mouse and on-screen graphic icons. Management Services, with its
requirements for graphics and desktop publishing related to training documents
and brochures, purchased a Mac and the two camps settled along divisional lines
for years to come.
All this time, the Systems Department was managed by Bank insiders who had
progressed to higher ranks in the Bank through the term lending operation. They
were supported by a few IT professionals. This changed with the arrival of Frank
Urbanski as Senior Vice President, Management Systems and Finance. He joined
the Bank from Teleglobe, another crown corporation headquartered in Montreal.
In late 1986, he brought in systems professionals Terry Gilbert and Guy Hanchet,
former colleagues in Teleglobe, to work in the Systems Department. (He also
brought in Maurice Rossin who took over the financial forecasting model and, for
much of his career at the Bank, continued to make refinements to the model to
produce more accurate and detailed forecasts.)
One of the first decisions Urbanski made was to cancel the mainframe service
bureau contract the Bank had with the firm CSG. Costs under this contract
were running at $3 million per year. In its stead, IBM mainframe equipment was
purchased for a $1 million onetime cost and hosted at a CGI data centre for
about $300,000 per year. The Systems Department was also re-organized into
two divisions with a director for each: Operations & Technical Support under
Terry Gilbert and Systems Development under Guy Hanchet.
For most of the 1980s, the information technology and systems environment at
FBDB was still the “wild west,” with battles among department heads clamouring for
new technologies, no filters for prioritizing demand and budget challenges. Within
the Systems Department, it was often easier, and more efficient, for professional IT
staff to do what they thought had to be done and ask for permission later. Some may
call it a “cowboy” spirit, others a “pioneering” spirit and still others an “innovative”
spirit. In any case, it moved the Bank forward by providing tools to improve staff
productivity, eventually leading to better customer service and profitability.
Information technology @ FBDB/BDC | 177
With new tools and computers coming on stream at head office, there was a
longstanding perception in the field that head office had better “stuff.” Ironically,
the mentality of head office employees, drilled into them by rotating vice
presidents from the regions, was that the priority, first and foremost, was always
the branch offices where the deals were being sealed, where the income was
coming from and the greatest efficiency gains could be realized.
FBDB had never created a system for branch users before but AIM was a
golden opportunity to prove the Bank as an innovator and get PC’s into every
branch, an investment the Bank, without government appropriations, could not
have made at the time. After a sputtering start, John Ryan was brought in to lead
the AIM development project, and he selected Rich Goulet, another long-time
FBDBer, to assist in 1985.
The challenge was immense, especially given the tools available at the time. The
team had one year to develop the AIM computer logic, write the software, and
configure and wire the hardware. Alain Carrière was hired as an IT professional to
help build the AIM system. During his FBDB job interview in 1985, he drew a sketch
of his proposed solutions and was hired on the spot under a one-year contract. (In
2013, he was still employed at the Bank.)
A large team was assembled in head office to enter and proofread the bilingual
texts for the description of all government programs aimed at small business. The
178 | Chapter 14
firm DMR built the software in C language (third generation) with Btrieve, a software
developed for fast retrieval of data and used for index files. The logic required
numerous levels of indexing such as industry and geographic area. The target
retrieval time was one second, once users had looked up the key words in an index.
The end of March 1986 was approaching and the team was still developing the
AIM software. Funds provided by the government for the project were going to
be unspent in the fiscal year. So the Bank decided to purchase the computers
the system would require when it was completed, rather than let the funds lapse
and be lost forever. Such moves were typical of government departments and
agencies. About 80 computers were purchased, configured and stacked in
conference rooms until AIM was officially launched. That the Bank was able to
procure this amount of computers in one order before the March 31st spending
deadline was not a feat. Suppliers generally expected large government purchases
as the fiscal year end approached and usually increased inventory for such
purchases. The computers the Bank procured for AIM were IBM PC’s (not XT) with
64k RAM and 30 megabytes of memory – exceptional features at the time. The
cost was about $5,000 per PC (a figure that would now elicit raised eyebrows).
The AIM system was delivered to all branches in 1986 including the Business
Information Centres taken over by FBDB with its new mandate. The system was
formally launched in Vancouver at Expo’86. Rod Stillwell and Rich Goulet were
sent to train branch users across Canada. In Ottawa, a special demo was held
to show officials what the Bank had achieved. It was a first: the consolidation
of all programs for business into one database. AIM was a rudimentary search
engine and while some users complained about having to search the key words,
which they said took longer than flipping through the old ABC directory, the
system worked. The Bank had fulfilled its directive and AIM became a useful,
user-friendly source for Canadian businesses and public sector employees at all
levels of government.
The axe fell on AIM in 1989 when the government cut its appropriations
in support of FBDB’s Management Services. As mentioned earlier, the Bank
eliminated its information services and that included AIM. It was hoped provincial
governments and chambers of commerce would take over AIM on a nationwide
basis but only Quebec and B.C. governments kept it going, without updates, and
the system eventually disappeared.
Information technology @ FBDB/BDC | 179
As the first custom-made application oriented to users in the Bank’s branch offices,
AIM left a crucial legacy. It led to the installation of PC’s in every branch and became a
catalyst for future field-driven innovations. It broke in FBDB employees, helping them
to become microcomputer-literate and accelerated the learning curve for effective
computer training approaches in branch and regional offices. Having PC’s in the field
allowed for the migration from dumb terminals to access the mainframe.
Throughout the late eighties and early nineties, continuous improvements were
made to technical infrastructure and business applications at the Bank. With the
availability of lower cost clones, the number of PC’s deployed in the Bank rose
from about one per branch to 800 Bank-wide. The availability of micro-computers
across the Bank opened the door for new technologies to be introduced. An
example was a primitive form of email based on an early version of Microsoft Mail.
These innovations were supported by a head office help desk originally consisting
of a three person team – Hélène Febrile, Collette Hamilton and Jeanette Mende
– and managed by Elwin Jopling. The desk later evolved into a call centre
supporting all computer hardware and software used in the Bank.
Around 1990, branch offices began using a package called Form Easy, which
quickly became known as ‘form hard’ and ‘form crazy’ for obvious reasons. For
the first time, the loan authorization form, F4073, was completed on a computer
rather than a typewriter. As its nicknames suggest, this application was the cause
of extreme frustration. Form Easy was branch-based without a linkage to LAPS.
But in branch offices, the system had a habit of freezing and losing information
and caused major headaches for users and even more for call centre operators.
Users were often told not to hit buttons on the keyboard if the system was not
responding. But by then it was too late. Computerizing the Form 73 was needed
but Form Easy couldn’t do the job. Thus began another innovation in the early
1990s that revved up FBDB productivity in a big way. Known as The Manager, it
would become the second longest lasting application (after LAPS) at the Bank
and was still in use in the 2nd decade of the 21st century.
180
Rod Stillwell,
training branch users
across Canada.
Information technology @ FBDB/BDC | 181
The Manager was developed by FBDB employees, chief among them, Denis Poirier
and Alain Carrière (of AIM fame). They exemplified the cowboy spirit in systems
development. Importantly, the development was user-led and resulted in an
application oriented towards branch office needs. The working environment was all
about attitude (hard work) and a sense of humour rather than altitude (or rank).
The platform selected for The Manager was Microsoft’s Access database
management system and Visual Basic (first introduced in 1991) which came in
cheap at $99 a copy. Other options were rejected because they did not allow
for the construction of a database. Microsoft provided consulting advice. During
the project’s early days it was known as ‘clux’ (the word used by a consultant) but
182 | Chapter 14
eventually became known as “The Manager” of your client’s data. The decision, a
wise one in hindsight, was made to allow for linkage to LAPS and possibilities for
communications, once local area networks could be installed throughout the Bank.
The clock, again, was ticking. Three months went by and scope creep set in. More
consultants were contracted to work on the application. After two years, the Vice
President of Systems impatiently declared The Manager would never work. Soon
after, a test version was sent to branch offices. It included the command: “Do not
click on this button.” When the user clicked on the button, the message “why did
you click on this button, you weasel?” had inadvertently been left in. (Or had it?)
In the summer of 1994, the first version of The Manager was rolled out. It had to
be installed in every branch by its developers and staff had to be trained accordingly.
One developer logged 21 flights in 19 days. The system was slow but easy to use
and, unlike the crazy system it replaced, no data were lost. In the beginning, it was
decentralized with one database per branch. This meant over 100 databases had to
be backed-up onto servers every night. Paper copies of the loan authorization Form
73 were still being sent to the Controller’s department at head office for data entry
and, in the early years, the application was never used to actually authorize loans. A
diskette was sent to and from the branches when information on the Form 73 was
modified. In a later edition, a loan authorization button was added to the screen. It
depicted a cartoon character with red hair and a green jacket bearing an uncanny
resemblance to one of the Bank’s regional vice presidents.
The Manager was a work in progress with continuous improvements made along
the way. Communications were facilitated when local area networks were installed
in the branch offices in 1995. A project expected to take three months to complete
went on for four years. Its success was tied to the patience of its senior backers
and their acceptance of hiccups along the way, as well as the determination of
its developers.
The Manager became the catalyst for office automation and email and helped
overcome, once and for all, lingering suspicions of computers. At one time, when
IT employees went to upgrade PC’s in the branch offices, they found a few that
had never been touched, still in their boxes. Others were loaded with all sorts
of software purchased on an ad hoc basis. The Manager improved productivity
and, despite initial resistance, field employees began entering their own credit
reports into computers instead of asking an assistant to type them up. It set the
Bank ahead of its time. It allowed for improved branch connectivity and increased
overall Bank productivity. New recruits from other financial institutions heaped
praise on The Manager.
As new information systems and training became recognized for their important
roles in increasing staff productivity, a new IT position was created in each region
– Regional Information Systems Representatives (RISR’s). Each RISR supported the
installation of hardware and software in the branch offices located in their region
and provided upgrades or repairs as well as training and coaching to facilitate the
adaptation to new applications in the field.
Meanwhile, the impending doom of Year 2000 (Y2K) loomed in the not too
distant future. LAPS, the GL and Payroll, the Bank of Canada legacy systems,
were not Y2K compliant. Information Systems had been planning for these major
upgrades throughout the nineties as illustrated in a 1993 presentation to the Board:
Projects underway
Develop
• “The Manager” for our lending staff
Re-develop
• Our Loans Administration System (LAPS)
Replace
• General ledger application
• Treasury application
Source: IT presentation to the Board of Directors, December 1st, 1993.
Abacus was the name chosen for the new system that would replace LAPS.
After many inconclusive studies on how to proceed, Price Waterhouse was called
in. The firm recommended the Bank migrate its system to one being developed by
a software company in San Diego, California. Created for U.S. financial institutions,
Advanced Commercial Banking System (ACBS) consisted of modules written in
Lansa. BDC was the first Canadian user of this new software followed by National
Bank; other chartered banks kept their own LAPS-like systems.
After consultation with the San Diego company, an AS/400 computer was
purchased to run Abacus. This decision later resulted in challenges running the
184 | Chapter 14
The project would have gone relatively smoothly if BDC processes could
have been adapted to fit the ACBS package. But BDC was, as its annual report
advertised, A Different Kind of Bank, and migrating LAPS to a pre-tailored
application proved difficult. As the patchwork LAPS was compartmentalized into
the ACBS modules, it quickly became evident that the Bank’s needs for flexibility
(for example, the allowance of seasonal repayments by clients) could not be easily
accommodated by the system’s structure. BDC processes differed substantially
from those for which ACBS had been designed (regional banks in the U.S.).
Gaps between the new system and LAPS had to be bridged by modifying the
new system rather than modifying BDC procedures. The tail could not be allowed
to wag the dog. Complicating the transformation was the paucity of systems
analysts who could work with the Lansa language. The Bank had to find and
compete for this scarce resource in Montreal. The “fit gap” processes took many
months to complete.
Meanwhile, the clock was ticking ... and loudly. Mireille Rondeau and her team,
including Anne Boutin, Guy Turcotte and Louis Dallaire, had to find ways to solve
the problems presented by “fit gap” obstacles. In addition they had to adapt
existing applications, such as The Manager, to ‘talk to’ Abacus.
After a few technical glitches involving the AS/400, Abacus went live on
March 31, 1999. Amazingly, for such a critical system, there was no parallel testing
of LAPS and Abacus. All eggs went to the market in one basket. There really
was no alternative. The Abacus project cost $5 million including the purchase
of the ACBS system at $500,000. One lesson learned was that the payments
for purchasing the system should have been staggered. On buying the software
package, it was agreed the vendor would provide consultant services to BDC as
the Bank built Abacus. But these consultants were hardly made available once
the vendor received full payment. Mireille Rondeau and her team had to figure out
solutions to complex problems. But it is in situations such as these that the Bank
has shown it can rise to practical challenges and emerge successful. This uncanny
ability was in the Bank’s genetic make-up.
Meanwhile, work was proceeding on replacing the general ledger (GL), Payroll
and Finance applications to ensure Y2K compliance. The GL was recognized as
“broken” and vulnerable to compliance issues. The scope of the upgrades was
huge and affected virtually all employees in all locations.
The Bank’s payroll system was made Y2K compliant through the purchase of
human resources software from PeopleSoft. Such products, known as enterprise
resource planning systems, were developed for businesses and partly fuelled
by the need to plan for a Y2K response and, in Europe, for the Euro conversion.
Some systems were wide ranging in scope. They encompassed integrated systems
operating in real time with a common database to support finance, accounting,
human resources, customer relations, etc. PeopleSoft, used by manufacturers
Information technology @ FBDB/BDC | 185
and financial institutions, had its roots in human resource systems as the name
suggests. Unlike other software options needing a busload of consultants to
implement, PeopleSoft required just a carload. It was a product used mostly by
very large corporations as BDC representatives found out when they attended
training sessions with other users, many from larger companies with 50,000 to
100,000 employees. Once the Bank made the decision to purchase PeopleSoft
software, work proceeded to complete another mammoth task with the clock
ticking, again, very loudly.
Ross Hamilton and Claude Mailhot were two of the bright people tasked with
implementing the system. One big challenge for the team related to the AS/400
computer purchased for Abacus. This piece of hardware was not a recommended
platform for PeopleSoft and caused some grief in the conversion process.
For Human Resources (HR), the conversion of the payroll system was
completed with Price Waterhouse assisting the in-house IT team. In the fall of
1998, unsuccessful attempts were made to run the payroll on the new system. It
finally worked in December and for January 1st, 1998 the payroll was produced
off PeopleSoft (Version 7.01). One change required the President’s approval.
Twice-monthly salaries in PeopleSoft were calculated by dividing annual salaries
by 26. In contrast, the legacy payroll system (Genesys) inherited in 1975, used a
divisor of 26.088 for bi-weekly payments, like the federal government. This change
increased paycheques issued to each employee and even though it was so small
as to be negligible, a pay increase is always welcome. The overall impact on the
Bank was in the thousands of dollars.
Ex-post, the hype surrounding the arrival of Y2K seemed to have been fabricated
by doomsday prophets but, in fact, it had been promoted by knowledgeable systems
186 | Chapter 14
The development of Abacus and PeopleSoft coincided with two new waves
of technological innovations: connectivity and portability. The Internet came into
being in the 1990s, forcing the Bank to grapple with security and access issues.
At first, the policy of having separate, stand-alone PC’s for Internet browsing
in selected offices was seen as the solution. But this quickly changed into a
broader-based approach using software (rather than hardware) to maximize
security. Google became a market leader in search technology and eventually
all BDC employees had access to the Web at their desk. The Bank’s wide area
network was changed to Bell Canada Frame Relay circuits, and data transmission
speeds increased substantially during the 1994 to 1999 period. The Web boom of
the 1990s also led to the development of BDC’s online presence and the creation
in 1998 of Connex as a one-stop BDC portal for businesses.
On the communications front, the first portable phone was the size of a
shoe box with calls scrambled for security purposes. It was used by selected
(read very senior) managers, as were pagers. During the mid-1990s, one vice
president sported a pen-sized pager in his shirt pocket, given to him by the
President. Technologically advanced at the time but on call 24/7. As mobile phone
technology improved, cell phones were introduced culminating with the eventual
deployment of Blackberries years later.
Information technology @ FBDB/BDC | 187
Meanwhile, tools for analysing and monitoring the Bank’s portfolio improved
dramatically with ongoing upgrades to the Executive Information System (the
brainchild of Luc Provencher), improved portfolio risk management practices and
recalibrations to financial modelling.
Again, while this was completed in the period beyond the scope of this history, it is
worth recounting here, since preparations for the move began much earlier.
To most staff, getting ready for the move was not overwhelming. One benefit
would be discarding all the useless junk acquired and kept over the years. For the
Information Systems department, it was quite another story. They were responsible
for ensuring each person’s telephone and networked computer system would work
on the Monday morning, as if the move had never happened.
Over the weekend, a six-person team from the Operations and Technical
Support group worked non-stop to install the hardware and ensure all systems
and communications would function as they should. At one point, they realized
a data switch in the LAN had been damaged in the move and they scrambled to
contact a firm in California for a solution. The team checked every single phone
and computer in every work station on every floor occupied by BDC. Monday
morning, when BDC staff arrived at their new digs, all systems and phones were
fully functioning. The department had proven its mettle and its image within the
Bank took another step in the right direction.
Twenty years of bright people doing amazing things completely changed the
face of the Bank. Now, when entering a typical Bank office, one would see offices
and work areas equipped with desktop personal computers and/or laptops with
access to integrated corporate systems and instantaneous communications
technologies. It could seem eerily silent for one who worked at the Bank before
the “Machine” arrived on the scene. Analytic tools developed over the years would
also leave the early 1980s employee astounded by the amount of data available
on the portfolio and how fast the numbers could be obtained.
Still to come in the years following 1995 (and reserved for the next history of
the Bank) are the many developments we know of such as data warehousing,
improved wireless technologies, cloud computing and the tablet, as well as all the
unforeseeable breakthroughs that will once again revolutionize BDC.
190 | Chapter 15
1992 to 1995
Start of
a new era
In early 1993, when François Beaudoin was named President, FBDB was in a
healthy financial position with a solid foundation on which to prepare for the new
BDC. Guy Lavigueur, who went on to pursue opportunities in international banking,
had steered the organization through the storms of fifteen tumultuous years. With
the support of the Board of Directors, particularly those who understood the
importance of FBDB’s role and the challenges small businesses encountered from
their own private sector experience, Lavigueur had succeeded in proving a strong
case for the Bank’s continued viability in financing and supporting Canadian SMEs.
Under his leadership, the Bank had developed into a modernized and valued
organization poised to meet future challenges in the evolving economic landscape.
Beaudoin’s appointment as President and Chief Executive Officer of FBDB was
supported by the Board of Directors. John Crow, then Governor of the Bank of
Canada and an FBDB Board Member, reflected the sentiment of the Board in his
previously referenced book in which he underscored his role in the nomination of
François Beaudoin as President of the Bank.
It was not a major transition to the office of President as Beaudoin had already
been managing most aspects of the Bank as Chief Operating Officer. He continued
with the changes he had already started to move the Bank to the next level.
The operational review of all the Bank’s divisions was intended to improve
productivity by streamlining operations. The higher goal was to improve customer
service and achieve growth in new business. Customer service, though, was
an ongoing challenge for FBDB, and reflective of the paradoxical mandate
to be a supplementary lender, that is, to require letters of refusal from other
financial institutions, take higher risk and be profitable, all at the same time.
Surveys throughout the 1980s had shown FBDB clients, for both financing and
management services, were quite satisfied with the service they received at
the Bank. The questionnaires handed out at the end of seminars or counselling
assignments all showed well over 90% satisfaction with FBDB’s service. The only
complaint the Bank received from its loan clients was that FBDB’s interest rates
were too high. (In an environment where interest rates were steadily above 10%,
even chartered banks were subject to the same complaint.)
That those receiving financing from FBDB were quite satisfied with the service
they received was beyond doubt. On the other hand, Members of Parliament
(MPs) were frustrated with FBDB’s handling of referrals they had sent to the Bank.
192 | Chapter 15
Constituents who were refused financing often complained about the treatment
they received at the Bank. Some MPs even said they would stop referring
constituents to FBDB because they always returned complaining about how
they had been treated. This view of FBDB’s customer service was emphasized
in the Minister of Small Business’ remarks to the Board of Directors at the end
of 1992 (mentioned in Chapter 13). MPs were not the only group with complaints
about FBDB’s customer service. When the Department of Regional and Industrial
Expansion conducted its surveys of FBDB stakeholders in the late 1980s, they
received many critical comments about FBDB’s service from industry associations.
While the Bank had little to improve on when it came to customers who received
financing and management services, it had to do a better job with businesses who
did not receive the financing sought. The MPs visit program, mentioned earlier,
helped improve their understanding of the Bank’s actions and the limitations
on what FBDB could deliver. Beaudoin, however, made customer satisfaction a
priority for the Bank with an important caveat. To him, the customer was anyone
approaching the Bank for any of its services. It was a standard maxim in marketing
circles that one satisfied customer would tell of a good service experience to
only one other person, while one unsatisfied customer would tell ten others of a
bad service experience. Coming from a retail operation in a chartered bank where
customer satisfaction was paramount, Beaudoin instituted a series of actions to
ensure customer satisfaction was a priority for all Bank staff.
A brochure entitled If you’re not happy, we’re not happy was produced. The
brochure was placed in a prominent location in all branch and regional offices.
Directed at customers who were unhappy with the service they received from the
Bank, the brochure stated: “we want you, our client, to know that we will seriously
look at any concern ... if we can’t give you a positive response, we’ll explain why.”
Three levels of contact to resolve a problem were made available to any client
walking in and out of any FBDB branch office. The first level was the local branch
manager. If the problem could not be resolved to the satisfaction of the client
at this level, the client was invited to contact the regional vice president whose
address and fax number were provided in the brochure. If still not satisfied, the
client could write to the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Bank. His
address and fax number were also provided in the brochure.
Statistics were not officially kept on how many clients availed themselves of the
redress mechanism but one could be sure almost all would have been resolved at
the branch level. Branch managers would not want their regional vice presidents
resolving complaints coming from their branches and regional vice presidents
would not want the President resolving complaints coming from their regions.
Later on, the President’s office was removed from the complaint hierarchy when
an Ombudsman position was created. In 1995, the Bank instituted its Charter of
Client Rights, monitored by the Ombudsman. It also introduced a cost-shared
independent mediation service for situations where a loan had been called and
issues could not be resolved by the complaint handling system. A toll-free hotline
was also made available for all customers.
The If you’re not happy, we’re not happy brochure was accompanied by an
internal one for staff, If they’re not happy, we’re not happy. It explained the Bank’s
Start of a new era | 193
further definition to allow for setting objectives and reporting results; and ii)
the Bank lacked comprehensive plans for marketing its services and address-
ing objectives, including coordination of activities throughout the Bank. To the
layperson these may be considered important albeit non-earth shattering remarks.
In reality, these issues went to the heart of the Bank and how it carried out its
mandate as legislated by Parliament.
The ensuing debate harked back to discussions within the Bank, including the
Board of Directors, about the market role for FBDB. Should the Bank be reacting to
the requests and needs of all small businesses or only to a small select group that
generated significant value-added to the economy, principally the manufacturing
sector? Gordon Sharwood, a Board Director, had initiated this discussion back in
1980. As noted earlier, he thought the Bank should be focussing its financing more
on growth sectors and less on “mom and pop” establishments. The same topic
was broached in 1981 when Peat Marwick proposed that the Bank play a reactive
role to serve the “mom and pops” and a proactive role for growth companies. The
Investment Banking Division was created in part to serve in this proactive role,
but the number of investments the Bank made each year hardly qualified it as
playing a significant developmental role in the economy. In reference to the level
of venture capital activity at the Bank, one senior Ottawa official once remarked it
was like a fart in a windstorm–but a good fart.
FBDB’s legislation and policy mandates stated it was to serve all small
businesses at large. The Bank argued that to provide services to only specific
sectors of the economy would be ultra vires of the FBDB Act. The Board Director
representing the Department of Industry, Science and Technology Canada
(ISTC) noted it was government policy for FBDB to be providing its services in
a non-discriminatory manner. The government’s developmental activities were
concentrated in its regional development agencies and in ISTC, where subsidy
programs resided.
Start of a new era | 195
In October 1993, federal elections were held and the Liberal Party of Canada
won a large majority of seats in Parliament. The ruling Progressive Conservative
196 | Chapter 15
Party lost all but two seats it had held prior to the elections. The Bloc Québécois,
under the leadership of the Honourable Lucien Bouchard, a cabinet minister in the
former Progressive Conservative government, won the second largest number of
seats, 54, and formed the Official Opposition in Parliament. The Reform Party, with
support principally in Western Canada and from former Progressive Conservative
voters, won 52 seats, not quite enough to become the Official Opposition.
During the 1993 electoral campaign, the Liberal Party had released its
manifesto, the Red Book as it became known. It outlined actions the party would
pursue if it formed the government. There was a strong emphasis on small
business development in the Red Book. When the new Minister of Industry, the
Honourable John Manley, received the special examination report from the Auditor
General of Canada, he stated the deficiencies would be resolved through a
change to FBDB’s mandate and legislation.
The positive impact of the new ads did not happen by chance. The process
of preparing new ads started with focus groups and surveys of small business
owners/managers across the country. Focus groups were held first in Toronto,
Montreal and Vancouver. The object was to gauge the attributes small business
owners were looking for from providers of financing and management services,
their knowledge and impressions of FBDB, the news media they read and listened
to, and which phrases, clichés, etc. caught their attention. Findings from the focus
groups were then used to design larger surveys to obtain representative views of
small businesses at large. The survey information was analysed and given to the
Bank’s advertising agency that then designed new ads. Groupe BCP of Montreal
was selected as the Bank’s advertising agency after a call for concepts was put
out and submissions received. The job of the agency was to design and place
ads with the news media on behalf of the Bank. But, their designs had first to be
approved by the management team, including the President.
Almost all participants in focus groups and surveys had never dealt with the
Bank. When they were asked to name financial institutions that provided financing,
few would mention FBDB “off the top of their mind.” However, when prompted
(have you ever heard of the Federal Business Development Bank?), almost all
interviewees would respond in the affirmative. Moreover, they knew what services
the Bank provided, both financial and management, but their impressions of the
Start of a new era | 197
Bank were on the whole neither negative nor positive. If, by chance, one of the
participants had received financing or a management service from the Bank, the
impression would be positive.
Christiane Beaulieu joined FBDB in 1994 to head the Public Affairs department.
She was given responsibility for developing and managing a strategy to increase
public visibility and awareness of the Bank. From the recently completed business
surveys, the Bank had a baseline measure of its awareness among small business
owners and managers. One objective of the advertising strategy, therefore, was
to raise the level of “FBDB” responses when small business owners and managers
were asked to name financial institutions that provided financing. The Bank also
sought to raise small business owners’ impressions of FBDB to more positive levels.
Christiane Beaulieu,
head of the Public
Affairs department,
and André Bourdeau,
Vice President for the
Quebec region.
With positive feedback coming from the ads, Beaulieu was allowed to go over
budget, so to speak, on her advertising expenditures. The Bank was posting a
198 | Chapter 15
small profit of just under $5 million a year in the 1993 to 1994 period so some
monies were available for this priority. Not everyone needing increased budgets
got them. In fact the Bank was in the mode where spending over budget was
not tolerated unless it had been pre-approved by the highest authorities. After
all, each $50,000 saved meant an extra job could be saved at the Bank. In 1993
and 1994, the Loans Division was still in a downsizing mode, though mostly from
voluntary departures.
With more spending on larger ads in newspapers, Groupe BCP was able to
arrange editorial board meetings for the Bank. At these meetings, the Bank’s
officers would be interviewed by the newspaper’s business editor and reporters.
The Bank wanted to get its story out to the public through the news media, in
advance of anticipated changes in its mandate and legislation. Editorial board
meetings were held in major centres across Canada, with Vancouver being the
exception. Both major dailies in Vancouver declined to have the meetings. The
head of Corporate Affairs and a local FBDB manager met with editorial boards in
western Canada and in the Atlantic region. The President did the Quebec boards
and both did the editorial board at the Globe and Mail in Toronto. Following these
meetings, the newspapers all published positive articles on the Bank, including the
prospect of a new and expanded mandate for FBDB.
The editorial board at the Globe and Mail was important given the national
distribution and readership of its daily Report on Business. However, it was where
the Bank’s representatives ran into tough questioning from an unexpected source.
Andrew Coyne was a well known columnist for the Report on Business section
of the paper. His viewpoints were reflective of a champion of free markets. At the
editorial board meeting, he questioned the need for the Bank and the existence
of a financing gap. It was the Small Business Financing Review revisited. While it
had been expected that his questions for the Bank would be difficult, the Bank’s
representatives had not anticipated he would question the need for the Bank. After
all, his father, James Coyne, had once been Governor of the Bank of Canada and
President of the Industrial Development Bank, the predecessor to FBDB. The elder
Coyne, known for his staunch independent stand at the Bank of Canada, actually
resigned from the post in the early 1960s rather than implement the Diefenbaker
government’s monetary expansion policies. In any event, there was much relief
when the Globe and Mail published a positive article on the Bank a few days later.
Start of a new era | 199
The President was also interviewed by senior columnist Neville Nankivell with
the Financial Post, another newspaper with national distribution and business
readership. Following the interview, a positive article appeared in the Financial
Post. It was noteworthy for its reflections on what a new mandate for the Bank
could entail, including the possibility of having private sector involvement in the
ownership of the Bank through the issuance of preferred shares, foreshadowing
an area of debate that would come up in crafting the Bank’s new legislation. The
article also indicated that although there was a time when many questioned the
need for an institution such as FBDB, the banking community seemed to have
accepted its [FBDB’s] place in the market and worked closely with it. The Bank had
recently formed a strategic alliance with TD Bank in which its CASE counselling
program would be used by TD small business customers.
Members of Parliament too were calling for a change in FBDB’s mandate and
legislation. Following-up on the emphasis placed on small business as the engine
for economic growth in the Liberal Party’s platform for the 1993 federal election,
contained in the Red Book, members of the Ontario Liberal caucus held small
business “town hall” meetings across the province. These meetings kept focussing
on the credit crunch faced by small businesses.
A key member of the Liberal caucus was Dennis Mills. He had a part in making
small business a focal point of the Red Book and was critical of chartered banks’
treatment of small businesses. Mills was appointed Parliamentary Secretary to the
Minister of Industry. He was a champion for small business and also an advocate
for changing FBDB’s legislation. His colleagues on the House of Commons
200 | Chapter 15
That chartered banks were seen to be more stringent in their small business
lending was not surprising. In the early 1990s, the Canadian Bankers Association
(CBA) commissioned a study with the University of Western Ontario to look
at chartered banks’ lending practices. The same Business School professors,
Wynant and Hatch, who had done a similar study for the CBA in the early 1980s,
conducted the study. The purpose of this update was to examine the relationship
between chartered banks and their small business customers, identify problems
and recommend solutions.
Instead, this edition of the CBA small business study attempted to justify
why chartered banks were becoming more demanding with their small business
customers. The study concluded that: i) chartered banks were in the business of
providing low risk financing to small businesses; ii) to ensure safety of deposits,
banks had set limits on loan losses; and iii) to achieve a 99.5% recovery rate for
loans, bankers felt that they must be assured of a secondary source of repayment
should a business not succeed. It was the first time chartered banks revealed their
objective of having a 99.5% recovery rate on small business loans, or a 0.5% loss
rate. It was also the first time banks had used ‘safety of deposits’ to justify taking
minimal risk on small business loans, the implication being that if they were to take
more risk, Canadians at large stood to lose their bank deposits.
There were other factors, not mentioned in the study, that affected chartered
banks’ willingness to take on risks and expend the administrative effort associated
with small business loans. During the 1980s, Canadian chartered banks had
experienced very high loan losses on loans made to developing countries and,
with the 1990 recession, large loan losses had accrued from the commercial
real estate sector. These events led to a general tightening of credit standards
in the banking industry, analogous to what FBDB did in its cost recovery efforts
of the early 1980s. Then there were new capital requirements imposed on banks
emanating from the first Basel Accord. Higher capital requirements meant capital
had to be rationed among competing activities and higher returns generated from
all assets, small business loans included. In such an environment, capital would
flow first to those activities providing the highest returns.
With MPs voicing their displeasure with the state of small business financing
in Canada, the Minister of Industry, the Honourable John Manley, and his Deputy
Minister, Harry Swain, sat down to plan the future direction for FBDB. The Minister,
by his own admission, was not a vocal supporter of the Bank. As a member of the
Opposition in earlier Parliamentary Committee hearings, he had shown by his
questioning of Bank officers that he was not enamoured with some Bank actions.
However, he agreed with his Deputy that the Bank could play a key role in the
government’s Jobs and Growth Strategy. This required changing the vision and
Start of a new era | 201
role for the Bank. In the views of both the Minister and his Deputy, the Bank had to
change its focus or be sold. To support the overall Jobs and Growth Strategy, the
Bank would have to be repositioned to address the needs of a technology, export-
based economy. According to the Minister, the Bank should gradually decrease
its real estate-backed loans and increase loans to knowledge-based companies.
He was prepared to take this new direction and the required changes to FBDB’s
legislation to his cabinet colleagues for approval. The Memorandum to Cabinet
process thus started in earnest.
Minister Manley supported changes to the Bank’s role and mandate. The Bank
had proposed that the clause in its Act to provide financing not otherwise
available on reasonable terms and conditions be removed to allow greater access
to the market like the Farm Credit and Export Development Corporations. On the
other hand, senior officials in the Department of Industry wanted to keep the last
resort role of the Bank intact. Beaudoin took the matter up with Minister Manley
and it was decided the Bank would play a “complementary” role in the market. This
role still envisaged filling financing gaps.
In early 1995, the Memorandum to Cabinet (MC) was written by the new
Associate Deputy Minister of Industry, Kevin Lynch. Referred to by many as having
one of the brightest minds in government, he quickly placed the mandate issues
into a fresh perspective. Soon after, when he was appointed Deputy Minister of
Industry, Lynch became a member of the Bank’s Board of Directors and oversaw
the implementation of his handiwork. (Later he progressed to become Deputy
Minister of Finance and then Clerk of the Privy Council, the highest ranking public
service position in the federal government.)
Lynch broke down the financing gap into four components. First there was
a risk gap in the market. The risk gap resulted from the unwillingness of many
lenders to lend in higher risk situations, even at high interest rates. Then there was
the size gap. This resulted from the relative high costs of assessing small loans,
costs that negated potential returns to lenders. This was the same gap the former
Governor of the Bank of Canada, Gerald Bouey, and Frank Podruski had cited in
earlier times in relation to FBDB’s market role and the small business financing
gap. Lynch also identified a knowledge gap as financial institutions generally did
not have the methods and knowledge base to evaluate lending and investment
risks for businesses in the new economy. Finally there was the flexibility gap, the
unwillingness of lenders to finance promising businesses on flexible terms. These
were situations the Bank had financed throughout its history. Most importantly
for the Bank, Lynch – a top economist in the government – accepted that gaps
existed in the small business financing market. The Minister of Industry would refer
to these gaps frequently in his subsequent presentations in Parliament.
Securing Department of Justice approval for this procedure was crucial from a
timing perspective. It was further agreed the draft legislation would accompany the
Memorandum to Cabinet so that approval of the MC would include approval of the
draft legislation to change the FBDB Act and its presentation to Parliament. It was an
unusual procedure but all concerned parties realized that to meet the deadline of
having new legislation in effect by mid-1995, there was no other alternative.
Daniel Picotte from Martineau Walker was assigned the task of writing the new
legislation. It was decided very early in the process that the existing FBDB Act
would not be amended piecemeal but instead would be replaced completely by a
newly written Act. Normally, businesses would be incorporated under the Canada
Business Corporations Act (CBCA) that would govern their activities. Crown
corporations, however, are governed by their own Acts of Parliament. A crown
corporation cannot do anything that is not included in its enabling Act. This meant
anything the Bank did, or would do in the future, had to be included in its Act. Thus,
the draft legislation had to foresee future needs, reflect precise wording and avoid
anything that could impractically stifle or inconvenience the Bank in the future.
Drafting the legislation literally started with a pencil and a blank sheet of paper.
The existing FBDB Act was a guide but the Bank wanted many of its major clauses
changed. Over the decades – the FBDB Act was over twenty years old – many
legal issues had arisen with respect to the Bank’s activities, especially Treasury’s
borrowing activities and FBDB partnerships with other organizations. These issues
entailed major expenditures on legal interpretations. One objective therefore was
to remove the need for such interpretations by making explicit the powers to carry
out such activities. Jim Hercus as General Counsel had kept a file on all issues that
had to be resolved when the Act was revised.
Daniel Picotte, with his expertise in the CBCA and the Bank Act governing
chartered bank activities, had the task of drafting the Bank’s legislation so that it
contained powers normal corporations would have while respecting the Bank’s
Start of a new era | 203
The legislative task force met its deadline and proceeded to negotiations with
lawyers from the aforementioned government departments. There was a lot of give
and take at these sessions, especially as the new Act had to conform to limitations
imposed by the Financial Administration Act. And lawyers, being lawyers (with the
added presence of economists in the room), had much to argue about potential
interpretations of individual words, phrases and placement of commas. Eventually
a draft of the new Act was agreed on within the tight deadline.
Time was running out for FBDB as it was fast approaching its liabilities ceiling of
$3.2 billion. An alternative was proposed to split the new Bank legislation into two
parts. One part would deal only with raising the $3.2 billion ceiling and the second
would deal with all the other changes at a later date. The Bank’s Board of Directors
agreed that splitting the legislation was neither advantageous nor recommended.
Minister Manley also did not want to split the new legislation. A contingency plan
for credit rationing was again discussed by the Board and was to be implemented
to ensure the Bank stayed within its $3.2 billion ceiling. At the time, new loan
authorizations were increasing at a 17% annual rate.
The Chairman of the Board, Patrick Lavelle, and FBDB’s President met with
Minister Dingwall to discuss passage of the Bank’s Memorandum to Cabinet.
Lavelle had joined the Bank’s Board of Directors as Chairman in October 1994.
He was a former Deputy Minister of Industry in the Ontario provincial government.
Initially, he wanted to be appointed Chairman of the Export Development
Corporation but this posting was not available. Patrick Lavelle was persuaded to
take on the FBDB position after he saw elements of what its new mandate would
be. The Honourable David Dingwall held the unofficial title of Minister for the
Atlantic region. By coincidence, Patrick Lavelle also had ties to the Liberal political
establishment from the region. (At one time he had served as an assistant to the
204 | Chapter 15
At the meeting with the Bank’s Chairman and President, Minister Dingwall
requested that the Bank play a bigger role in Atlantic Canada. He wanted a
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between ACOA and the Bank regarding
support for small businesses in Atlantic Canada. An MOU between the Bank and
ACOA was subsequently signed in mid-1995. The Bank committed to participating
in the capitalization of an Atlantic Investment Fund, to establish a venture capital
office/capacity in the region and, on a best-effort basis, increase lending in the
region over the following three years with emphasis on the new economy. The
meeting with Minister Dingwall led to another major hurdle being cleared and a
new Bank was on its way.
At the Standing Committee stage, witnesses are called to present their views
on the bill at hand and be questioned by committee members. Interested parties
can make representations to the committee and request to appear in person. In
the Bank’s case, it was expected the Canadian Bankers Association (CBA) would
appear before the Industry Committee. They declined to do so, saying they were
too busy, but sent a written position to the committee. The CBA in its submission
opposed changing the Bank’s last resort role. Other industry associations, notably
the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, also did not participate in the
discussion of Bill C-91. The Minister of Industry (the Honourable John Manley), his
Parliamentary Secretary (Dennis Mills), and Bank officers appeared as witnesses
before the Industry Committee in respect of Bill C-91.
On May 31, 1995, the Honourable John Manley and the President of FBDB
appeared at the start of the committee’s hearings. Beaudoin returned the next
week to respond to questions concerning contents of the bill. The following week,
on June 13, the Industry Committee did its clause-by-clause review of Bill C-91,
with Dennis Mills as the principal witness representing the government, assisted by
the Bank’s legislative task force.
Time was of the essence. June 13, 1995 was absolutely the last day the
Industry Committee could conduct its clause-by-clause review and send its
report and recommendations back to the full House of Commons, where they
would be debated and voted on. According to the established timetable, a full
week was needed to get the necessary paperwork and translations done before
a Committee report could be tabled in the House of Commons. It had been
announced Parliament would be recessed on June 22 and would not reconvene
until the fall. More critically, it was widely expected the fall session would open with
Start of a new era | 205
a Speech from the Throne signalling the start of a new session of Parliament. This
meant all legislation that had not passed in the previous Parliamentary session
would have to be reintroduced and the whole process started from scratch.
Only one day, with breaks to attend to matters in the House of Commons such
as the daily Question Period, allowed little time for the Industry Committee to
conduct a clause-by-clause review of the Bank’s legislation, especially given
the new powers being introduced in Bill C-91. The Chairman of the committee,
Paul Zed of New Brunswick, valued highly the consensus building spirit his
committee had forged among its members. This spirit had been evident a year
earlier when committee MPs from both sides of the House of Commons reached
a consensus agreement on the contents of its report Taking Care of Small
Business. He thus allowed in-depth debate when the clause-by-clause session
began. However, the first two clauses studied by the committee were controversial
for members of the Opposition parties – the Bank’s new name and the switch to
become a complementary lender. (Further commentaries from this discussion are
referenced in the next chapter dealing with the substance of the new Act.)
By the end of the morning session, only four of the 50 or so clauses in Bill
C-91 were debated and voted on by the Standing Committee. If the clause-by-
clause review was not completed by the close of day, there would be no new Bank
legislation for a long time.
While it was never divulged what discussions had occurred over the lunch
break, the pace picked up when the committee meeting resumed in the afternoon.
The Chairman allowed debate and discussion of the issues but he moved the
meeting along at a sufficient pace to have the clause-by-clause review and
amendments completed by the end of the day. And there were no complaints from
Opposition Members on the committee about the quick pace. It helped that FBDB
officers, Jim Hercus and Mary Grover-Leblanc, had spent time with Opposition
Members the previous day, briefing them on the key aspects of the legislation and
responding to any questions they had. The Members appreciated this gesture by
the Bank.
The Industry Committee report on Bill C-91 was sent to the House of Commons
for second reading with 33 amendments. On June 21, 1995, the amendments were
debated and voted on in the House of Commons. As one MP proffered, the job of
the Opposition in Parliament is to oppose. That they did. Bloc Québécois MPs said
there was no need for the new legislation as the Bank was doing just fine in the
province of Quebec. They considered expanded powers being given to the Bank
as a federal government tactic to become more involved in the region’s economic
affairs, which they held were the domain of the provincial government. Reform
Party MPs said their Party did not support the creation of new crown corporations
which, technically, Bill C-91 did. In their view, federal crown corporations should
be closed or be privatized. They pointed to the privatization of Air Canada and CN
Rail as exemplary actions by the government. However, they recognized Bill C-91
would be passed by the government majority in the House of Commons, so they
supported the amendments sent by the Industry Committee. If the Bank was going
to exist, it should be structured properly.
206 | Chapter 15
The next day, Bill C-91 was supposed to receive third reading and be passed by
the House of Commons. But Murphy’s Law was at work again and an unexpected
roadblock arose at the last minute. Jacques Hudon, the Bank’s Vice President of
Government Affairs, learned the Official Opposition, the Bloc Québécois, planned
to use parliamentary procedures to block Bill C-91 from being passed. It seemed
the move was not specifically aimed at the Bank but was the result of overall
disagreement with the government. The air in Parliament was heavy with the
upcoming referendum in Quebec. Jacques Hudon immediately apprised Beaudoin
of the situation. He then arranged for Beaudoin to speak with the Leader of the
Opposition, the Honourable Lucien Bouchard. Beaudoin convinced Bouchard to
allow Bill C-91 to proceed through Parliament. If the Bank’s legislation had been
delayed, the Bank would have had no choice but to institute credit rationing the
following month. Quebec, having the largest volume of lending at the time, would
have been most affected.
In the House of Commons, Dennis Mills thanked the Leader of the Opposition
for his cooperation in allowing passage of Bill C-91. He noted a commitment on
the government’s part not to accelerate Bank lending or aggressively promote its
presence in Quebec before the upcoming referendum.
Bill C-91 was passed by the House of Commons on June 22, 1995, the last day
of sitting for that session of Parliament. It was passed in the Senate on July 13,
1995 and received Royal Assent the same day. The Senate Banking Committee
would normally hold its own hearings on any legislation coming before it for
approval. There were no Senate hearings in respect of Bill C-91. Minister Manley
later revealed the concession he had made to the Senate Committee so that Bill
C-91 could be passed quickly in the Senate. The concession was to support the
Senate Banking Committee holding hearings on all federal government financial
crown corporations.
On July 14, 1995, the Bank’s Board of Directors took formal notice of the coming
into force of the new Business Development Bank of Canada Act. It passed all
the resolutions the Corporate Secretary, Andrée Leblanc Daviault, had prepared
so that Bank operations could be carried on seamlessly. Just as in 1975 with the
creation of FBDB, the powers of the new Bank lay in the hands of the Board of
Directors to delegate to officers of the Bank as they saw fit.
At the Bank, there was excitement and jubilation on the day Beaudoin
announced to all employees that the legislation had been passed and that their
employer was now officially the Business Development Bank of Canada.
Chapter 16 | 207
1995
The
BDC act
In their report, Taking Care of Small Business, the Industry Committee had
agreed FBDB should be transformed and re-named Small Business Bank of
Canada. Members of the committee all showed an attachment to this name,
especially the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Industry, Dennis Mills.
It was their baby, as the saying goes. This name for the new Bank was cited
so often following publication of the committee’s report it was being used in
management presentations at the Bank, almost as a fait accompli. But the name
had to be tested: what does it mean to small businesses? When the Bank held
focus groups of small business owners and managers, it posed this question. The
focus groups were also asked to give their reactions to other potential names.
There was consensus among the focus groups; they preferred the name Business
Development Bank of Canada. So this was the name Minister Manley adopted for
the Bank. The tough task of notifying the Industry Committee that the government
proposed to change the name of the Bank to Business Development Bank of
Canada was given to Dennis Mills.
In its clause-by-clause analysis of Bill C-91, the BDC Act, the Industry Committee
voted to send an amendment to the full House of Commons to change the
name back to Small Business Bank of Canada. Minister Manley persevered and
government members in the House voted for the name Business Development
Bank of Canada.
The BDC act | 209
Complementary role
As indicated in the previous chapter, it took a full morning session for the Industry
Committee to review the first four clauses of the BDC Act. The first clause
related to the name of the Bank and the second clause referred to the Bank’s
new complementary role, the two main controversial aspects, and priorities, of
the new Act. The Industry Committee itself had recommended the Bank play a
complementary role in the market, but there were differing views as to what a
complementary role meant. In the version of the BDC Act first tabled in Parliament,
section 14(4) stated: “the loans, investments and guarantees are to complement
those available from commercial financial institutions.”
In its first set of hearings on the BDC Act, members on the Industry Committee
asked what the word “complement” meant. A dictionary definition was given, that
is, to “fill out or complete.” As this question was being asked often, it was decided
to define the word “complement” in the interpretations section of the BDC Act,
Section 2. As such, it spurred debate about the complementary role early in the
clause-by-clause review. Some Industry Committee members wanted the Bank
to remain a last resort lender. Their view was that with the new complementary
role, the Bank would move away from its traditional supplementary lending and
compete with chartered banks for profitable business. It was pointed out to
them that if competing with the private sector were the objective, no reference
to a complementary role would be in the Act. It would then be similar to the laws
governing Farm Credit and Export Development Corporations. The presence
of the condition to be complementary meant exactly that – the Bank would be
complementing financing available from commercial institutions.
The change in the market role for the Bank meant one thing for certain. A
large yoke had been lifted from the Bank. The previous role of having to provide
financing not otherwise available on reasonable terms and conditions was
terminated and by Parliament. So the Bank was no longer obliged to seek letters
of refusals before authorizing loans, a bureaucratic, time-wasting procedure the
Minister of Industry, and the Bank, wanted eliminated. While the Bank’s last resort
role was terminated, the government did not want it to be in full competition with
the private sector either. The word “complement” and its dictionary definition were
chosen to represent a middle ground between these two alternatives.
Not unexpectedly, the practical meaning of the phrase “to fill out or complete”
and more specifically the word “complementary,” would be the subject of many
discussions after the BDC Act came into force. To clarify things, an example
of the complementary role was given by the Bank that reflected a partnership
characteristic of a complementary relationship. If a business had an operating line
of credit with a chartered bank and a term loan with BDC, then the BDC term loan
was considered to be complementing the line of credit (in addition to all the other
services the chartered bank would be providing the business). To underscore this
role, the Bank informed each client’s principal banker of the financing program it
was considering. Another characteristic of a complementary role was described
in the context of markets and product differentiation. An analogy to the beer
market was cited. In the 1990s, the market comprised two major Canadian bottlers,
Molson and Labatt’s, and U.S. bottlers, Budweiser, etc., all competing with one
another in a market also occupied by smaller sized and micro breweries. The latter
provided a specialized product for those who found their product attractive and
were willing to pay a slightly higher price. They were not in the same competitive
market as the major bottlers and were considered to be providing complementary
products. In this analogy, BDC was the smaller sized brewery and chartered banks
were the major bottlers. In the Minister’s view, the Bank, in its complementary
role, would be leading the way in small business financing with its unique risk
assessment methods and new innovative financing instruments.
Share structure
Early on, it had been decided the Bank should convert its capital structure to a
share structure. The previous capital structure, defined by the FBDB Act, included
payments to the Bank of Canada and was worded in such a way that many legal
interpretations had to be done to determine how much capital the Bank could
receive, all at a cost. With multiple interpretations being given by various parties,
Jim Hercus noted in his legislative file that when the Bank’s legislation would be
changed, its capital structure should be converted into a share structure like those
of normal companies incorporated under the Canada Business Corporations Act.
Thus, the next major change incorporated in the BDC Act was the switch to a
share structure for the Bank’s equity. The BDC Act allowed for the issuance of
common and preferred shares to the Designated Minister of the government. In
addition, a clause was added in the Act to allow for the issuance of hybrid capital
to non-government sources. This structure attracted much debate at the Industry
Committee and in the House of Commons.
The BDC act | 211
A new Act allowed the Bank to start with a clean slate by converting the Bank’s
net equity to common shares held by the Government of Canada, each share
with a par value of $100. On July 13, 1995, net equity in FBDB amounted to
$303.4 million. This was converted into 3,034,000 common shares in BDC.
The power to issue preferred shares was included in the BDC Act. It arose from
the FBDB having been rejected, on so many occasions, when it requested new
capital injections. It was proposed by the Bank that private sector institutions
might, at some point, be willing to invest in preferred shares of the BDC thereby
reducing the need for the government to place scarce funds in the Bank. A
mixed private-public sector ownership was envisaged in this scenario although
the private sector would be limited to non-voting preferred shares. Recall in
the debates of 1944, it had been suggested that the IDB should be created as
an institution owned by chartered banks and other private institutions. In 1995,
it was offered by the Bank that chartered banks might be willing to invest in
BDC preferred shares to show their commitment to small business and ward off
criticisms from politicians for not helping this important sector of the economy.
The Minister of Industry did not reject the proposal to include preferred
shares in the BDC share structure. But he wanted the Industry Committee to
debate the issue before making a decision. At the drafting stage, however,
lawyers from the Treasury Board held a different position. The Financial
Administration Act stipulated that only the Government of Canada could own
shares in a crown corporation. It was pointed out by the Bank that if Parliament
wanted, they could change this stipulation via the BDC Act. The issue could
have been a deal breaker. To get agreement to proceed with the legislation to
Parliament, the Act had to be drafted so that only the Government of Canada
could hold BDC preferred shares. Officials allowed preferred shares to be in the
share structure as they thought this vehicle would make it easier for the Bank to
get new capital from the government. Preferred shares could be dividend-paying
and would be classed as a non-budgetary item in the government’s books. That
is, they would not affect the budgetary deficit and would thereby face fewer
obstacles in the approval process.
In its review of the BDC Act, the Industry Committee did not support the notion
of private ownership in the Bank and wanted preferred shares to be issued only
to the Government of Canada. This closed the books on what could have been a
truly innovative public-private partnership.
A clause was added to the legislation to allow for the issuance of hybrid capital
– a defensive move to provide for the event that issuance of preferred shares to
private sector interests would not be allowed. Section 28(1) of the BDC Act stated:
“with the approval of the Governor in Council, on the recommendation of the
Minister of Finance, the Bank may issue to persons other than the Crown, hybrid
capital instruments prescribed in whole or in part, as equity of the Bank.” Section
28(2) stated: “the Crown is not in any way liable for the payment of amounts
owing under an instrument issued under subsection (1).” Section 28(3) stated: “for
greater certainty an instrument issued under subsection (1) is not a share within
the meaning of Part X of the Financial Administration Act.”
212 | Chapter 16
The insertion of hybrid capital instruments into the BDC Act attracted much
debate in Parliament. When asked by the Industry Committee what a hybrid capital
instrument was, François Beaudoin responded with a definition taken from the
Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions, Canada’s financial services
regulator. Hybrid capital was described as an unsecured, subordinated debt that
is fully paid up. Such instruments were not redeemable at the initiative of the
holder but would be redeemable by the issuer after an initial term of five years,
with the prior consent of the Superintendent. The President noted that hybrid
instruments were being used by chartered banks, that they were being referred to
as subordinated debt and were considered Tier 2 capital for regulatory purposes.
Tier 1 capital was usually common shares.
The hybrid capital section made it through Parliament but, for even greater
certainty, another section was added to the BDC Act in this regard. Section
40 stated: “the Governor in Council may, by regulation, define hybrid capital
instrument.” The hybrid capital facility was one of the ‘flexibility’ clauses in the Act,
belonging to the class of “who knows what will occur in the future.”
With respect to BDC’s size limit, Section 30(1) of the BDC Act stipulated that
the aggregate of borrowings of the Bank and contingent liabilities in the form of
guarantees must not exceed twelve times the equity of the Bank. The facility to
increase this leverage to fifteen times, as contained in the FBDB Act, was removed
in the BDC Act. This ensured the Bank would not be over-levered. The factor
of twelve more or less corresponded to capital requirements for private sector
banks under the first Basel Accord. Section 30(2) specified the components of
Bank’s equity: amounts paid for shares, retained earnings which may be positive
or negative, amounts paid-in as capital by Parliamentary appropriation and such
proceeds of debt instruments, hybrid capital instruments or other arrangements
as may be prescribed as equity by the Governor in Council. This clause provided
some measure of flexibility for future unknowns.
Section 23 stated that the maximum of paid-in capital in the form of shares,
together with any contributed surplus and proceeds from hybrid capital
prescribed as equity, must not exceed $1.5 billion. While the FBDB Act placed a
$3.2 billion absolute limit on the Bank’s total liabilities, the BDC Act does not set a
The BDC act | 213
rigid limit as it would depend on the value of each component of the Bank’s equity,
defined by Section 30(2). The amount of retained earnings, for example, would be
a factor in determining the maximum size of the Bank.
Other changes in the BDC Act fell into the categories of “housecleaning” and
“for greater certainty.” Over the years, the Bank had to rely on legal interpretations
for many activities, chief among them, the various borrowing strategies employed
by its Treasury department. Thus, for greater certainty, a whole part was added
in the BDC Act to authorize a full range of Treasury activities. Further, the power
to enter into agreements with others, such as government departments, and to
provide services on their behalf, was made explicit by Section 20 of the BDC
Act. This power was not explicit in the FBDB Act and the Bank again had had to
rely on legal interpretations to carry out such activities as delivery of the Cultural
Industries Development Fund. Section 21 of the BDC Act added that the Bank
could carry out duties assigned to it by the Designated Minister in relation to any
program supporting Canadian entrepreneurship, to the extent it is able to recover
the costs of carrying out such duties. This section was included to make clear the
Bank had to be compensated for any money-losing activity assigned to it by the
Designated Minister.
Section 16 clarified the powers to purchase loans and other instruments from
financial institutions and others for purposes such as securitization. Formerly, under
the FBDB Act, the Bank needed legal interpretations to ascertain such powers.
Section 16 of the BDC Act stated that: “the Bank may acquire and deal as its own
any loan, investment or guarantee made or given by another person if (a) the loan,
investment or guarantee would meet the Bank’s eligibility criteria in sub-section
14(3) or (b) it is part of a block of loans, investments or guarantees the majority of
which meet those criteria.” Sub-section 14(3) essentially stated that the Bank is to
provide financing to enterprises that are reasonably expected to prove successful,
the commercial viability clause as it was referred to under the FBDB Act.
Requests for Bank information filed under the Access to Information Act were
dealt with by Bob Annett, legal counsel for most of his career at the Bank. While
214 | Chapter 16
information collected from clients was considered confidential, there were limits
as to what the Bank could withhold under Access to Information. Section 37 of
the BDC Act made it clear customer information could not be communicated,
disclosed or made available except under specific circumstances which were:
for the purpose of administering or enforcing the BDC Act; for the purpose of
prosecuting an offense under any Act of Parliament; disclosure to the Minister of
National Revenue for the purpose of administering or enforcing the Income Tax
Act or the Excise Tax Act; or with the written consent of the person to whom the
information relates. The BDC Act also triggered an amendment to the Access to
Information Act by adding section 37 of the BDC Act as a recognized statutory
exemption for the purpose of the Access Act. This meant that customer-related
information would be “privileged” and therefore exempt from disclosure under
Access to Information. The first test case of this section came a few years later
in the case of L’Auberge Grand-Mère when reporters tried to obtain client
information from BDC files under provisions of the Access to Information Act.
The Information Commissioner in Ottawa agreed Section 37 of the BDC Act took
precedence over relevant sections of the Access to Information Act.
The Bank’s income tax status was also addressed for greater certainty. There
had been periodic reviews of the income tax status of all crown corporations. Each
time the Bank had to make representations as to why it should not be subject to
income tax. Section 35 of the BDC Act stated: “the Bank is exempt from taxes
imposed by the Income Tax Act.” The intention of Section 35 was to signal to
officials that Parliament wanted BDC to be tax exempt, in effect raising another
consideration to be dealt with if a change were to be made. A noteworthy deletion
from the FBDB Act related to Regional Advisory Councils. With no mention of them
in the BDC Act, they were in effect discontinued. Instead, the BDC Act gave the
Board of Directors explicit power to establish its own advisory groups.
As with the Bank Act governing chartered banks in Canada, a ten year review of
the BDC Act was included. Industry Committee members wanted an earlier review
so the Act stipulated that a review of the BDC Act would be done five years after
passage of the Act and every ten years thereafter. Within a year after a legislative
review, the Designated Minister must submit to Parliament a report on the review.
The report in turn must be reviewed by a committee of the Senate or the House of
Commons or by a joint committee.
With two heavy yokes off its back, the “fubdub” name and reputation as well
as the last resort role, the Bank was now better equipped to move to the next
level. Expectations were very high. Many politicians and officials had rallied to
reach consensus and meet tight deadlines. Stakeholders, the media, the business
community and the Bank’s employees were watching.
Chapter 17 | 215
1995
Mandate
change begets
culture change
The new BDC works quickly to implement its mandate with a new
image, increased visibility, new products and cooperative initiatives
backed by a transformation in corporate culture.
216 | Chapter 17
I n a short period following passage of the legislation to create BDC, many new
strategies were implemented by the Bank’s management. As President,
François Beaudoin led the Bank through this transformation. With vision,
determination and hard work, he championed changes that touched on virtually
all aspects of the Bank’s operations and activities, and set BDC on a strong course
to fulfilling its new role and mandate.
Some of the changes implemented in 1995 had immediate results. Others laid
the groundwork for later achievements. Their outcomes, while occurring beyond
the scope of this history, are included to illustrate the extent of change at the Bank.
From the outset, new BDC legislation was accompanied by expectations for
a new operating approach. The Minister of Industry and his Deputy Minister
wanted a change in the Bank’s market focus. Thus, a new operating mandate from
the government called for a move towards smaller loans and investments, more
focus on knowledge-based and exporting firms without abandoning traditional
activities, strategic alliances with federal regional development agencies,
increased financings to Aboriginal-owned businesses and a revision of the
Bank’s Management Services. Financial conditions were also set as part of the
new mandate. The term lending operation was to operate at least on a break-
even basis, the venture capital operation was to earn a return at least equal to
the government’s cost of funds and the management services operation was to
increase its cost recovery levels.
The new mandate seemed to be a hodgepodge of targets but each was selected
on the basis of what the Industry department thought were the most pressing
needs among small businesses. The mandate to increase the number of smaller
loans and investments was a response to the size gap for loans and the venture
capital industry’s focus on investments of $1 million or more. The focus on
knowledge-based and exporting companies was to align the Bank with the priority
of the department, Industry Canada.
The Department of Industry had also increased its focus on (and funding for)
Aboriginal-owned businesses and wanted BDC to follow suit. The mandate to work
with regional development agencies was intended to encourage synergy between
BDC and regional agency financings. The Memorandum of Understanding
between the Bank and ACOA, the Atlantic region’s development agency, was to
be built on with other regional development agencies.
The new mandate was the result of long discussions between Bank
representatives and officials from the Department of Industry, including
Mandate change begets culture change | 217
discussions at the Board of Directors where senior officials from the Department of
Industry sat. At the Bank’s insistence, the phrase “without abandoning traditional
activities” was added to the mandate. The discussions on what BDC’s market focus
should be were about the dichotomy of the small business population, the low
flyers versus the high flyers, their respective financing risks and contributions to
economic growth. Such discussions were throwbacks to those of the early 1980s
and the Auditor General’s Special Examination in 1993, but wrapped now in the
context of an evolving new economy.
Two weeks after the BDC Act was passed by Parliament in 1995, the Minister of
Industry, the Honourable John Manley, addressed BDC’s Board of Directors. He
outlined the new mandate, stressing that the government was looking to the Bank to
increase its activity in filling financing gaps; in particular, loans to micro-businesses,
knowledge-based businesses, financings for groups such as Aboriginal peoples
and for certain regions such as Atlantic Canada. He acknowledged the Bank would
not abandon its traditional lending sectors, but thought some of these activities,
such as tourism and low technology manufacturing would almost have to be scaled
back. The Minister wanted the Bank to focus much more on strategic lending among
knowledge-based, value added, traded goods firms. He also indicated the Bank
should lead private sector institutions into these areas by example, a mandate to
demonstrate novel and superior banking skills.
The Minister recognized the Bank needed to tool up to meet the challenges
of its new mandate. He cited the need to undertake an effective communications
effort to establish the Bank’s new name and mandate with the business community.
He recognized too that the Bank’s compensation policies had to be changed in
order to recruit and retain appropriate frontline staff. He was looking forward to
receiving a revised Corporate Plan that reflected the Bank’s new mandate.
The Minister expected the new Corporate Plan would lead to a gradual
decrease in real estate-backed loans. This was an issue raised by Departmental
officials at the Board of Directors in the months leading up to the new mandate. At
one point the Bank commissioned Price Waterhouse to conduct a study on the
commercial real estate financing market. The study found the availability of small
business financing for real estate-backed projects had been significantly curtailed.
The number of traditional suppliers had diminished with the takeover of trust
companies by chartered banks. Banks too were favouring residential projects over
commercial real estate projects. This was a reaction to the heavy losses banks
suffered earlier in the decade on commercial real estate projects, especially office
towers in central urban areas.
Minister Manley had told the Bank not to expect any new funding from the
government to carry out its mandate. Thus, a key strategy for the Bank was to
significantly expand its loans portfolio and increase profits to fund start-up
costs associated with new financing programs required to fulfill the new
mandate. Growing the loans portfolio profitably therefore became the prime
operating objective for the Bank. The Bank’s management, recognizing the need
to quickly convert the organization to deliver on its new mandate with respect
to knowledge-based and technology companies, suggested that a separate
division within the Bank should be created to implement new financings to these
companies as they had business characteristics and risk factors significantly
different from those of traditional sectors. Accordingly different skill sets were
needed to analyse their risks and perhaps a different corporate culture.
A precedent cited at the time was the Saturn car company, created as
a distinct company by General Motors in the U.S. to change the culture of
car manufacturing. BDC’s Saturn Division would concentrate on providing
quasi-equity financings to knowledge-based and high technology companies
within a different mode of operation. Project Saturn, as it was called, was quickly
rejected by the Board as it was felt the whole Bank should undergo a cultural
change to meet the demands of its new mandate especially as it related to
financing knowledge-based companies.
sought the advice of Nuala Beck. She had written extensively on the emerging
new economy and the kinds of companies that made up the new economy.
While her writings provided numerous examples of these companies, she had
no standard definition that could be measured. The Bank therefore worked with
Industry Canada to establish which Statistics Canada industry classifications
could be used as a proxy for knowledge-based companies. In the end, a
series of industry classifications were chosen to represent knowledge-based
industries. These classifications reflected where knowledge-based companies
were prevalent and were adopted by the Bank and Industry Canada to measure
knowledge-based activities.
Since his arrival at the Bank in 1990, Beaudoin had made significant changes
to the Bank’s operations. The new mandate however called for fundamental,
structural change. The Bank did not have the luxury of time and had to move on
many fronts simultaneously. First, the Bank had to create a new image of itself.
Then this image had to be engrained in the minds of small business owners and
recognized by industry and the public at large. Internally, the skills and productivity
of the Bank’s human resources had to be sharpened to meet the requirements
of the new mandate. There were major challenges related to staff turnover,
staff competencies and compensation. These had to be resolved quickly. New
products had to be developed for the target groups stipulated in the new mandate.
Management Services needed an overhaul to mesh with the new mandate and to
increase cost recovery. Venture Capital also needed to increase its level of activity.
Perhaps most importantly, there had to be a culture change throughout the whole
organization. Changing an organization’s culture is often the most difficult of tasks.
And doing so normally takes years.
When, during the legislative process, it became evident what the Bank’s new
name would be, a few quick actions were taken. First was selecting the trade
name/acronym for the Bank. Would it be like the previous FBDB/BFD, the Bank’s
initials in English and French? Management wanted only one set of initials, BDC,
even though it was not a complete abbreviation of the English name of the Bank.
As mentioned earlier, over the years the initials FBDB were often misspelled in
the media. The initials also led to the nickname “fub dub.” The Bank did not want
this small part of its history repeated and its name mangled along the lines of
“bud dub.”
220 | Chapter 17
Another immediate task was to get a new logo for the Bank. Christiane Beaulieu,
in charge of Public Affairs, put out a call for proposals to design a new Bank logo.
The three top national agencies doing this type of work were asked to tender their
designs. The designs that were submitted did not excite the Bank’s reviewers,
including the President. So Beaulieu decided to call on the talents of a small
Montreal-based firm managed by Roland Ménard who produced the stylized
intertwined D&C that became the eventual choice for the Bank’s logo.
Before finalizing decisions on its acronym and logo, the Bank commissioned
Insight Canada to get a reaction from small business owners, like it had done
with the Bank’s new name previously. All four designs of the logo received by
the Bank were tested in four focus groups. The intertwined D&C with the maple
leaf garnered by far the most favourable reception. It was seen to represent a
cooperative, hand-in-hand service-oriented company. It was more associated with
a high technology company than a bank. A few participants thought the logo was
too “oriental-looking” for a Canadian organization particularly since it was red in
colour. The maple leaf however helped offset this impression while adding a sense
of stability. (Later, a Board member had to be assured by the head of Corporate
Affairs that the logo was not an expletive in Chinese or any other language.)
The focus groups also preferred the use of BDC as the acronym for the
Bank. BDBC was considered difficult to remember and pronounce and the
letters BC at the end made some think it was an organization specific to British
Columbia. Getting the Bank’s logo and trade name right was important since they
represented the public’s first impression of BDC’s image.
When the decision to use BDC as the trade name was final, Tony Singelis
of Management Services had the presence of mind to suggest that the Bank
immediately reserve its 1-800 toll free phone number and domain name for its
website. The first choices were 1-800-BDC-INFO for the toll free number and
BDC.com for the website. Singelis tried to get the toll free number and domain
name reserved but found they were already taken. The Bank settled for the toll
free number 1-888-INFO-BDC and the web domain, BDC.ca.
Groupe BCP was again commissioned to develop new ads for the new BDC
including print ads for newspapers and magazines as well as television ads.
As before, the ads were tested in focus groups of small business owners who
provided their impressions of the messages the ads were conveying. Using a
pre-exposure/post-exposure methodology, the impacts of the ads were measured
Mandate change begets culture change | 221
Ex-post, the impacts of the ads showed that recall of BDC advertising had
jumped by 11 percentage points, from 18% to 29% among small business owners
at large. Among BDC clients the recall jumped from 45% to 58%. Recall of ads was
important as about half of all small business owners who recalled BDC ads were
likely to consider using the Bank’s services. The following year, fiscal 1998, the
Board of Directors, at the President’s urging, approved another special budget of
$4 million to extend the advertising.
Advertising was just one prong in the campaign to raise awareness of the
Bank and change its public image, albeit the most expensive. The next strategy
was for more effective media relations. The object was to get more articles about
the Bank published in newspapers and magazines as well as television exposure.
The latter was difficult to achieve but Beaudoin did appear several times on
television to promote the Bank and its services. He was even interviewed on the
national program Canada AM to promote Small Business Week. (While this meant
being in the CTV television studio in Markham, Ontario at 5:30 a.m., it was worth
the exposure.)
In its media relations strategy, the Bank would produce articles ready for
publication and relay them to business news editors and journalists. Peter Stewart,
the master writer in the Public Affairs department, would ask branch offices
to provide success stories, clients whose line of business or growth would be
newsworthy locally. He would then craft an article around the client’s business, all
the while making the connection to BDC and its services. The article would then
be transmitted to local journalists. Many of these articles were published with little
modification. They became so popular with branch offices that a standard article
was crafted that could then be used by local branch managers who would fill in
the name of the client and description of the business. Placing a BDC ad in some
business magazines was accompanied by a Bank article in the magazine, a sort of
quid pro quo understanding.
After the Bank received its new legislation and mandate, there was a huge
increase in the number of press releases the Bank sent over the news wires.
New products created by the Bank provided attractive content for such releases.
So too were the results of studies on the economic impact of small businesses
sponsored by the Bank, and in particular those done for the Association of
Canadian Venture Capital Companies (ACVCC). When Small Business Week
arrived, there would be numerous BDC-written articles sent to local and national
media to generate interest. The highlight of the media strategy of the day was a
14 page Globe and Mail supplement on Small Business Week. It published BDC’s
articles but was paid for by advertising dollars from BDC and its partners, including
222 | Chapter 17
FedEx, Bank of Montreal, Nortel, Scotiabank, IBM, Microsoft, Royal Bank and
Export Development Corporation. Fourteen pages of advertising in the Globe
and Mail would cost several million dollars. BDC’s share was just a fraction but the
focus of the supplement was BDC’s Small Business Week. When the Bank’s media
tracking service tallied all BDC related articles published each year in news
media, it was estimated that the value of the publicity the Bank received from the
articles ran in the millions of dollars, far outstripping the advertising budget.
The Bank worked on other fronts to polish its image. Profit$ magazine, delivered
to all business addresses in Canada, received a long-needed makeover. It became
a brighter looking magazine with a glossy finish and images in bright colours. The
makeover was akin to a ‘rags to riches’ transformation. Success stories were added
to the content and the previous practice, where all articles were written by in-house
staff, was changed so that most of the articles were now contributed by external
professionals. The latter received free publicity in return for their efforts. This was
another avenue to building partnerships with small business advocates.
New brochures for the Bank’s various products were also produced. These
brochures emphasized the Bank’s new economy focus by placing Canadian
inventions, and their inventors, prominently on their covers. The covers were so
attractive and informative, many people visiting a BDC office would instinctively
take one or more to carry with them. The Bank also had to construct its website.
With no in-house expertise, the job of building the website was contracted out.
The first version was quite basic if judged by later standards – websites were still a
new phenomenon in the mid-1990s – but it received a favourable rating from small
business owners who accessed it.
The next prong in the communications plan was to have BDC managers speak
about the Bank’s new mandate at business conferences. More funds were made
available to regional and branch offices to sponsor small business related events,
where BDC promotional material would be displayed and a speech given by a
BDC representative. Each local branch manager was expected to deliver one
speech each quarter at a local business event. Depending on the nature of the
conference, sometimes senior management would be called on to deliver the
speech. Beaudoin delivered several to very large business audiences, for example
at Board of Trade conferences.
Later on, in 1998, the Bank launched a Community Support Strategy at national
and local levels. The strategy, targeted at Canadian youth involved in various
sports activities, was intended to enhance the Bank’s image in communities where
it was present and to show it was a good corporate citizen, giving back something
to the community. The ultimate objective was to expose the Bank to Canada’s
future entrepreneurs. One of the first sponsorships was that of a ski group in
Mont Tremblant, north of Montreal. The ski group had the BDC name prominently
featured on their clothing. This caused some concern as it recalled the early 1970s
when skiers at Banff, Alberta with their “On UIC” bibs created a huge political
uproar. Fortunately there was no similar reaction to the BDC-sponsored skiers.
Another strategy to improve BDC visibility involved new branch office openings
to extend the reach of the Bank. Storefront locations in high business traffic areas
Mandate change begets culture change | 223
were chosen for new branch offices. And since the Bank would be a class A tenant,
like federal government departments, Beaudoin insisted the Bank be given
prominent signage on buildings. When head office and the Montreal area office
moved to Place Ville Marie in downtown Montreal in 1996, the Bank procured
the rights to have its logo placed at the top of the building, 5 PVM. The building
became officially known as The BDC Building/L’édifice de la BDC. Similar signage
rights were procured in prime locations such as the Bentall Centre in Vancouver,
the Cogswell Tower in Halifax and at the intersection of King and York in Toronto.
The head office move to Place Ville Marie in Montreal was an example of
controversy avoidance. Beaudoin was determined to keep the process free of
any political influence and so called on an independent consultant to assist the
Bank in its review of proposals. The Board of Directors created a special Premises
Committee of the Board to oversee the project. The office space market was
depressed at the time so the Bank was able to negotiate what was seen by the
industry as a very favourable lease for its new premises.
Simone Desjardins,
Vice President,
Human Resources
and Administration.
Desjardins estimated that over the life of the new lease at Place Ville Marie, the
Bank realized savings of some $27 million compared to the terms of the expiring
lease. To ensure the Bank’s process was fair and free of undue influence,
Desjardins called in the federal Department of Supply and Services (DSS) to
review the procedures used. DSS was the department negotiating all real estate
procurements and leases for the whole federal government. DSS officials lauded
the Bank for its procedures which they found to be thorough as well as beneficial
for the Bank.
224 | Chapter 17
When Rob Yuzwa arrived at the Bank in the early 1990s, what he found was a
frontline staff with a 30% turnover rate per year and salary levels approaching
50% of comparable private sector positions. To deal with the turnover, the Bank
introduced a program to hire new employees to replace those leaving. It was
called Selecting the Best and the Brightest. Beaudoin had a penchant for flair.
When a new Bank program was to be announced, he made sure it caught attention.
Much like the official launching of Small Business Week each year, major events
noted for their highly professional and theatrical-like productions. In Selecting the
Best and Brightest, young post-graduates from business schools were targeted.
They would bring their talents to the Bank and the Bank would train them in “The
BDC Way.” At the start of the program, many came, many were trained, many left.
Veni, vidi, reliqui. They went away for higher pay at other financial institutions. At
human resource conferences, Yuzwa would be thanked by other bankers for the
well-trained personnel they had hired away from the Bank.
Yuzwa worked with two Vice Presidents, Human Resources through most of
the 1990s, Simone Desjardins and Dave Mowat, to build a human resource (HR)
administration structure to support the Bank’s overall objectives. They held
numerous meetings with Treasury Board officials to try and get some relief from
salary constraints imposed on the Bank. But there was little movement in closing
the gap with the private sector. It was not until the new mandate was announced
that the Board of Directors made the decisions to move the Bank to market
compensation levels. Even then, it took until 1998 for the Bank to finally reach
parity with private sector counterparts.
Adjusting compensation levels was only one, albeit major, piece of the puzzle
to put an effective HR administration structure in place. Others involved job
ratings, performance measurements and their relation to compensation amounts.
Over the years, the Bank’s job rating system had been thoroughly massaged by
managers wanting to get the last ounce out of the rating system for their staff
(and themselves). The rating system was based on the Hay system but it became
so discombobulated by actions to circumvent salary constraints that in the early
1990s, the Hay group threatened to remove the Bank from its salary surveys. The
results of the Hay surveys were used by numerous large corporations, including
the Bank, to gauge market pay scales for comparable job ratings. The Bank’s input
was so out of range, they were skewing the Hay benchmarks. To make the HR
Mandate change begets culture change | 225
The senior account manager (SAM) position at BDC was very similar to its
equivalent at chartered banks and so was used as the benchmark against which
other positions would be rated. In the BDC system, the SAM position was given a
B9 rating. Difficulties were encountered in rating some professional support jobs
as the scope of the Bank’s operations was smaller than that of a chartered bank.
Also tying private sector compensation levels to equivalent job ratings was not
possible for senior management as their salaries were compressed to maintain a
practical relative relationship to the President’s salary. The latter was set by the
government and reflected the public service pay scale for deputy ministers, a pay
scale that bore no relationship to private sector jobs as no equivalents existed
in the private sector (it was thought). At the end of the exercise, all jobs were
re-rated and the Bank was kept in the Hay system.
PACT became a two-way communication tool for staff and their supervisors.
Managers had no choice but to sit with subordinates and discuss their evaluations.
It also provided the opportunity for subordinates to provide their own comments
as well as their career aspirations. This feature meshed with a succession planning
system also instituted after the new mandate was received.
In the early 1990s, the Bank was losing account managers to chartered
banks. Before the decade was out, the Bank had turned around its reputation
in the market and chartered banks were losing their account managers to BDC.
Chartered bank managers were now complaining BDC was stealing their good
employees. With its new training and human resource policies, BDC was attracting,
and retaining, the best and the brightest.
Regional office authority was distributed to the Bank’s seventeen area offices,
each now headed by a Vice President and Area Manager (VPAM). Support
functions formerly in regional offices – for example, controller and human
resources – were placed in field service support centres but overall, the number
of staff in regional support functions was reduced. Head office support functions
too had to be “rationalized.” This term signalled staff had to be reduced. Since
the first cost recovery efforts of the early 1980s, it had been Bank doctrine that if
field staff was being reduced, proportionate reductions had to be made at head
office. There was little room to reduce staff so some services were contracted out
to meet head count objectives. As an example, the Bank’s translation service was
Mandate change begets culture change | 227
contracted to an external supplier. This led to higher costs but the head count
objective was achieved. As recounted earlier, the Bank also looked at contracting
out its information systems functions but declined to do so as costs would have
been too great. As staff counts in support functions were decreasing, the number
of staff dealing with customers increased.
The reorganization emanating from Direct Access meant that a number of staff
had to be reassigned to new positions. The young hires who stayed with the Bank
and had shown promise were given more responsibilities and coaching to grow
within the Bank. The reorganization also led to a number of staff leaving the Bank.
In total, between 1993 and 1998 there was a 50% staff turnover in the Bank, with
an even higher percentage in branch offices. There were 500 new hires over this
period while total Bank staff stayed fairly steady at around 1,000, of which just
under 900 were in the Loans Division. An early retirement plan was authorized by
the Board of Directors as part of the Direct Access program.
The next task was to introduce products that focused on particular parts of the
new mandate. These new products were basically all variations of existing lending
and quasi-equity products. In term lending, new products would extend the risk
the Bank was prepared to take. But they were given attractive names and limits on
the amounts that could be financed. The attractive names pinpointed their target
groups and also helped garner attention in the market. The volume limits ensured
losses accumulating through the learning period would be contained.
Before the new mandate was announced, working capital was seen as the
greatest need by small business. Nothing new here except that it was highlighted
by the Industry Committee in its report Taking Care of Small Business. In response,
BDC launched the Working Capital for Growth product. Term loans of up to
$100,000 were made available to top-up existing lines of credit customers
had with their chartered banks. Next up were Micro business loans. These were
loans of up to $25,000 that could be made by the Bank contingent upon the
228 | Chapter 17
Then came Patient Capital, essentially the ‘venture loan’ product the Bank
had introduced in the early 1990s with a new name (and registered as an official
trademark of the Bank). Advocates for small business were saying that the pressing
need for financing by new growth companies was capital that was patient; that is,
capital that did not have to provide an immediate return. So the Bank’s venture
loan product was rebranded as Patient Capital. It targeted knowledge-based
businesses with high growth potential that could not attract venture capital. Like
its venture loan predecessor, returns were based on a combination of interest
and royalties tied to a client company’s sales or profits. Patient capital started out
with a maximum loan size of $250,000 that was soon raised to $500,000. This
product later evolved into subordinate financing.
An MOU was also struck with Farm Credit Corporation (FCC) to establish a
joint Agri-business Development fund. The fund was intended to provide up to
$100 million in financing over a three-year period. There were other areas of
cooperation specified in this MOU, including cross-referrals of clients, usage of
respective offices when visiting clients and staff secondments.
The MOU with FCC was part of a larger push by the government to have its
financial crown corporations work in a more cooperative manner. Recall the
concept of merging these corporations arose in the latter half of the 1980s. After
passage of the BDC Act in 1995, the Senate Banking Committee in its review
of the government’s financial crown corporations, looked at this concept again
and recommended the merger of BDC and FCC into one institution. The Export
Mandate change begets culture change | 229
Development Corporation (EDC) was excluded from the merger proposal, perhaps
because it was dealing principally with large corporations. After consideration of
the Senate committee’s recommendation, the government decided not to merge
BDC and FCC. One likely issue in this file was the location of the head office
of the new entity and its jobs. The political uproar that followed the assignment
of the F-18 jet fighter maintenance contract to Bombardier of Montreal, instead of
to Bristol Aerospace of Winnipeg, was probably still fresh in political minds. So
instead of merging corporations, a Council of Financial Crowns was created
to coordinate operational activities as well as dealings with clients as much as
possible among the financial crowns. The Chairman and President of each of
the financial crown corporations as well as deputy ministers from sponsoring
departments sat on the Council.
In the spirit of cooperation, BDC and EDC renewed their partnership for
providing working capital financing to exporters. The Export Receivables
Financing product, launched in the late 1980s, was revitalized and renamed
Working Capital for Exporters. It was launched as an innovative new p roduct.
It provided up to $250,000 in BDC financing to top-up existing lines of
credit to finance higher inventories and receivables, production of goods
and export marketing.
The introduction of numerous new products showed the Bank was serious
about meeting its new mandate and would not go about the task in its usual,
time-honoured way, by providing term loans. “New Times and New Horizons” (the
moniker on the fiscal 1996 BDC Annual Report) called for new approaches and
while the new products were all variations of three basic financing products from
the 1980s – term loans, venture loans and venture capital – they signalled to
the business community a new BDC approach to responding to their financing
needs, and in particular to those in the Bank’s target sectors, knowledge-based
companies and exporters. To be sure, credit risks would be extended with the new
products, especially working capital financing and patient capital, but they were
contained, as noted earlier, by placing limits on total amounts financed with these
new instruments and by the enhanced loan monitoring system that had been put
in place in the early 1990s. In effect, the Bank was extending its risk spectrum but
in a carefully managed way.
The new BDC significantly ramped up its presence in the Canadian venture
capital market to address the gap in private sector financing of high growth
firms requiring smaller investments. The objective was to increase activity and
maximize leverage by co-investing with other players in the market. In this way,
BDC helped develop the venture capital industry while supporting a greater
number of emerging, high growth firms. BDC’s portfolio of venture capital
investments increased almost four-fold by the fiscal year 2000.
In the mid 1990s, the federal government moved to increase emphasis and
resources to support First Nations’ entrepreneurship. The Department of Industry
had created a separate branch responsible for Aboriginal Business development.
It would provide support to Aboriginal Capital Corporations that were set
up across the country. BDC’s new mandate called for increased financing to
Aboriginal-owned businesses. Financing these businesses posed challenges to
the Bank throughout its history as it could not take security on First Nations’ lands.
Some loans were made but not many. Too few to be counted.
advocate for Aboriginal businesses within the Bank. Thus, his first tasks were to
increase BDC’s profile in the Aboriginal business market and develop products
and programs to better serve the market.
To effect the transformation, the Division would have to restructure the way it was
organized to accommodate the shift from being product-driven to client-driven; it
would have to develop a new marketing strategy to target knowledge-based, growth
232 | Chapter 17
companies and exporters; it would have to totally revamp its roster of counsellors
and build a network of functional experts; and it would have to have the right skill
sets in its human resources which meant another round of hiring and de-hiring.
The new market role for the BDC Consulting Group would lead to a drastic
reduction in the number of clients receiving management services from the
Bank. In fiscal 1995, before the transformation started, the Bank reported over
5,000 counselling assignments were completed, 35,000 participants attended
Bank seminars and workshops, and 43,000 participated in mentoring programs.
With the new focus of the BDC Consulting Group, the number of clients for the
division would drop to below 10,000 annually. Precise figures are not available
as the Bank stopped reporting on the number of clients served. A four-year
transformation period was envisaged starting in fiscal 1998. At the end of 1999, the
Division was still in the “thick” of the transformation dealing with major challenges in
change management and acquiring the right skill sets among its human resources.
to convince the news crew there was no story to report. Hotel accommodations at
Whistler were cheaper than in Vancouver since it was off-season at Whistler, all staff
were attending training seminars, which the reporter saw, and no one was on the golf
course. The reporter called his producer to tell him there was no story – and returned
to Vancouver with his camera crew to seek out another story.
There was one other national conference of note, this one attended by all
account managers from across the country in September 1996. They were
the frontline staff who would deliver on the key objective of the new mandate:
to increase the proportion of loans going to knowledge-based and exporter
companies. The conference was held to update everyone on where the Bank stood,
how well it was doing in respect of its new mandate and what objectives lay ahead.
The conference ensured every account manager received the same message,
undiluted, from the Bank’s senior officers. The conference opened with a scene that
underscored the task the Bank faced. The hall darkened and then spotlights shone
on actors, dressed in black, rappelling down from the 25 foot ceiling to the musical
theme from the Mission Impossible movie series. It recalled, for some, the comment
made by the Small Business Financing Review in 1981. The SBFR report had stated
that achieving the Bank’s mandate would be “heroic if not impossible.”
In the second half of the 1990s, the whole Bank was being transformed. With
its new BDC Act and new mandate, BDC was a different development bank from
FBDB. François Beaudoin had put in place all the major pieces needed to get
BDC moving in its new direction. The Bank had a new image and much wider
visibility. New p roducts (with catchy names) oriented towards meeting the needs of
knowledge-based, exporting and high growth firms were being introduced. Direct
Access had restructured the delivery of the Bank’s services and led to increased
productivity. The Bank’s human resources had been re-tooled with effective
performance measures and compensation policies. The Bank literally presented
a new face resulting from de-hirings and the hirings of “young guns.” BDC was
becoming a preferred employer of choice. There was a sense of purpose among
BDC employees.
By the turn of the century, the oak tree evoked in E. Ritchie Clark’s history
of the Industrial Development Bank, referred to in earlier chapters, had grown
to new heights: the trunk was wider, its branches higher and its roots deeper. It
had weathered twenty-five years of recessions and upswings, low points and
near death experiences, reviews and transformations. At its essence, the Bank’s
genetic make-up remained unchanged: reservoirs of high-mindedness and
the willingness of many employees to work really hard, overcome seemingly
insurmountable obstacles and take pride in helping Canadian SMEs thrive.
The new BDC had emerged stronger and was poised to play a leading role in
supporting the vitality of entrepreneurship in Canada in the years ahead, a decade
of accelerated competition and globalization, of financial crises and technological
revolutions – challenges left for the next sequel in the Bank’s history.
The next sequel in the Bank’s history – which was filled with both successes and
challenges – is still being written 20 years later.
234 | Appendix 1
1975 to 1995
Members
of the boards
of directors
Federal Business Development Bank
and Business Development Bank of Canada
Members of the boards of directors | 235
1975 to 1995
Contributors
T he following persons graciously gave their valued time to meet with the author.
They are listed more or less in the order they were interviewed.
The author is especially grateful to Ching Jung, Dominique Davies and Susan Hughes
for keeping valuable historical data, especially those on staff counts and loan loss
recognition, not available elsewhere. These data provide the underpinning for
describing many important trends and events provided in this History.
238 | Chapter 17