This section provides the key highlights of the Bank’s financial results for the year ended December 31, 2022. These highlights should be read with the financial statements and accompanying notes for the year ended December 31, 2022. Management is responsible for the information presented in the Annual Report.
To fulfill its mandate, the Bank has access to several tools to support the Canadian economy and financial system. When key financial markets became strained in March 2020, the Bank responded by introducing several programs to provide liquidity and maintain market functioning. As markets gradually improved, most facilities and operations were suspended, discontinued or scaled back. This led in 2021 to ending quantitative easing and moving into a reinvestment phase. In 2022, the Bank stopped reinvestment and began quantitative tightening. Refer to the Bank’s website for the relevant press releases and market notices and more information on these measures.
Financial position (in millions of Canadian dollars) | ||
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As at December 31 | 2022 | 2021 |
Assets |
Bank notes in circulation represents approximately 29% (23% as at December 31, 2021) of the Bank’s total liabilities. Bank notes in circulation increased by 4% to $119,726 million as at December 31, 2022, mainly reflecting an increase in demand during the year.
Deposits consists of deposits made by the Government of Canada, members of Payments Canada and others. Although deposits were previously maintained at a lower level, they now represent the largest liability on the Bank’s balance sheet. This balance has declined by 21% to $273,333 million as at December 31, 2022, compared with December 31, 2021, reflecting the start of quantitative tightening in April 2022.
Securities sold under repurchase agreements decreased by 51% to $17,396 million as at December 31, 2022, compared with December 31, 2021. This liability represents the repurchase price for securities repo operations and overnight reverse repo operations. The Securities Repo Operations program supports core funding markets and the proper functioning of the Government of Canada securities market. Overnight reverse repos help to effectively implement monetary policy by withdrawing intraday liquidity, complementing the standing deposit and lending facilities.
Equity turned negative during the fourth quarter of 2022, primarily as a result of net losses of $1,111 million, and sits at a deficiency of $97 million as at December 31, 2022. The net losses—after drawing down the statutory reserve of $25 million—are recorded as an accumulated deficit. Equity also includes $5 million of authorized share capital, a special reserve of $100 million, an actuarial gains reserve of $444 million and an investment revaluation reserve of $440 million. Refer to Note 14 in the financial statements for more information about the Bank’s equity.
In 2022, after a period of higher-than-average income, the Bank incurred a net interest expense. This does not affect the Bank’s ability to conduct monetary policy or its operations. The Bank incurred a net loss in 2022 because the interest incurred on deposits was greater than the interest earned on assets. The interest expense on deposits was higher in 2022 because the Bank increased its policy rate from 0.25% to 4.25%. In time, the Bank will return to a net income position.
Interest revenue depends on market conditions, their impact on the interest-bearing assets held on the Bank’s balance sheet, and the volume and blend of these assets. The Bank earns interest on its investments in Government of Canada securities, on SPRAs and on assets resulting from the large-scale asset purchase programs. In 2022, interest revenue increased by $351 million (or 9%) over 2021. This increase was driven by higher yields and a higher average holding of interest-yielding investments by the Bank throughout the year.
Interest expense consists mainly of interest incurred on deposits held by the Bank. During the year, as a result of rises in the Bank’s policy interest rate, interest expense quintupled. This resulted in an increase of $3,863 million compared with the same period in 2021. The increase was partially offset by a lower average volume of deposits during the year and by a decrease in the interest rate paid on Government of Canada deposits to 0% in May 2022.
Operating expenses in 2022 decreased by $2 million compared with 2021. This primarily reflects a decrease in bank note research, production and processing costs, offset by increases in costs for staff and technology and telecommunications.
Other comprehensive income for the year was $406 million. It consists of remeasurement gains of $401 million on the Bank’s defined-benefit plans as a result of increases in discount rates,2 offset by a decrease in the fair value of the plans’ assets. It also consists of a $5 million increase in the fair value of the Bank’s investment in the Bank for International Settlements.
The Bank’s 2023 plan (in millions of Canadian dollars) | ||||||
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2022 budget | 2022 actuals | 2023 budget | ||||
For the year ended December 31 | $ | % | $ | % | $ | % |
Staff costs | 407 | 53 | 378 | 53 | 419 | 52 |
Bank note research, production and processing | 55 | 7 | 51 | 7 | 60 | 7 |
Premises costs | 35 | 5 | 35 | 5 | 35 | 4 |
Technology and telecommunications | 101 | 13 | 104 | 15 | 118 | 15 |
Depreciation and amortization | 71 | 9 | 75 | 10 | 78 | 10 |
Other operating expenses | 97 | 13 | 69 | 10 | 96 | 12 |
Total operating expenses | 766 | 100 | 712 | 100 | 806 | 100 |
The Bank’s financial management framework supports strategic planning. It enables decisions for allocating resources to achieve the Bank’s objectives, mitigate risks and invest in the Bank’s people and tools in a prudent fiscal manner.3 The year 2022 was the first year of the Bank’s 2022–24 strategic plan, Delivering on Our Promise.
Staff costs represents the largest portion of the Bank’s expenditures. Other expenditures include the cost of enhancing systems and tools to support operations to sustain the Bank’s resilience posture and prepare for the future, as well as supporting the Bank’s new mandates, continuing the Bank’s digital transformation and reducing the Bank’s risk. In 2022, the Bank did not spend its full budget, mainly due to slower-than-planned recruitment, the timing of other operating expenses and lower-than-planned benefits costs resulting from a change in the discount rate.
For details of the Bank’s financial reporting framework and accounting matters, refer to the accompanying annual financial statements.
The Bank maintains a framework to evaluate the design and effectiveness of internal controls over financial reporting. This framework includes disclosure controls and procedures to provide reasonable assurance about the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of the financial statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards. Every year, the Bank certifies its internal controls over financial reporting. This process is based on the Internal Control–Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission and on the Control Objectives for Information and Related Technologies framework.
The Risk management section provides an overview of the Bank’s 2022 risk management activities and achievements. It also reviews in detail the key areas of risk—strategic, operational, financial, and environment- and climate-related. The financial risks are discussed further in the notes to the December 31, 2022, financial statements. The pandemic has heightened the Bank’s exposure to financial risks.
Management has considered the impact of climate change, especially in the context of the disclosures included in the Annual Report. In 2023, the Bank will publish a stand-alone disclosure of climate-related risks in accordance with guidance published by the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures. The Bank will continue monitoring the evolving financial reporting standards for climate-related disclosures.