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RBC Stock Tops 52-Week High Ahead of May 28
20 May 2026
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RBC Stock Tops 52-Week High Ahead of May 28

TORONTO, May 20, 2026, 16:06 EDT

  • Royal Bank of Canada shares added 1.99% to C$257.55 late in the Toronto session, just under the C$257.91 52-week high on the books.
  • Fitch upgraded RBC’s legacy senior long-term debt to AA+ from AA, according to a filing on May 19.
  • Investors are looking ahead to RBC’s Q2 results out May 28.

Royal Bank of Canada shares hit a 52-week high Wednesday as Toronto stocks bounced back after two weak sessions. RBC was at C$257.55, up C$5.02, or 1.99%, at 3:49 p.m. EDT, after reaching C$257.91 earlier in the day. Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, National Bank of Canada and Bank of Nova Scotia moved higher too, with gains seen across the bank group, not just at RBC.

RBC’s timing is in focus ahead of its earnings next week. The bank, seen as a bellwether for Canadian credit, mortgages and wealth, reports second-quarter results on May 28 at 8:30 a.m. ET. Investors are watching to see if the bank’s rally holds up on loan growth, margins, and credit costs.

Canada’s S&P/TSX Composite Index climbed 0.9% to 34,067.18 late Wednesday morning, with gains in 10 out of 11 sectors. The market moved higher after news of movement in U.S.-Iran peace talks, which took some pressure off inflation and brought bond yields down. Shiraz Ahmed, founder of Sartorial Wealth, told Reuters that investors remain “very, very concerned” about inflation. Ahmed said Nvidia’s results due later could give markets a “temporary bump.” Reuters

RBC got a credit-rating bump that factored into the move. Fitch lifted the bank’s legacy senior long-term debt to AA+ from AA in a May 19 U.S. filing, and held the short-term rating at F1+. The ratings agency kept the long-term issuer default rating for senior long-term debt at AA-. The legacy senior debt covers older bank debt not included in Canada’s “bail-in” regime, which allows some debt to be converted to equity in a crisis. RBC

This isn’t an earnings beat. It’s about funding. Banks’ higher-rated debt matters since wholesale investors track ratings to price risk, and ratings move the needle when bond markets get volatile.

RBC started the week on strong footing. The bank posted record first-quarter net income in February, bringing in C$5.8 billion, a 13% gain over last year. Adjusted diluted earnings per share hit C$4.08, also up 13%. The CET1 ratio was 13.7%.

RBC started fiscal 2026 from a “position of strength,” Chief Executive Dave McKay said. He cited a “robust balance sheet and capital position.” The bank gave back C$3.3 billion to shareholders for the quarter in buybacks and common dividends.

But if rates move, the trade could flip. The TSX dropped to a two-week low the day before, with higher oil prices fueling fresh inflation fears and pushing up long-term borrowing costs. “Oil remains expensive,” Michael Sprung, president at Treegrove Investment Management, told Reuters, adding that inflation expectations were “going higher.” For RBC, a new bond selloff, weaker housing credit, or an increase in credit loss provisions in next week’s numbers would be the most direct downside signs. Reuters

RBC is still seen as a cleaner large-cap option in the Canadian financial sector right now. The stock is at a new high, which cuts down the room for error. Investors will look to the May 28 earnings to see if the bank’s capital position isn’t coming at the expense of growth.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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