Canada's Big Five banks have ruled the country's retail banking market for decades.
The federal government just gave the green light to one of the biggest threats to that lineup in years.
Final Approval From Ottawa
EQB Inc. runs the digital-first EQ Bank platform. It agreed in December 2025 to buy PC Financial from grocery giant Loblaw for about $800 million in cash and shares.
PC Financial includes President's Choice Bank. It also covers a few related insurance and brokerage units.
The Competition Bureau cleared the deal in March. The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions then made its formal sign-off.
The Federal Minister of Finance approved the deal on May 5. EQB now expects the deal to close this summer.
PC Financial brings 2.5 million customers to the table. It also gives EQ Bank access to Loblaw's national footprint.
That includes more than 2,800 store locations under brands like Loblaws, Shoppers Drug Mart, and Pharmaprix.
What EQB Adds To Its Balance Sheet
The deal pushes EQB's combined customer base to 3.3 million Canadians. It adds about $5.8 billion in assets.
It also adds about $800 million in direct retail deposits. EQB already held $142 billion in assets under management as of late January.
The deal also makes EQB the only financial partner of PC Optimum. That is Loblaw's loyalty program, with more than 18 million active members.
PC Optimum points and the PC Mastercard get folded into EQ Bank's digital platform. EQB CEO Chadwick Westlake described the move as building Canada's first "Challenger-driven, loyalty-linked banking ecosystem."
EQB Steps Up Against The Big Five
Equitable Bank, EQB's main unit, ranks as Canada's seventh largest bank by assets.
The PC Financial deal jumps it into a different tier. It now has grocery-aisle reach, a household loyalty program, and a digital platform that takes on the Big Five on everyday banking.
For Loblaw, the deal hands off the daily work of running a regulated bank. It keeps the loyalty engine that drives grocery and pharmacy traffic.
Loblaw CFO Richard Dufresne said the deal unlocks gains for PC Financial customers and PC Optimum members. Those gains include more products, services, and ways to earn rewards.
What To Watch
EQB has said there will be no quick changes to the customer experience after closing.
The integration work is where the value of the deal will actually show up. That includes what gets rebranded and what gets rolled into EQ Bank.
EQB stock trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange under the ticker EQB. Loblaw trades under L.
The deal first surfaced in late 2025. PC Financial was set up in 1998 and has earned PC Optimum members more than $1 billion in points to date.
Westlake said the federal sign-off signals support for stronger banking competition. He framed the deal as a step toward a more dynamic Canadian banking system.
For investors, the close itself is the next checkpoint. EQB plans to share more details once the deal clears.
The deal also gives EQB a much bigger national brand. PC Financial is well known in Canadian grocery aisles. EQ Bank is mostly a digital-only name today.
That brand boost could help EQB win more deposits over time.
