Business

Home Capital names veteran of Canadian mortgage industry as new CEO

Yousry Bissada joins Home Capital, Canada's largest alternative mortgage lender, as it struggles to recover from a series of problems

One of new leader's top priorities will be to select a chief financial officer

The entry to the Home Capital Group's headquarters is seen at an office tower in the financial district of Toronto in this May 2017. The company has tapped Yousry Bissada to become its chief executive officer. (Chris Helgren/Reuters)

A veteran of the Canadian financial services and mortgage industry has been appointed the next CEO of Home Capital Group Inc., which is working to restore investor and customer confidence after the company appeared to be on the brink of collapse earlier this year.

Yousry Bissada, 57, will join the Toronto-based alternative mortgage lender on Aug. 3.

The announcement comes three weeks after Home Capital earned a vote of confidence from famed American billionaire Warren Buffett, whose Berkshire Hathaway is investing in the company and providing much needed funding.

Berkshire Hathaway has agreed to buy up to $400 million in stock — about 39 per cent Home Capital's total equity — and provide a $2 billion line of credit to offset cash that Home Capital customers have withdrawn from their savings accounts.

One of Bissada's top priorities will be to select a new chief financial officer as Home Capital, the country's largest supplier of alternative mortgages, undergoes sweeping changes to its senior management team and board of directors.

"We want to be the first choice for depositors, borrowers and brokers," Bissada said in a statement Wednesday.

During the 1990s, Bissada had executive roles in mortgage operations at CIBC and TD Canada Trust. He was CEO of Filogix, a software and service provider to the mortgage industry, from 2000 to 2007. Since 2011, he has been CEO of Kanetix Ltd., a technology company that operates an online platform for insurance quotes.

He also serves as a director of Equity Financial Holdings Inc, another non-bank mortgage provider, and is a past chairman of two mortgage lenders, Canadian Financial Corp. and Paradigm Quest Inc.

Brenda Eprile, who has been chairwoman of Home Capital's board of directors since May, said that Bissada has proven his ability to balance an entrepreneurial culture with operational and regulatory discipline.

"These are precisely the characteristics we see driving our future success," Eprile said.

Home Capital required an emergency $2 billion line of credit from the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan in April after its customers started withdrawing their savings, which the company uses to fund its mortgage lending. That came after the Ontario Securities Commission alleged that the company had misled investors in its handling of a scandal involving falsified loan applications.

Home Capital agreed to settle both the OSC case and a class-action lawsuit filed by investors, prior to Berkshire's investment.

Bissada has led a number of business transformations.