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(Reuters) - Canada's second-biggest lender TD Bank reported a fall in fourth-quarter profit on Thursday, hurt by weakness in its U.S. business due to the impact of anti-money laundering issues.

The lender in October became the biggest bank in U.S. history to plead guilty to violating a federal law aimed at preventing money laundering and agreed to pay $3 billion in penalties.

TD has been hit by a rare asset cap imposed by regulators in the United States. The bank will reduce its assets in the country by 10% and sell as much as $50 billion of low-yielding bonds and reinvest the proceeds.

The bank's U.S. retail business posted an adjusted net income of C$1.10 billion ($782.70 million) in the quarter, a decrease of C$174 million from a year earlier.

Analysts believe TD could look to get more competitive in the domestic market following the U.S. asset cap imposition.

Canada's TD Bank quarterly profit falls on US business weakness

The bank's adjusted net income fell to C$3.21 billion ($2.28 billion), or C$1.72 per share, in the three months ended Oct. 31, from C$3.49 billion, or C$1.82 per share, a year earlier.

($1 = 1.4054 Canadian dollars)