TRADE WARS
Asia-focused HSBC profits double as bank reverses credit losses
By Jerome TAYLOR
Hong Kong (AFP) April 27, 2021

HSBC bank on Tuesday said its first-quarter profits more than doubled, helped by a reversal in credit losses as well as its ongoing restructuring and pivot to Asia.

Adjusted profit before tax surged 109 percent to $6.4 billion from a year earlier although reported revenue slipped five percent to $13.0 billion in part because of low interest rates.

The results, which beat estimates, are a shot in the arm for the Asia-reliant lender after a tumultuous year that saw its fortunes take a hammering from the coronavirus and simmering geopolitical tensions.

"I am pleased with our revenue and cost performance, but particularly with our significantly lower expected credit losses," Chief Executive Officer Noel Quinn said in a statement.

Quinn struck a cautiously optimistic note for the near future with hopes high that mass vaccinations may start to ease pressure on the global economy, even as infection numbers continue to soar.

"The economic outlook has improved, although uncertainties remain," he said.

Bright spots included a $400-million reversal in credit losses as well as its Europe and US regions returning to profit.

In the UK, pre-tax profits were more than $1.0 billion for the quarter.

Britain's vaccine roll-out "has really given us the confidence that the UK economy has the potential to rebound", Quinn said in a call with reporters.

Like all banking giants HSBC was battered by the coronavirus last year with a 30 percent plunge in 2020 profit.

Under Quinn, the bank has embarked on a dramatic restructuring, rolling out plans to cut its workforce by about 35,000 to drive down costs and to refocus on its most profitable areas -- Asia and the Middle East.

- Source of vulnerability -

HSBC makes 90 percent of its profit in Asia, with China and Hong Kong the major drivers of growth.

In February it published a new strategy laying out plans to redouble its attempt to seize more of the Asian market.

Weighed down by low interest rates, it is planning to seek out more fee-based income, especially wealth management for Asia's increasingly affluent.

It recently announced four senior executives would relocate to Hong Kong from the bank's London headquarters as part of its Asia pivot and it would plough an additional $6 billion into shoring up operations in the region.

Quinn, who is remaining in London, said Tuesday that the UK is a "good place" for an international bank's headquarters, having recently highlighted London's important role as a global financial hub.

At the same time, HSBC's historical and present-day connections to China are both its major selling point and a source of vulnerability.

It has found itself more at risk than most global banks to the increasingly frayed relationship between China and western powers -- especially after Beijing imposed a draconian security law on Hong Kong last year and cracked down on democracy supporters.

HSBC endorsed the security law, a move that led to criticism from lawmakers in Britain and the United States, and has frozen the accounts of some Hong Kong democracy activists at the request of local authorities.

At the same time the lender has found itself called out by Chinese state media for providing information that helped lead to the arrest in Canada of a top Huawei executive.

HSBC says it has to obey the laws in each jurisdiction it operates in.

But it warned political tensions would continue to be a risk.

"Evolving developments in Hong Kong, US policy on strategic Chinese industries, claims of human rights violations and other potential areas of tension may affect the Group in terms of the impact of sanctions, as well as regulatory, reputational and market risks," the bank wrote in its profit statement.

Elsewhere, HSBC is keen to offload less profitable operations. In Tuesday's profit update it said it was "continuing with negotiations" to sell its French retail division.

In the US, it said it was exploring "both organic and inorganic options for our retail banking franchise".

jta/dan-ved/bcp/leg

HSBC


Related Links
Global Trade News

TRADE WARS
Asian markets drop with Fed, earnings and Biden in focus
Hong Kong (AFP) April 27, 2021
Markets dipped in Asia on Tuesday ahead of a big week of key events including the Federal Reserve's latest policy meeting, Joe Biden's State of the Union address and earnings from tech titans. While trading floors are geared up for a rocket-fuelled surge in economic activity in the second half of the year and into the next thanks to vaccinations and the easing of lockdowns, investors are in wait-and-see mode for now. The Fed's gathering, which concludes Wednesday, is broadly expected to see it r ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

TRADE WARS
Greece to lend Patriot battery to Saudi as Huthi attacks spike

Missile Warning Satellite Delivered to Cape Canaveral

Lockheed Martin awarded $3.7B to modernize key missile defense mission

Lockheed, Northrop to compete for Next Generation Interceptor program

TRADE WARS
Explosion at Israeli rocket factory a controlled test

Pentagon Will Attempt Hypersonic Missile Shootdown Using US Navy's SM-6 Missile

SeaRAM missile launched from littoral combat ship USS Charleston in exercise

Air Force's hypersonic missile booster fails to launch from B-52 in first test

TRADE WARS
Future drones likely to resemble 300-million-year-old flying machine

Cuban engineers' dreams take flight with home-grown drones

Skydweller Aero validates initial flight hardware and autopilot software

Navy exercise tests unmanned vessels, aircraft

TRADE WARS
Northrop Grumman designs protected Tactical SATCOM Payload Prototype for the Space Force

Japan-Germany international joint experiment on space optical communication

Parsons awarded $250M Seabed-to-Space ISR contract

Air Force exercises push data integration from across military domains

TRADE WARS
BAE, Oshkosh to build prototype cold-weather vehicles for U.S. Army

Marines to begin testing, evaluating new physical training uniforms

Marine Corps commandant to testify before Congress on training fatalities

U.S. military readiness has 'degraded' over last two decades

TRADE WARS
Lockheed Martin And Thales Australia team up to make weapons locally

Guterres and Ban Ki-moon call for ASEAN to act on Myanmar

Senators seek to boost military spending on quantum computing

EU set to expand Myanmar sanctions to military-linked firms

TRADE WARS
NATO fighter jets scramble to intercept Russian aircraft over Baltic Sea

Five key points from Putin's state of the nation speech

Cooperate despite 'genocide'? Biden tests ties with China, Russia

Philippines' Duterte prepared to deploy navy over South China Sea claim

TRADE WARS
Scientists use DNA technology to build tough 3D nanomaterials

New "metalens" shifts focus without tilting or moving

Nanowire could provide a stable, easy-to-make superconducting transistor