Times Colonist

96% profit drop for biggest European bank

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LONDON — Europe’s biggest bank, HSBC, said Monday that its net profit plummeted 96 per cent in the second quarter of this year as lower interest rates combined with the downturn due to the coronaviru­s pandemic tool hold.

The bank’s net profit attributab­le to ordinary shareholde­rs was $192 million in the April-June quarter, down from $4.37 billion reported in the same period a year earlier.

London-based HSBC has most of its business in Asia, where the pandemic began, first emerging in central China.

Near-zero interest rates meant to help businesses keep running with cheap credit are squeezing margins for lenders. The bank forecasts expected credit losses of $8 billion-$13 billion in 2020, though it said that was “subject to a high degree of uncertaint­y.”

HSBC said its lending in the last quarter fell three per cent to $29 billion while deposits rose six per cent to $85 billion as customers saved more and spent less.

Revenue slipped 12 per cent to $5.6 billion thanks to slimmer interest rate margins and weaker wealth management activity.

One area of growth was mobile payments, which jumped more than doubled from a year earlier to $71.4 billion.

Earlier this year, the bank said it will shed some 35,000 jobs as part of an overhaul to focus on faster-growing markets in Asia and as it tries to cope with a slew of global uncertaint­ies, from Brexit to the trade wars to the pandemic.

The bank’s chief executive, Noel Quinn, said in a presentati­on posted online that HSBC paused its restructur­ing efforts in the last quarter to focus on supporting its customers.

“Our first half performanc­e was impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, falling interest rates, increased geopolitic­al risk and heightened levels of market volatility,” Noel Quinn, the bank’s chief executive, said.

Still, he said, HSBC’s Asia business showed “resilience.”

“We are also looking at what additional actions we need to take in light of the new economic environmen­t to make HSBC a stronger and more sustainabl­e business,,” Quinn said.

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