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HSBC warns of restructur­ing pain ahead as outlook darkens

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HSBC Holdings Plc dropped its 2020 profit target, reported a sharp fall in earnings and warned of a costly restructur­ing, as interim chief executive Noel Quinn seeks to tackle its problems head-on in his bid for the full-time role.

Quinn branded the lender’s sluggish performanc­e in Europe and the United States as “not acceptable”, but said investors may have to wait until early next year to hear his full plans to “remodel” Europe’s biggest bank by assets.

The latest bid to restructur­e HSBC comes amid a gloomy business environmen­t, including an escalating Us-china trade war, Britain’s protracted withdrawal from the European Union, an easing monetary policy cycle, and unrest in Hong Kong.

HSBC reported pre-tax profit of Us$4.8bil for the third quarter yesterday, compared with the Us$5.3bil average of analysts’ forecasts.

“Overall a poor set of results,” said analyst Edward Firth at broker KBW.

“But the good news is that this performanc­e looks set to finally goad the management into taking some of the actions to address underperfo­rming businesses that we have been awaiting.”

The earnings update is HSBC’S first under Quinn, and is widely seen by shareholde­rs and insiders as a report card on his audition for the CEO role full-time.

“Our previous plans are no longer sufficient to improve performanc­e for these businesses, given the softer outlook for revenue growth,” Quinn said of the bank’s US and European operations.

As a result of a “more challengin­g” revenue outlook compared with the first half of the year, HSBC said it did not expect to meet its return on tangible equity (ROTE) target of 11% in 2020.

One of Quinn’s biggest headaches is HSBC’S US retail banking busi

ness, which has struggled for years against much bigger domestic rivals and where it booked a loss of Us$189mil in the first nine months of the year.

Some analysts have said the bank could look to shutter the business entirely, but Quinn dismissed the notion.

“You should not read into anything I’ve said that we are looking to exit the retail bank in the United States,” he said yesterday.

A veteran of the bank since 1987, Quinn, 57, has made no secret that he is keen to secure the permanent appointmen­t of CEO from chairman Mark Tucker, who said in August the search to replace the ousted John Flint would take six to 12 months.

Quinn said the bank, which generates the bulk of its revenue and profit in Asia, would rebalance capital away from low-return businesses and adjust its cost base.

HSBC will also look to cut costs by simplifyin­g its notoriousl­y complicate­d management structure and internal reporting lines.

“There is scope throughout the bank to clarify and simplify roles, and to reduce duplicatio­n,” Quinn told Reuters.

Such action could result in significan­t costs in the fourth quarter and beyond, including the possible impairment of goodwill and additional restructur­ing charges, the bank said.

The near- to medium-term outlook for HSBC, and rival Standard Chartered PLC, has also been clouded by anti-government protests in Hong Kong, their single biggest profit centre.

 ?? — AFP ?? Profit down: A woman is seen walking towards a HSBC branch in Hong Kong’s Central District recently. HSBC’S pre-tax profit slips 18% to Us$4.8bil in the third quarter.
— AFP Profit down: A woman is seen walking towards a HSBC branch in Hong Kong’s Central District recently. HSBC’S pre-tax profit slips 18% to Us$4.8bil in the third quarter.

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