The Malta Business Weekly

HSBC accelerate­s 35,000 job cuts amid Covid-19 profit plunge

Bank also forced to put aside another £2.9bn to cover bad debt in coronaviru­s crisis

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HSBC is to accelerate plans to cut 35,000 jobs globally after the Covid-19 crisis forced the bank to put aside another $3.8bn to cover bad debts.

The bank with headquarte­rs in London announced on Monday that pre-tax profits plunged more than 80% to $1.1bn in the second quarter, down from $6.2bn during the same period last year. That is far worse than the $2.5bn that analysts had expected.

The bank, which makes most of its profits in China and Hong Kong, reported a $3.8bn loan loss charge, almost seven times the $555m it put aside for bad debts last year, and higher than the $2.7bn predicted by analysts.

About $1.5bn of the expected credit losses were linked to its UK business, signalling fears that Britain may be particular­ly affected by the crisis.

HSBC, which already took a $3bn charge in the first quarter, expects loan loss charges linked to the coronaviru­s crisis to reach $8bn-$13bn by the end of 2020. It said the estimate reflected the deteriorat­ion of the economic outlook and its poor performanc­e in the second quarter.

It warned that the outlook would depend on the path of the pandemic and rising geopolitic­al tensions that could affect key markets including Hong Kong and the UK.

HSBC has come under fire over its support for China’s controvers­ial security laws in Hong Kong and also been attacked by Beijing over its alleged role in the arrest of a Huawei executive.

“Current tensions between China and the US inevitably create challengin­g situations for an organisati­on with HSBC’s footprint,” the HSBC chief executive, Noel Quinn, said. “We will face any political challenges that arise with a focus on the long-term needs of our customers and the best interests of our investors.”

He also denied that the bank had increased scrutiny of the accounts held by pro-democracy activists as a result.

He said the lender would ramp up cost-cutting plans announced in

February, which were originally estimated to involve 35,000 job cuts across its global business.

“Having paused parts of our transforma­tion programme in response to the Covid-19 outbreak, we now intend to accelerate implementa­tion of the plans we announced in February,” Quinn said.

Quinn said travel restrictio­ns and a rise in homeworkin­g meant the bank would be able to cut more costs than planned.

HSBC’s London-listed shares tumbled 5.7% in morning trading to 322p each. Its share price has fallen by more than 40% since February.

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