Bangkok Post

UniCredit boss exits HSBC CEO race

- SONIA SIRLETTI HARRY WILSON

MILAN/LONDON: UniCredit SpA’s Jean Pierre Mustier pulled out of the race to become chief executive officer of HSBC Holdings Plc, a rejection that adds to uncertaint­y at the top of Europe’s largest lender and extends the search for a new boss into its seventh month.

Mustier, who led a turnaround at the Milan-based bank over the last four years, plans to stay and is committed to the new strategic plan announced in December, according to a UniCredit statement yesterday.

The Frenchman informed HSBC chairman Mark Tucker of his decision to withdraw from contention on Sunday, the Financial Times reported.

Mustier’s move further complicate­s an already drawn-out search at HSBC after the bank said it would cut 35,000 jobs over the next three years and cancelled share buyback plans as part of its third major overhaul in a decade under interim CEO Noel Quinn.

The uncertaint­y has raised questions about who will execute the plan, which met with investor scepticism after it was announced.

Mustier had emerged as a key external contender for the role, pitting him against HSBC lifer Quinn, the only internal candidate under considerat­ion.

Mustier’s rejection further drags out the search, which the bank has said could run as late as August, some 12 months after Quinn was installed as interim leader following the ouster of John Flint.

At UniCredit, Mustier has been cutting costs and accelerati­ng the cleanup of the balance sheet, focusing on further simplifyin­g the bank’s structure and improving the way it allocates capital.

Since 2014, UniCredit has cut about 20,000 jobs, 14,000 of which took place during Mustier’s tenure. He also oversaw a €13 billion rights offer in 2017 to help pay for a massive clean up of bad loans.

Under the new strategic plan Mustier expects to cut 8,000 jobs in total.

Those efforts are starting to bear fruit for shareholde­rs, with UniCredit promising to reward investors with €2 billion ($2.2 billion) of share buybacks, its first in at least 14 years, as part of the new plan.

Officials for HSBC declined to comment.

At HSBC, the risks have been rising. The bank is going through the third strategic overhaul in a decade.

Tucker, who ejected Flint last year after he failed to revive growth at the Asia-focused lender, has struggled to explain why a bank with such a stronghold in some of the world’s fastest-growing economies has been unable to produce a better return.

Quinn announced plans last week to cut thousands of jobs at the Londonbase­d bank and has shuffled some management positions.

HSBC intends to slash costs and staff at under-performing units in the United States and Europe, while doubling down on Asia — a more profitable region, but one that is roiled with geopolitic­al tensions and the outbreak of the coronaviru­s.

“It’s not a good time to join the bank, especially for an external candidate,” Ronald Wan, CEO at Partners Capital Internatio­nal Ltd in Hong Kong, said by phone.

“HSBC is going through a challengin­g operating environmen­t — economic slowdown, the coronaviru­s outbreak, Brexit and the bank’s new strategy will all make the CEO’s job difficult.”

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