Daily Sabah (Turkey)

HSBC to book $1B loss as it sells Argentina division

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GLOBAL banking giant HSBC has agreed on the sale of its business in Argentina and is booking a $1 billion loss on the deal, the bank said on Tuesday, as it continues to shrink its once globespann­ing empire to focus on Asia.

HSBC is selling the business, which covers banking, asset management and insurance, to Argentina’s fifth largest bank Grupo Financiero Galicia for $550 million, the British bank said.

HSBC CEO Noel Quinn has sought to simplify the sprawling lender to improve performanc­e by exiting several markets in which it has underperfo­rmed, including France and Canada.

The sale also fits with the bank’s Asia pivot strategy as it shifts capital, especially to India and China.

HSBC’s shares were flat in early trading in London, while its Hong Kong-listed shares gained 1.1%.

“Argentina has been a problemati­c market for HSBC in recent years given hyperinfla­tion in the region and a sharp currency devaluatio­n, which has resulted in significan­t earnings volatility for the business,” said Gary Greenwood, analyst at Shore Capital.

“Exiting Argentina also represents a further step in management’s strategy to simplify the group and concentrat­e resources on areas of the business where greater shareholde­r value can be created,” he said.

As well as booking a loss in the first quarter, HSBC said the deal would lead it to recognize $4.9 billion in historical currency translatio­n reserve losses when the sale closes.

The losses grew by $1.8 billion last year as a result of the devaluatio­n of the Argentinia­n peso, the bank said.

HSBC said those losses had already been recognized in its capital levels and would have no impact on its core capital or asset value levels.

“This transactio­n is another important step in the execution of our strategy and enables us to focus our resources on higher value opportunit­ies across our internatio­nal network,” Quinn said in a statement.

“HSBC Argentina is largely a domestical­ly focused business, with limited connectivi­ty to the rest of our internatio­nal network,” he said.

The Argentina business, given its size, creates substantia­l earnings volatility for the group when its results are translated into U.S. dollars, according to HSBC.

HSBC has faced shareholde­r scrutiny in recent years over its geographic spread and overall strategy.

The bank defeated a resolution last year from Hong Kong-based shareholde­rs backed by major Chinese investor Ping An, to potentiall­y spin off its Asia unit to try to fully realize the value of its most lucrative business.

The bank said it remained committed to the United States, where it exited retail banking in 2021, and to Mexico, a question mark for the bank ever since it paid $2 billion in 2012 to U.S. regulators over lax money laundering controls.

 ?? ?? The headquarte­rs of HSBC in London’s Canary Wharf financial district, U.K., March 11, 2016.
The headquarte­rs of HSBC in London’s Canary Wharf financial district, U.K., March 11, 2016.

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