The National - News

HSBC’s third-quarter profit increases 76% thanks to improved economic outlook

- MASSOUD A DERHALLY

HSBC, Europe’s largest lender, said its third-quarter profit rose 76 per cent after it released provisions that were earmarked for bad loans that did not materialis­e.

Pretax profit for the quarter to the end of September rose to $5.4 billion, from $3.1bn in the year-earlier period, the bank said yesterday.

The results beat the $3.78bn average estimate of 14 analysts compiled by HSBC.

HSBC released $700 million in cash it had put aside as provisions for bad loans during the Covid-19 pandemic, compared with an $800m charge it took a year ago.

This was a reflection of “continued stability in economic conditions and better-than-expected levels of credit performanc­e”, the bank said.

All of the bank’s regions were profitable during the third quarter, with Asia, the lender’s most important market, contributi­ng $3.3bn to the group’s reported profit before tax.

HSBC UK’s reported profit before tax increased by $1bn to $1.5bn.

“We had a good third-quarter performanc­e, with strong growth in profits supported by additional credit provision releases. Our strategy remains on track, with good delivery in all areas. This was reflected in more consistent top-line growth, robust lending pipelines across our businesses and rising trade and mortgage balances,” said Noel Quinn, group chief executive.

“While we retain a cautious outlook on the external risk environmen­t, we believe that the lows of recent quarters are behind us. This confidence, together with our strong capital position, enables us to announce a share buyback of up to $2bn, which we expect to commence shortly.”

In an interview with Bloomberg Television on Monday, chief financial officer Ewen Stevenson said HSBC expects no material fallout from indebted property developer Evergrande.

Reported revenue edged up 1 per cent to $12bn and the revenue outlook is becoming more positive, with fee growth across the bank’s businesses and a stabilisat­ion of net interest income expected to begin increasing in the coming quarters as lending picks up and interest rates rise.

The bank said it continued to “demonstrat­e strong cost control over the course of the year”.

In light of rising inflation, continued investment and the impact and timing of recently announced acquisitio­ns and disposals, HSBC now expects adjusted costs of about $32bn for 2021 and 2022, excluding the estimated UK bank levy charge of $300m.

“With an improved revenue outlook and the prospect of rising policy rates, we remain committed to achieving a RoTE [return on equity] of greater than or equal to 10 per cent over the medium term,” it said.

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