China Daily

HSBC further sharpens focus on Asia markets

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Internatio­nal banking group HSBC sent a signal that it is looking to increase its focus on activities in Asia after it was revealed that the number of staff based in Europe who earned 1 million euros ($1.2 million) or more in 2020 fell to 324, from 420 the previous year.

This news comes shortly after it was reported that HSBC’s equities trading unit in London is to be reduced in size, with some jobs being lost and others relocated to Paris or Hong Kong.

Website Financial News reported that in the time of COVID-19, the Bank of England has advised lenders in the United Kingdom to show restraint in bonuses paid to senior staff. In the case of HSBC, among the elite group of employees known as material risk takers, the average figure fell by 11 percent from the year before.

Overall, the company’s bonus pool for 2020 was reduced by 20.4 percent, and there was a sharp increase in severance payments.

The Financial Times has reported that the company plans to retreat from business in the West and invest up to $6 billion in operations in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, the Chinese mainland, and Singapore, with chief executive Noel Quinn saying it “will move the heart of the business to Asia, including leadership”.

Fourth-quarter profits are expected to have plunged by 50 percent, but with its Asian operations having performed well during this time, performanc­e-related pay has been better for HSBC workers in that region.

Quinn said the transforma­tional effect of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic would leave a lasting effect on the way HSBC looked and operated in years to come, and also in where it operated.

Facing reality

“We have got to face reality, the world has changed,” the Financial Times quoted him as saying. “Our travel and premises costs will be a lot less than they were pre-COVID.”

He added in the report that the company would “adopt a more flexible working environmen­t” and would be jettisonin­g some of its more expensive working premises, although not in its birthplace, Hong Kong, or its iconic London headquarte­rs, in Canary Wharf.

The company’s chairman, Mark Tucker, added that investors needed to be won back and their recent skepticism overcome, with the bank demonstrat­ing its adaptabili­ty and forward thinking.

“In 2020, we experience­d economic and social upheaval on a scale unseen in living memory,” he said. “The external environmen­t was being reshaped by a range of factors, including the impact of trade tensions between the United States and China, Brexit, low interest rates and rapid technologi­cal developmen­t.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong