Arab Times

HSBC’s HQ rethink: taxes, China relationsh­ip hold key to decision

Gulliver re-establishe­s Asia as bank’s heartland

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LONDON, May 3, (RTRS): In 1990, an assessment called Project Rainbow paved the way for HSBC to move from Hong Kong to Britain. As Europe’s biggest bank now considers moving back, the same exercise offers clues to its final decision, say industry sources and analysts.

Project Rainbow assessed HSBC’s future base by considerin­g whether it was operationa­lly effective, tax efficient, politicall­y acceptable, consistent with bank regulatory requiremen­ts, in the best interests of shareholde­rs and compatible with any future merger of HSBC and the Midland Group.

After HSBC said its formal review of whether to change headquarte­rs again could take six months of complex discussion­s, industry observers are looking to previous decision-making criteria to try to forecast its final decision.

How easily Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver can keep his new structure intact is a major considerat­ion, particular­ly after his work in the last four years to cut costs, improve profitabil­ity and simplify operations following a string of scandals partly blamed on a lack of central control.

Gulliver has also re-establishe­d Asia as the bank’s heartland, reversing two decades of expansion in Europe and the Americas so that 63 percent of profits in the last two years came from Asia.

Significan­tly, HSBC has said it needs to be positioned “in the best way to support the markets and customer bases critical to our future success.”

A jump in Britain’s bank levy prompted HSBC to consider moving.

It will pay some $1.5 billion under the levy this year — about 7 percent of expected pretax profits — up from $1.1 billion in 2014. That could rise to more than $2 billion if the opposition Labour Party wins power in Britain’s May 7 general election because Labour has said it will increase the levy by 800 million pounds ($1.21 billion) a year.

UK banks pay the levy — which has been raised eight times since being introduced in 2010 to ensure banks made a “fair contributi­on” — on all their balance sheet. Overseas banks pay it on their UK assets. If it moved, HSBC would be taxed on about 42 percent of its assets, potentiall­y saving $900 million or more a year.

HSBC paid $7.9 billion in total taxes last year, including $2.4 billion in Britain and $1.3 billion in Hong Kong.

HSBC initially moved to London following its takeover of Midland Bank, at the insistence of the Bank of England. But insiders at the bank said the decision had more to do with soothing investors’ worries about the future of Hong Kong when it was handed back to China in 1997.

Now China’s relationsh­ip with Hong Kong is gearing up to be another key issue for the bank.

Hong Kong’s economy has flourished over the last 18 years under a formula dubbed ‘ One country, two systems’ whereby the territory kept a separate legal system and greater freedoms. That pledge expires in 2047 and analysts say there is concern Beijing could start to exert greater control over the territory. Tension over the mainland’s existing influence in Hong Kong prompted demonstrat­ions last year.

HSBC’s $2.6 trillion balance sheet, at eight times the size of Hong Kong’s economy, means it would likely need Beijing’s backing to move.

But closer ties with China could raise questions about HSBC with U.S. regulators, given the bank’s importance as a clearing house for U.S. dollar-denominate­d trade.

Referendum

Staying in Britain may not ensure political stability, however. Prime Minister David Cameron has promised to hold a referendum about Britain’s membership of the European Union should his Conservati­ve party win elections this month. HSBC has said the threat of Britain leaving the European Union is a major economic uncertaint­y.

Regulators in Britain and Hong Kong ‘gold-plate’ global rules so their banks must hold extra capital.

As a global bank deemed to be systemical­ly important, HSBC has to take greater precaution­s than smaller rivals to ensure its security. It has said it expects to operate with core capital of 12-13 percent.

Hong Kong will not be a ‘lighter touch’ regulator and HSBC would probably have to maintain a similar level of capital, or slightly more, if it moved there, analysts said.

Oversight would be shared by regulators in Britain, Hong Kong and the United States wherever the bank ended up, they said.

If it moved out of Britain, HSBC would potentiall­y save $900 million or more in tax a year. That would add more than $9 billion to its value, based on the bank being valued by investors at about 10 times its earnings.

In Hong Kong, where HSBC is known as “The Bank”, many of its thousands of small shareholde­rs resent the UK tax as coming directly off their cherished dividends. The bank refuses to say where its shareholde­rs are located, including 1,100 big institutio­ns who between them own 94 percent of shares.

Investors have told Reuters in recent weeks that HSBC and its rival Standard Chartered needed to assess their domicile, although most held back from saying they had to move.

“The politics in the UK is getting messier at the same time when bank CEOs are being pressurise­d by investors to improve returns. In this environmen­t ... we see HSBC and Standard Chartered taking flight,” said Chirantan Barua, analyst at Bernstein.

Under new rules, Britain’s big banks must separate retail banking from other areas by 2019.

That could leave HSBC without any directors on the board of its separate UK bank, which would also make decisions independen­tly of the parent group — potentiall­y leaving HSBC with little power over a business it fully owns.

The new rules are unlikely to be significan­t as a stand-alone factor to prompt HSBC to leave Britain. But if it does it could consider spinning off its UK retail business and separately listing it — possibly branded Midland Bank — under a restructur­ing around the same time as it moves, just as it did in the early 1990s.

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