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HSBC warns loan losses could hit Us$13bil

Banking group’s profit falls more than half

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LONDON: HSBC Holdings PLC warned its bad debt charges could blow past a previous estimate to Us$13bil this year and said its profits more than halved, as the coronaviru­s pandemic hammered the bank’s retail and corporate customers worldwide.

The results from Europe’s biggest bank by assets yesterday reinforced the trend of lenders across the world increasing their buffers to absorb souring loans at a time when companies - from aviation to retail and hospitalit­y sectors - are reeling from the impact of Covid19.

HSBC reported a pre-tax profit of Us$4.32bil for the first six months this year, lower than the Us$5.67bil average of analysts’ forecasts.

The bank increased its estimate of the total bad debt charges it could take this year to between Us$8bil and Us$13bil from Us$7bilUs$11bil, reflecting worse-than-expected actual losses in the second quarter and expectatio­ns of a steeper decline in the economy.

“What we have seen this quarter is quite a sharp shift in economic outlook for the global economy, the famous ‘V’ has got a lot sharper and as a result we have materially increased our provisions,” chief financial officer Ewen Stevenson told Reuters.

HSBC’S business in Britain has been hit particular­ly hard, Stevenson said, as it took a Us$1.5bil charge against expected credit losses.

While the bank’s results were bolstered like those of its US and European peers by higher revenues from fixed income trading, analysts said investors were likely to be disappoint­ed by the higher forecast bad debt charges.

Its Hong Kong listed shares dropped as much as 4.7% yesterday afternoon, outpacing a fall in the local benchmark, to their lowest since March 2009.

The bank’s credit impairment provisions in the first-half soared to Us$6.9bil, compared to Us$1bil in the same period a year earlier. It had set aside Us$3bil to cover loan losses in the first quarter.

Impairment charges included a Us$1.2bil writedown on the value of software it owns, mainly in Europe, it said.

While HSBC’S core capital ratio, a key measure of financial strength, rose to 15% at the end of June thanks to favourable regulatory changes, the bank warned the metric would likely decline this year as falling credit ratings hit its risk-weighted asset ratio.

Its revenues fell 9% in the six-month period, as global interest rate cuts and declining market values on assets in investment banking and insurance outweighed higher trading income.

HSBC is continuing to review its long-term dividend policy, CEO Noel Quinn said in a statement.

The bank earlier this year halted payouts in response to a regulatory request in Britain, infuriatin­g many of its retail investors who rely on it for income, particular­ly in Hong Kong.

Quinn told Reuters the bank’s staff headcount has fallen by some 4,000 this year after it restarted a redundancy programme that was put on ice after the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The bank is aiming to cut costs by 3% this year from that restructur­ing as well as lower employee spending on travel and other items during the pandemic, he said.

“What we have seen this quarter is quite a sharp shift in economic outlook for the global economy, the famous ‘V’ has got a lot sharper and as a result we have materially increased our provision”. Ewen Stevenson

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