The Sun (Malaysia)

HSBC to shrink investment bank, axe 35,000 jobs over three years

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HONG KONG/LONDON: HSBC Holdings PLC said yesterday it would shed US$100 billion (RM415 billion) in assets, shrink its investment bank and revamp its US and European businesses in a drastic overhaul that will mean 35,000 jobs cut over three years.

The bank, which has struggled to keep pace with leaner and more focused rivals, is seeking to become more competitiv­e as it grapples with slowing growth in its major markets, the coronaviru­s epidemic, Britain’s European Union exit and lower central bank interest rates.

In the latest in a series of overhauls since the 2008 financial crisis, HSBC said it would merge its private banking and wealth businesses, axe European stock trading and cut US retail branches as it seeks to remove US$4.5 billion in costs.

“The totality of this programme is that our headcount is likely to go from 235,000 to closer to 200,000 over the next three years,” Noel Quinn, interim chief executive, told Reuters.

The restructur­ing, one of the largest undertaken by a blue-chip lender for more than a decade, will be partly managed through natural attrition as people leave the bank, he said.

The UK-based bank, whose huge Asian operations are headquarte­red in Hong Kong, said the coronaviru­s epidemic had significan­tly impacted staff and customers. In the long run it could reduce revenue and cause bad loans to rise as supply chains are disrupted, Quinn said.

Europe’s biggest bank by assets, which makes the bulk of its revenue in Asia, said profit before tax tumbled by a third to US$13.35 billion in 2019, far below the average estimate of US$20.03 billion from brokerages compiled by the bank. That was due to US$7.3 billion in write-offs linked to its global banking and markets and commercial banking business units in Europe.

In the United States, where the bank has underperfo­rmed for years, HSBC said it would close around a third of its 224 branches and target only internatio­nal and wealthier clients.

The lender’s shares were down 3.7% at 568 pence at the London market open.

HSBC said it planned to invest more than US$100 billion in “higher returning areas”, resulting in broadly flat assets in value terms over the three years. It also expects to incur restructur­ing costs of about US$6 billion, the bulk of it in this year and the next.

While strengthen­ing its investment banking capabiliti­es in Asia and the Middle East, the bank will maintain a global investment banking hub in London, reducing its European footprint for the business.

Commenting on the impact of the coronaviru­s, chief financial officer Ewen Stevenson told Reuters the bank expected additional loan loss provisions in the first quarter. – Reuters

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