Yahoo – AFP,
Roland Jackson, Roland Jackson with Laura Mannering in Hong Kong, 9 June 2015
HSBC says
about 25,000 jobs will be lost with the sale of operations in Turkey
and Brazil
(AFP Photo/Ozan Kose)
|
HSBC will
cut its global workforce by up to 50,000 as it exits Brazil and Turkey and
mulls relocating headquarters back to Asia from London, the banking giant said
Tuesday.
Europe's
biggest bank aims to save up to $5.0 billion (4.4 billion euros) in annual
costs within two and a half years as it seeks to boost profits and move past
recent scandals that have scarred the British lender, including the rigging of
foreign exchange markets.
HSBC said
it wants to focus more on Asia, particularly in the Pearl River Delta region in
southern China, amid an ongoing review of its London headquarters that will be
completed this year.
Financial
analysts predict that HSBC
may relocate its headquarters from
London to Hong
Kong, owing to its low
tax regime (AFP Photo/Ben Stansall)
|
"We
have reshaped HSBC, but it is clear it is insufficent," said chief
executive Stuart Gulliver, who has implemented swinging cutbacks since becoming
the bank's head in 2011.
With regard
to the group's possible new base, Gulliver said "there is an opportunity
to create another Hong Kong" in Guangdong.
"The
world is increasingly connected, with Asia expected to show high growth and
become the centre of global trade over the next decade," he added.
Philip
Benton, an analyst at research group Euromonitor, said the bank was "redeploying
their resources to where the most profit and the most revenue they can generate
for the bank".
"HSBC
is known as an Asian bank, that is what its heritage is. And I think the
problem they faced in entering markets like Brazil and Turkey... it took them a
while to be established and they were also up against strong competition from
the local banks," he told AFP.
Headcount
slashed
HSBC said
there would be a 10-percent reduction in jobs with the shedding of between
22,000 and 25,000 positions worldwide.
A further
25,000 jobs would be lost with the sale of operations in Turkey and Brazil.
However some or all of these staff could be kept on by potential buyers.
The group
will meanwhile seek to axe its risk-weighted assets (RWA) by a hefty $290 billion,
and also outlined plans to rebrand its British retail banking division.
The
announcements sent HSBC's share prices dropping 0.97 percent to 613.50 pence in
late deals on London's benchmark FTSE 100 index, which was down half a percent.
HSBC said
the latest job losses would include between 7,000 and 8,000 positions in
Britain -- where its retail bank is being relocated from London to Birmingham,
central England, by 2019.
It also
aims to trim its worldwide network of branches by 12 percent, with Britain
being one of seven major regions to be impacted.
HSBC has
been hit by Britain's banking levy on the financial sector -- which last year
cost it $1.1 billion -- as well as new industry rules to "ring fence"
British banks' retail operations to protect them from riskier investment
divisions.
The bank
aims to save $4.5-$5.0 billion in annual costs by late 2017.
However,
the initial overall cost of the restructuring is estimated at $4.0-4.5 billion.
Swiss
prosecutors have closed an investigation into claims HSBC's Geneva
branch
helped clients evade millions of dollars in taxes (AFP Photo/Fabrice Coffrini)
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'Strategic reset'
Investec
bank analyst Ian Gordon described the news as "a positive
announcement".
"Today’s
strategic reset is focused on the delivery of cost and RWA efficiencies, and
exiting unattractive markets," he said.
Nicolas
Ziegelasch, head of equity research at broker Killik & Co, agreed.
"The
announced restructuring is positive as the market had begun to question whether
its sheer size and scale allowed it to generate strong returns," he said.
"The
refocusing on the business on its Asian operations is in line with where future
global growth will come from."
Founded in
Hong Kong and Shanghai in 1865, HSBC has been based in Britain since 1992 when
it took over Midland Bank and shifted its headquarters to London.
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