9th Jun 2015 05:05
LONDON (Alliance News) - HSBC Holdings PLC Tuesday said it will take action to save billions of dollars in costs by 2017, building on the costs Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver has already slashed from the group's annual bill.
In a statement, the London-based banking group said it wants to save between USD4.5 billion and USD5.0 billion by 2017, with a one-off cost of between USD4.0 billion and USD4.5 billion to achieve those cuts. The group confirmed it intends to sell operations in Turkey and Brazil, though it will keep a presence in the South American country to help serve large corporate clients.
"HSBC has an unrivalled global position: access to high growth markets; a diversified universal banking model with strong funding and a low risk profile; and strong internal capital generation with industry leading dividends," Gulliver said in a statement.
The chief executive also wants to accelerate investments in Asia, where it wants to expand its assets management and insurance activities.
"The world is increasingly connected, with Asia expected to show high growth and become the centre of global trade over the next decade. I am confident that our actions will allow us to capture expected future growth opportunities and deliver further value to shareholders," Gulliver said.
By business, Gulliver wants to reduce the emphasis placed on HSBC's investment banking division - global banking and markets - where he wants to reduce risk-weighted assets to less than one-third of the group total. The investment bank's risk-weighted assets, which are more capital intensive - amounted to GBP516.1 billion at the end of 2014, about 42% of the total. Overall, Gulliver wants to cut risk-weighted assets by USD290 billion.
Four years have elapsed since Gulliver first addressed investors about his vision for the group. Since the strategy update in May 2011, when Gulliver had been chief executive for just a few months, HSBC has taken considerable action simplify the group, selling or exiting dozens of business and removing complexity.
Earlier this year, the bank launched a review to decide whether to move its global headquarters from London, with Hong Kong widely seen as a possible destination, due to the costs of the UK's bank levy on global balance sheets and plans to separate retail banking from investment banking with a ring-fence.
By sharpening the group's structure and processes, Gulliver achieved sustainable savings of USD6.1 billion on an annualised basis as of the end of 2014, far above the initial USD2.5 billion to USD3.5 billion targeted in 2011.
The importance of cutting costs has been highlighted by the pressure on other key profitability and cost efficiency metrics for the group, which has seen heightened costs relating to regulation and compliance. Challenges have come from tougher capital requirements, higher costs of regulation, compliance and fines, the UK's bank levy, and low interest rates set by central banks.
Under the goals set out in 2011, the bank was supposed to attain a 48-52% cost efficiency ratio - a measure of expenses as a percentage of net operating income before loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions - by 2013, but that figure was 59.6% for 2013 and 67.3% for 2014, driven higher by burdensome legal, regulatory and inflation-related costs.
The targeted CER was later revised to "the mid-50s", along with a goal of growing revenue faster than operating costs on an adjusted basis.
In 2011, Gulliver had considered a 12-15% return on equity - the ratio of net profit to average ordinary shareholders? equity - a viable target. Four years later, HSBC said it is now targeting an ROE of "greater than 10%" by 2017, revenue growth in excess of cost growth, and progressive dividends to shareholders.
By Samuel Agini; [email protected]; @samuelagini
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