HSBC
bank said Tuesday it will shed some 35,000 jobs as part of a deep
overhaul to focus on faster-growing markets in Asia and better cope with
a slew of global uncertainties.
The
interim chief executive, Noel Quinn, said the number of people employed
by the bank would fall from 235,000 to 200,000 in the next three years.
But he said that some of the reductions would come from attrition as
opposed to outright cuts.
Quinn
said his team is already carrying out his plans. The restructure
involves “consolidating” of some parts of the business and “reorganising
the global functions and head office.’’
In August, the company announced 4,700 job cuts from a workforce of 238,000 at the time.
The
bank, which is headquartered in London but makes most of its money in
Asia, reported that its net profit fell 53% in 2019 to $6 billion.
It said that it plans to revamp its U.S. and European business and shed $100 billion in assets to improve its profitability.
The
bank said the virus outbreak that began in China has caused a
“significant disruption” for its staff, suppliers and customers,
especially in the Chinese mainland and in Hong Kong.
“Depending
on how the situation develops, there is the potential for any
associated economic slowdown to impact our expected credit losses in
Hong Kong and mainland China,” the bank said in a statement. “Longer
term, it is also possible that we may see revenue reductions from lower
lending and transaction volumes, and further credit losses stemming from
disruption to customer supply chains. We continue to monitor the
situation closely,” it said.
HSBC’s revenue rose 5.9% in 2019 to $55.4 billion.
The
sharp drop in 2019 profit reflected slower economic activity but also a
$7.3 billion write-down for HSBC’s Global Banking and Markets and
Commercial Banking divisions in Europe. Pretax profit fell 33%, to $13.3
billion. HSBC reported $12.6 billion in net profit in 2018.
HSBC said months’ long protests in Hong Kong also weighed on the local economy and caused disruptions to the bank’s business.
The
bank has been carrying out a corporate overhaul designed to boost
profitability by focusing on high-growth markets in Asia while shedding
businesses and workers in other countries.
“Our
immediate aims are to increase returns, create the capacity to invest
in the future, and build a platform for sustainable growth,” the bank’s
group CEO, Noel Quinn, said in the statement.
The
bank said it would shrink its sales and trading and equity research in
Europe and shift resources to Asia. In the U.S., HSBC plans to grow its
international-client corporate banking business.
The
restructuring is expected to cost $6 billion, with another $1.2 billion
for asset sales, mainly in 2020 and 2021, the bank said.
No comments:
Post a Comment