HONG KONG/LONDON — HSBC Holdings reported a sharper-than-expected drop in profit on Wednesday, hurt by write-downs from exposures to a Chinese bank and Hong Kong real estate, while the bank pushed ahead with a global restructuring.
Its 26 per cent slump in pretax profit in the first half showed the challenge ahead for CEO Georges Elhedery, as Europe’s largest bank racked up losses in China, where it has increasingly pinned its plans for growth in recent years after shrinking in Western markets.
Elhedery, who has unleashed a sweeping restructuring at the bank after taking charge last year, said in an earnings conference call that the bank started reviews of its retail banking business in Australia, Indonesia and Sri Lanka, and will start winding down its Bangladesh retail business in the second half of this year.
The lender’s corporate and institutional banking businesses were unaffected by these developments, he said.
The bank posted a profit of US$15.8 billion for the first six months of this year, missing brokers’ estimates of US$16.5 billion.
London-listed shares of HSBC fell 4.5 per cent, matching earlier losses in its Hong Kong shares.
The lender’s shares have risen 36 per cent in the last year, as it benefited from higher returns on its lending and grew income in its wealth business, though that lagged a 76 per cent gain over the same period in rival Standard Chartered.
HSBC took a further US$2.1 billion hit from its stake in state-run Bank of Communications, following a US$3 billion impairment it took in February 2024 amid mounting bad loans in China.
CEO Elhedery downplayed the impairments on the bank’s BoCom stake, saying it would have no impact on its ability to pay dividends.
“These are accounting-related impairments...they do not impact the outlook we have on the Chinese economy, they are paper losses,” he said on the call.
The new writedown included a US$1.1 billion loss as a result of the Chinese bank’s fundraising earlier this year, which diluted HSBC’s ownership.
China’s property market, once a key growth driver for the world’s second-largest economy, has been in a multi-year tailspin despite repeated government attempts to revive weak consumer demand, which left losses on domestic lenders’ loan books.
HSBC’s expected credit losses grew by US$900 million compared to the first half of last year to US$1.9 billion, the bank said, partly due to its exposure to Hong Kong’s troubled commercial real estate sector.
A sluggish property market in Hong Kong could continue to weigh on the asset quality of banks operating in Hong Kong, analysts from Citigroup said.
Hang Seng Bank, which is 62 per cent owned by HSBC, saw shares slump close to seven per cent on Wednesday after a 224 per cent increase in Hong Kong real estate credit charges in the second quarter from a year ago.
Dour outlook
HSBC also said the impact of U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs could cause it to miss its profitability target of a mid-teens return on tangible equity in future years, in a scenario where the economy deteriorates and central banks slash policy rates.
The lender disclosed it expects to recognize a loss of around US$1.4 billion in the fourth quarter this year, when it completes the sale of a mortgage portfolio in France to insurer Rothesay and French lender CCF.
The corporate and institutional banking business, HSBC’s biggest revenue earner after a sweeping reorganization since last year, delivered US$6.4 billion in pretax profit in the first half, up four per cent from same period last year, and was the only business segment out of four main divisions that saw profit increase.
The lender, with a market value of US$225 billion, announced a new share buyback worth up to US$3 billion, in line with expectations, on top of a US$3 billion buyback program announced earlier this year.
The bank said it would pay an interim dividend of 10 cents a share.
HSBC’s immediate challenge is to find a replacement for Chairman Mark Tucker, who announced his plan to step down in May after eight years at the bank, said Morningstar senior analyst Michael Makdad.
“It needs to make sure that shareholders in Asia remain on board with the strategic direction CEO Elhedery is taking centered on simplification and intensive cost-cutting, but without a radical overhaul of the entire business model,” he said.
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Reporting by Selena Li in Hong Kong and Lawrence White in London; Editing by Jamie Freed and Muralikumar Anantharaman