FORM 6-K
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
Report of Foreign Private Issuer
Pursuant to Rule 13a - 16 or 15d - 16
of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
For the month of March 2009
HSBC Holdings plc
42nd Floor, 8 Canada Square, London E14 5HQ, England
(Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F).
Form 20-F X Form 40-F ......
(Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934).
Yes....... No X
(If "Yes" is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b): 82- ..............).
2 March
2009
HSBC HOLDINGS PLC
2008 FINAL RESULTS - HIGHLIGHTS
Profitable business model
· |
Pre-tax profit for 2008, excluding goodwill impairment, of US$19.9 billion, down 18 per cent. On a reported basis, pre-tax profit was US$9.3 billion, down 62 per cent. |
· |
Diversified business model delivers profits in every region except North America and every customer group except Personal Financial Services. |
· |
Earnings per ordinary share excluding goodwill impairment down 18 per cent to US$1.36 (2007: US$1.65). On a reported basis, earnings per share was US$0.47, down 72 per cent (2007: US$1.65). |
Maintaining our traditional financial
strength
· |
Capital generation remains strong. Tier 1 ratio of 8.3 per cent and total capital ratio of 11.4 per cent at 31 December 2008. |
· |
Fully underwritten Rights Issue announced to enhance our capital strength. |
· |
Subject to shareholder approval on 19 March 2009, Rights Issue will add 150 basis points to our capital ratios, strengthening the core equity tier 1 ratio to 8.5 per cent and the tier 1 ratio to 9.8 per cent, both on a pro forma basis as at 31 December 2008. |
· |
Enhances our ability to respond to unforeseen events as well as provide opportunities to grow through targeted acquisitions. |
· |
Total dividends in respect of 2008 of US$0.64 including fourth interim dividend of US$0.10, down 29 per cent, around 15 per cent in sterling terms. Total value of dividends for 2008 of US$7.7 billion. |
· |
Customer advances to deposits ratio of 84 per cent at 31 December 2008. |
Managing our business in a challenging
environment
· |
Supporting our customers: grew our lending to personal, commercial and corporate customers by 9 per cent on an underlying basis. |
· |
Writing no further consumer finance business in the US through the HFC and Beneficial brands and closing the majority of the network. |
· |
Growing in emerging markets: |
- Mainland China profit before tax of US$1.6 billion, up 25 per cent excluding 2007 dilution gains;
- India profit before tax of US$666 million, up 26 per cent;
- Middle East profit before tax of US$1.7 billion, up 34 per cent.
· |
Emerging markets acquisitions in banking in Taiwan and Indonesia and in retail brokerage in India. |
· |
Difficult outlook for 2009. |
· |
Strong performance in January 2009 ahead of expectations, particularly in Global Banking and Markets. |
HSBC HOLDINGS REPORTS PRE-TAX PROFIT OF US$9,307 MILLION
HSBC made a profit before tax of US$9,307 million, a decrease of US$14,905 million, or
62 per cent, compared with 2007.
Net interest income of US$42,563 million was US$4,768 million,
or 13 per cent, higher than 2007.
Net operating income before loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions of US$81,682 million was US$2,689 million, or 3 per cent, higher than 2007.
Total operating expenses (excluding goodwill impairment) of US$38,535 million declined by US$507 million, or 1 per cent, compared with 2007. On an underlying basis, and expressed in terms of constant currency, operating expenses were broadly unchanged.
HSBC's cost efficiency ratio* was 47.2 per cent compared with 49.4 per cent in 2007.
Loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions were US$24,937 million in 2008, US$7,695 million higher than 2007.
The tier 1 ratio and total capital ratio for the Group remained strong at 8.3 per cent and 11.4 per cent, respectively, at 31 December 2008.
The Group's total assets at 31 December 2008 were US$2,527 billion, an
increase of US$173 billion, or 7 per cent, since 31 December 2007.
* Excluding goodwill impairment. The cost efficiency
ratio including goodwill impairment was 60.1 per cent.
Geographical distribution of results
Year ended 31 December |
||||||||
2008 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
% |
US$m |
% |
|||||
Europe |
10,869 |
116.7 |
8,595 |
35.5 |
||||
Hong Kong |
5,461 |
58.7 |
7,339 |
30.3 |
||||
Rest of Asia-Pacific |
6,468 |
69.5 |
6,009 |
24.8 |
||||
North America |
(15,528 |
) |
(166.8 |
) |
91 |
0.4 |
||
Latin America |
2,037 |
21.9 |
2,178 |
9.0 |
||||
Profit before tax |
9,307 |
100.0 |
24,212 |
100.0 |
||||
Tax expense |
(2,809 |
) |
(3,757 |
) |
||||
Profit for the year |
6,498 |
20,455 |
||||||
Profit attributable to shareholders of the parent |
||||||||
company |
5,728 |
19,133 |
||||||
Profit attributable to minority interests |
770 |
1,322 |
Distribution of results by customer group and global business
Year ended 31 December |
||||||||
2008 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
% |
US$m |
% |
|||||
Personal Financial Services |
(10,974 |
) |
(117.9 |
) |
5,900 |
24.4 |
||
Commercial Banking |
7,194 |
77.3 |
7,145 |
29.5 |
||||
Global Banking and Markets |
3,483 |
37.4 |
6,121 |
25.3 |
||||
Private Banking |
1,447 |
15.6 |
1,511 |
6.2 |
||||
Other |
8,157 |
87.6 |
3,535 |
14.6 |
||||
Profit before tax |
9,307 |
100.0 |
24,212 |
100.0 |
Statement by Stephen Green, Group Chairman
2008 was the most extraordinary year for the global economy and financial services in well over half a century. It marked the first crisis of the era of globalised securitisation. And it also marked the first crisis of the just-in-time global economy as the impact of the financial crisis fed rapidly straight into the performance of the real economy.
Causes of the crisis
The causes of the crisis are complex and interrelated. But we can clearly see that a
number of different factors contributed:
· |
First, the global financial imbalances that arose from the accelerating global economic shift towards emerging markets. The rapid growth of emerging economies created a macro-economic triangle, made up of: the major consumer markets, in particular the US but also a number of other Western economies; major producer nations - notably a number of fast-growing emerging markets which have been manufacturing a vast range of goods for consumption in the West; and resource providers whose wealth of hydrocarbons and other commodities have helped power the producer economies and have thus commanded such high prices until recently. This macro-economic triangle delivered high rates of growth, but also created major financial imbalances as producer nations and resource providers accumulated massive reserves whilst the US and other consumer markets ran significant and growing deficits. |
· |
Second, cheap credit. A large proportion of the accumulated savings of the producers and resource providers were invested in the world's reserve currency, the US dollar, keeping rates low. This cheap money fuelled a consumer boom and rising house prices. It encouraged increased borrowing by banks and by their customers, fuelling asset price bubbles particularly in housing markets. Loose monetary conditions in the US and in much of the emerging world gave added strength to this already potent cocktail. |
· |
Third, securitisation based on overly complex product structures. The complexity and opacity of certain financial instruments reached a point where even senior and experienced bankers and professional investors had trouble understanding them. This meant that people were selling and buying assets whose risks they had not properly assessed. |
· |
And finally, excessive gearing. Many banks became overgeared and too dependent on wholesale funding, which they assumed, incorrectly, would never dry up. Assets were created on the back of ever higher leverage, both direct and indirect. And when the securitisation market began to collapse, banks found themselves with assets that they could neither sell nor fund, so forcing large losses on the asset side and a funding challenge on the liability side for which they were entirely unprepared. |
The result has been unprecedented stress in the financial system, and it has led to a major
breakdown in trust. In many countries, huge support from taxpayers has been required in
order to stabilise the system.
Failings in the banking industry
The industry has done many things wrong. It is important to remember that many
ordinary bankers have always sought to provide good service to their customers; but we must
also recognise that there have been too many who have profoundly damaged the industry's
reputation.
Inappropriate products were sold inappropriately by many. Compensation practices
ran out of control and perverse incentives led to dangerous outcomes. There is genuine
and widespread anger that the contributors to the crisis were in some cases amongst the
biggest beneficiaries of the system.
Underlying all these events is a question about the culture and ethics of the industry. It
is as if, too often, people had given up asking whether something was the right thing to
do, and focused only whether it was legal and complied with the rules. The industry needs
to recover a sense of what is right and suitable as a key impulse for doing business.
HSBC strategy intact
We at HSBC were not immune from the crisis. But we have built our business on very strong
foundations and are able to report results which demonstrate our ability to withstand the
storm.
Our strategy has been tested and remains intact. We will continue to build our
business by focusing on faster-growing markets around the world and on businesses where
international connectivity is important - all from a position of financial strength. If
anything, the current crisis validates our renewed focus over the last few years on
fast growing economies, since it will accelerate the shift in the world's centre of
economic gravity from west to east.
Our robust balance sheet and liquidity means that we have continued to lend. In 2008, we
grew our lending to commercial customers by 10 per cent on an underlying basis. Lending to
personal customers increased in all regions except North America. And our brand
strength continues to underpin our performance. It was noticeable that, at times of stress
in many markets, HSBC was a beneficiary of funds flowing in. Recently, the HSBC brand was
recognised as the number one brand in banking by Brand Finance.
Profitable from a broad-based earnings platform
Excluding the goodwill impairment on our North American Personal Financial Services
business, HSBC reported a pre-tax profit for 2008 of US$19.9 billion, a decline of 18
per cent. On a reported basis, pre-tax profit was US$9.3 billion, down 62 per
cent. Within this were some strong regional and business line performances which are
covered in the Group Chief Executive's review. However, there is one area on which I would
like to comment.
For North America, we reported a loss of US$15.5 billion including the goodwill
impairment charge of US$10.6 billion in Personal Financial Services. The significant
deterioration in US employment and economic outlook in the fourth quarter of 2008
were the primary factors in causing us to write off all the remaining goodwill carried on
our balance sheet in respect of our Personal Financial Services business in North
America.
The management team has worked tirelessly to address this problem acquisition in
the US and we have considered all viable options. We saw the disruption in
sub-prime lending as early as 2006 and sharply scaled back in 2007 while others continued
to grow. We also devoted considerable resources to helping our customers. Virtually
no one then foresaw the subsequent scale of the deterioration in
the US economy and financial markets. It is now clear that models of direct
personal lending that depend on wholesale markets for funding are no longer viable. In
light of this, we have taken the difficult decision that, with the exception of credit
cards, we will write no further consumer finance business through the HFC and
Beneficial brands in the US and close the majority of the network. Thus, in
terms of new business, we are drawing a line and we will run off our existing business,
providing all necessary support to HSBC Finance to enable it to do so in a measured way and
meet all its commitments.
HSBC has a reputation for telling it as it is. With the benefit of hindsight, this is
an acquisition we wish we had not undertaken.
The US remains the world's largest economy and HSBC remains committed to
the US, which we see as a core market for HSBC. HSBC Bank in the US is not
affected by the restructure. In the immediate future we will focus on those businesses and
customers for whom our global connectivity gives us advantage - primarily in corporate and
commercial business, and in Private and Premier banking.
Performance overview and strategic activity
In this difficult environment, we missed our profitability targets. We hit our capital
target with our tier 1 ratio at 8.3 per cent. We maintained a very
conservative advances to deposits ratio of 84 per cent. We grew
lending in each region outside North America on an underlying basis. And we
constrained costs, with the cost efficiency ratio improving to 47.2 per cent, excluding the
goodwill impairment mentioned above. We also continued implementation of OneHSBC, our
programme to enhance customer experience and improve cost efficiency through standardising
products, processes and technology around the world.
We also acquired businesses in strategic areas - we acquired the
assets, liabilities and operations of The Chinese Bank
in Taiwan in March; IL&FS Investsmart, a retail brokerage
in India in May; and, in October, the acquisition of Bank Ekonomi
in Indonesia was announced. The first two are complete and being integrated, the
last is expected to be completed in the second quarter. The most notable
disposal was the sale of our regional branch network in France for a
consideration of US$3.2 billion.
Thank you to our people
This was an extraordinary year and made extraordinary demands on many of our people. I want
to express my sincere thanks for all their efforts and achievements. Our industry has
rightly been under considerable public scrutiny and banks have been indiscriminately
bunched together. It is through our staff that HSBC's distinctive character stands out for
our customers and it is they who ensure that not all banks are the same.
Dividend declaration and progressive dividend policy
The directors have declared a fourth interim dividend for 2008 of US$0.10 per ordinary
share (in lieu of a final dividend) which, together with the first three interim dividends
for 2008 of US$0.18 already paid, will make a total distribution in respect of the
year of US$0.64 per ordinary share. The payments in total represent a decrease of 29
per cent in US dollar terms compared with 2007 and of 15 per cent in
sterling terms. The dividend will be payable on 6 May 2009, to shareholders on the
register at the close of business on 20 March 2009.
After 15 years of double-digit dividend growth, we did not make the decision to lower the
dividend lightly. Very careful consideration was given to the current operating environment
and the increased uncertainty over both the supply of capital required in an increasingly
volatile financial world and a pro-cyclical regulatory capital framework.
For 2009, HSBC has rebased the envisaged dividend per share for the first three interim
dividends to US$0.08 to reflect the impact of the enlarged ordinary share capital following
the Rights Issue we are announcing today, prevailing business conditions and capital
requirements. The dividend payments remain substantial and reflect management's long-term
confidence in the business. HSBC will continue to aim to pay progressive dividends in line
with the long-term growth of the business.
Maintaining HSBC's financial strength
The logic of maintaining HSBC's distinctive financial strength which we have applied to our
dividend also applies to our capital position. We have announced today a Rights Issue to
strengthen further our capital ratios. We propose to raise, on a fully underwritten
basis, approximately US$17.7 billion of equity which will increase our capital
ratios by 150 basis points, strengthening the core equity tier 1
ratio to 8.5 per cent and the tier 1 ratio to 9.8 per
cent, both on a pro-forma basis as at 31 December 2008. I shall be writing to all
shareholders with full details.
Over the past 12 months, many of our competitors have received significant government
capital injections - something we said we could not envisage - or have raised capital from
shareholders and other investors. Higher regulatory capital requirements, in part from the
effect of the economic downturn on capital requirements under the Basel II regime, as well
as changing market sentiment on appropriate levels of leverage, have also raised
expectations regarding capital levels. We are determined that HSBC should maintain its
signature financial strength and we are now raising the top of our target range for
our tier 1 ratio so that the range will be from 7.5 per cent to 10 per cent.
Planned internal capital generation remains strong and this capital raising will enhance
our ability to deal with the impact of an uncertain economic environment and to respond to
unforeseen events. Importantly, it will also give us options with respect to opportunities
which we believe will present themselves to those with superior financial
strength. These may involve organic investment in the continued taking of market share
from more capital constrained competitors. There may also be opportunities to grow through
targeted acquisitions by taking advantage of attractive valuations where the opportunities
in question align with our strategy and the risks are understood.
Culture and compensation
We believe in the profound importance of culture and ethics in business. HSBC's
longstanding traditions of financial strength, long-term customer relationships and
conservative management are as important today as ever. They have not always been
fashionable and we have not always been perfect. One of the consequences of the
crisis - and rightly - is that we are going to see a fundamental re-evaluation of the rules
and regulations that govern our business. But we should remember that no amount of rules
and regulation will be sufficient if the culture does not encourage people to do the right
thing. It is the responsibility of boards to supervise and management to embed a
sustainable culture into the very fibre of the organisation. For HSBC, there is nothing
more important.
We also intend to play our part in rebuilding public trust in our industry. This means we
must be willing to take part in and shape the debate on how our industry should evolve in
the coming years, based on the lessons which must be learnt from this crisis. In
particular, we strongly believe that the industry must respond to the requirement for a
more sober and reasonable approach to compensation. At HSBC, we are committed to the
principle of sensible market-related pay, structured to align executive actions with
long-term shareholder interests. A small number of individuals in a market system will
inevitably receive compensation that is high in absolute terms, but this must be genuinely
linked to long-term shareholder interests. It is clear that the banking industry got it
wrong in the go-go years: we will play our part in helping the industry respond
appropriately to the new realities.
It is right therefore that in HSBC's case, I outline our present position. As
Chairman I elected in 2007 to no longer receive any cash bonus award; any variable
compensation would be delivered through performance share awards - which would only vest if
performance hurdles are met. No performance share awards will be made in the Group in
respect of 2008. Mike Geoghegan, Group Chief Executive, Stuart Gulliver, Chief
Executive of Global Banking and Markets and HSBC Global Asset Management,
and Douglas Flint, Group Finance Director have asked the Remuneration Committee not to
consider them for any bonus award for 2008. No cash bonus award will be made to any
Executive Director for 2008. Full details on Directors' remuneration can be found in
the Annual Report.
Learning the lessons
We are living through a genuinely global crisis; it cannot be solved by one nation alone.
Governments need to work together with our industry to tackle the root causes of the
crisis, while maintaining the open, globalised markets that have helped spread prosperity
in the last two decades. Protectionism, both in trade and in capital flows, is a threat and
in all its forms must be resisted.
We must also urgently improve governance and regulation to create a more stable financial
framework. The globalisation of financial markets contrasts sharply with the domestic
agenda of the regulatory regimes that underpin it. We support intergovernmental
efforts to enhance the coordination of regulatory oversight, since we believe that this is
essential to the stable development of the international capital markets for the benefit of
the common good.
Continued economic strain
The coming twelve months will be difficult. We expect parts of Asia, the Middle East
and Latin America to continue to outperform Western economies, but to be
constrained by the global downturn.
We see unemployment rising through 2009 into 2010 in both the US and the UK,
together with continuing declines in housing markets. We should remember that
the US is the driver of the global economy and global growth depends on
the US recovery.
We remain confident that HSBC is well-placed in today's environment and that our strength
leads to opportunity. Our strategy has served HSBC well and positions it for long-term
growth with attractive returns. HSBC continues to combine its position as the world's
leading emerging markets bank with an extensive international network across both developed
and faster growing markets. At the same time, as the financial system exhibits stress, our
competitive position is improving as the capacity and
capabilities of financial institutions are constrained by lack of
capital and funding; many of them are also focusing more on their domestic
markets.
Further strengthening our capital base will enhance our ability to deal with the impact of
an uncertain economic environment and to respond to unforeseen events, as well as giving us
options regarding opportunities which will undoubtedly present themselves to those with
superior financial strength.
Review by Michael Geoghegan, Group Chief Executive Officer
The world today faces exceptionally challenging economic circumstances. 2008 was a very difficult year for the financial sector, and 2009 will be no less so, as the global downturn intensifies.
We have always talked openly about the challenges of the environment we operate in, rather than how we would like it to be. Today those challenges are many. We saw the downturn coming early, so we were able to position ourselves for it early. This has offered us some protection in the current turmoil, as have HSBC's trademark strengths of diversification, financial strength and self-funding. No one market accounts for more than a quarter of our total revenues.
All business lines except Personal Financial Services, and all regions except North America, were profitable in 2008. Many of our businesses have delivered strong results, despite very tough market conditions, and these offset the ongoing difficulties in the US business which the Group Chairman has mentioned.
Profits in Europe were US$10.9 billion, up 26 per cent. The results included a number of acquisition gains, and fair value gains on own debt, which were offset by write-downs in Global Banking and Markets. There was underlying growth in Personal Financial Services and Private Banking.
Asia produced pre-tax profits of some US$11.9 billion, 11 per cent down on a reported basis from the record performance of 2007, which had benefited from very strong equity market-based revenues and dilution gains from our mainland China and other associates.
Profits in Hong Kong declined 26 per cent to US$5.5 billion from 2007's record levels, mainly reflecting lower wealth management and insurance income in the deteriorating economic climate, in addition to impairment charges on some investments arising from sharp falls in equity market prices.
Outside Hong Kong, the Rest of Asia-Pacific (including the Middle East), grew pre-tax profits by 27 per cent to US$6.5 billion on an underlying basis. Many individual markets performed strongly, with profits in India some 26 per cent stronger at US$666 million, and our mainland China operations grew 64 per cent to US$319 million (excluding income from associates and dilution gains). Our operations in the Middle East increased pre-tax profits by US$439 million or 34 per cent to US$1.7 billion.
Pre-tax profits in Latin America were US$2 billion, down by 6 per cent, as a result of higher impairment changes.
We also reported a gain of US$6.6 billion on the fair value on own debt. As this will be reversed in later years we consider it a special item and it is not attributed to any business line.
Protecting our business and supporting our customers in challenging times
Although we were prepared for a significant global slowdown, it became clear last year that some markets were facing financial meltdown, driven by a lack of confidence in financial institutions not seen before. What began as a financial crisis has turned into a broader economic crisis that will affect virtually every economy in the world.
In this environment, we have taken measures to protect the business. Early on, we introduced more conservative lending criteria, for example, tightening loan-to-value ratios in the UK and reducing unsecured lending. In 2008, we have continued to focus our attention on the core banking principles that are fundamental to HSBC. Maintaining our capital strength and our conservative advances-to-deposits ratio of 84 per cent enables us to be self-funding. We are working hard to reduce non-core wholesale Global Banking and Markets assets and US-based sub-prime consumer assets. We are increasing liquidity and managing our risk-weighted assets carefully to protect our capital position. In many of our businesses, we saw a flight to quality from banks badly affected by the crisis, and in many markets we have helped provide liquidity to the interbank market.
I would like to emphasise that HSBC remains very much open for business. Our strong and diversified deposit base means we can continue to lend when our competitors are withdrawing. With the exception of North America, HSBC grew its lending in support of customers strongly in all regions in 2008. In our key markets of the UK and Hong Kong, we grew personal and commercial lending by 12 per cent and 11 per cent respectively, on an underlying basis. In the UK, where we called the top of the market and reduced our lending in 2006, we came back into the market to assist customers and almost doubled our gross mortgage lending in 2008 to £17 billion. In Hong Kong, savings and deposit balances grew strongly, as did customer lending, particularly in mortgages, cards and commercial lending. We are focusing all our lending growth carefully, to maintain high asset quality and to support our customers across the world.
Commercial Banking - maintained profitability despite difficult economic climate
Commercial Banking continues to be the jewel in the crown for HSBC. We have the broadest and best commercial banking franchise in the world, and our strengths as an international bank remain a compelling proposition for our customers.
In 2008, Commercial Banking profit before tax was modestly up on 2007 at US$7.2 billion, as strong revenue growth of 10 per cent more than offset the rise in loan impairments. To maintain our profitability in such a difficult year is a significant achievement.
Our international connectivity is driving increasing revenues. We grew international revenues - trade and supply chain and foreign exchange services - by a third. Our Global Links cross-border referral system helped us conclude over 5,600 transactions, almost double the volume in 2007, with an aggregate transaction value of over US$11 billion.
We are also supporting customers and expanding lending responsibly, growing deposits and lending, by 15 and 10 per cent respectively on an underlying basis. To provide extra support to smaller companies at a time when credit is scarce, we have established a US$5 billion global SME fund to support this important customer group.
Personal Financial Services - North America drives PBT loss, reasonable performance in other markets
Overall our Personal Financial Services business reported a loss before tax of US$11 billion in 2008, driven by loan impairment charges and a goodwill impairment charge related to North America.
Excluding the North America business, PFS remained profitable and we maintained revenue at 2007 levels despite pressure on interest margins and on fee income. Low interest rates are affecting savers, and the economics of running branch networks become more challenging in a low interest-rate environment.
We continued to focus on serving affluent customers who value the unique international banking and wealth management services HSBC can provide. We grew our HSBC Premier client base to 2.6m customers, up 22 per cent on 2007. Eight out of ten new Premier clients were new to HSBC. We achieve average income of US$2,000 per Premier customer and our proposition clearly meets the needs of affluent, internationally mobile customers. We launched Premier in six new markets, taking the total to 41.
In Europe, our Personal Financial Services business performance was resilient. Performance was solid in the UK, where we continued to strengthen our position in the mortgage market with the launch of a RateMatcher promotion to attract quality customers facing interest rate resets. This promotion resulted in new business totalling £5.4 billion, whose quality can be seen in the low LTV ratios which averaged 59 per cent. We have established a £15 billion mortgage fund in the UK for 2009 to build on this success.
Fee income fell in most regions due to a lack of confidence in investments, which resulted in lower fees from retail securities and investments.
HSBC Finance Corporation
The satisfactory performance of our Personal Financial Services businesses outside the US was obscured by substantial losses in HSBC Finance in the US. Loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions in the US were US$16.3 billion, and we incurred a goodwill impairment charge of US$10.6 billion, representing all of our remaining North America Personal Financial Services goodwill. In these tough times, we must be, and we are, prepared to take tough action to work through this troubled business.
As the Chairman has said, the US economy deteriorated severely towards the end of 2008. Although it serves a large part of the population, it is clear that the sub-prime mortgage refinance model no longer operates effectively. Due to the lack of home equity, the deteriorating outlook for house price appreciation and very limited refinancing opportunities available to this customer segment in the near future, we will cease to write new consumer finance business through the HFC and Beneficial brands in the US, and will concentrate on running-off the outstanding real estate-secured and unsecured portfolio of US$62 billion.
As a result, we will close the majority of the HFC and Beneficial-branded US branch network, regrettably with the loss of 6,100 jobs. This will result in a restructuring charge of US$265 million in the first half of 2009, inclusive of closure costs and non-cash charges, and annualised cost savings of approximately US$700 million. With downside risks for unemployment and residential real estate in the US, we expect credit provisioning to remain elevated and operating losses to continue in 2009 and 2010.
With the future of subprime finance in the US uncertain, we no longer consider sub-prime finance in the US to be a core business to HSBC. We continue to make strenuous efforts to help customers in financial difficulty and avoid foreclosure. We modified almost 100,000 loans in 2008 and our foreclosure rate only increased slightly, despite the deterioration in the economy.
As the Chairman has said, we remain committed to the US. HSBC will continue to offer card finance, with the majority of assets held and funded through HSBC Bank USA. The personal finance operations of HSBC Bank USA, including its network of retail branches, are also unaffected by this decision.
Global Banking and Markets
Global Banking and Markets posted pre-tax profits of US$3.5 billion. This performance reflects the success of our emerging markets-led and financing-focused strategy, introduced in 2006, which is creating a leading wholesale bank offering global connectivity and a sophisticated range of services.
Global Banking and Markets revenues were affected by US$6.1 billion in write-downs of which US$5.4 billion were in respect of credit trading, leveraged and acquisition financing positions and monoline credit exposures and US$0.7 billion were impairments on available-for-sale asset-backed securities and holdings of debt and preferred shares of financial institutions.
Our focus on connecting emerging and developed markets has helped us grow profits from emerging markets, which now contribute two thirds of Global Banking and Markets profit before tax, up from a half in 2006.
Core businesses such as foreign exchange, Rates, Balance Sheet Management and Financing and Equity Capital Markets achieved record revenues. Foreign exchange revenues rose to a record US$3.8 billion due to increased market volatility and higher levels of customer activity, with notably strong performance in Europe and Rest of Asia-Pacific.
Robust growth in Global Banking was driven by improved margins in the credit and lending business, as well as substantial gains on credit default swaps in certain portfolios.
Loan impairments and other credit risk provisions rose to US$1.5 billion, reflecting the deteriorating credit environment as well as a number of bank failures in 2008.
Global Transaction Banking generated revenues of US$9.1 billion across Commercial Banking and Global Banking and Markets, an increase of 7 per cent over 2007. Trade and Supply Chain and Securities Services performed strongly with growth of 29 per cent and 10 per cent respectively, notably in Asia Pacific and the Middle East. Payments & Cash Management revenues remained robust, in spite of global interest rate cuts.
We recognised impairment losses of US$279 million in relation to our portfolio of securities held available for sale during 2008, although the value of these securities declined by some US$16.5 billion. The significant difference between these figures reflects illiquidity for all asset backed securities, and the low level of impairment losses reflects the seniority of the tranches held by HSBC. Please see the 2008 Annual Report and Accounts for more details.
Private Banking - a leading international private bank
In a world where the private banking industry saw major reductions in overall assets, HSBC Private Bank continued to perform strongly. Pre-tax profit held up well at just 4 per cent below 2007's record figure. Strong revenue growth in Europe, especially in Switzerland and the UK, was offset by reduced trading income in Asia, lower fee income, higher staff costs and loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions.
Client assets decreased 16 per cent to US$352 billion, despite strong net new money flow of US$24 billion of which US$16.5 billion was in Europe. The decline in market values in all regions was the major reason for this decline. Although total client assets under management fell as a result of economic conditions, we attracted net new money of US$30 billion. Intra-Group referrals resulted in US$6.8 billion of net new money, compared with US$5.7 billion in 2007.
We continued to build our Private Banking franchise, opening offices in Guangzhou, Shanghai and Beijing, in mainland China, and expanding our domestic business in other emerging markets, especially India, Panama and Brazil.
Insurance - strong premium growth but profits affected by reduced investment income
We signalled our intention to grow Insurance to become a more significant contributor to the Group's profits. In 2008, pre-tax profits totalled US$2.6 billion, a decline of 19 per cent driven by lower investment returns and a reduced contribution from Ping An due to the Fortis impairment. Both Latin America and North America achieved higher profits than in 2007. Premiums grew by 20 per cent to US$11 billion, proving the resilience of the bancassurance model in all regions. In Asia, we continued to build our insurance franchise, opening businesses in both India and Korea.
Joining up the Company
Our customers rightly expect a consistently high quality of service wherever they deal with us around the world, consistent with our ranking as the number 1 financial brand. Our programme to 'join up' HSBC aims to make the brand promise a reality. Now in its third year, the positive results of Joining up the Company can be seen in many of our businesses - in Global Links referrals, Private Banking and Premier growth. We are also two years into a five-year plan to develop and deploy common systems throughout the Group under the One HSBC banner. This programme is core to Joining up the Company. It is delivering higher quality IT and Operations at lower cost across the Group. It allows us to service individual and corporate customer needs seamlessly across borders. It means we can deliver a consistently high-quality customer experience.
We cannot Join up the Company without joining up our people, my colleagues who deliver on our brand promise to our customers every day. Throughout the year, the Group Chairman and I visit almost half of the markets in which we operate. We know from the many colleagues we meet how difficult 2008 has been for them, as they have tried to support our customers and our business through the turmoil. I would like to thank them for their commitment and hard work through these tough times. It is a measure of the strength of this company that employee engagement, as recorded in our annual employee survey, rose to a new high in 2008 and exceeds both global and sector norms. As 93 per cent of colleagues completed the survey, this is a tremendous accolade and we are privileged to have such talented and loyal employees.
Operating outlook for 2009
Banks are a leveraged play on the economies they serve, and thus are a reflection of their customers' success. With most developed markets in recession, and emerging markets slowing sharply, we are seeing increased levels of stress in both consumer and commercial books. With the exception of North America, HSBC grew its lending in support of customers strongly in 2008. However, the general lack of international lending is a cause for concern, and will put further pressure on the availability of credit, especially in emerging markets.
As the Chairman has outlined, the outcome for 2009 is extremely hard to predict. In these challenging times, we are focusing on staying close to our loyal customers. We will concentrate on the opportunities our scale, international connectivity and emerging market dominance provide to do profitable, responsible business, despite the downturn. I am pleased to report that our business performance in January 2009 has been strong, and ahead of our expectations.
Financial Overview
Year ended 31 December |
Year ended 31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
||||||||
£m |
HK$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
For the year |
||||||||||
5,072 |
72,474 |
Profit before tax |
9,307 |
24,212 |
||||||
Profit attributable to shareholders of the parent |
||||||||||
3,122 |
44,604 |
company |
5,728 |
19,133 |
||||||
6,159 |
88,001 |
Dividends |
11,301 |
10,241 |
||||||
At the year-end |
||||||||||
64,203 |
725,330 |
|
93,591 |
128,160 |
||||||
90,182 |
1,018,815 |
Capital resources *** |
131,460 |
152,640 |
||||||
854,352 |
9,651,935 |
Customer accounts and deposits by banks |
1,245,411 |
1,228,321 |
||||||
1,733,841 |
19,587,854 |
|
2,527,465 |
2,354,266 |
||||||
787,510 |
8,896,799 |
Risk-weighted assets *** |
1,147,974 |
1,123,782 |
||||||
£ |
HK$ |
US$ |
US$ |
|||||||
Per ordinary share |
||||||||||
0.26 |
3.66 |
Basic earnings |
0.47 |
1.65 |
||||||
0.26 |
3.66 |
Diluted earnings |
0.47 |
1.63 |
||||||
0.74 |
10.59 |
Basic earnings excluding goodwill impairment |
1.36 |
1.65 |
||||||
0.51 |
7.24 |
Dividends * |
0.93 |
0.87 |
||||||
5.10 |
57.65 |
|
7.44 |
10.72 |
||||||
Share information |
||||||||||
US$0.50 ordinary shares in issue |
12,105m |
11,829m |
||||||||
Market capitalisation |
US$114bn |
US$198bn |
||||||||
Closing market price per share |
£6.62 |
£8.42 |
||||||||
Over 1 |
Over 3 years |
Over 5 years |
||||||||
Total shareholder return to |
||||||||||
31 December 2008 ** |
84.5 |
84.5 |
98.5 |
|||||||
Benchmarks: FTSE 100 |
71.7 |
88.1 |
118.3 |
|||||||
MSCI World |
81.8 |
93.6 |
123.7 |
|||||||
MSCI Banks |
63.0 |
60.8 |
82.7 |
* Under IFRSs accounting rules, the
dividend per share of US$0.93 shown in the accounts is the
total of the dividends declared during 2008. This represents the fourth interim
dividend for 2007 and the first, second and third interim dividends for 2008. As the fourth
interim dividend for 2008 was declared in 2009 it will be reflected in the accounts for
2009.
** Total shareholder return ('TSR') is as defined in the Annual
Report and Accounts 2008.
*** The calculation of capital resources, capital ratios and
risk-weighted assets for 31 December 2008 is on a Basel II basis. Comparatives
are on a Basel I basis.
Year ended 31 December |
|||
2008 |
2007 |
||
% |
% |
||
Performance ratios |
|||
Return on average invested capital^ |
4.0 |
15.3 |
|
|
4.7 |
15.9 |
|
|
0.26 |
0.97 |
|
|
0.55 |
1.95 |
|
Efficiency and revenue mix ratios |
|||
Cost efficiency ratio |
|||
- reported |
60.1 |
49.4 |
|
- excluding goodwill impairment |
47.2 |
49.4 |
|
As a percentage of total operating income: |
|||
- net interest income |
48.1 |
43.1 |
|
- net fee income |
22.6 |
25.1 |
|
- net trading income |
7.4 |
11.2 |
|
Capital ratios ** |
|||
- Tier 1 ratio |
8.3 |
9.3 |
|
- Total capital ratio |
11.4 |
13.6 |
^ Return on invested capital is based on the profit attributable to ordinary shareholders. Average invested capital is measured as average total shareholders' equity after adding back goodwill previously written-off directly to reserves, deducting average equity preference shares issued by HSBC Holdings and deducting/(adding) average reserves for unrealised gains/(losses) on effective cash flow hedges and available-for-sale securities. This measure reflects capital initially invested and subsequent profit.
** The calculation of capital resources, capital ratios and risk-weighted assests for 31 December 2008 is on a Basel II basis. Comparatives are on a Basel I basis.
Consolidated Income Statement
Year ended 31 December |
Year ended 31 December |
|||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
||||||
£m |
HK$m |
US$m |
|
|||||
49,759 |
710,961 |
Interest income |
91,301 |
92,359 |
||||
(26,562 |
|
(379,523 |
|
Interest expense |
(48,738 |
) |
(54,564 |
|
23,197 |
331,438 |
Net interest income |
42,563 |
37,795 |
||||
13,496 |
192,837 |
Fee income |
24,764 |
26,337 |
||||
(2,583 |
|
(36,910 |
|
Fee expense |
(4,740 |
) |
(4,335 |
|
10,913 |
155,927 |
Net fee income |
20,024 |
22,002 |
||||
462 |
6,594 |
Trading income excluding net interest income |
847 |
4,458 |
||||
3,113 |
44,489 |
Net interest income on trading activities |
5,713 |
5,376 |
||||
3,575 |
51,083 |
Net trading income |
6,560 |
9,834 |
||||
3,640 |
52,009 |
Changes in fair value of long-term debt issued |
6,679 |
2,812 |
||||
(1,541 |
) |
(22,013 |
) |
Net income/(expense) from other financial |
(2,827 |
) |
1,271 |
|
Net income from financial instruments designated at |
||||||||
2,099 |
29,996 |
fair value |
3,852 |
4,083 |
||||
107 |
1,534 |
Gains less losses from financial investments |
197 |
1,956 |
||||
- |
- |
Gains arising from dilution of interests in associates |
- |
1,092 |
||||
148 |
2,118 |
Dividend income |
272 |
324 |
||||
5,913 |
84,489 |
Net earned insurance premiums |
10,850 |
9,076 |
||||
1,333 |
19,039 |
Gains on disposal of French regional banks |
2,445 |
- |
||||
986 |
14,078 |
Other operating income |
1,808 |
1,439 |
||||
48,271 |
689,702 |
Total operating income |
88,571 |
87,601 |
||||
Net insurance claims incurred and movement in |
||||||||
(3,754 |
) |
(53,644 |
) |
liabilities to policyholders |
(6,889 |
) |
(8,608 |
) |
Net operating income before loan impairment charges |
||||||||
44,517 |
636,058 |
and other credit risk provisions |
81,682 |
78,993 |
||||
(13,591 |
) |
(194,185 |
) |
Loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions |
(24,937 |
) |
(17,242 |
) |
30,926 |
441,873 |
Net operating income |
56,745 |
61,751 |
||||
(11,332 |
) |
(161,907 |
) |
Employee compensation and benefits |
(20,792 |
) |
(21,334 |
) |
(8,316 |
) |
(118,829 |
) |
General and administrative expenses |
(15,260 |
) |
(15,294 |
) |
Depreciation and impairment of property, plant and |
||||||||
(954 |
) |
(13,625 |
) |
equipment |
(1,750 |
) |
(1,714 |
) |
(5,758 |
) |
(82,265 |
) |
Goodwill impairment |
(10,564 |
) |
- |
|
(399 |
) |
(5,708 |
) |
Amortisation and impairment of intangible assets |
(733 |
) |
(700 |
) |
(26,759 |
) |
(382,334 |
) |
Total operating expenses |
(49,099 |
) |
(39,042 |
) |
4,167 |
59,539 |
Operating profit |
7,646 |
22,709 |
||||
905 |
12,935 |
Share of profit in associates and joint ventures |
1,661 |
1,503 |
||||
5,072 |
72,474 |
Profit before tax |
9,307 |
24,212 |
||||
(1,531 |
) |
(21,874 |
) |
Tax expense |
(2,809 |
) |
(3,757 |
) |
3,541 |
50,600 |
Profit for the year |
6,498 |
20,455 |
||||
Profit attributable to shareholders of the parent |
||||||||
3,122 |
44,604 |
company |
5,728 |
19,133 |
||||
419 |
5,996 |
Profit attributable to minority interests |
770 |
1,322 |
Consolidated Balance Sheet
At 31 December |
At 31 December |
|||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
||||||
£m |
HK$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||
ASSETS |
||||||||
35,944 |
406,069 |
Cash and balances at central banks |
52,396 |
21,765 |
||||
4,118 |
46,523 |
Items in the course of collection from other banks |
6,003 |
9,777 |
||||
10,536 |
119,024 |
Hong Kong Government certificates of indebtedness |
15,358 |
13,893 |
||||
293,148 |
3,311,800 |
Trading assets |
427,329 |
445,968 |
||||
19,574 |
221,131 |
Financial assets designated at fair value |
28,533 |
41,564 |
||||
339,485 |
3,835,289 |
Derivatives |
494,876 |
187,854 |
||||
105,483 |
1,191,687 |
Loans and advances to banks |
153,766 |
237,366 |
||||
639,947 |
7,229,727 |
Loans and advances to customers |
932,868 |
981,548 |
||||
205,961 |
2,326,821 |
Financial investments |
300,235 |
283,000 |
||||
7,914 |
89,412 |
Interests in associates and joint ventures |
11,537 |
10,384 |
||||
18,767 |
212,017 |
Goodwill and intangible assets |
27,357 |
39,689 |
||||
9,621 |
108,694 |
Property, plant and equipment |
14,025 |
15,694 |
||||
25,945 |
293,120 |
Other assets |
37,822 |
39,493 |
||||
1,751 |
19,778 |
Current tax assets |
2,552 |
896 |
||||
4,810 |
54,335 |
Deferred tax assets |
7,011 |
5,284 |
||||
10,837 |
122,427 |
Prepayments and accrued income |
15,797 |
20,091 |
||||
1,733,841 |
19,587,854 |
Total assets |
2,527,465 |
2,354,266 |
At 31 December |
At 31 December |
|||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
||||||
£m |
HK$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||
LIABILITIES AND EQUITY |
||||||||
Liabilities |
||||||||
10,536 |
119,024 |
Hong Kong currency notes in circulation |
15,358 |
13,893 |
||||
89,238 |
1,008,151 |
Deposits by banks |
130,084 |
132,181 |
||||
765,114 |
8,643,784 |
Customer accounts |
1,115,327 |
1,096,140 |
||||
4,961 |
56,048 |
Items in the course of transmission to other banks |
7,232 |
8,672 |
||||
169,889 |
1,919,303 |
Trading liabilities |
247,652 |
314,580 |
||||
51,167 |
578,050 |
Financial liabilities designated at fair value |
74,587 |
89,939 |
||||
334,123 |
3,774,715 |
Derivatives |
487,060 |
183,393 |
||||
123,269 |
1,392,621 |
Debt securities in issue |
179,693 |
246,579 |
||||
2,667 |
30,132 |
Retirement benefit liabilities |
3,888 |
2,893 |
||||
49,655 |
560,975 |
Other liabilities |
72,384 |
35,013 |
||||
1,250 |
14,121 |
Current tax liabilities |
1,822 |
2,559 |
||||
29,967 |
338,543 |
Liabilities under insurance contracts |
43,683 |
42,606 |
||||
10,597 |
119,722 |
Accruals and deferred income |
15,448 |
21,766 |
||||
1,187 |
13,408 |
Provisions |
1,730 |
1,958 |
||||
1,273 |
14,376 |
Deferred tax liabilities |
1,855 |
1,859 |
||||
20,191 |
228,106 |
Subordinated liabilities |
29,433 |
24,819 |
||||
1,665,084 |
18,811,079 |
Total liabilities |
2,427,236 |
2,218,850 |
||||
Equity |
||||||||
4,152 |
46,911 |
Called up share capital |
6,053 |
5,915 |
||||
5,806 |
65,588 |
Share premium account |
8,463 |
8,134 |
||||
1,463 |
16,531 |
Other equity instruments |
2,133 |
- |
||||
(2,570 |
) |
(29,039 |
) |
Other reserves |
(3,747 |
) |
33,014 |
|
55,352 |
625,339 |
Retained earnings |
80,689 |
81,097 |
||||
64,203 |
725,330 |
Total shareholders' equity |
93,591 |
128,160 |
||||
4,554 |
51,445 |
Minority interests |
6,638 |
7,256 |
||||
68,757 |
776,775 |
Total equity |
100,229 |
135,416 |
||||
1,733,841 |
19,587,854 |
Total equity and liabilities |
2,527,465 |
2,354,266 |
Consolidated Statement of Recognised Income and Expense
Year ended 31 December |
||||
2008 |
2007 |
|||
US$m |
US$m |
|||
Available-for-sale investments: |
||||
- fair value gains/(losses) taken to equity |
(23,722 |
) |
756 |
|
- fair value losses transferred to income statement on disposal |
(1,316 |
) |
(1,826 |
) |
- amounts transferred to the income statement in respect of |
||||
impairment losses |
1,779 |
86 |
||
Cash flow hedges: |
||||
- fair value gains/(losses) taken to equity |
(1,720 |
) |
625 |
|
- fair value (gains)/losses transferred to income statement |
1,754 |
(1,886 |
) |
|
Share of changes in equity of associates and joint ventures |
(559 |
) |
372 |
|
Exchange differences |
(12,205 |
) |
5,946 |
|
Actuarial gains/(losses) on defined benefit plans |
(1,609 |
) |
2,167 |
|
(37,598 |
) |
6,240 |
||
Tax on items taken directly to equity |
1,879 |
(226 |
) |
|
Profit for the year |
6,498 |
20,455 |
||
Total recognised income and expense for the year |
(29,221 |
) |
26,469 |
|
Total recognised income and expense for the year attributable to: |
||||
- shareholders of the parent company |
(29,225 |
) |
24,801 |
|
- minority interests |
4 |
1,668 |
||
(29,221 |
) |
26,469 |
Consolidated Cash Flow Statement
Year ended 31 December |
||||
2008 |
2007 |
|||
US$m |
US$m |
|||
Cash flows from operating activities |
||||
Profit before tax |
9,307 |
24,212 |
||
Adjustments for: |
||||
Non-cash items included in profit before tax |
41,305 |
21,701 |
||
Change in operating assets |
18,123 |
(176,538 |
) |
|
Change in operating liabilities |
(63,413 |
) |
250,095 |
|
Elimination of exchange differences |
36,132 |
(18,602 |
) |
|
Net gain from investing activities |
(4,195 |
) |
(2,209 |
) |
Share of profits in associates and joint ventures |
(1,661 |
) |
(1,503 |
) |
Dividends received from associates |
655 |
363 |
||
Contribution paid to defined benefit plans |
(719 |
) |
(1,393 |
) |
Tax paid |
(5,114 |
) |
(5,088 |
) |
Net cash from operating activities |
30,420 |
91,038 |
||
Cash flows from investing activities |
||||
Purchase of financial investments |
(277,023 |
) |
(260,980 |
) |
Proceeds from the sale and maturity |
||||
of financial investments |
223,138 |
238,647 |
||
Purchase of property, plant and equipment |
(2,985 |
) |
(2,720 |
) |
Proceeds from the sale of property, plant and equipment |
2,467 |
3,178 |
||
Proceeds from the sale of loan portfolios |
9,941 |
1,665 |
||
Net purchase of intangible assets |
(1,169 |
) |
(950 |
) |
Net cash inflow/(outflow) from acquisition of and increase in stake of subsidiaries |
1,313 |
(623 |
) |
|
Net cash inflow from disposal of subsidiaries |
2,979 |
187 |
||
Net cash outflow from acquisition of and increase in stake of associates |
(355 |
) |
(351 |
) |
Net cash inflow from the consolidation of funds |
16,500 |
1,600 |
||
Proceeds from disposal of associates |
101 |
69 |
||
Net cash used in investing activities |
(25,093 |
) |
(20,278 |
) |
Cash flows from financing activities |
||||
Issue of ordinary share capital |
467 |
474 |
||
Issue of other equity instruments |
2,133 |
- |
||
Net purchases and sales of own shares for market-making |
||||
and investment purposes |
(194 |
) |
126 |
|
Purchases of own shares to meet share awards and share option awards |
(808 |
) |
(636 |
) |
On exercise of share options |
27 |
104 |
||
Subordinated loan capital issued |
7,094 |
5,705 |
||
Subordinated loan capital repaid |
(350 |
) |
(689 |
) |
Dividends paid to shareholders of the parent company |
(7,211 |
) |
(6,003 |
) |
Dividends paid to minority interests |
(714 |
) |
(718 |
) |
Dividends paid to holders of other equity instruments |
(92 |
) |
- |
|
Net cash generated from/(used in) financing activities |
352 |
(1,637 |
) |
|
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents |
5,679 |
69,123 |
||
Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January |
297,009 |
215,486 |
||
Exchange differences in respect of cash and cash equivalents |
(23,816 |
) |
12,400 |
|
Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December |
278,872 |
297,009 |
Additional Information
1. Basis of preparation and accounting policies
The basis of preparation and significant accounting policies applicable to the consolidated
financial statements of HSBC and the separate financial statements of HSBC Holdings can be
found in Notes 1 and 2 of the Annual Report and Accounts 2008.
The consolidated financial statements of HSBC and the separate financial statements of HSBC
Holdings contained within the Annual Report and Accounts 2008 have
been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards ('IFRSs') as
issued by the International Accounting Standards Board ('IASB') and as endorsed by the EU.
EU-endorsed IFRSs may differ from IFRSs as issued by the IASB if, at any point in time, new
or amended IFRSs have not been endorsed by the EU. At 31 December 2008, there were no
unendorsed standards effective for the year ended 31 December 2008 affecting these
consolidated and separate financial statements, and there was no difference between IFRSs
endorsed by the EU and IFRSs issued by the IASB in terms of their application to HSBC.
Accordingly, HSBC's financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2008 are prepared
in accordance with IFRSs as issued by the IASB.
IFRSs comprise accounting standards issued by the IASB and its predecessor body as well as
interpretations issued by the International Financial Reporting Interpretations
Committee ('IFRIC') and its predecessor body.
2. Dividends |
On 2 March 2009, the Directors declared a fourth interim dividend for 2008 of US$0.10 per
ordinary share. The dividend will be payable on 6 May 2009, to shareholders on the Register
at the close of business on 20 March 2009. The dividend will be payable in cash, in US
dollars, sterling or Hong Kong dollars, or a combination of these currencies, at the
exchange rates quoted by HSBC Bank plc in London at or about 11 am on 27 April
2009, and with a scrip dividend alternative. Particulars of these arrangements will be
mailed to shareholders on or about 31 March 2009 and elections will be required to be made
by 23 April 2009. As this dividend was declared after the balance sheet date, it has not
been included in 'Other liabilities' at 31 December 2008.
The dividend on shares held through Euroclear France, the settlement and central
depositary system for Euronext Paris, will be payable on 6 May 2009 to the holders of
record on 20 March 2009. The dividend will be payable in cash, in euros at the exchange
rate on 27 April 2009, or as a scrip dividend. Particulars of these arrangements will be
announced through Euronext Paris on 16 March 2009 and 25 March 2009.
The dividend on American Depositary Shares ('ADSs'), each of which represents five ordinary
shares, will be payable on 6 May 2009 to holders of record on 20 March 2009. The dividend
of US$0.50 per ADS will be payable in cash in US dollars or as a scrip dividend of new
ADSs. Particulars of these arrangements will be mailed to holders on or about 31 March
2009, and elections will be required to be made by 17 April 2009. Alternatively, the cash
dividend may be invested in additional ADSs for participants in the dividend reinvestment
plan operated by the depositary.
The Company's shares will be quoted ex-dividend in London, Hong
Kong, Paris and Bermuda on 18 March 2009. The ADSs will be quoted
ex-dividend in New York on 18 March 2009.
Dividends declared on HSBC Holdings shares during 2008 were as follows:
2008 |
2007 |
||||||||||
Per share US$ |
Total US$m |
Settled in scrip US$m |
Per share US$ |
Total US$m |
Settled in scrip US$m |
||||||
Dividends declared on ordinary shares |
|||||||||||
In respect of previous year: |
|||||||||||
- fourth interim dividend |
0.390 |
4,620 |
2,233 |
0.360 |
4,161 |
2,116 |
|||||
In respect of current year: |
|||||||||||
- first interim dividend |
0.180 |
2,158 |
256 |
0.170 |
1,986 |
712 |
|||||
- second interim dividend |
0.180 |
2,166 |
727 |
0.170 |
1,997 |
912 |
|||||
- third interim dividend |
0.180 |
2,175 |
380 |
0.170 |
2,007 |
614 |
|||||
0.930 |
11,119 |
3,596 |
0.870 |
10,151 |
4,354 |
||||||
Quarterly dividends on preference shares |
|||||||||||
classified as equity |
|||||||||||
March dividend |
15.50 |
22 |
15.50 |
22 |
|||||||
June dividend |
15.50 |
23 |
15.50 |
23 |
|||||||
September dividend |
15.50 |
22 |
15.50 |
22 |
|||||||
December dividend |
15.50 |
23 |
15.50 |
23 |
|||||||
62.00 |
90 |
62.00 |
90 |
||||||||
Quarterly coupons on capital securities |
|||||||||||
classified as equity^ |
|||||||||||
July coupon |
0.541 |
47 |
- |
- |
|||||||
October coupon |
0.508 |
45 |
- |
- |
|||||||
1.049 |
92 |
- |
- |
||||||||
^ During April 2008, HSBC Holdings issued US$2,200 million of Perpetual Subordinated Capital Securities which are classified as equity under IFRSs.
On 11 February 2009, the Directors declared a dividend of US$15.50 per non-cumulative US
dollar preference share (Series A dollar preference share), equivalent to a dividend of
US$0.3875 per Series A American Depository Share, each of which represents one-fortieth of
a Series A dollar preference share. The dividend is payable on 16 March 2009 to the holder
of record on 27 February 2009.
On 15 January 2009, HSBC paid a coupon on the Capital Securities of US$0.508
per security, a distribution of US$45 million. No liability is recorded in the
balance sheet at 31 December 2008 in respect of this coupon payment.
3. Earnings and dividends per ordinary share |
Year ended 31 December |
||||
2008 |
2007 |
|||
US$ |
US$ |
|||
Basic earnings per ordinary share |
0.47 |
1.65 |
||
Diluted earnings per ordinary share |
0.47 |
1.63 |
||
Basic earnings per ordinary share excluding goodwill impairment |
1.36 |
1.65 |
||
Dividends per ordinary share |
0.93 |
0.87 |
||
Net asset value at year-end |
7.44 |
10.72 |
||
Dividend pay out ratio^ |
||||
- reported |
197.9% |
52.7% |
||
- excluding goodwill impairment |
68.4% |
52.7% |
||
^ Dividends per ordinary share expressed as a percentage of basic earnings per ordinary share.
Basic earnings per ordinary share was calculated by dividing the profit attributable to
ordinary shareholders of the parent company of US$5,546 million (2007:
US$19,043 million) by the weighted average number of ordinary shares, excluding own
shares held, outstanding in 2008 of 11,812 million (2007: 11,545 million).
Year ended 31 December |
||||
2008 |
2007 |
|||
US$m |
US$m |
|||
Profit attributable to shareholders of the parent company |
5,728 |
19,133 |
||
Dividend payable on preference shares classified as equity |
(90 |
) |
(90 |
) |
Coupon payable on capital securities classified as equity |
(92 |
) |
- |
|
Profit attributable to the ordinary shareholders of the parent company |
5,546 |
19,043 |
Diluted earnings per ordinary share was calculated by dividing the basic earnings, which
require no adjustment for the effects of dilutive potential ordinary shares (including
share options outstanding not yet exercised), by the weighted average number of ordinary
shares outstanding, excluding own shares held, plus the weighted average number of ordinary
shares that would be issued on ordinary conversion of dilutive potential ordinary shares in
2008 of 11,915 million shares (2007: 11,661 million shares).
4. Tax expense |
Year ended 31 December |
||||
2008 |
2007 |
|||
US$m |
US$m |
|||
UK corporation tax charge |
1,671 |
1,326 |
||
Overseas tax |
1,703 |
3,879 |
||
Current tax |
3,374 |
5,205 |
||
Deferred tax |
(565 |
) |
(1,448 |
) |
Tax expense |
2,809 |
3,757 |
||
Effective tax rate |
30.2% |
15.5% |
HSBC Holdings and its subsidiaries in the United Kingdom provided
for UK corporation tax at 28.5 per cent (2007: 30 per cent).
Overseas tax included Hong Kong profits tax of US$846 million (2007: US$1,137 million)
provided at the rate of 16.5 per cent (2007: 17.5 per cent) on the profits for the year
assessable in Hong Kong. Other overseas subsidiaries and overseas branches provided
for taxation at the appropriate rates in the countries in which they operate.
Analysis of tax expense |
Year ended 31 December |
|||
2008 |
2007 |
|||
US$m |
US$m |
|||
Taxation at UK corporation tax rate of 28.5 per cent (2007: 30 per cent) |
2,652 |
7,264 |
||
Goodwill impaired |
3,010 |
- |
||
Effect of taxing overseas profit in principal locations at different rates |
(1,339 |
) |
(1,460 |
) |
Tax-free gains |
(1,016 |
) |
(296 |
) |
Adjustments in respect of prior period liabilities |
(67 |
) |
(309 |
) |
Low income housing tax credits |
(103 |
) |
(107 |
) |
Effect of profit in associates and joint ventures |
(473 |
) |
(450 |
) |
Effect of previously unrecognised temporary differences |
(98 |
) |
(485 |
) |
Release of deferred tax consequent on restructuring of Group interests |
- |
(359 |
) |
|
Impact of gains arising from dilution of interests in associates |
- |
(253 |
) |
|
Other items |
243 |
212 |
||
Overall tax expense |
2,809 |
3,757 |
5. Capital resources
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
||||
Basel II |
Basel II |
Basel I |
||||
Actual |
Pro-forma |
Actual |
||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
||||
Composition of regulatory capital |
||||||
Tier 1 capital |
||||||
Shareholders' equity |
93,591 |
128,160 |
128,160 |
|||
Minority interests |
6,638 |
7,256 |
7,256 |
|||
Less: |
||||||
Preference share premium |
(1,405 |
) |
(1,405 |
) |
(1,405 |
) |
Preference share minority interests |
(2,110 |
) |
(2,181 |
) |
(2,181 |
) |
Goodwill capitalised and intangible assets |
(26,861 |
) |
(38,855 |
) |
(38,855 |
) |
Unrealised losses on available-for-sale debt securities |
21,439 |
2,445 |
2,445 |
|||
Other regulatory adjustments |
(8,222 |
) |
(3,325 |
) |
(4,551 |
) |
50% of excess of expected losses over impairment allowances |
(2,660 |
) |
(4,508 |
) |
- |
|
Core equity tier 1 capital |
80,410 |
87,587 |
90,869 |
|||
Preference share premium |
1,405 |
1,405 |
1,405 |
|||
Preference share minority interests |
2,110 |
2,181 |
2,181 |
|||
Innovative tier 1 securities |
11,411 |
10,512 |
10,512 |
|||
Tier 1 capital |
95,336 |
101,685 |
104,967 |
|||
Tier 2 capital |
||||||
Reserves arising from revaluation of property and unrealised |
||||||
gains on available-for-sale equities |
1,726 |
4,393 |
4,393 |
|||
Collective impairment allowances |
3,168 |
2,176 |
14,047 |
|||
Perpetual subordinated debt |
2,996 |
3,114 |
3,114 |
|||
Term subordinated debt |
41,204 |
37,658 |
37,658 |
|||
Minority and other interests in tier 2 capital |
300 |
300 |
300 |
|||
Total qualifying tier 2 capital before deductions |
49,394 |
47,641 |
59,512 |
|||
Unconsolidated investments |
(9,613 |
) |
(11,092 |
) |
(11,092 |
) |
50% of excess of expected losses over impairment allowances |
(2,660 |
) |
(4,508 |
) |
- |
|
Other deductions |
(997 |
) |
(747 |
) |
(747 |
) |
(13,270 |
) |
(16,347 |
) |
(11,839 |
) |
|
Total regulatory capital |
131,460 |
132,979 |
152,640 |
|||
Risk-weighted assets |
||||||
Credit and counterparty risk |
956,596 |
1,011,343 |
- |
|||
Market risk |
70,264 |
45,840 |
- |
|||
Operational risk |
121,114 |
107,466 |
- |
|||
Banking book |
- |
- |
1,020,747 |
|||
Trading book |
- |
- |
103,035 |
|||
1,147,974 |
1,164,649 |
1,123,782 |
||||
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
||||
Basel II |
Basel II |
Basel I |
||||
Actual |
Pro-forma |
Actual |
||||
% |
% |
% |
||||
Capital ratios |
||||||
Core equity tier 1 ratio |
7.0 |
7.5 |
8.1 |
|||
Tier 1 ratio |
8.3 |
8.7 |
9.3 |
|||
Total capital ratio |
11.4 |
11.4 |
13.6 |
|||
6. Notes on the cash flow statement |
Year ended 31 December |
||||
2008 |
2007 |
|||
US$m |
US$m |
|||
Non-cash items included in profit before tax |
||||
Depreciation, amortisation and impairment |
13,367 |
2,522 |
||
Gain arising from dilution of interests in associates |
- |
(1,092 |
) |
|
Revaluations on investment property |
92 |
(152 |
) |
|
Share-based payment expense |
819 |
870 |
||
Loan impairment losses gross of recoveries and other credit risk provisions |
25,034 |
18,182 |
||
Provisions |
591 |
989 |
||
Impairment of financial investments |
1,779 |
104 |
||
Charge for defined benefit plans |
490 |
727 |
||
Accretion of discounts and amortisation of premiums |
(867 |
) |
(449 |
) |
41,305 |
21,701 |
|||
Change in operating assets |
||||
Change in prepayments and accrued income |
4,178 |
(5,069 |
) |
|
Change in net trading securities and net derivatives |
(23,293 |
) |
(4,972 |
) |
Change in loans and advances to banks |
22,596 |
(8,922 |
) |
|
Change in loans and advances to customers |
7,279 |
(131,886 |
) |
|
Change in financial assets designated at fair value |
12,757 |
(13,360 |
) |
|
Change in other assets |
(5,394 |
) |
(12,329 |
) |
18,123 |
(176,538 |
) |
||
Change in operating liabilities |
||||
Change in accruals and deferred income |
(6,169 |
) |
5,119 |
|
Change in deposits by banks |
(3,038 |
) |
32,594 |
|
Change in customer accounts |
32,372 |
199,806 |
||
Change in debt securities in issue |
(67,152 |
) |
(12,489 |
) |
Change in financial liabilities designated at fair value |
(15,352 |
) |
12,304 |
|
Change in other liabilities |
(4,074 |
) |
12,761 |
|
(63,413 |
) |
250,095 |
Cash and cash equivalents |
||||
Cash and balances at central banks |
52,396 |
21,765 |
||
Items in the course of collection from other banks |
6,003 |
9,777 |
||
Loans and advances to banks of one month or less |
165,066 |
232,320 |
||
Treasury bills, other bills and certificates of deposit |
||||
less than three months |
62,639 |
41,819 |
||
Less: items in the course of transmission to other banks |
(7,232 |
) |
(8,672 |
) |
Total cash and cash equivalents |
278,872 |
297,009 |
||
Interest and dividends |
||||
Interest paid |
(60,342 |
) |
(63,626 |
) |
Interest received |
107,019 |
103,393 |
||
Dividends received |
1,876 |
1,833 |
||
7. Loan impairment charges |
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Individually assessed impairment allowances: |
||||||||||||
- Net new allowances |
390 |
1,787 |
2,177 |
442 |
483 |
925 |
||||||
- Recoveries |
(58 |
) |
(55 |
) |
(113 |
) |
(57 |
) |
(72 |
) |
(129 |
) |
332 |
1,732 |
2,064 |
385 |
411 |
796 |
|||||||
Collectively assessed impairment allowances: |
||||||||||||
- Net new allowances |
10,046 |
12,742 |
22,788 |
6,230 |
11,027 |
17,257 |
||||||
- Recoveries |
(421 |
) |
(300 |
) |
(721 |
) |
(287 |
) |
(589 |
) |
(876 |
) |
9,625 |
12,442 |
22,067 |
5,943 |
10,438 |
16,381 |
|||||||
Total charge for |
||||||||||||
impairment losses |
9,957 |
14,174 |
24,131 |
6,328 |
10,849 |
17,177 |
||||||
Customers |
9,957 |
14,120 |
24,077 |
6,328 |
10,849 |
17,177 |
||||||
Banks |
- |
54 |
54 |
- |
- |
- |
||||||
8. Analysis of net fee income
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Cards |
3,089 |
2,755 |
5,844 |
3,092 |
3,404 |
6,496 |
||||||
Account services |
2,260 |
2,093 |
4,353 |
1,961 |
2,398 |
4,359 |
||||||
Funds under management |
1,572 |
1,185 |
2,757 |
1,390 |
1,585 |
2,975 |
||||||
Insurance |
942 |
829 |
1,771 |
804 |
1,032 |
1,836 |
||||||
Broking income |
954 |
784 |
1,738 |
928 |
1,084 |
2,012 |
||||||
Credit facilities |
639 |
674 |
1,313 |
672 |
466 |
1,138 |
||||||
Global custody |
757 |
554 |
1,311 |
557 |
847 |
1,404 |
||||||
Imports/Exports |
496 |
518 |
1,014 |
407 |
459 |
866 |
||||||
Remittances |
307 |
303 |
610 |
273 |
283 |
556 |
||||||
Unit trusts |
337 |
165 |
502 |
420 |
455 |
875 |
||||||
Corporate finance |
232 |
149 |
381 |
220 |
189 |
409 |
||||||
Underwriting |
204 |
121 |
325 |
196 |
171 |
367 |
||||||
Trust income |
164 |
161 |
325 |
146 |
153 |
299 |
||||||
Taxpayer financial services |
154 |
14 |
168 |
234 |
18 |
252 |
||||||
Maintenance income on |
||||||||||||
operating leases |
70 |
60 |
130 |
69 |
70 |
139 |
||||||
Mortgage servicing |
56 |
64 |
120 |
53 |
56 |
109 |
||||||
Other |
1,148 |
954 |
2,102 |
1,066 |
1,179 |
2,245 |
||||||
Total fee income |
13,381 |
11,383 |
24,764 |
12,488 |
13,849 |
26,337 |
||||||
Less: fee expense |
(2,390 |
) |
(2,350 |
) |
(4,740 |
) |
(1,993 |
) |
(2,342 |
) |
(4,335 |
) |
Net fee income |
10,991 |
9,033 |
20,024 |
10,495 |
11,507 |
22,002 |
9. Distribution of results by customer group and global business
Personal Financial Services |
||||||||||||
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Net interest income |
15,217 |
14,202 |
29,419 |
13,998 |
15,071 |
29,069 |
||||||
Net fee income |
5,626 |
4,481 |
10,107 |
5,523 |
6,219 |
11,742 |
||||||
Net trading income |
184 |
70 |
254 |
93 |
85 |
178 |
||||||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
financial instruments designated |
||||||||||||
at fair value |
(1,135 |
) |
(1,777 |
) |
(2,912 |
) |
796 |
537 |
1,333 |
|||
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
585 |
78 |
663 |
60 |
291 |
351 |
||||||
Dividend income |
15 |
75 |
90 |
41 |
14 |
55 |
||||||
Net earned insurance premiums |
4,746 |
5,337 |
10,083 |
3,735 |
4,536 |
8,271 |
||||||
Other operating income/(expense) |
390 |
(131 |
) |
259 |
255 |
132 |
387 |
|||||
Total operating income |
25,628 |
22,335 |
47,963 |
24,501 |
26,885 |
51,386 |
||||||
Net insurance claims incurred and |
||||||||||||
movement in liabilities to |
||||||||||||
policyholders |
(3,206 |
) |
(3,268 |
) |
(6,474 |
) |
(3,605 |
) |
(4,542 |
) |
(8,147 |
) |
Net operating income before loan |
||||||||||||
impairment charges and other |
||||||||||||
credit risk provisions |
22,422 |
19,067 |
41,489 |
20,896 |
22,343 |
43,239 |
||||||
Loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
(9,384 |
) |
(11,836 |
) |
(21,220 |
) |
(5,928 |
) |
(10,244 |
) |
(16,172 |
) |
Net operating income |
13,038 |
7,231 |
20,269 |
14,968 |
12,099 |
27,067 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
||||||||||||
excluding goodwill impairment |
(10,572 |
) |
(10,568 |
) |
(21,140 |
) |
(10,452 |
) |
(11,305 |
) |
(21,757 |
) |
Goodwill impairment |
(527 |
) |
(10,037 |
) |
(10,564 |
) |
- |
- |
- |
|||
Operating profit/(loss) |
1,939 |
(13,374 |
) |
(11,435 |
) |
4,516 |
794 |
5,310 |
||||
Share of profit in associates and |
||||||||||||
joint ventures |
374 |
87 |
461 |
213 |
377 |
590 |
||||||
Profit/(loss) before tax |
2,313 |
(13,287 |
) |
(10,974 |
) |
4,729 |
1,171 |
5,900 |
Commercial Banking |
||||||||||||
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Net interest income |
4,747 |
4,747 |
9,494 |
4,286 |
4,769 |
9,055 |
||||||
Net fee income |
2,165 |
1,932 |
4,097 |
1,904 |
2,068 |
3,972 |
||||||
Net trading income |
221 |
165 |
386 |
134 |
162 |
296 |
||||||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
(59 |
) |
(165 |
) |
(224 |
) |
(24 |
) |
46 |
22 |
||
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
191 |
2 |
193 |
25 |
65 |
90 |
||||||
Dividend income |
3 |
85 |
88 |
4 |
4 |
8 |
||||||
Net earned insurance premiums |
360 |
319 |
679 |
205 |
528 |
733 |
||||||
Other operating income |
718 |
221 |
939 |
2 |
163 |
165 |
||||||
Total operating income |
8,346 |
7,306 |
15,652 |
6,536 |
7,805 |
14,341 |
||||||
Net insurance claims incurred and |
||||||||||||
movement in liabilities to |
||||||||||||
policyholders |
(190 |
) |
(145 |
) |
(335 |
) |
44 |
(435 |
) |
(391 |
) |
|
Net operating income before loan |
||||||||||||
impairment charges and other |
||||||||||||
credit risk provisions |
8,156 |
7,161 |
15,317 |
6,580 |
7,370 |
13,950 |
||||||
Loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
(563 |
) |
(1,610 |
) |
(2,173 |
) |
(431 |
) |
(576 |
) |
(1,007 |
) |
Net operating income |
7,593 |
5,551 |
13,144 |
6,149 |
6,794 |
12,943 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
(3,280 |
) |
(3,301 |
) |
(6,581 |
) |
(2,907 |
) |
(3,345 |
) |
(6,252 |
) |
Operating profit |
4,313 |
2,250 |
6,563 |
3,242 |
3,449 |
6,691 |
||||||
Share of profit in associates and |
||||||||||||
joint ventures |
298 |
333 |
631 |
180 |
274 |
454 |
||||||
Profit before tax |
4,611 |
2,583 |
7,194 |
3,422 |
3,723 |
7,145 |
Global Banking and Markets |
||||||||||||
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Net interest income |
3,737 |
4,804 |
8,541 |
1,847 |
2,583 |
4,430 |
||||||
Net fee income |
2,354 |
1,937 |
4,291 |
2,264 |
2,637 |
4,901 |
||||||
Net trading income/(expense) |
633 |
(152 |
) |
481 |
2,897 |
370 |
3,267 |
|||||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
financial instruments designated |
||||||||||||
at fair value |
(211 |
) |
(227 |
) |
(438 |
) |
11 |
(175 |
) |
(164 |
) |
|
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
244 |
(571 |
) |
(327 |
) |
768 |
545 |
1,313 |
||||
Dividend income |
49 |
27 |
76 |
175 |
47 |
222 |
||||||
Net earned insurance premiums |
62 |
43 |
105 |
46 |
47 |
93 |
||||||
Other operating income |
551 |
317 |
868 |
529 |
689 |
1,218 |
||||||
Total operating income |
7,419 |
6,178 |
13,597 |
8,537 |
6,743 |
15,280 |
||||||
Net insurance claims incurred and |
||||||||||||
movement in liabilities to |
||||||||||||
policyholders |
(40 |
) |
(39 |
) |
(79 |
) |
(38 |
) |
(32 |
) |
(70 |
) |
Net operating income before loan |
||||||||||||
impairment charges and other |
||||||||||||
credit risk provisions |
7,379 |
6,139 |
13,518 |
8,499 |
6,711 |
15,210 |
||||||
Loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk recoveries |
(115 |
) |
(1,356 |
) |
(1,471 |
) |
24 |
(62 |
) |
(38 |
) |
|
Net operating income |
7,264 |
4,783 |
12,047 |
8,523 |
6,649 |
15,172 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
(4,827 |
) |
(4,265 |
) |
(9,092 |
) |
(4,479 |
) |
(4,879 |
) |
(9,358 |
) |
Operating profit |
2,437 |
518 |
2,955 |
4,044 |
1,770 |
5,814 |
||||||
Share of profit in associates and |
||||||||||||
joint ventures |
253 |
275 |
528 |
114 |
193 |
307 |
||||||
Profit before tax |
2,690 |
793 |
3,483 |
4,158 |
1,963 |
6,121 |
Private Banking |
||||||||||||
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Net interest income |
783 |
829 |
1,612 |
567 |
649 |
1,216 |
||||||
Net fee income |
814 |
662 |
1,476 |
811 |
804 |
1,615 |
||||||
Net trading income |
218 |
204 |
422 |
259 |
275 |
534 |
||||||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
financial instruments designated |
||||||||||||
at fair value |
1 |
(1 |
) |
- |
- |
(1 |
) |
(1 |
) |
|||
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
80 |
(16 |
) |
64 |
45 |
74 |
119 |
|||||
Dividend income |
4 |
4 |
8 |
5 |
2 |
7 |
||||||
Other operating income |
16 |
33 |
49 |
31 |
27 |
58 |
||||||
Net operating income before |
||||||||||||
loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
1,916 |
1,715 |
3,631 |
1,718 |
1,830 |
3,548 |
||||||
Loan impairment (charges)/ |
||||||||||||
recoveries and other credit |
||||||||||||
risk provisions |
4 |
(72 |
) |
(68 |
) |
(9 |
) |
(5 |
) |
(14 |
) |
|
Net operating income |
1,920 |
1,643 |
3,563 |
1,709 |
1,825 |
3,534 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
(1,098 |
) |
(1,018 |
) |
(2,116 |
) |
(929 |
) |
(1,096 |
) |
(2,025 |
) |
Operating profit |
822 |
625 |
1,447 |
780 |
729 |
1,509 |
||||||
Share of profit in associates and |
||||||||||||
joint ventures |
- |
- |
- |
- |
2 |
2 |
||||||
Profit before tax |
822 |
625 |
1,447 |
780 |
731 |
1,511 |
Other |
||||||||||||
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Net interest income/(expense) |
(375 |
) |
(581 |
) |
(956 |
) |
(291 |
) |
(251 |
) |
(542 |
) |
Net fee income/(expense) |
32 |
21 |
53 |
(7 |
) |
(221 |
) |
(228 |
) |
|||
Net trading income/(expense) |
(353 |
) |
(177 |
) |
(530 |
) |
(49 |
) |
175 |
126 |
||
Changes in fair value of long-term |
||||||||||||
debt issued and related |
||||||||||||
derivatives |
577 |
6,102 |
6,679 |
284 |
2,528 |
2,812 |
||||||
Net income from other |
||||||||||||
financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
243 |
504 |
747 |
(193) |
274 |
81 |
||||||
Net income from financial |
||||||||||||
instruments designated |
||||||||||||
at fair value |
820 |
6,606 |
7,426 |
91 |
2,802 |
2,893 |
||||||
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
(283 |
) |
(113 |
) |
(396 |
) |
101 |
(18 |
) |
83 |
||
Gains arising from dilution of |
||||||||||||
interests in associates |
- |
- |
- |
1,076 |
16 |
1,092 |
||||||
Dividend income |
17 |
(7 |
) |
10 |
27 |
5 |
32 |
|||||
Net earned insurance premiums |
(15 |
) |
(2 |
) |
(17 |
) |
(9 |
) |
(12 |
) |
(21 |
) |
Gains on disposal of French |
||||||||||||
regional banks |
- |
2,445 |
2,445 |
- |
- |
- |
||||||
Other operating income |
1,943 |
2,318 |
4,261 |
1,667 |
1,856 |
3,523 |
||||||
Total operating income |
1,786 |
10,510 |
12,296 |
2,606 |
4,352 |
6,958 |
||||||
Net insurance claims incurred |
||||||||||||
and movement in liabilities |
||||||||||||
to policyholders |
(1 |
) |
- |
(1 |
) |
- |
- |
- |
||||
Net operating income before |
||||||||||||
loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
1,785 |
10,510 |
12,295 |
2,606 |
4,352 |
6,958 |
||||||
Loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
- |
(5 |
) |
(5 |
) |
(2 |
) |
(9 |
) |
(11 |
) |
|
Net operating income |
1,785 |
10,505 |
12,290 |
2,604 |
4,343 |
6,947 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
(2,019 |
) |
(2,155 |
) |
(4,174 |
) |
(1,650 |
) |
(1,912 |
) |
(3,562 |
) |
Operating profit/(loss) |
(234 |
) |
8,350 |
8,116 |
954 |
2,431 |
3,385 |
|||||
Share of profit/(loss) in associates |
||||||||||||
and joint ventures |
45 |
(4 |
) |
41 |
116 |
34 |
150 |
|||||
Profit/(loss) before tax |
(189 |
) |
8,346 |
8,157 |
1,070 |
2,465 |
3,535 |
10. Geographical distribution of results
Europe |
||||||||||||
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Interest income |
18,126 |
16,991 |
35,117 |
15,217 |
17,927 |
33,144 |
||||||
Interest expense |
(13,651 |
) |
(11,770 |
) |
(25,421 |
) |
(11,297 |
) |
(14,101 |
) |
(25,398 |
) |
Net interest income |
4,475 |
5,221 |
9,696 |
3,920 |
3,826 |
7,746 |
||||||
Fee income |
5,666 |
4,559 |
10,225 |
5,382 |
5,591 |
10,973 |
||||||
Fee expense |
(1,443 |
) |
(1,290 |
) |
(2,733 |
) |
(1,238 |
) |
(1,304 |
) |
(2,542 |
) |
Net fee income |
4,223 |
3,269 |
7,492 |
4,144 |
4,287 |
8,431 |
||||||
Net trading income |
3,649 |
1,708 |
5,357 |
3,338 |
3,605 |
6,943 |
||||||
Changes in fair value of long-term |
||||||||||||
debt issued and related derivatives |
207 |
2,732 |
2,939 |
203 |
856 |
1,059 |
||||||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
other financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
(866 |
) |
(960 |
) |
(1,826 |
) |
145 |
22 |
167 |
|||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
(659 |
) |
1,772 |
1,113 |
348 |
878 |
1,226 |
|||||
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
608 |
(190 |
) |
418 |
790 |
536 |
1,326 |
|||||
Dividend income |
20 |
110 |
130 |
161 |
10 |
171 |
||||||
Net earned insurance premiums |
2,286 |
3,013 |
5,299 |
1,480 |
2,530 |
4,010 |
||||||
Gains on disposal of French |
||||||||||||
regional banks |
- |
2,445 |
2,445 |
- |
- |
- |
||||||
Other operating income |
1,427 |
669 |
2,096 |
262 |
931 |
1,193 |
||||||
Total operating income |
16,029 |
18,017 |
34,046 |
14,443 |
16,603 |
31,046 |
||||||
Net insurance claims incurred and |
||||||||||||
movement in liabilities to |
||||||||||||
policyholders |
(1,388 |
) |
(1,979 |
) |
(3,367 |
) |
(1,146 |
) |
(2,333 |
) |
(3,479 |
) |
Net operating income before loan |
||||||||||||
impairment charges and other |
||||||||||||
credit risk provisions |
14,641 |
16,038 |
30,679 |
13,297 |
14,270 |
27,567 |
||||||
Loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
(1,272 |
) |
(2,482 |
) |
(3,754 |
) |
(1,363 |
) |
(1,179 |
) |
(2,542 |
) |
Net operating income |
13,369 |
13,556 |
26,925 |
11,934 |
13,091 |
25,025 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
(8,193 |
) |
(7,879 |
) |
(16,072 |
) |
(7,972 |
) |
(8,553 |
) |
(16,525 |
) |
Operating profit |
5,176 |
5,677 |
10,853 |
3,962 |
4,538 |
8,500 |
||||||
Share of profit in associates |
||||||||||||
and joint ventures |
1 |
15 |
16 |
88 |
7 |
95 |
||||||
Profit before tax |
5,177 |
5,692 |
10,869 |
4,050 |
4,545 |
8,595 |
Hong Kong |
||||||||||||
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Interest income |
4,984 |
4,546 |
9,530 |
6,214 |
6,366 |
12,580 |
||||||
Interest expense |
(2,149 |
) |
(1,683 |
) |
(3,832 |
) |
(3,646 |
) |
(3,451 |
) |
(7,097 |
) |
Net interest income |
2,835 |
2,863 |
5,698 |
2,568 |
2,915 |
5,483 |
||||||
Fee income |
1,724 |
1,338 |
3,062 |
1,659 |
2,201 |
3,860 |
||||||
Fee expense |
(255 |
) |
(227 |
) |
(482 |
) |
(220 |
) |
(278 |
) |
(498 |
) |
Net fee income |
1,469 |
1,111 |
2,580 |
1,439 |
1,923 |
3,362 |
||||||
Net trading income |
314 |
879 |
1,193 |
469 |
773 |
1,242 |
||||||
Changes in fair value of |
||||||||||||
long-term debt issued |
||||||||||||
and related derivatives |
1 |
2 |
3 |
- |
2 |
2 |
||||||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
other financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
(362 |
) |
(832 |
) |
(1,194 |
) |
210 |
464 |
674 |
|||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
(361 |
) |
(830 |
) |
(1,191 |
) |
210 |
466 |
676 |
|||
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
(98 |
) |
(211 |
) |
(309 |
) |
32 |
62 |
94 |
|||
Dividend income |
20 |
21 |
41 |
17 |
14 |
31 |
||||||
Net earned insurance premiums |
1,650 |
1,597 |
3,247 |
1,426 |
1,371 |
2,797 |
||||||
Other operating income |
448 |
369 |
817 |
413 |
432 |
845 |
||||||
Total operating income |
6,277 |
5,799 |
12,076 |
6,574 |
7,956 |
14,530 |
||||||
Net insurance claims incurred and |
||||||||||||
movement in liabilities to |
||||||||||||
policyholders |
(1,169 |
) |
(753 |
) |
(1,922 |
) |
(1,512 |
) |
(1,696 |
) |
(3,208 |
) |
Net operating income before |
||||||||||||
loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
5,108 |
5,046 |
10,154 |
5,062 |
6,260 |
11,322 |
||||||
Loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
(81 |
) |
(684 |
) |
(765 |
) |
(80 |
) |
(151 |
) |
(231 |
) |
Net operating income |
5,027 |
4,362 |
9,389 |
4,982 |
6,109 |
11,091 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
(1,975 |
) |
(1,968 |
) |
(3,943 |
) |
(1,665 |
) |
(2,115 |
) |
(3,780 |
) |
Operating profit |
3,052 |
2,394 |
5,446 |
3,317 |
3,994 |
7,311 |
||||||
Share of profit/(loss) in associates |
||||||||||||
and joint ventures |
21 |
(6 |
) |
15 |
13 |
15 |
28 |
|||||
Profit before tax |
3,073 |
2,388 |
5,461 |
3,330 |
4,009 |
7,339 |
Rest of Asia-Pacific (including |
||||||||||||
Middle East) |
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Interest income |
5,747 |
5,770 |
11,517 |
4,662 |
5,496 |
10,158 |
||||||
Interest expense |
(3,114 |
) |
(2,910 |
) |
(6,024 |
) |
(2,761 |
) |
(3,254 |
) |
(6,015 |
) |
Net interest income |
2,633 |
2,860 |
5,493 |
1,901 |
2,242 |
4,143 |
||||||
Fee income |
1,686 |
1,468 |
3,154 |
1,174 |
1,535 |
2,709 |
||||||
Fee expense |
(348 |
) |
(248 |
) |
(596 |
) |
(164 |
) |
(299 |
) |
(463 |
) |
Net fee income |
1,338 |
1,220 |
2,558 |
1,010 |
1,236 |
2,246 |
||||||
Net trading income |
1,329 |
1,115 |
2,444 |
797 |
846 |
1,643 |
||||||
Changes in fair value of |
||||||||||||
long-term debt issued and |
||||||||||||
related derivatives |
- |
1 |
1 |
1 |
- |
1 |
||||||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
other financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
(88 |
) |
(84 |
) |
(172 |
) |
77 |
33 |
110 |
|||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
(88 |
) |
(83 |
) |
(171 |
) |
78 |
33 |
111 |
|||
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
33 |
(1 |
) |
32 |
26 |
12 |
38 |
|||||
Gains arising from dilution of |
||||||||||||
interests in associates |
- |
- |
- |
1,076 |
5 |
1,081 |
||||||
Dividend income |
2 |
2 |
4 |
4 |
4 |
8 |
||||||
Net earned insurance premiums |
114 |
83 |
197 |
109 |
117 |
226 |
||||||
Other operating income |
484 |
580 |
1,064 |
360 |
438 |
798 |
||||||
Total operating income |
5,845 |
5,776 |
11,621 |
5,361 |
4,933 |
10,294 |
||||||
Net insurance claims incurred and |
||||||||||||
movement in liabilities to |
||||||||||||
policyholders |
(4 |
) |
32 |
28 |
(141 |
) |
(112 |
) |
(253 |
) |
||
Net operating income before loan |
||||||||||||
impairment charges and other |
||||||||||||
credit risk provisions |
5,841 |
5,808 |
11,649 |
5,220 |
4,821 |
10,041 |
||||||
Loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
(369 |
) |
(762 |
) |
(1,131 |
) |
(308 |
) |
(308 |
) |
(616 |
) |
Net operating income |
5,472 |
5,046 |
10,518 |
4,912 |
4,513 |
9,425 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
(2,784 |
) |
(2,879 |
) |
(5,663 |
) |
(2,075 |
) |
(2,689 |
) |
(4,764 |
) |
Operating profit |
2,688 |
2,167 |
4,855 |
2,837 |
1,824 |
4,661 |
||||||
Share of profit in associates and |
||||||||||||
joint ventures |
936 |
677 |
1,613 |
507 |
841 |
1,348 |
||||||
Profit before tax |
3,624 |
2,844 |
6,468 |
3,344 |
2,665 |
6,009 |
North America |
||||||||||||
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Interest income |
13,797 |
12,100 |
25,897 |
14,958 |
15,225 |
30,183 |
||||||
Interest expense |
(5,924 |
) |
(4,755 |
) |
(10,679 |
) |
(7,651 |
) |
(7,685 |
) |
(15,336 |
) |
Net interest income |
7,873 |
7,345 |
15,218 |
7,307 |
7,540 |
14,847 |
||||||
Fee income |
3,245 |
3,047 |
6,292 |
3,307 |
3,426 |
6,733 |
||||||
Fee expense |
(423 |
) |
(642 |
) |
(1,065 |
) |
(403 |
) |
(520 |
) |
(923 |
) |
Net fee income |
2,822 |
2,405 |
5,227 |
2,904 |
2,906 |
5,810 |
||||||
Net trading income/(expense) |
(1,816 |
) |
(1,319 |
) |
(3,135 |
) |
622 |
(1,164 |
) |
(542 |
) |
|
Changes in fair value of |
||||||||||||
long-term debt issued |
||||||||||||
and related derivatives |
369 |
3,367 |
3,736 |
81 |
1,669 |
1,750 |
||||||
Net income/(expense) from |
||||||||||||
other financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
(1 |
) |
2 |
1 |
- |
- |
- |
|||||
Net income from |
||||||||||||
financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
368 |
3,369 |
3,737 |
81 |
1,669 |
1,750 |
||||||
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
106 |
(226 |
) |
(120 |
) |
53 |
192 |
245 |
||||
Dividend income |
40 |
37 |
77 |
64 |
41 |
105 |
||||||
Net earned insurance premiums |
203 |
187 |
390 |
231 |
218 |
449 |
||||||
Other operating income/(expense) |
115 |
(92 |
) |
23 |
342 |
18 |
360 |
|||||
Total operating income |
9,711 |
11,706 |
21,417 |
11,604 |
11,420 |
23,024 |
||||||
Net insurance claims incurred and |
||||||||||||
movement in liabilities to |
||||||||||||
policyholders |
(112 |
) |
(126 |
) |
(238 |
) |
(124 |
) |
(117 |
) |
(241 |
) |
Net operating income before loan |
||||||||||||
impairment charges and other |
||||||||||||
credit risk provisions |
9,599 |
11,580 |
21,179 |
11,480 |
11,303 |
22,783 |
||||||
Loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
(7,166 |
) |
(9,629 |
) |
(16,795 |
) |
(3,820 |
) |
(8,336 |
) |
(12,156 |
) |
Net operating income |
2,433 |
1,951 |
4,384 |
7,660 |
2,967 |
10,627 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
||||||||||||
excluding goodwill impairment |
(4,807 |
) |
(4,552 |
) |
(9,359 |
) |
(5,235 |
) |
(5,321 |
) |
(10,556 |
) |
Goodwill impairment |
(527 |
) |
(10,037 |
) |
(10,564 |
) |
- |
- |
- |
|||
Operating profit/(loss) |
(2,901 |
) |
(12,638 |
) |
(15,539 |
) |
2,425 |
(2,354 |
) |
71 |
||
Share of profit in associates |
||||||||||||
and joint ventures |
8 |
3 |
11 |
10 |
10 |
20 |
||||||
Profit/(loss) before tax |
(2,893 |
) |
(12,635 |
) |
(15,528 |
) |
2,435 |
(2,344 |
) |
91 |
Latin America |
||||||||||||
Half-year to |
Half-year to |
|||||||||||
30 June |
31 December |
30 June |
31 December |
|||||||||
2008 |
2008 |
2008 |
2007 |
2007 |
2007 |
|||||||
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
US$m |
|||||||
Interest income |
5,785 |
5,847 |
11,632 |
4,376 |
5,095 |
9,471 |
||||||
Interest expense |
(2,423 |
) |
(2,751 |
) |
(5,174 |
) |
(1,842 |
) |
(2,053 |
) |
(3,895 |
) |
Net interest income |
3,362 |
3,096 |
6,458 |
2,534 |
3,042 |
5,576 |
||||||
Fee income |
1,418 |
1,298 |
2,716 |
1,234 |
1,413 |
2,647 |
||||||
Fee expense |
(279 |
) |
(270 |
) |
(549 |
) |
(236 |
) |
(258 |
) |
(494 |
) |
Net fee income |
1,139 |
1,028 |
2,167 |
998 |
1,155 |
2,153 |
||||||
Net trading income |
358 |
343 |
701 |
285 |
263 |
548 |
||||||
Changes in fair value of |
||||||||||||
long-term debt issued |
||||||||||||
and related derivatives |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
||||||
Net income from other |
||||||||||||
financial instruments |
||||||||||||
designated at fair value |
156 |
208 |
364 |
157 |
163 |
320 |
||||||
Net income from financial |
||||||||||||
instruments designated at |
||||||||||||
fair value |
156 |
208 |
364 |
157 |
163 |
320 |
||||||
Gains less losses from financial |
||||||||||||
investments |
168 |
8 |
176 |
98 |
155 |
253 |
||||||
Gains arising from dilution of |
||||||||||||
interests in associates |
- |
- |
- |
- |
11 |
11 |
||||||
Dividend income |
6 |
14 |
20 |
6 |
3 |
9 |
||||||
Net earned insurance premiums |
900 |
817 |
1,717 |
731 |
863 |
1,594 |
||||||
Other operating income |
130 |
170 |
300 |
153 |
75 |
228 |
||||||
Total operating income |
6,219 |
5,684 |
11,903 |
4,962 |
5,730 |
10,692 |
||||||
Net insurance claims incurred and |
||||||||||||
movement in liabilities to |
||||||||||||
policyholders |
(764 |
) |
(626 |
) |
(1,390 |
) |
(676 |
) |
(751 |
) |
(1,427 |
) |
Net operating income before loan |
||||||||||||
impairment charges and other |
||||||||||||
credit risk provisions |
5,455 |
5,058 |
10,513 |
4,286 |
4,979 |
9,265 |
||||||
Loan impairment charges and |
||||||||||||
other credit risk provisions |
(1,170 |
) |
(1,322 |
) |
(2,492 |
) |
(775 |
) |
(922 |
) |
(1,697 |
) |
Net operating income |
4,285 |
3,736 |
8,021 |
3,511 |
4,057 |
7,568 |
||||||
Net operating expenses |
(3,023 |
) |
(2,967 |
) |
(5,990 |
) |
(2,516 |
) |
(2,886 |
) |
(5,402 |
) |
Operating profit |
1,262 |
769 |
2,031 |
995 |
1,171 |
2,166 |
||||||
Share of profit in associates and |
||||||||||||
joint ventures |
4 |
2 |
6 |
5 |
7 |
12 |
||||||
Profit before tax |
1,266 |
771 |
2,037 |
1,000 |
1,178 |
2,178 |
11. Registers of shareholders
The Overseas Branch Register of shareholders in Hong Kong will be closed for one
day, on Friday 20 March 2009. Any person who has acquired shares registered on the
Hong Kong Overseas Branch Register but who has not lodged the share transfer with the Hong
Kong Overseas Branch Registrar should do so before 4.00pm on Thursday 19 March 2009 in
order to receive the fourth interim dividend for 2008, which will be payable on Wednesday 6
May 2009. Transfers may not be made to or from the Hong Kong Overseas Branch Register
while the Branch Register is closed.
Any person who has acquired shares registered on the Principal Register in the United
Kingdom but who has not lodged the share transfer with the Principal Registrar should
do so before 4.00pm on Friday 20 March 2009 in order to receive the dividend.
Transfers of American Depositary Shares should be lodged with the depositary by 12 noon on
Friday 20 March 2009 in order to receive the dividend.
12. Foreign currency amounts |
The sterling and Hong Kong dollar equivalent figures in the consolidated income
statement and balance sheet are for information only. These are translated at the average
rate for the period for the income statement and the closing rate for the balance sheet as
follows:
Year ended 31 December |
|||||
2008 |
2007 |
||||
Closing : |
HK$/US$ |
7.750 |
7.798 |
||
£/US$ |
0.686 |
0.498 |
|||
Average : |
HK$/US$ |
7.787 |
7.801 |
||
£/US$ |
0.545 |
0.500 |
|||
13. Litigation |
On 27 July 2007, the UK Office of Fair Trading ('OFT') issued High Court legal proceedings
against a number of UK financial institutions, including HSBC Bank, to determine the legal
status and enforceability of certain of the charges applied to their personal customers in
relation to unauthorised overdrafts (the 'charges'). Pending the resolution of the
proceedings, the Financial Services Authority ('FSA') has granted firms (including HSBC
Bank) a waiver enabling them to place relevant complaints about the charges on hold and the
County Courts have stayed all individual customer claims.
Certain preliminary issues in these proceedings have been heard in the Commercial Division
of the High Court. This has confirmed that HSBC Bank's current and historic charges are
capable of being tested for fairness but are not capable of being penalties. HSBC Bank (and
all the other financial institutions involved in the legal proceedings) appealed the
finding that the current charges are capable of being tested for fairness. The Court of
Appeal delivered its judgement on 26 February 2009, confirming the decision of the High
Court that the charges of HSBC Bank (and all of the other financial institutions involved
in the legal proceedings) are capable of being tested for fairness. HSBC Bank is
considering applying for leave to appeal to the House of Lords.
The proceedings remain at an early stage and may, allowing for appeals on the issues, take
some time to conclude. A wide range of outcomes is possible, depending upon the outcome of
any appeal to the House of Lords and, to the extent applicable, upon the Court's assessment
of the fairness of each charge across the period under review. Since July 2001, there have
been a variety of charges applied by HSBC Bank across different charging periods under the
then existing contractual arrangements. HSBC Bank considers the charges to be and to have
been valid and enforceable, and intends strongly to defend its position.
If, contrary to HSBC Bank's current assessment, the Court should ultimately (after appeals)
reach an adverse decision that results in a liability, a large number of different outcomes
is possible, each of which would have a different financial impact. Given that there is
limited authority on how an assessment of fairness should be conducted, HSBC Bank's
estimate of the potential financial impact is that it could be in the order of
approximately £350 million (US$510 million), as published in the Interim Report
2008. To make an estimate of the potential financial impact at this stage with any
precision is extremely difficult, owing to (among other things) the complexity of the
issues, the number of permutations of possible outcomes, and the early stage of the
proceedings. In addition, the assumptions made by HSBC Bank may prove to be incorrect.
On 11 December 2008 Bernard L Madoff ('Madoff') was arrested and charged in the United
States District Court for the Southern District of New York with one count of securities
fraud. That same day, the US Securities and Exchange Commission ('SEC') filed securities
fraud charges against Madoff and his firm Bernard L Madoff Investment Securities LLC
('Madoff Securities'), a broker dealer and investment advisor registered with the SEC. The
criminal complaint and SEC complaint each alleged that Madoff had informed senior Madoff
Securities employees, in substance, that his investment advisory business was a fraud. On
15 December 2008, on the application of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation, the
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York appointed a trustee for
the liquidation of the business of Madoff Securities, and removed the liquidation
proceeding to the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. On
9 February 2009, on Madoff's consent, the United States District Court for the Southern
District of New York entered a partial judgement in the SEC action, permanently enjoining
Madoff from violating certain antifraud provisions of the US securities laws, ordering
Madoff to pay disgorgement, prejudgement interest and a civil penalty in amounts to be
determined at a later time, and continuing certain other relief previously imposed,
including a freeze on Madoff's assets. The relevant US authorities are continuing
their investigations into the alleged fraud. There remains significant uncertainty as to
the facts of the alleged fraud and the extent of any assets of, and remaining within,
Madoff Securities.
Various non-US HSBC group companies provide custodial, administration and similar services
to a number of funds incorporated outside the United States of America whose
assets were invested with Madoff Securities. Based on information provided by Madoff
Securities, as at 30 November 2008, the aggregate net asset value of these funds (which
would include principal amounts invested and unrealised gains) was US$8.4 billion.
Proceedings concerning Madoff and Madoff Securities have already been issued in various
jurisdictions against numerous defendants and HSBC expects further proceedings to be
brought, including by the Madoff Securities trustee. Various HSBC group companies have been
named as defendants in suits in the United States anticipated to seek class
action status and cases in the Commercial List of the Irish courts. All of the cases where
HSBC group companies are named as a defendant are at a very early stage. HSBC considers
that it has good defences to these claims and will continue to defend them vigorously. HSBC
is unable reliably to estimate the liability, if any, that might arise as a result of such
claims.
Various HSBC group companies have also received requests for information from various
regulatory authorities in connection with the alleged fraud by Madoff. HSBC group companies
are co-operating with these requests for information.
These actions apart HSBC is party to legal actions in a number of jurisdictions including
the UK, Hong Kong and the US arising out of its normal business operation.
HSBC considers that none of the actions is material, and none is expected to result in a
significant adverse effect on the financial position of HSBC, either individually or in the
aggregate. Management believes that adequate provisions have been made in respect of the
litigation arising out of its normal business operations. HSBC has not disclosed any
contingent liability associated with these legal actions because it is not practical to do
so.
14. Goodwill impairment |
It is HSBC's policy to test goodwill for impairment annually, and to perform an impairment
test more frequently for cash generating units ('CGUs') when there are indications that
conditions have changed for those CGUs since the last goodwill impairment test that would
result in a different outcome.
At 31 December 2008, HSBC recognised an impairment charge of US$10,564 million (2007: nil)
in respect of Personal Financial Services - North America. This was a result of the
very significant deterioration in the economic and credit conditions in North
America and the resulting further restructuring in the Personal Financial Services -
North America CGU in the latter part of 2008. The reduction in the recoverable amount
of the main business lines was driven by higher losses than were expected for 2008,
including higher levels of impairment charges, contraction in new business from lending
activities and a delay in the expected return to profitability of the business. The
deterioration in the financial performance was particularly severe in the fourth quarter of
2008. In addition, the discount rate used increased as observed market discount rates
increased for US consumer finance and banking businesses.
15. Events after the balance sheet date |
A fourth interim dividend for 2008 of US$0.10 per ordinary share
(US$1,214 million) (2007: US$0.39 per ordinary share, US$4,628 million) was
declared by the Directors after 31 December 2008.
In late February 2009, HSBC decided to discontinue all originations by the branch-based consumer lending business of HSBC Finance. HSBC Finance will continue to service and collect the existing portfolio as it runs off. Closure costs of approximately US$265 million are expected to be incurred, mainly relating to one-off termination and other employee benefit costs, and charges for impairment
of fixed assets associated with the consumer lending branch network, a substantial portion of which will be recorded in the first half of 2009.
On 2 March 2009, HSBC Holdings plc announced its proposal to raise £12.5 billion
(US$17.7 billion) (net of expenses) by way of a fully underwritten rights issue
of 5,060 million new ordinary shares at a price of 254 pence per share
on the basis of 5 new ordinary shares for every 12 existing ordinary
shares. The proposal is subject to authorisation by the shareholders at a general meeting
on 19 March 2009.
These accounts were approved by the Board of Directors on 2 March 2009 and authorised for
issue.
16. Dealings in HSBC Holdings plc shares |
Except for dealings as intermediaries by HSBC Bank plc, HSBC Financial Products (France)
and The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited, which are members of a European
Economic Area exchange, neither HSBC Holdings nor any subsidiaries has bought, sold or
redeemed any securities of HSBC Holdings during the year ended 31 December 2008.
17. Statutory accounts |
The information in this news release does not constitute statutory accounts within the
meaning of Section 240 of the Companies Act 1985 (the Act). The statutory accounts for the
year ended 31 December 2008 will be delivered to the Registrar of Companies
in England and Wales in accordance with Section 242 of the Act. The
auditor has reported on those accounts. Its report was unqualified and did not contain a
statement under Section 237(2) or (3) of the Act.
18. Forward-looking statements |
This news release contains certain forward-looking statements with respect to the financial
condition, results of operations and business of HSBC. These forward-looking statements
represent HSBC's expectations or beliefs concerning future events and involve known and
unknown risks and uncertainty that could cause actual results, performance or events to
differ materially from those expressed or implied in such statements. Certain statements,
such as those that include the words 'potential', 'estimated', and similar expressions or
variations on such expressions may be considered 'forward-looking statements'.
Past performance cannot be relied on as a guide to future performance.
19. Corporate governance |
HSBC is committed to high standards of corporate governance. HSBC Holdings plc has complied
throughout 2008 with the applicable code provisions of the Combined Code on Corporate
Governance issued by the Financial Reporting Council and the Code on Corporate Governance
Practices in Appendix 14 to the Rules Governing the Listing of Securities on The Stock
Exchange of Hong Kong Limited.
The Board of HSBC Holdings plc has adopted a code of conduct for transactions in HSBC Group
securities by Directors that complies with The Model Code in the Listing Rules of the
Financial Services Authority and with The Model Code for Securities Transactions by
Directors of Listed Issuers ('Hong Kong Model Code') set out in the Rules Governing the
Listing of Securities on The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong Limited save that The Stock
Exchange of Hong Kong has granted certain waivers from strict compliance with the Hong Kong
Model Code, primarily to take into account accepted practices in the UK, particularly in
respect of employee share plans. Following a specific enquiry, each Director has confirmed
he or she has complied with the code of conduct for transactions in HSBC Group securities
throughout 2008.
The Directors of HSBC Holdings plc as at the date of this announcement are:
S K Green, M F Geoghegan, S A Catz† ,
M K T Cheung† , V H C Cheng,
J D Coombe† , J L
Durán† , R A
Fairhead† , D J Flint, A A
Flockhart, W K L Fung*, S T Gulliver, J W J
Hughes-Hallett† ,
W S H Laidlaw† , J R
Lomax† , Sir Mark
Moody-Stuart† , G
Morgan† , N R N
Murthy†
, S M Robertson† , J
L Thornton† and Sir Brian
Williamson† .
* Non-executive Director
† Independent non-executive Director
The Group Audit Committee has reviewed the annual results for 2008.
20. Annual Review and Annual Report and Accounts |
The Annual Review 2008 and/or Annual Report and Accounts
2008 will be mailed to shareholders on or about Tuesday 31 March 2009. Copies may
be obtained from Group Communications, HSBC Holdings plc, 8 Canada Square, London E14 5HQ,
United Kingdom; Group Public Affairs, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation
Limited, 1 Queen's Road Central, Hong Kong; Internal Communications, HSBC - North America,
26525 N Riverwoods Boulevard, Mattawa, Illinois, 60045,USA; HSBC France, Direction de la
Communication, 103 avenue des Champs Elysées, 75419 Paris Cedex 08, France; or from
the HSBC Group website - www.hsbc.com. Chinese translations of the Annual
Review and Annual Report and Accounts may be obtained on request
from Computershare Hong Kong Investor Services Limited, Hopewell Centre, Rooms 1806-07,
18th Floor, 183 Queen's Road
East, Hong Kong.
A French translation of the Annual Review may be obtained on request from
HSBC France, Direction de la Communication, 103 avenue des Champs Elysées, 75419
Paris Cedex 08, France.
The Annual Report and Accounts will be filed with the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Annual Review and Annual Report and Accounts will be
available on the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong's website - www.hkex.com.hk.
Custodians or nominees that wish to distribute copies of the Annual
Review and/or Annual Report and Accounts to their clients may
request copies for collection by writing to Group Communications at the address given
above.
21. Annual General Meeting |
The 2009 Annual General Meeting of the Company will be held at the Barbican Hall, Barbican
Centre, London EC2 on Friday 22 May 2009 at 11 am.
Notice of the meeting will be mailed to shareholders on or about Tuesday 31 March 2009.
22. Interim Management Statements and Interim results for 2009 |
Interim Management Statements are expected to be issued on 8 May 2009 and 5 November 2009,
respectively. The interim results for the six months to 30 June 2009 will be announced on
Monday 3 August 2009.
23. Proposed interim dividends for 2009 |
The Board has adopted a policy of paying quarterly interim dividends on the ordinary
shares. Under this policy it is intended to have a pattern of three equal interim dividends
with a variable fourth interim dividend. It is envisaged that the first interim dividend in
respect of 2009 will be US$0.08 per ordinary share. The proposed timetables for the
dividends in respect of 2009 are:
Interim dividends on the ordinary shares for 2008 |
||||||||
First |
Second |
Third |
Fourth |
|||||
Announcement |
5 May 2009 |
3 August 2009 |
2 November 2009 |
1 March 2010 |
||||
ADSs quoted ex-dividend in |
||||||||
New York |
20 May 2009 |
19 August 2009 |
18 November 2009 |
17 March 2010 |
||||
Shares quoted ex-dividend in |
||||||||
London, Hong Kong, Paris |
||||||||
and Bermuda |
20 May 2009 |
19 August 2009 |
18 November 2009 |
17 March 2010 |
||||
Record date in Hong Kong |
22 May 2009 |
21 August 2009 |
19 November 2009 |
18 March 2010 |
||||
Record date in London, |
||||||||
Paris and Bermuda |
22 May 2009 |
21 August 2009 |
*20 November 2009 |
*19 March 2010 |
||||
Closure of the Overseas |
||||||||
Branch Register of |
||||||||
shareholders in Hong Kong |
||||||||
for one day |
22 May 2009 |
21 August 2009 |
- |
- |
||||
Payment date |
8 July 2009 |
7 October 2009 |
13 January 2010 |
5 May 2010 |
* Removals to and from the Overseas Branch Register of shareholders
in Hong Kong will not be permitted on these dates
24. News release |
Copies of this news release may be obtained from Group Comunications, HSBC Holdings plc,
8 Canada Square, London E14 5HQ, United Kingdom; The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking
Corporation Limited, 1 Queen's Road Central, Hong Kong;
HSBC - North America, 26525
N Riverwoods Boulevard, Mettawa, Illinois 60045, USA; HSBC France, Direction de la
Communication, 103 avenue des Champs Elysées, 75419 Paris Cedex 08, France. The news
release will also be available on the HSBC Group website - www.hsbc.com.
25. For further information contact: |
London |
Hong Kong |
Richard Beck |
David Hall |
Group General Manager and Director |
Head of Group Communications (Asia) |
of Group Comunications |
Telephone: +852 2822 1133 |
Telephone: +44 (0)20 7991 0633 |
|
Danielle Neben |
Gareth Hewett |
Manager Investor Relations |
Deputy Head, Group Communications (Asia) |
Telephone: +44 (0)20 7992 1938 |
Telephone: +852 2822 4929 |
Chicago |
Paris |
Lisa Sodeika |
Chantal Nedjib |
Executive Vice President |
Managing Director, Corporate Communications |
Corporate Affairs |
Telephone: +33 1 40 70 7729 |
Telephone: +1 224 544 3299 |
|
Diane Bergan |
Gilberte Lombard |
Senior Vice President |
Investor Relations Director |
Public Affairs |
Telephone: +33 1 40 70 2257 |
Telephone: +1 224 544 3310 |
SIGNATURE
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
HSBC Holdings plc
By:
Name: P A Stafford
Title: Assistant Group Secretary
Date: March 2, 2009