Quarter ended
|
|||||
31 March
2011
|
31 March
2010
|
31 December 2010
|
|||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
|||
Net operating income before loan impairment charges and
other credit risk provisions.................................................................
|
17,040
|
17,926
|
17,322
|
||
Loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions ................
|
(2,384)
|
(3,787)
|
(3,370)
|
||
Net operating income ..............................................................................
|
14,656
|
14,139
|
13,952
|
||
Total operating expenses ........................................................................
|
(10,369)
|
(8,898)
|
(10,199)
|
||
Share of profit in associates and joint ventures ..................................
|
619
|
471
|
655
|
||
Profit before tax .......................................................................................
|
4,906
|
5,712
|
4,408
|
||
Changes in own credit spread on long-term debt ...............................
|
589
|
357
|
203
|
||
Adjustments for foreign currency translation and acquisitions
and disposals .......................................................................................
|
-
|
28
|
(313)
|
||
Underlying profit before tax ...................................................................
|
5,495
|
6,097
|
4,298
|
||
Profit after tax ..........................................................................................
|
4,415
|
2,899
|
3,516
|
||
Profit attributable to shareholders of the parent company ................
|
4,153
|
2,631
|
3,242
|
||
US$
|
US$
|
US$
|
|||
Basic earnings per ordinary share .........................................................
|
0.23
|
0.15
|
0.18
|
||
Diluted earnings per ordinary share ......................................................
|
0.22
|
0.15
|
0.18
|
||
Dividend per ordinary share (in respect of the period) ......................
|
0.09
|
0.08
|
0.12
|
||
%
|
%
|
%
|
|||
Return on average ordinary shareholders' equity (annualised) .......
|
11.4
|
8.3
|
8.8
|
||
Cost efficiency ratio .................................................................................
|
60.9
|
49.6
|
58.9
|
·
|
Revenues benefited from a number of positive trends. Higher trade-related volumes and increased insurance and investment income were recorded, most notably in Asia. We continued to grow customer loan balances, which increased by 4% during the quarter. In line with recent strong loan growth, net interest income in Asia and Latin America increased overall, while in Europe net interest income rose in Retail Banking and Wealth Management and in Commercial Banking. This was partly offset by asset spread compression as the portfolio mix migrated to better quality secured lending.
|
·
|
Revenues were 5% lower than in Q1 2010, principally as a result of headwinds highlighted in respect of full year 2010 performance. These were the ongoing run-off in the US of the Consumer Finance portfolios and lower balances in Cards, and reduced revenues in Global Banking and Markets, including lower Balance Sheet Management revenues, as expected.
|
·
|
Compared with Q4 2010, Group revenues were broadly unchanged, reflecting an improvement in Global Banking and Markets, offset by movements in the fair value of non-qualifying hedges, with an unfavourable fair value movement of US$59m in Q1 2011 which contrasted with a favourable movement of US$736m in Q4 2010.
|
·
|
In Global Banking and Markets, revenues were lower compared with a strong Q1 2010. However, following strategic investment in the business, equities revenues reached their highest quarterly level in two years as global equity markets rallied. Compared with Q4 2010, revenues recovered strongly across most business lines and regions, as market conditions improved and client activity increased.
|
·
|
Loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions continued to improve as a result of stabilising economic conditions combined with earlier management initiatives to reduce portfolio risk and improve collection processes. Overall, they fell by 37% to US$2.4bn, the lowest quarterly level since Q2 2006. All customer groups and all regions experienced an improvement, with the US accounting for a significant proportion of the total due to lower balances in the Consumer Finance run-off portfolio and the Cards business. Within the Consumer Finance run-off portfolio, the decline in loan impairment charges was moderated by US$0.4bn of additional charges as a result of changes in economic assumptions about the pace of recovery in home prices and delays in the timing of expected cash flows, notably as a result of the foreclosure moratorium that began in late 2010.
|
·
|
In Global Banking and Markets, a small net release in loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions contrasted with a charge in Q1 2010 in line with improved market conditions. Projected impairment charges and expected cash losses remain in line with earlier guidance and the available-for-sale reserve reduced from US$6.4bn at 31 December 2010 to US$5.8bn at 31 March 2011.
|
·
|
Costs in Q1 2011 included a US$440m provision in respect of the adverse judgement in the Judicial Review relating to sales of PPI in the UK (for details see below); restructuring costs of US$67m in Latin America; impairments on certain software projects now deferred or cancelled of US$78m in the US; and an acceleration in the expense recognition for deferred bonus awards of US$70m2. Excluding these items and movements in the fair value of own debt related to credit spreads, the cost efficiency ratio was 55.1%, compared with a reported cost efficiency ratio of 60.9% for Q1 2011. On the same basis, and excluding the pension curtailment gain of US$148m recorded in Q1 2010, expenses rose by 7%. The principal drivers of this increase were higher employee expenses and technology-related costs supporting strategic investment in the business.
|
·
|
On a reported basis, costs were 2% higher compared with Q4 2010. However, both quarters included a number of notable items, including litigation and other regulatory provisions and, after excluding these, costs were broadly stable. In the UK, legislation in respect of the bank levy has yet to be substantively enacted and therefore no charge has been recognised in Q1 2011. However, we estimate that the cost of the UK bank levy for HSBC will be approximately US$600m for the full year 2011.
|
·
|
At US$5.5bn, underlying pre-tax profits were 10% lower than in Q1 2010. On a reported basis, pre-tax profits fell by 14% to US$4.9bn. Unfavourable movements in the fair value of own debt relating to credit spreads mainly accounted for the difference between the reported and underlying figures in Q1 2011.
|
·
|
Profit after tax rose by 52% to US$4.4bn. The effective tax rate for the Group was significantly lower at 10.0%, principally due to the recognition of previously unrecognised deferred tax assets in the US on foreign tax credits. The high effective tax rate in Q1 2010 of 49.2% was largely caused by a tax charge on the sale of HSBC Bank Canada by HSBC North America Holdings Inc. to its UK parent company, as previously reported.
|
·
|
Profit attributable to shareholders increased by 58% to US$4.2bn, resulting in basic earnings per ordinary share of US$0.23, up 53%.
|
·
|
Annualised return on average ordinary shareholders' equity was 11.4%, up from 8.3% in Q1 2010, in part reflecting the low effective tax rate in Q1 2011, as noted above.
|
·
|
Customer account balances increased by 4% or US$47bn to US$1.3 trillion during the quarter, mainly in Europe and Asia.
|
·
|
We continued to increase customer lending during the quarter. Loans and advances to customers rose by 4% or US$39bn to US$997bn, despite the effect of the run-off of portfolios in the US. Europe, Asia and Latin America all recorded higher balances, with Commercial Banking and mortgage lending driving the growth, as we focus on faster-growing and lower-risk markets and sectors.
|
·
|
The advances-to-deposits ratio for the Group remained conservative at 78.2%. This is well within our maximum benchmark ratio of 90% and highlights further room for lending growth.
|
·
|
We continued to generate capital and the core tier 1 ratio improved to 10.7%. Risk-weighted assets marginally increased, reflecting strong growth in the key markets where we are expanding our customer relationships, partly offset by run-off in legacy portfolios.
|
·
|
On 3 May 2011, the Board announced a first interim dividend payment for 2011 of US$0.09 per ordinary share, an increase of 12.5% compared with the first interim dividend in 2010, as we signalled in February.
|
1.
|
We measure our performance internally on a like-for-like basis by eliminating the effects of foreign currency translation differences, acquisitions and disposals of subsidiaries and businesses and fair value movements on own debt attributable to credit spread where the net result of such movements will be zero upon maturity of the debt, all of which distort year-on-year comparisons. We refer to this as our underlying performance.
|
2.
|
Income statement comparisons, unless stated otherwise, relate to the three months ended 31 March 2011 and are compared with the corresponding three months in 2010. Balance sheet comparisons, unless otherwise stated, relate to balances as at 31 March 2011 compared with the corresponding balances as at 31 December 2010.
|
3.
|
The financial information on which this Interim Management Statement is based, and the data set out in the appendices to this Statement, are unaudited and have been prepared in accordance with HSBC's accounting policies as described in the Annual Report and Accounts 2010. A glossary of terms is also provided in the Annual Report and Accounts 2010.
|
4.
|
We announced in November 2010 that, with effect from March 2011, within the context of the customer group/global business view of Group performance, Retail Banking and Wealth Management would be managed as a single global business. This business is the existing Personal Financial Services, with Global Asset Management moving from Global Banking and Markets to this new single business. Commentary in this Interim Management Statement related to Retail Banking and Wealth Management reflects the performance of Personal Financial Services and does not yet reflect the change in the structure. These changes will be reflected in our Interim Report 2011.
|
5.
|
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. Dividends are declared in US dollars and, at the election of the shareholder, paid in cash in one of, or in a combination of, US dollars, sterling and Hong Kong dollars or, subject to the Board's determination that a scrip dividend is to be offered in respect of that dividend, may be satisfied in whole or in part by the issue of new shares in lieu of a cash dividend.
|
|
|
Shares quoted ex-dividend in London, Hong Kong, Paris and Bermuda
|
18 May 2011
|
|
ADSs quoted ex-dividend in New York
|
18 May 2011
|
|
Dividend record date in Hong Kong
|
19 May 2011
|
|
Dividend record date in London, New York, Paris and Bermuda
|
20 May 2011
|
|
Dividend payment date
|
6 July 2011
|
|
Interim Results 2011 announcement
|
1 August 2011
|
|
Q3 2011 Interim Management Statement
|
7 November 2011
|
|
|
|
|
London
|
|
Robert Bailhache
|
+44 (0) 20 7992 5712
|
Hong Kong
|
|
Patrick McGuinness
|
+852 3663 6883
|
Gareth Hewett
|
+852 6792 8195
|
London
|
|
Alastair Brown
|
+44 (0)20 7992 1938
|
Robert Quinlan
|
+44 (0)20 7991 3643
|
Hong Kong
|
|
Hugh Pye
|
+852 2822 4908
|
·
|
changes in general economic conditions in the markets in which we operate, such as continuing or deepening recessions and fluctuations in employment beyond those factored into consensus forecasts; changes in foreign exchange rates and interest rates; volatility in equity markets; lack of liquidity in wholesale funding markets; illiquidity and downward price pressure in national real estate markets; adverse changes in central banks' policies with respect to the provision of liquidity support to financial markets; heightened market concerns over sovereign creditworthiness in over-indebted countries; adverse changes in the funding status of public or private defined benefit pensions; and consumer perception as to the continuing availability of credit and price competition in the market segments we serve;
|
·
|
changes in government policy and regulation, including the monetary, interest rate and other policies of central banks and other regulatory authorities; initiatives to change the size, scope of activities and interconnectedness of financial institutions in connection with the implementation of stricter regulation of financial institutions in key markets worldwide; revised capital and liquidity benchmarks which could serve to deleverage bank balance sheets and lower returns available from the current business model and portfolio mix; imposition of levies or taxes designed to change business mix and risk appetite; the practices, pricing or responsibilities of financial institutions serving their consumer markets; expropriation, nationalisation, confiscation of assets and changes in legislation relating to foreign ownership; changes in bankruptcy legislation in the principal markets in which we operate and the consequences thereof; general changes in government policy that may significantly influence investor decisions; extraordinary government actions as a result of current market turmoil; other unfavourable political or diplomatic developments producing social instability or legal uncertainty which in turn may affect demand for our products and services; the costs, effects and outcomes of product regulatory reviews, actions or litigation, including any additional compliance requirements; and the effects of competition in the markets where we operate including increased competition from non-bank financial services companies, including securities firms; and factors specific to HSBC, including our success in adequately identifying the risks we face, such as the incidence of loan losses or delinquency, and managing those risks (through account management, hedging and other techniques). Effective risk management depends on, among other things, our ability through stress testing and other techniques to prepare for events that cannot be captured by the statistical models it uses; and our success in addressing operational, legal and regulatory, and litigation challenges.
|
Quarter ended
|
|||||
31 March
2011
|
31 March
2010
|
31 December 2010
|
|||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
|||
Net interest income ..................................................................................
|
9,911
|
10,023
|
9,932
|
||
Net fee income ..........................................................................................
|
4,371
|
4,412
|
4,571
|
||
Net trading income ...................................................................................
|
2,556
|
2,873
|
2,259
|
||
Changes in fair value of long-term debt issued and related
derivatives ............................................................................................
|
(602)
|
(584)
|
(509)
|
||
Net income from other financial instruments designated at
fair value ................................................................................................
|
291
|
289
|
592
|
||
Net income/(expense) from financial instruments designated
at fair value ...........................................................................................
|
(311)
|
(295)
|
83
|
||
Gains less losses from financial investments ......................................
|
207
|
342
|
126
|
||
Dividend income ......................................................................................
|
32
|
20
|
21
|
||
Net earned insurance premiums .............................................................
|
3,363
|
2,922
|
2,831
|
||
Other operating income ...........................................................................
|
314
|
699
|
786
|
||
Total operating income ...........................................................................
|
20,443
|
20,996
|
20,609
|
||
Net insurance claims incurred and movement in liabilities to
policyholders ........................................................................................
|
(3,403)
|
(3,070)
|
(3,287)
|
||
Net operating income before loan impairment charges and
other credit risk provisions ..............................................................
|
17,040
|
17,926
|
17,322
|
||
Loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions ................
|
(2,384)
|
(3,787)
|
(3,370)
|
||
Net operating income ..............................................................................
|
14,656
|
14,139
|
13,952
|
||
Total operating expenses ........................................................................
|
(10,369)
|
(8,898)
|
(10,199)
|
||
Operating profit .......................................................................................
|
4,287
|
5,241
|
3,753
|
||
Share of profit in associates and joint ventures ..................................
|
619
|
471
|
655
|
||
Profit before tax .......................................................................................
|
4,906
|
5,712
|
4,408
|
||
Tax expense ...............................................................................................
|
(491)
|
(2,813)
|
(892)
|
||
Profit after tax ..........................................................................................
|
4,415
|
2,899
|
3,516
|
||
Profit attributable to shareholders of the parent company ................
|
4,153
|
2,631
|
3,242
|
||
Profit attributable to non-controlling interests ....................................
|
262
|
268
|
274
|
||
Profit before tax by geographical region
|
|||||
Europe ........................................................................................................
|
652
|
1,857
|
374
|
||
Hong Kong ...............................................................................................
|
1,562
|
1,509
|
1,408
|
||
Rest of Asia-Pacific .................................................................................
|
1,634
|
1,302
|
1,523
|
||
Middle East ...............................................................................................
|
335
|
175
|
251
|
||
North America ..........................................................................................
|
181
|
450
|
410
|
||
Latin America ............................................................................................
|
542
|
419
|
442
|
||
4,906
|
5,712
|
4,408
|
31 March
2011
|
31 December
2010
|
||
US$m
|
US$m
|
||
ASSETS
|
|||
Cash and balances at central banks ...................................................................
|
71,754
|
57,383
|
|
Trading assets .......................................................................................................
|
467,202
|
385,052
|
|
Financial assets designated at fair value ..........................................................
|
38,854
|
37,011
|
|
Derivatives .............................................................................................................
|
242,669
|
260,757
|
|
Loans and advances to banks ............................................................................
|
223,137
|
208,271
|
|
Loans and advances to customers ....................................................................
|
997,163
|
958,366
|
|
Financial investments ..........................................................................................
|
401,619
|
400,755
|
|
Other assets ...........................................................................................................
|
155,408
|
147,094
|
|
Total assets ...........................................................................................................
|
2,597,806
|
2,454,689
|
|
LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
|
|||
Liabilities
|
|||
Deposits by banks ................................................................................................
|
122,808
|
110,584
|
|
Customer accounts ...............................................................................................
|
1,274,820
|
1,227,725
|
|
Trading liabilities ..................................................................................................
|
372,649
|
300,703
|
|
Financial liabilities designated at fair value ......................................................
|
93,222
|
88,133
|
|
Derivatives .............................................................................................................
|
240,689
|
258,665
|
|
Debt securities in issue ........................................................................................
|
153,753
|
145,401
|
|
Liabilities under insurance contracts .................................................................
|
61,953
|
58,609
|
|
Other liabilities ......................................................................................................
|
118,053
|
109,954
|
|
Total liabilities .......................................................................................................
|
2,437,947
|
2,299,774
|
|
Equity
|
|||
Total shareholders' equity ..................................................................................
|
152,546
|
147,667
|
|
Non-controlling interests ....................................................................................
|
7,313
|
7,248
|
|
Total equity ...........................................................................................................
|
159,859
|
154,915
|
|
Total equity and liabilities ...................................................................................
|
2,597,806
|
2,454,689
|
31 March
2011
|
31 December
2010
|
||
US$m
|
US$m
|
||
Core tier 1 capital ..................................................................................................
|
120,672
|
116,116
|
|
Tier 1 capital ..........................................................................................................
|
137,869
|
133,179
|
|
Total regulatory capital ........................................................................................
|
170,632
|
167,555
|
|
Total risk-weighted assets ..................................................................................
|
1,129,478
|
1,103,113
|
|
Capital ratios
|
|||
Core tier 1 ratio.......................................................................................................
|
10.7%
|
10.5%
|
|
Tier 1 ratio...............................................................................................................
|
12.2%
|
12.1%
|
|
Total capital ratio...................................................................................................
|
15.1%
|
15.2%
|
Europe
|
Hong
Kong
|
Rest of
Asia- Pacific
|
Middle
East
|
North America
|
Latin America
|
Gross
loans and
advances to customers
|
Gross loans by industry sector as a % of total
gross loans
|
||||||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
%
|
||||||||
At 31 March 2011
|
|||||||||||||||
Personal ...................................
|
168,839
|
59,205
|
42,054
|
5,223
|
134,282
|
22,558
|
432,161
|
42.5
|
|||||||
Residential mortgages ............
|
117,749
|
43,757
|
30,190
|
1,756
|
77,716
|
5,505
|
276,673
|
27.2
|
|||||||
Other personal .......................
|
51,090
|
15,448
|
11,864
|
3,467
|
56,566
|
17,053
|
155,488
|
15.3
|
|||||||
Corporate and commercial .......
|
215,240
|
86,989
|
69,943
|
20,475
|
38,971
|
38,111
|
469,729
|
46.2
|
|||||||
Commercial, industrial and international trade ...............
|
119,234
|
36,035
|
42,588
|
12,291
|
16,945
|
25,091
|
252,184
|
24.8
|
|||||||
Commercial real estate ..........
|
30,823
|
20,373
|
9,007
|
1,007
|
8,110
|
3,101
|
72,421
|
7.1
|
|||||||
Other property-related ..........
|
7,512
|
16,424
|
5,847
|
1,833
|
5,293
|
813
|
37,722
|
3.7
|
|||||||
Government ..........................
|
2,810
|
3,193
|
382
|
1,320
|
217
|
2,158
|
10,080
|
1.0
|
|||||||
Other commercial ..................
|
54,861
|
10,964
|
12,119
|
4,024
|
8,406
|
6,948
|
97,322
|
9.6
|
|||||||
Financial ..................................
|
77,999
|
4,368
|
2,801
|
1,035
|
19,483
|
3,014
|
108,700
|
10.7
|
|||||||
Non-bank financial institutions ............................................
|
76,490
|
2,849
|
2,403
|
1,009
|
19,483
|
2,919
|
105,153
|
10.3
|
|||||||
Settlement accounts ...............
|
1,509
|
1,519
|
398
|
26
|
-
|
95
|
3,547
|
0.4
|
|||||||
Asset-backed securities reclassified ............................
|
5,171
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
656
|
-
|
5,827
|
0.6
|
|||||||
Total gross loans and advances to customers .........................
|
467,249
|
150,562
|
114,798
|
26,733
|
193,392
|
63,683
|
1,016,417
|
100.0
|
Europe
|
Hong
Kong
|
Rest of
Asia- Pacific
|
Middle
East
|
North America
|
Latin America
|
Gross
loans and
advances to customers
|
Gross loans by industry sector as a % of total
gross loans
|
||||||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
%
|
||||||||
At 31 December 2010
|
|||||||||||||||
Personal ....................................
|
161,717
|
57,308
|
40,184
|
5,371
|
139,117
|
21,623
|
425,320
|
43.4
|
|||||||
Residential mortgages .............
|
111,618
|
42,488
|
28,724
|
1,751
|
78,842
|
5,258
|
268,681
|
27.4
|
|||||||
Other personal ........................
|
50,099
|
14,820
|
11,460
|
3,620
|
60,275
|
16,365
|
156,639
|
16.0
|
|||||||
Corporate and commercial .........
|
203,804
|
80,823
|
67,247
|
19,560
|
38,707
|
35,371
|
445,512
|
45.6
|
|||||||
Commercial, industrial and international trade ................
|
111,980
|
33,451
|
41,274
|
11,173
|
16,737
|
23,079
|
237,694
|
24.3
|
|||||||
Commercial real estate ...........
|
30,629
|
19,678
|
8,732
|
1,085
|
8,768
|
2,988
|
71,880
|
7.3
|
|||||||
Other property-related ...........
|
6,401
|
15,232
|
5,426
|
1,785
|
5,109
|
885
|
34,838
|
3.6
|
|||||||
Government ...........................
|
2,289
|
2,339
|
415
|
1,345
|
89
|
2,117
|
8,594
|
0.9
|
|||||||
Other commercial ...................
|
52,505
|
10,123
|
11,400
|
4,172
|
8,004
|
6,302
|
92,506
|
9.5
|
|||||||
Financial ....................................
|
70,725
|
3,189
|
2,259
|
1,347
|
21,202
|
3,003
|
101,725
|
10.4
|
|||||||
Non-bank financial institutions .............................................
|
70,019
|
2,824
|
2,058
|
1,335
|
21,109
|
2,818
|
100,163
|
10.2
|
|||||||
Settlement accounts ................
|
706
|
365
|
201
|
12
|
93
|
185
|
1,562
|
0.2
|
|||||||
Asset-backed securities reclassified .............................
|
5,216
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
676
|
-
|
5,892
|
0.6
|
|||||||
Total gross loans and advances to customers ...............................
|
441,462
|
141,320
|
109,690
|
26,278
|
199,702
|
59,997
|
978,449
|
100.0
|