Blueprint
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 April
2018
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-
).
HSBC HOLDINGS PLC - AGM STATEMENTS
At the
Annual General Meeting of HSBC Holdings plc, held at the Queen
Elizabeth II Conference Centre, London today, the following
speeches were given by Group Chairman, Mark Tucker and Group Chief
Executive, John Flint.
Group Chairman, Mark Tucker, said:
Ladies
and gentlemen, good morning and a warm welcome to the 2018 Annual
General Meeting for HSBC Holdings plc.
This is
my first opportunity to speak with you directly and I am very much
looking forward to talking to you about the Group's performance and
other areas of interest.
I want
to begin by saying that it is an honour to stand before you today
as your Group Chairman.
Working
as I have done in the financial services sector for over 35 years
with the greater part of my career spent in Asia, I have long had
enormous admiration for HSBC with its unrivalled network, great
people, exceptional brand and leading position supporting global
business and trade.
This is
the consequence of the vision and hard work of all those who have
gone before us and in particular, I want to acknowledge my
predecessor, Douglas Flint, who retired from HSBC at the end of
September last year.
On
behalf of all shareholders, I would like to thank Douglas for his
dedicated service to HSBC over a long and distinguished
career.
Stuart
Gulliver stepped down as Group Chief Executive on 20 February. I
would also like to thank Stuart for his exceptional leadership
through some difficult and challenging times.
My
first responsibility as Group Chairman was to oversee the
appointment of a successor for Stuart who would be capable of
building on his achievements while further enhancing the qualities
that make HSBC unique.
With an
exceptional record of managing a diverse range of international
businesses and a deep understanding of HSBC's heritage and culture,
John Flint was the outstanding candidate.
The
Board is very much looking forward to working closely with John to
continue the Group's success and in a few minutes, I will ask John
to say a few words.
2017
saw three other Board changes as we said goodbye to Rachel Lomax,
Sam Laidlaw and Paul Walsh, all of whom provided valuable service
and wise counsel to the Board.
I am
grateful to Rachel for her excellent work as the Senior Independent
Director, Sam for his thoughtful leadership of the Nominations
Committee, and Paul for his important and valuable
contributions.
We are
committed to simplifying, strengthening and clarifying our
governance arrangements and a number of further changes take effect
today as part of this ongoing work.
As we
announced in February, Phillip Ameen, Joachim Faber and John Lipsky
have all decided to retire from the Board at the conclusion of the
AGM.
Each
served HSBC with distinction and I am very grateful to them for
their valuable insights and important contributions to the Board
and the Committees on which they have served.
As is
customary, John Flint and I will stand for election for the first
time today and all of the other continuing Directors will stand for
re-election.
This
means that, subject to the election and re-election of Directors as
recommended, your Board will comprise a non-executive Chairman,
three executive Directors and 10 independent non-executive
Directors.
We are
also announcing that we are reducing the number of Board committees
from seven to five.
As a
result, the responsibilities of the Conduct and Values Committee
and the Philanthropic and Community Investment Oversight Committee
will be reassigned.
Both
the Conduct and Philanthropic agendas remain of vital importance to
HSBC.
Now
that both are embedded within the Group's governance structure we
can continue to advance these agendas through the Board and other
Committees whilst also reducing complexity and strengthening
oversight.
In
addition, responsibility for cyber-crime and information security
risk will be transferred from the Financial System Vulnerabilities
Committee to the Group Risk Committee.
This
will enable us to better consider cyber-crime and information
security risk as part of a holistic view of strategic issues
affecting HSBC.
Turning
to your Group's performance, our 2017 results demonstrated both the
strength and the potential of HSBC.
A large
increase in reported profit before tax reflected both a healthy
business and the non-recurrence of significant items, compared to
2016.
All of
our global businesses grew adjusted profits and our three main
global businesses generated improved adjusted
revenues.
Strong
revenue growth more than covered the cost of business investment
and increased lending laid a foundation for future
performance.
Our
history and privileged access in Asia continue to serve us well as
the region again contributed a substantial proportion of these
profits.
Overall,
this delivered an adjusted Group profit before tax of US$21bn, up
11% on 2016.
This
performance enabled the Board to approve an unchanged fourth
interim dividend of 21 cents.
I would
like to remind shareholders that the authority granted to the Board
to pay interim dividends ensures that they are processed more
quickly than if there was a need to seek further approvals at
general meetings.
The
total dividend for 2017 is 51 cents.
When
combined with share price appreciation during the calendar year of
2017, this represents a total shareholder return of
24%.
We
intend to maintain the annual dividend at the current level for the
foreseeable future.
As we
look ahead, we expect the current economic momentum to continue
through 2018.
Global
growth is robust by post-crisis standards, all regions of the world
are participating, although some are benefiting more than others,
and unemployment is falling.
Although
we believe growth might have peaked in Europe, we raised our US
growth forecasts after its recent tax and spending plans and we
expect emerging markets to pick up further.
Asia's
economies in particular look set for another strong
year.
China's
renewed commitment to reform and opening up, demonstrated by
President Xi Jinping's speech at the National People's Congress
last month, is particularly significant.
The
conclusion of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for
Trans-Pacific Partnership, alongside other trade liberalisation
initiatives like the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership,
ASEAN 2025 and Belt and Road initiative, also provide cause for
optimism.
With an
international network covering 90% of global trade flows and a
leading presence in the world's fastest-growing region, these
trends play to HSBC's strengths and we are in prime position to
help our customers to capitalise on them.
While
we are optimistic about the short-term prospects for the global
economy, risks remain.
Potential
monetary tightening and the threat of protectionism could act as a
drag on growth.
Rising
international tensions could yet have wider economic implications,
in particular the tariffs recently imposed on trade by the US and
China.
We
continue to model and anticipate a wide range of scenarios as part
of our day-to-day risk management to cover unlikely but not
impossible events.
As a
well-diversified business underpinned by historically stable
revenue generation and significant capital strength, we are
confident that HSBC is well equipped to manage the risks and
uncertainty in today's world.
The
lasting relationships we are building with our stakeholders
strengthen HSBC to meet the challenges of tomorrow.
Last
year, for the first time, we published a range of environmental,
social and governance metrics - ESG for short - to enable investors
and customers to assess our non-financial performance.
Our
latest ESG update, published earlier this month, shows that we are
making progress in a number of areas. It also makes it clear that
we still need to do better in others and one such area is diversity
and inclusion.
HSBC
employs a diverse group of 229,000 people, we serve a diverse group
of 38 million customers, and we have a diverse group of 200,000
shareholders.
Diversity
is a fundamental part of who we are.
But
despite the progress we have made we still have a long way to
go.
John
and his management team have the Board's full support in ensuring
all our people are able to do their jobs to the best of their
abilities, and fulfil their potential.
On that
note, I want to end by thanking all of the people who work for HSBC
around the world.
In my
six months as Group Chairman, I have been enormously impressed by
their effort, their energy, their commitment and their
ability.
It is a
cliché to say that we could not do it without them but the
truth is that we could not.
I also
want to thank you - our very loyal shareholders - for your
continued trust and support.
Group Chief Executive, John Flint, said:
Let me
start by saying what a privilege it is to address my first Annual
General Meeting as your Group Chief Executive.
Having
spent my entire career with HSBC, I'm very much aware of the
responsibility this role brings, and I am humbled and excited by
the opportunity.
I also
want to thank Stuart Gulliver for his extraordinary contribution to
HSBC.
Stuart
successfully reshaped the organisation through an acutely
challenging period.
And for
this, we all owe him a huge debt of gratitude.
2017
was a good year for HSBC.
Reported
profit before tax of US$17.2bn was US$10.1bn higher than the
previous year, due mainly to the non-recurrence of a number of
large one-off items.
On an
adjusted basis, profit before tax was US$21bn, an increase of
US$2.1bn on the prior year.
This
included increases in all four global businesses and four out of
five geographical regions.
We grew
revenue at a faster rate than costs, and maintained a strong common
equity tier one ratio of 14.5%.
We also
returned a total of US$3bn to shareholders through share buy-backs
last year, and we paid more in dividends than any other European or
American bank.
Our
policy on share buy-backs remains unchanged, and we will consider
them where appropriate.
First
and foremost, where there is an opportunity to invest capital to
support the growth of the business, we will do so.
And we
intend to maintain the dividend at the current level for the
foreseeable future.
After
the provision of capital to support the growth of the business and
maintaining our dividend, we will then consider share buy-backs,
subject to regulatory approval.
The end
of last year also saw the conclusion of the programme of strategic
actions announced at our Investor Update in June 2015.
We
completed eight out of 10 actions on time, and on or above
target.
This
included actions to reduce Group risk-weighted assets, deliver cost
savings, accelerate our pivot to Asia, and to implement Global
Standards.
Our US
bank profitability and RMB internationalisation revenue targets
remain outstanding, although we have made significant progress with
both.
This
includes completing the run-off of our legacy US consumer and
mortgage lending portfolio, bringing an end to a difficult chapter
in HSBC's recent history.
We also
remain on course to complete the set-up of the UK ring-fenced
bank.
And as
an overall consequence of the programme of strategic actions, HSBC
is simpler, stronger and more secure than it was a few years
ago.
Our
business is now more capital-efficient and capable of producing
stronger returns for investors.
Our
investment in Global Standards and risk and compliance helped pave
the way for our exit from the 2012 Deferred Prosecution Agreement
with the US Department of Justice, although financial crime
prevention and strong compliance remain a daily focus for us
all.
Our
improved international connectivity has strengthened our market
position.
We've
invested in our network so we can better deliver the kind of
cross-border service that our clients want, while many of our
competitors have exited the markets at the same time.
We've
also simplified the business to improve control while retaining the
benefits of our scale.
This
has enabled us to increase the proportion of revenue that comes
from international clients from 50% in 2015, to 53% last
year.
Finally
we've refocused the business back towards the bank's heartland in
Asia.
Our
presence in Asia's biggest growth markets and privileged access
have given HSBC a uniquely strong position in the
region.
We've
rapidly grown lending in the Pearl River Delta, launched new
products and established new businesses.
These
include HSBC Qianhai Securities, the first securities joint-venture
in mainland China to be majority-owned by an international
bank.
The
fantastic work being done by our team continues to enhance our very
strong competitive position in the region.
This
was recognised by a number of major awards in 2017.
HSBC
was named 'Asia's Best Bank' and 'Hong Kong's Best Bank' at the
Euromoney Awards for
Excellence.
We also
received 'Best Overall International Bank for Belt and Road' from
Asiamoney, and 'Best Belt
and Road Bank' from FinanceAsia.
Meanwhile
the Group was honoured to be recognised as the 'World's Best Bank'
by Euromoney in July last
year.
So we
clearly have a great platform to build on, and we will be looking
to do just that in the months and years ahead.
We're
already doing a lot of work to refresh our strategy and accelerate
our delivery.
The
strategy we have is working. But we now need to keep evolving it,
and to deliver at pace.
I will
update shareholders on how we intend to do this at or before our
half-year results.
For
today, it is important to note that we're now in a very different
environment to the one we've been navigating since the global
financial crisis.
With
tailwinds as opposed to headwinds, we're going to be better able to
invest in growing the business…
…but
we will not be loosening our grip on costs.
Investing
in the business requires revenue growth and efficiencies across the
Group.
So the
traditional disciplines of good capital management and positive
jaws remain essential to achieving our return on equity
target.
Both
have served us well recently, and throughout our
history.
We're
also going to maintain a strong focus on risk and
compliance.
The
investment that we have made in our financial crime risk management
capabilities has considerably strengthened our ability to protect
the integrity of the financial system.
This
work will continue as we seek to ensure that the changes we have
made are effective and sustainable.
We have
a clear aim to be the industry leader in combating financial crime,
and believe that this can be a powerful competitive advantage as a
leading international bank.
How we
do business will be as important to me as Group Chief Executive as
what business we choose to do.
Getting
this right is absolutely critical.
Our
future success will be determined by our ability to meet all of our
obligations to society, and by our impact on people and the planet
more generally.
As
Group Chief Executive, I am going to have open and honest
discussions about our progress.
I want
to mention three specific areas today.
First,
we have a lot more work to do to keep our customers
happy.
As a
bank, HSBC exists to serve.
We've
been investing to speed-up approval times, simplify processes and
significantly reduce bureaucracy.
But we
know that we need to do more.
Second,
our people and culture are HSBC's most important long-term
competitive advantages.
It is
therefore vital that we create an environment that is diverse and
inclusive, where everyone is able to fulfil their
potential.
Gender
balance is an extremely important part of this.
We have
set some ambitious goals to ensure we continue to make the progress
needed - but let me be clear, we have a long way to go to get to
where we want to be, and we're going to keep looking for ways to
get there faster.
Third,
we want to do more to support sustainable growth.
We have
taken genuine strides forward, including by setting out a series of
commitments to assist in the global transition to a low-carbon
economy.
Today
we reach another milestone with the publication of our revised
energy policy.
As a
leading international bank, we have a vital role to play in
supporting countries and clients to transition from a high-carbon
to a low-carbon economy.
But we
understand that we need to meet our obligation to protect the
environment.
Our
revised energy policy strengthens our ability to achieve both of
these objectives - and enables HSBC to play a leading role in
creating a sustainable future that everyone can be part
of.
So to
conclude, I believe that we have a great platform to build
on.
I said
earlier that I'm aware of the responsibility that my new role
brings.
Part of
that responsibility is to repay the trust that you, our loyal
shareholders, have placed in us.
Thank
you for your support so far.
Your
views are of paramount importance to me as we carry out our
work.
Media enquiries to:
Heidi
Ashley
Tel: +44 (0)20 7992 2045
Gillian
James
Tel: +44 (0)20 7992 0516
Investor enquiries to:
Richard
O'Connor
Tel: +44 (0)20 7991 6590
Note to editors:
HSBC Holdings plc
HSBC
Holdings plc, the parent company of the HSBC Group, is
headquartered in London. The Group serves customers worldwide from
around 3,900 offices in 67 countries and territories in Europe,
Asia, North and Latin America, and the Middle East and North
Africa. With assets of US$2,522bn at 31 December 2017, HSBC is
one of the world's largest banking and financial services
organisations.
ends/all
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:
Ben J S Mathews
|
|
Title:
Group Company Secretary
|
|
|
|
Date:
20 April 2018
|