HSBC will cut costs by as much as $5 billion within two years, laying off as many as 25,000 staff, the banking behemoth told investors Tuesday in a much-anticipated update.
The bank said that it would shrink its risk-weighted assets by about $290 billion, including cutting its global banking and markets risk-weighted assets to less than a third of the group’s assets.
RELATED: HSBC bank helped clients avoid taxes
Europe’s largest bank by assets also revealed plans to streamline its 260,000 strong workforce and trim its branch numbers by around 12%. The bank said it intended to sell its Turkish and Brazilian operations—although it will maintain a presence in Brazil to serve large clients—in what the it called a “significant reshaping of its business portfolio.”
Job cuts
The closures in Brazil and Turkey will result in a further 25,000 job cuts in addition to the other job losses announced Tuesday, the bank revealed in a statement to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. Since its cost-cutting purge began in 2011, HSBC has cut about 40,000 people from its workforce.
“Brazil and Turkey have limited value to the franchise and that is why we have made the announcements we have today. These announcements prove there are no ‘sacred cows’ in the business,” HSBC chief executive Stuart Gulliver told investors on a conference call following its statement.
In the U.K., Stuart Gulliver said the bank would likely cut 7,000-8,000 roles, which would occur as a result natural attrition, or employees leaving on their own accord.
Chief Operating Officer Andy Maguire added that the bank’s push towards improved digital systems for consumers, and automation in branches, would result in thousands of job cuts.
Trade union Unite said the proposed job cuts in the U.K. were the latest example of a workforce being punished for misconduct by senior investment bankers.
“This latest wave of job losses is a stab in the back to a dedicated workforce who have put HSBC back on the road to recovery since 2008,” Unite national officer for finance, Dominic Hook, said.
“Unite are seeking to meet with U.K. Chief Executive Antonio Simoes as soon as possible to demand that any redundancies are through voluntary means or managed through natural attrition,” he added.
Relocating to Hong Kong?
Gulliver said that if the bank were to relocate its headquarters, as touted earlier this year, this would only result in around 250 job losses, meaning it would not be a “major employment issue”.
“We will make the decision towards the end of this year. If it was to leave the U.K. it would take another two years,” he said, stressing that no decisions had been made yet and that the issue had not even been discussed by the board.
The bank threatened to relocate its headquarters from London to Hong Kong earlier this year.
RELATED: The dirt behind HSBC’s record $2 bill. settlement
Being based in the U.K., HSBC is forced to pay a bank levy that cost the lender £700 million last year ($1.07 billion). Gulliver has openly criticized the levy, introduced by U.K. chancellor George Osborne in 2010, as well as the requirement to create a ring-fenced U.K. high street arm. He cited the measures as the key issues over headquartering in London.
Jenny Cosgrave
Christine Seib









