Financial Results
Profits Fall At HSBC, Hit By Impairment

An impairment linked to an agreed sale of a retail banking operation in France affected the bottom-line result. More positively, net interest income rose, driven by rising interest rates.
HSBC has reported
after-tax profit of $2.6 billion in the three months to
end-September, falling by $1.7 billion from a year
earlier.
The UK/Hong Kong-listed bank said its third-quarter results
included an impairment of $2.4 billion following the
reclassification of its retail banking operations in France to
"held for sale," as well as a net charge for expected credit
losses and other credit impairment charges, compared with a net
release in Q3, 2021.
Shares in HSBC were down by 6.64 per cent yesterday.
Adjusted profit before tax increased $1.0 billion to $6.5
billion. There was continued “strong growth” in net interest
income, the bank said.
HSBC has upgraded its net interest income guidance for 2022 to
$32 billion, based on the current market consensus for global
central bank rates. In 2023, it expected net interest income of
at least $36 billion, with the cut from the at least $37 billion
guidance provided at its interim results reflecting the impact of
sterling depreciation against the US dollar and a higher cost of
funding in its trading book.
Reported revenue fell by 3 per cent to $11.6 billion, reflecting
an impairment on the planned disposal of its retail banking
operations in France, as well as adverse foreign currency
translation impacts of $1.0 billion.
Reported operating expenses were flat from
Q3 2021.
The lender said it had a Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) capital
ratio of 13.4 per cent – a standard measure of a bank’s capital
“buffer” – a slip of 0.2 percentage points from June this
year.
"We maintained our strong momentum in the third quarter and
delivered a good set of results. Our strategy produced good
organic growth in all three global businesses, and net interest
income increased on the back of rising interest rates,” Noel
Quinn, chairman and chief executive, said. “We retained a tight
grip on costs, despite inflationary pressures, and remain on
track to achieve our cost targets for 2022 and 2023. We are
focused on executing our plans and delivering our returns target
of at least 12 per cent from 2023 onwards and, as a result,
higher distributions to our shareholders."
Looking at the interest rate environment, HSBC said: “We continue
to monitor the expected path of interest rates. This is expected
to be supported by low single-digit percentage lending growth.
The impact of our growth and transformation programmes, as well
as the impact of higher global interest rates, mean we continue
to target a return on average tangible equity of at least 12 per
cent from 2023 onwards, and expect a dividend pay-out ratio of 50
per cent for 2023 and 2024.”
Wealth, personal banking
HSBC said its wealth and personal banking side – which includes
its private banking arm – adjusted pre-tax profit was unchanged
at $1.776 billion in the third quarter. In terms of adjusted
revenue, the result rose slightly to $5.523 billion from $5.038
billion.
French disposal
Last September, HSBC Continental Europe agreed with Promontoria
MMB, aka Money Group, and its subsidiary Banque des Caraïbes, to
sell HSBC’s retail banking business in France. The sale is
subject to regulatory clearance. HSBC said it expects to complete
the deal in the second half of 2023.
The disposal group was classified under reporting standards as
“held for sale” on 30 September 2022, at which point HSBC
recognised the estimated impairment of $2.4 billion, which
included impairment of goodwill of $400 million and related
transaction costs.