HSBC Holdings PLC announced it is withdrawing from U.S. mass market retail banking by selling some parts of the money-losing business and winding down others, a long-awaited move as the lender steps up a shift in focus to Asia, its biggest market.
Europe’s biggest bank has for years been trying to shrink its presence in some European and North American markets where it has struggled against competition from larger domestic players.
The bank said in a statement late on Wednesday it would exit retail banking for most individual and small-business customers but retain a small physical presence in the United States to serve its international affluent and very wealthy clients.
“They are good businesses, but we lacked the scale to compete,” HSBC chief executive Noel Quinn said in the statement.
HSBC unveiled in February a revised strategy focused mainly on wealth management in Asia, and at the same time said it was “exploring organic and inorganic options” for its U.S. retail banking franchise.
As part of Mr. Quinn’s game plan that also involved slashing costs across the banking group, the London-headquartered bank has been looking to step back from sub-scale markets and businesses.
HSBC is also seeking to sell its French retail banking operations as part of the same strategy, and has entered final negotiations to sell that business to private equity firm Cerberus, Reuters reported in March.
Citizens Bank, part of Citizens Financial Group, has agreed to buy HSBC’s east coast personal and small business banking business including 80 branches, and Cathay Bank, a unit of Cathay General Bancorp, has agreed to buy its west coast business including 10 branches, according to HSBC and separate statements from the two U.S.-headquartered banks. “These transactions, whilst very small in the context of HSBC group, should contribute to streamlining the group,” analysts at Jefferies wrote in a note on Thursday. They added, though, that the bank is expected to still face some investor pushback as it is not completely exiting U.S. retail.
HSBC said it expected to incur pretax costs of US$100-million connected with the transactions, after which it does not expect to generate a significant gain or loss.
HSBC’s U.S. wealth and personal banking business made a loss of US$547-million in 2020, according to the bank’s annual results, versus a US$5-billion profit in Asia, primarily from Hong Kong, its most profitable market.
Its global banking and markets division, which includes its investment banking and large corporate businesses, made a profit of US$573-million in the United States in 2020.
The bank’s Hong Kong listed shares rose as much as 0.8 per cent to a three-month high, before retreating.
U.S. TROUBLES
HSBC expanded into U.S. retail banking in the 1980s as part of a broader strategy to diversify its geographical focus.
However, it has been trying to walk back on this for more than a decade, and in 2011 announced the sale of nearly half of its then 470 U.S. branches, mostly in upstate New York, and also its profitable U.S. credit card arm.
HSBC had acquired that credit cards business as part of its disastrous US$14-billion purchase of U.S. consumer lending firm Household International in 2003, which triggered billions of dollars of subprime mortgage losses, and an eventual $1.6-billion payment to settle a class-action lawsuit.
The bank currently has a U.S. network of 148 branches.
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