Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
The HSBC sign
Ping An wants to separate HSBC’s profitable Asian business. Photograph: Stefan Wermuth/Reuters
Ping An wants to separate HSBC’s profitable Asian business. Photograph: Stefan Wermuth/Reuters

Ping An insists splitting HSBC would increase bank’s value

This article is more than 1 year old

The Chinese shareholder has accused HSBC executives of exaggerating the downfalls of separating off the Asian business

HSBC’s top shareholder, Ping An, has escalated a dispute with the bank, accusing executives of exaggerating the downfalls of splitting off the Asian business, and insisted the move could instead boost the bank’s value by up to $35bn (£28.6bn), according to a source close to the investor.

It comes after HSBC’s chief executive, Noel Quinn, used an earnings announcement last week to defend the bank’s strategy and stress that its success was dependent on maintaining its global network.

Quinn has been under pressure since April when Ping An revived calls to separate HSBC’s profitable Asian business from the rest of the London-headquartered bank’s operations.

However, according to a source with knowledge of the investor’s views, Ping An has hit back at Quinn’s arguments, saying: “HSBC only emphasised and clearly exaggerated the downsides and challenges of spinning off its Asia business, but did not mention the huge benefits and long-term value that a spin-off could create.”

It added that external analysis had suggested that a spin-off would “generate additional market value of $25-35bn” (£21-29bn) and that the bank would be able to deploy an additional $8bn in capital that would otherwise be held to offset risk in the rest of the business.

The investor also believes that the move would save money related to IT and headquarter costs over time.

While HSBC beat analyst estimates in the second quarter, reporting flat pre-tax profits of $5bn (£4.1bn), Ping An is said to have claimed that “almost all of its revenue growth was dependent on a phased, short-lived and uncontrollable interest rate hike cycle”.

Higher interest rates – which have been hiked in an attempt to combat soaring inflation in recent months – have allowed banks like HSBC to charge borrowers more for loans and mortgages, and in turn increase their net interest margin, which is a key measure of profitability and growth.

Sign up to the daily Business Today email or follow Guardian Business on Twitter at @BusinessDesk

While HSBC’s Asia operations remain more profitable than the rest of the bank, Ping An is also said to have raised concerns about the state of its Asia business model, saying it is “inefficient and cannot compete with its peers”. The investor added that profits for the division had been declining for the past two years.

“Its underperformance has not yet been fundamentally addressed and it is in urgent need of radical change,” the source said, reflecting the investor’s views.

Ping An is among a number of investors unhappy with returns on investment, particularly after HSBC cancelled the dividend during the first UK coronavirus lockdown and later reinstated it at only half the level paid out before the pandemic.

HSBC said it would not comment beyond what executives had already expressed during the second quarter earnings results last week.

Explore more on these topics

More on this story

More on this story

  • HSBC urges investors to back AGM vote opening way to higher bonuses

  • HSBC shares suffer biggest one-day drop in nearly four years

  • HSBC fined £57m over ‘serious’ deposit protection failings

  • Thousands of HSBC customers in UK unable to access online banking services

  • Higher interest rates help HSBC to more than double profits

  • HSBC executive apologises for calling UK weak over China

  • HSBC more than doubles profits as interest rates soar

  • HSBC to move out of Canary Wharf headquarters due to hybrid working

  • Labour criticised for giving global banks access to parliament

  • HSBC investors reject plan to split bank in meeting disrupted by climate protest

Most viewed

Most viewed