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HSBC may leave the UK if forced to split

by Deborah Hyde on Sep 03, 2010 at 09:39

HSBC may leave the UK if forced to split

HSBC has hinted it may consider moving its headquarters overseas if a commission on banking reform recommends banks split their investment banking arms from their retail operations.

HSBC's head of investment banking Stuart Gulliver told a conference on banking he is ‘genuinely concerned’ that banks will be forced to split their businesses, which he said would have ‘significant implications’ for where HSBC chooses to locate its headquarters, currently in Canary Wharf.

HSBC’s chairman Stephen Green has already warned that unilateral rules could mean London will become less attractive than rival cities such as Hong Kong and Zurich, while Angela Knight, chief executive of the banking lobby group British Bankers' Association, has warned that would mean the UK could lose billions in tax revenues.

In June chancellor George Osborne announced that the head of the Office of Fair Trading, John Vickers, will head up a commission to consider whether any banking industry reforms are necessary to prevent a re-run of the financial crisis.

As well as looking at increasing competition and reducing the risks and impacts of bank failures the commission will consider how much competitive advantage large banks get ‘from being perceived as too big to fail’.

But bankers have repeatedly said that while there are many lessons to be learned from the financial crisis there has been little evidence that size mattered.

Barclays’ chief executive John Varley has said historical data shows that bigger, more complex banks are not more likely to fail.

‘The evidence from the last 100 years is clear. By converting broad banks into narrow banks we will make the system less safe not more safe,’ he said earlier this year.

HSBC - which employs 50,000 staff in the UK - refused money offered by the UK government at the peak of the crisis and was relatively unscathed by the crisis thanks to its focus on Asia.

In January this year chief executive Michael Geoghegan relocated to Hong Kong but the bank said this reflected the rising importance of the Asian market and was not the start of a large scale move.

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3 comments so far. Why not have your say?

michael riley

Sep 03, 2010 at 11:15

It's not the size of the bank, rather the integriy, ethics and competence of those at the helm that matters (and failed).

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Anonymous 1 needed this 'off the record'

Sep 03, 2010 at 14:44

touche

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Emu culture

Sep 03, 2010 at 14:59

Scare tactics ... if it means a more stable economy/society ... I am all for banks heading wherever they like ... they can take their gambling culture/problem somewhere else.

As for the billions lost on tax revenues ... we will be fine thatnks Angela as taxpayers won't have to fork out many many billions more to prop up you and your banks.

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