
HSBC will divide its operations into eastern and western markets as part of a significantshake-up under its new chief executive, Georges Elhedery. This step will help the bankcut costs and navigate rising geopolitical tensions between China and the West as detailed in a report by The Guardian.
The Guardian report further stated that the major overhaul, which comes six weeks after Elhedery, the bank’s former finance chief, took the reins from Noel Quinn. The bank will set up a new operating committee to take responsibility for four lines of business. They include a standalone UK division and a Hong Kong division where bosses will be in charge of “eastern markets” covering Asia and the West Asia.
Details about the two other divisions
The two other divisions will cover international wealth and premier banking, and corporate and institutional banking, with the latter in charge of wholesale operations in “Western markets” including the UK, Europe, Latin America and North America. This will further mean HSBC departing from its current set-up centred on three main divisions: commercial banking, global banking and markets, and wealth and personal banking.
The reorganisation reflects historical complications in its global banking model. HSBC makes most of its profits in Asia, but it remains headquartered in London, allowing Western leaders to exert pressure over its relationship with the ruling Communist party in China. HSBC bosses were particularly hard-pressed over a controversial decision to stay neutral over Beijing’s crackdown on democracy advocates in Hong Kong.
HSBC bosses have also been targeted by prominent Asian investors incensed after the bank capitulated to UK regulators and cancelled dividends in the early days of the Covid pandemic.
That includes the potential fallout from next month’s US election, with fears that a Donald Trump victory could heighten a geopolitical rift with HSBC’s key market in China HSBC did not confirm whether Elhedery’s restructuring plans would involve job cuts, saying only that the changes, which come into force on 1 January 2025, will “reduce the duplication of processes and decision-making that are built into the current structure”.
The bank said it would give further details when it reports full-year results in February.
Elhedery, who learned Mandarin during a six-month sabbatical two years ago, said: “The changes that we are announcing today will make it easier for our colleagues to serve our customers and drive the future success of the group. The new structure will result in a simpler, more dynamic and agile organisation. “By making these changes, we can better focus on increasing leadership and market share in those businesses which have a clear competitive advantage and the greatest opportunities to grow.”
HSBC also announced the promotion of its chief risk and compliance officer, Pam Kaur, to chief financial officer, replacing Elhedery, who was promoted from the role last month. Kaur is the first woman to occupy the role in HSBC’s 159-year history. A qualified chartered accountant, she joined as head of audit in 2013 and has almost 40 years’ of experience working for UK, US and German banks.
Elhedery is reportedly preparing to cut the jobs of some of the bank’s most expensive senior bankers in a move that could save as much as $300m (£229m), the Financial Times reported this month.