Senin, 05 Agustus 2019

HSBC axes CEO Flint in shock shift to speed up strategy - One America News Network

FILE PHOTO: 2019 World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos
FILE PHOTO: CEO John Flint of HSBC attends the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, January 24, 2019. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann

August 5, 2019

By Sumeet Chatterjee and Lawrence White

HONG KONG/LONDON (Reuters) – HSBC <HSBA.L> ousted John Flint as chief executive after just 18 months in a shock move the chairman of Europe’s biggest bank said was needed to speed up progress on priority areas such as the turnaround of its U.S. business.

The CEO’s exit was a result of differences of opinion with chairman Mark Tucker over Flint’s more tentative approach to cutting expenses and setting revenue targets for senior managers to boost profit growth, a person familiar with the matter said.

HSBC disclosed the departure of Flint, 51, alongside its half-year results on Monday as it forecast a gloomier outlook for its business, with an escalation of a trade war between China and the United States, an easing monetary policy cycle, unrest in its key Hong Kong market and Brexit.

HSBC, which makes more than 80% of its profit in Asia, said that its global commercial banking unit head Noel Quinn will be interim chief executive.

Shares in HSBC, which fell nearly 14% during Flint’s tenure, were down 2% in London, even though it reported a 16% rise in profit and a revealed a share buyback of up to $1 billion.

Flint, who previously ran London-headquartered HSBC’s retail and wealth management business, was chosen as CEO in February 2018 in the first major decision by Tucker, who told Reuters:

“It’s the right time for change, and doing it clearly and decisively from a position of strength is very important.”

A key difference with Tucker was over Flint’s efforts to turn around HSBC’s under-performing U.S. business, the person familiar with the matter said. HSBC declined to comment.

Tucker, who became HSBC’s first externally appointed chairman when he joined HSBC’s board in late 2017, said that the search for a new CEO, which will include both internal and external candidates, could take up to a year.

(Graphic: HSBC shares under John Flint – https://tmsnrt.rs/2MCBpRO)

HUAWEI HEAT

Flint’s exit also followed weeks of adverse Chinese media coverage over HSBC’s role in the arrest of Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou.

China’s Global Times ran an editorial on Friday saying it ‘feels heat on Huawei CFO case’, suggesting HSBC had erred in cooperating with U.S. authorities and it could face penalties.

“Our business operations in China continue as normal,” Tucker told analysts on a conference call when asked whether the bank faced blacklisting in China over the Huawei situation.

HSBC executives at the time of his appointment saw Flint as a safe pair of hands and a natural successor to mentor and previous CEO Stuart Gulliver.

Outlining his strategy in June last year, Flint set out plans to invest $15-$17 billion in the next three years in areas including technology and China.

“We have been uninspired by the “business as usual” strategy,” analyst Ed Firth at broker KBW said.

“We suspect that any new CEO is still more likely to be internal, but will need a more dynamic approach to improving underperforming areas of the business,” he said.

U.S. WOES

HSBC said it no longer expects to achieve the targeted 6% return on tangible equity (ROE) by 2020 in the U.S., where it has struggled for years to build scale and compete.

That missed U.S. goal is still below the overall group aim of getting to more than 11% ROE by 2020.

HSBC hired Citigroup veteran Michael Roberts in July to head its U.S. business, in a renewed effort to turn it around.

The U.S business is not “getting the proper returns”, Chief Financial Officer Ewen Stevenson told Reuters, adding the unit has also been hit by the change in the monetary policy cycle.

HSBC’s investment banking business has also struggled in recent years as it lost a string of senior executives and saw U.S. rivals cash in on booming domestic stock markets.

Revenues in HSBC’s global banking and markets division fell by 3% in the first half compared with the same period last year.

REVENUE RISK

HSBC’s pretax profit for the first six months of 2019 rose to $12.41 billion from $10.71 billion in the same period a year earlier, helped by a surge in retail banking and Asia revenues.

“Interest rates in the US dollar bloc are now expected to fall rather than rise, and geopolitical issues could impact a significant number of our major markets,” HSBC said.

The U.S.-China trade war has taken its toll on trade-focused banks like HSBC and rival Standard Chartered <STAN.L>, which last week warned of an impact on its business customers from the escalating tensions.

Tucker played down the impact of protests in Hong Kong against an extradition bill which have evolved into a broader anti-government backlash and said HSBC remained confident about the future of the Asian financial center.

Analysts had been watching closely to see whether the bank would announce a fresh buyback, as a failure to do so would have been read as a sign of mounting caution by HSBC’s management.

Prior to the latest buyback announcement, HSBC had purchased more than $6 billion of its own shares since 2016.

(Reporting by Sumeet Chatterjee in Hong Kong, Lawrence White in London and Aditya Soni in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Anshuman Daga in Singapore; Editing by Nick Zieminski, Richard Pullin, Muralikumar Anantharaman and Alexander Smith)

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https://www.oann.com/hsbc-says-ceo-john-flint-to-step-down/

2019-08-05 09:22:30Z
52780345778567

HSBC to Slash Thousands of Jobs After Ousting CEO - The Wall Street Journal

HSBC said late Sunday that Chief Executive John Flint is out and new leadership is needed to meet the bank’s challenges. Photo: ehrenze/epa-efe/rex/shutterstock/EPA/Shutterstock

HSBC HSBC -0.91% Holdings PLC plans to slash thousands of jobs and slow investment spending after the surprise ouster of Chief Executive John Flint.

Up to 2% of the bank’s 237,685 employees could lose their jobs, a bank executive said Monday, as HSBC flagged a worsening outlook for the global economy in its second-quarter results.

Finance director Ewen Stevenson in an interview said the job cuts, which will be targeted at senior roles, would shave up to 4% off HSBC’s wage costs and would come from a mix of layoffs and attrition as people leave for other jobs. HSBC said severance costs this year would be $650 million to $700 million, and save it that much annually going forward.

HSBC late Sunday said Mr. Flint had agreed to leave the CEO job after just 18 months, ending the 51-year old’s three-decade career at the bank. Chairman Mark Tucker in an interview said Mr. Flint’s departure doesn’t signal any change in strategy, but that the board felt a leadership shift was needed to respond to “an increasingly complex and challenging global environment.”

Mr. Tucker said on Monday the bank remains focused on building out its business in China, which had been a priority for Mr. Flint and his predecessor, Stuart Gulliver. Asia-focused HSBC, already China’s largest foreign bank, has long aspired to grow further in the country’ retail and business banking market. Its relationship with China was tested, though, last year when U.S. prosecutors drew upon internal bank documents to help build a fraud case against an executive at Chinese telecommunications company Huawei Technologies Co. Huawei and the executive deny any wrongdoing.

Parts of HSBC’s business also have been under pressure from trade tensions between the U.S. and China, which has curbed trade and investment for some customers, albeit to a limited degree, according to the bank. Mr. Stevenson said a slowdown in global trade “will have an impact on the business,” and that consumer and business confidence in the U.K. has taken a knock from the U.K.’s pending exit from the European Union.

The bank said it will miss a target to make a 6% return on tangible equity in its U.S. business next year, because of adverse business conditions including U.S. interest rate cuts.

HSBC posted $4.37 billion in net profit for the second quarter, up from $4.1 billion in the prior-year quarter, on higher revenue.

Write to Margot Patrick at margot.patrick@wsj.com

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2019-08-05 07:29:00Z
52780345778567

Asia markets sink as the Chinese yuan tumbles - Yahoo News

Multiple rounds of tit-for-tat tariffs between the world's top two economies have already battered trade (AFP Photo/Paul J. RICHARDS, Ed Jones)

Asian markets plummeted Monday as the Chinese yuan fell sharply, days after US President Donald Trump's vow to impose fresh tariffs on goods from China sent trade war fears soaring.

Trump's announcement, which came on Thursday, means virtually all of the $660 billion in annual merchandise trade between the world's two biggest economies will be subject to punitive tariffs, with the latest duties due to take effect September 1.

The news saw all three major Wall Street indices slump to their lowest levels since June, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq recording their worst weekly losses of 2019 on Friday.

In China, the yuan dropped to its lowest level to the dollar since August 2010, fuelling speculation that Beijing was devaluing its currency to support exporters and offset Trump's latest threat to hit $300 billion in Chinese goods with 10 percent tariffs.

The US leader regularly accuses the Chinese central bank of artificially weakening the yuan -- charges long denied by Beijing.

The onshore yuan tumbled to 7.0307 against the dollar -- its lowest level since 2008 -- while the more freely traded offshore yuan tumbled to 7.1085, breaching the 7.0 level which investors see as a key threshold in the currency's value.

Multiple rounds of tit-for-tat tariffs between the world's top two economies have already battered trade, with China's American imports shrinking 30 percent in the first half of the year.

Beijing has vowed to hit back if Washington goes ahead with its latest threat, while news that demand for US exports had weakened underscored concern that trade was becoming a trouble spot for economies worldwide.

- 'A lot messier' -

"China is likely to drag out their response and retaliate in many ways against the US trade measures," warned Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA.

Negotiators from both nations are expected to reconvene in Washington in early September for another round of talks after last week's discussions in Shanghai, but investors remain nervous, Moya said.

"Financial markets are still working on pricing in a complete collapse of trade talks amongst the Chinese and Americans," he said.

"The base case still remains for a deal to get done, but talks are likely to get a lot messier before we see anything... that resembles a deal."

The yuan's depreciation spurred a sell-off across Asian markets.

Hong Kong lost more than three percent before staging a tepid recovery as pro-democracy protesters targeted the financial hub's transport network in a citywide strike aimed at forcing concessions from its embattled pro-Beijing government.

Tokyo shed 1.7 percent while Shanghai fell 1.6 percent. Singapore dropped two percent while Taipei, Seoul and Manila were also down.

European markets also extended a pre-weekend slump in the morning session. London plummeted two percent while Paris sank 1.9 percent and Frankfurt dropped 1.5 percent.

- Key figures around 0800 GMT -

Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 1.7 percent at 20,720.29 (close)

Hong Kong - Hang Seng: DOWN 2.9 percent at 26,151.32 (close)

Shanghai - Composite: DOWN 1.6 percent at 2,821.50 (close)

London - FTSE 100: DOWN two percent at 7,261.08

Pound/dollar: DOWN at $1.2121 from $1.2162 at 2100 GMT Friday

Euro/dollar: UP at $1.1137 from $1.1106

Dollar/yen: DOWN at 105.95 yen from 106.59 yen

Brent North Sea crude: DOWN 94 cents at $60.95 per barrel

West Texas Intermediate: DOWN 84 cents at $54.82 per barrel

New York - Dow: DOWN 0.4 percent at 26,485.01 (close)

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2019-08-05 08:34:00Z
CBMiWWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnlhaG9vLmNvbS9uZXdzL2FzaWEtbWFya2V0cy1zaW5rLWNoaW5lc2UteXVhbi10dW1ibGVzLTAzNTI0NTcxMi0tZmluYW5jZS5odG1s0gFdaHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnlhaG9vLmNvbS9hbXBodG1sL2FzaWEtbWFya2V0cy1zaW5rLWNoaW5lc2UteXVhbi10dW1ibGVzLTAzNTI0NTcxMi0tZmluYW5jZS5odG1s

Dow Futures Dive as China Retaliates on Trade; Yuan Falls to Decade Low v Dollar - TheStreet.com

The Monday Market Minute

  • Global stocks tumble to fresh multi-month lows as China hits back at U.S. Tariff moves with a weaker yuan and suspends agricultural purchases.
  • PBOC allows the yuan to fall below the 7 mark against the dollar for the first time since May 2008, risking the ire of President Donald Trump as tensions between the world's two biggest economies escalate.
  • Asia shares fall the most in nine months, while the yen hits a seven month high against the greenback and gold tops seven-year high $1,457.12 per ounce in safe-have trading.
  • European stocks slide, pulling the DAX to a three month low, as investors fret that trade disputes will further erode global growth prospects.
  • Wall Street futures, fresh off their worst week since December, suggest further heavy selling at the opening bell Monday, with the Dow poised to fall more than 250 points ahead of earnings from Tyson Foods and Services PMI data at 9:45 am Eastern time.

Market Snapshot

U.S. equity futures fell sharply Monday, while stocks in Asia suffered the biggest single-day decline in nine months, as Beijing hit back at President Donald Trump's move to accelerate tariffs on China-made goods by allowing the yuan to slip to the lowest levels against the dollar in more than a decade.

The People's Bank of China, the country's central bank, let the so-called on-shore yuan fall past the psychologically important threshold of 7 in early Monday trading, citing in a statement "unilateralism and protectionism", as well as the expectation of additional tariffs from the United States. The breach through 7, the first since May 2008, weakens the Chinese currency in international markets and theoretically makes exports more attractive by off-setting the impact of tariffs.

China's decision to allow the yuan to weaken to such a degree, while simultaneously instructing state-owned companies to suspend purchases of U.S. agricultural products, rattled markets overnight as investors braced for a reaction from the White House that could trigger even more protectionist measures on trade between the world's two biggest economies. 

U.S. equity futures suggest heavy selling at the start of trading Monday, following the worst week on Wall Street since December, with contracts tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average indicating a 360 point slump and those linked to the S&P 500, which touched the lowest levels since late June on Friday, poised for a further 42.5 point pullback.

Flight-to-safety flows were evident in markets all over the world Monday, as well, with the Japanese yen rising to a nine-month high of 105.78 against the U.S. dollar and spot gold surging more than 1% to the session to change hands at $1,457.12 per ounce.

Benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yields slipped to a three-year low of 1.745% in overnight trade as investors accelerated bets on deeper interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve in response to what is now seen as a dangerous escalation in the U.S.-China trade war, while all of the Germany government bond curve, including 30-year paper, traded with a negative yield in early Monday trading.

Asia stocks suffered their biggest single-day decline in nine months, with the MSCI ex-Japan index falling 2.43% into the close of trading thanks to heavy losses on the Shanghai Composite, which closed at the lowest level since February, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index falling 2.82%.

Japan's Nikkei 225 fell the most in four months, with a 1.74% decline that took the benchmark back to early June levels of 20,720.29 points.

In Europe, the benchmark Stoxx 600 index slumped more than 1.85% in the opening hour of trading in Frankfurt, led to the downside by basic resource and technology stocks, while German's DAX notched a early 1.57% decline that pushes the trade-sensitive index to a fresh 3-month low.

Britain's FTSE 100, which is heavily-weighted towards basic resource stocks, slumped 2.1% even as the pound hovered near 30-months lows of 1.2103 against the greenback.

Global oil prices were also on the back foot, with investors hiving expectations for growth and demand following China's move to devalue the yuan and last week's rig count from Houston-based oil services provider Baker Hughes, which showed the number of U.S. drilling installations fell for a fifth consecutive week.

Brent crude contracts for october delivery, the global benchmark, were seen 90 cents lower  from their Friday close and changing hands at $60.99 per barrel while WTI contracts for September, which are more tightly linked to U.S. gas prices, were marked 71 cents lower at $54.95 per barrel.

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2019-08-05 07:16:11Z
CBMigwFodHRwczovL3d3dy50aGVzdHJlZXQuY29tL2ludmVzdGluZy9zdG9ja3MvZG93LWZ1dHVyZXMtZGl2ZS1hcy1jaGluYS1yZXRhbGlhdGVzLW9uLXRyYWRlLXl1YW4tZmFsbHMtdG8tZGVjYWRlLWxvdy12LWRvbGxhci0xNTA0NDM3NNIBhwFodHRwczovL3d3dy50aGVzdHJlZXQuY29tL2FtcC9pbnZlc3Rpbmcvc3RvY2tzL2Rvdy1mdXR1cmVzLWRpdmUtYXMtY2hpbmEtcmV0YWxpYXRlcy1vbi10cmFkZS15dWFuLWZhbGxzLXRvLWRlY2FkZS1sb3ctdi1kb2xsYXItMTUwNDQzNzQ

China Yuan Falls Below 7 to US Dollar Over Trade War - Reports - Sputnik International

According to Reuters, the US-China trade dispute has reportedly prompted international investors to seek other assets, including the Japanese yen and gold.

The Chinese currency weakened to 7.0177 to the dollar on Monday following US President Donald Trump's latest threat of tariff hikes on Chinese goods, AP said. The yuan's weakness is among a series of Washington's complaints fueling tensions with the Trump administration.

US officials claim a weak yuan makes China's exports too inexpensive, hurting foreign competitors and swelling Beijing's trade surplus, according to AP.

On Thursday, Trump vowed to slap 10-percent tariffs on a further $300 billion worth of Chinese imports starting 1 September.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said Friday that Beijing was ready to take countermeasures if the US introduces more tariffs on Chinese goods.

The day before Trump’s announcement, the United States and China ended trade talks in Shanghai, which the White House described as "constructive," saying that China was committed to increase purchases of US agricultural exports.

Beijing and Washington have been engaged in a trade war since June 2018, when Trump announced he was imposing tariffs on $50 billion worth of Chinese imports in a bid to balance the trade deficit. Since then, the two countries have introduced several rounds of reciprocal tariffs.

The presidents of the United States and China previously met on the sidelines of the Osaka G20 summit in June, during which Trump said he was ready to reach a mutually acceptable trade agreement. In less than a week, however, he announced 10 percent tariffs, blaming China for not keeping promises to buy more US agricultural products.



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August 05, 2019 at 09:07AM

Trump reportedly overruled advisors in decision to slap tariffs on remaining Chinese imports - CNBC

President Donald Trump talking with the press as he leaves the White House in Washington, DC.

Michael Brochstein | LightRocket | Getty Images

President Donald Trump overruled the adamant objections of nearly his entire trade team when he ordered the imposition of 10% tariffs on China's remaining $300 billion of exports to the United States, according to The Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the matter.

Trump, in his decision announced on Twitter Thursday, said China has not made good on a promise to buy American agricultural goods in large quantities, and as a consequence the U.S. would impose new tariffs starting Sept. 1.

The Dow closed down more than 280 points on the news Thursday and Treasury yields also fell sharply.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer were in Shanghai last week in an effort to restart stalled trade talks. Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping had agreed to a truce in the trade war on the sidelines of the June G-20 summit in Japan.

Trump wanted to give farmers, who have been hit hard by the trade war, guarantees that China was boosting its U.S. purchases as he prepared for a rally in Ohio. But Lighthizer and Mnuchin conveyed to the president in an Oval Office meeting that the Shanghai talks did not have the results that he wanted, according to the Journal's sources.

Trump ordered new tariffs in response. Virtually everyone present at the Oval Office meeting – including national security advisor John Bolton, economic advisor Larry Kudlow and acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney – objected to his decision, according to the Journal. Only Peter Navarro, a China hawk, did not object.

A nearly two hour debate ensued but the president stood by his argument and eventually his advisors helped him draft a Twitter post on the new tariffs, the Journal reported.

Read the full report in The Wall Street Journal



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August 05, 2019 at 03:29AM

Facebook Rebrands Instagram and WhatsApp - Market Realist

Facebook (FB) has made a few changes to Instagram and WhatsApp, which were acquired in 2012 and 2014, respectively. While the company initially let these app function independently, the company has since made a few major changes.

Facebook is not afraid to step on toes to innovate. Instagram founders Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger left the company last year. The founders apparently left because they disagreed with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg about the future of the app. The company also runs WhatsApp after the founder left two years ago.

The social media giant has also started integrating the apps. Facebook users, for example, are prompted to join their friends on Instagram. The company is also working to allow users of any Facebook apps to send messages across them. Facebook has even started disclosing the number of users, which is currently more than 2.7 billion monthly active users.

Facebook rebrands for clarity

Now, Facebook is adding its own brand name alongside Instagram and WhatsApp. The slight rebranding was first reported by The Information. In a statement to The Information, Facebook said, “We want to be clearer about the products and services that are part of Facebook.”

The company had already made this change to Oculus VR, the AR/VR (augmented reality/virtual reality) company it acquired more than five years ago.

The latest move is another sign that the company wants to get more involved with Instagram and WhatsApp. A certain degree of separation from Facebook had actually caused Instagram and WhatsApp to flourish. Their reputations have been protected from the privacy scandals that Facebook is often hit with.

Privacy issues don’t affect user growth

That isn’t to say that the rebranding will affect Instagram’s and WhatsApp’s untarnished reputation or their growth. However, the rebranding might make Instagram and WhatsApp more conscious of privacy issues.

The social media giant has continued to grow its user base despite privacy issues. The reason the company didn’t loose users is because Facebook has a massive reach. Most users keep using the app because they don’t want to miss out on updates from their friends. If the company had fewer users, the users would have more reason to leave.

Social media giant takes credit

Facebook wants you to know that the company owns Instagram and WhatsApp and wants credit for their growth. While this might not necessarily please Instagram and WhatsApp users, the name change might not cause them to leave either. Again, Instagram and WhatsApp have too much value in terms of tremendous reach.

Despite the announcement, the new names won’t appear on the home screen of the apps. However, they will appear on the App Store and Google Play when users download the apps.

To learn more about Facebook, here are key highlights from the company’s recent earnings.



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August 04, 2019 at 11:31PM