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HSBC boss hid US$7m in Swiss account to 'protect' him from Hong Kong staff

Windsorlou

Alfrescian (Inf)
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HSBC boss hid US$7m in Swiss account to 'protect' him from Hong Kong staff


PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 24 February, 2015, 2:02am
UPDATED : Tuesday, 24 February, 2015, 4:58pm

Don Weinland and Ray Chan

stuart-hsbc.jpg


HSBC's chief executive Stuart Gulliver. Photo: Reuters

HSBC Holdings chief executive Stuart Gulliver painted recent revelations that he held his Hong Kong bonuses in a Swiss account via a Panamanian company as a matter of privacy.

In the latest of a string of leaked data on the bank's Swiss unit, British newspaper The Guardian said Gulliver held US$7.6 million in 2007 in an anonymous account in Panama under the name of Worcester Equities. The sum was reportedly bonuses he earned as an executive in Hong Kong.

During a conference call with journalists yesterday, at which the bank reported a 17 per cent drop in pre-tax profits for last year, Gulliver said most staff at the time had offshore accounts for their bonuses because those payments were not kept confidential in the computing system the bank used at the time.

The use of the Swiss account and Panamanian company were strictly for privacy and offered no tax benefits, he said. "Being in Switzerland protects me from the Hong Kong staff; being in Panama protects me from the Swiss staff," Gulliver said.

As a British resident who is domiciled in Hong Kong, he said he had disclosed all payments to tax authorities in those jurisdictions and paid all taxes due.

Tax experts in Hong Kong said that, if such disclosures were made by someone domiciled for tax purposes in Hong Kong, the account should be legal.

"Provided that everything has been properly reported, there is nothing wrong with this," said Willem Jan Hoogland, a partner at HKWJ Tax Law and Partners. "This could be done for non-tax purposes, if you don't want people to know how much you're making."

The Panamanian company was closed in 2009, Gulliver said, at which time his pay was made public. He declined to comment on whether he still held a Swiss account.

HSBC has been stricken this month by reports on the tax-dodging activities of its Swiss private bank. Data originally obtained by authorities in 2009 and later leaked to journalists has provided details on how the bank advised clients on avoiding tax around the world.

Authorities in 10 countries have launched investigations into the revelations.



 
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