HOT NEWS! HK Shanghai Bank retrenched 3000 jobs

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http://hk.news.yahoo.com/匯豐裁員百計-不限後勤-開刀序幕-有前線部門-夕消失-211258173.html

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匯豐裁員百計 不限後勤 開刀序幕 有前線部門一夕消失
明報明報 – 15小時前
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匯豐銀行近日展開首階段大規模裁員行動,發言人指該行裁職計劃正在進行中,由於裁減職位涉及不同職級層面,重整架構進度各異,故難以提供確實受影響員工數目。圖為中環匯豐總行門外。(李紹昌攝)放大圖片

匯豐銀行近日展開首階段大規模裁員行動,發言人指該行裁職計劃正在進行中,由於裁減職位涉及不同職級層面,重整架構進度各異,故難以提供確實受影響員工數目。圖為中環匯豐 …
文章: 人心惶惶密MSN 員工﹕非常恐怖

明報 - 18小時前

【明報專訊】匯豐銀行9月初宣布在港裁員3000人,近日展開首階段大規模裁員,開始派「大信封」。據悉,風險管理、企業融資、資訊科技及環球市場等部門首當其衝,陸續有過百員工接信。雖然有指後勤職員是被裁的「高危一族」,但有前線負責融資及市場部的部門即時「消失」,有匯豐員工形容公司內部人心惶惶。

匯豐發言人表示,市場消息不置評,僅稱裁職計劃正在進行。由於裁減職位涉及不同職級層面,重整架構進度各異,故難以提供確實受影響員工數目。

匯控(0005)昨日收市報61.7元,較前天下跌6.2元,跌幅達9.1%,歐債危機晚上雖有轉機,匯控美國預託證券(ADR)凌晨零時30分報折合港幣61.3元,仍跌4毫。

匯豐集團行政總裁歐智華周三公布第三季業績時承認,香港區的裁員行動數日前開始。昨日有匯豐員工向本報證實,大規模裁員行動正式展開,位於中環總行、大角嘴、太古城及旺角等多個部門,均有員工即時被裁走。

中午開會 下午即執包袱

據了解,昨晨匯豐各部門主管開始向下屬派大信封,有部門先「開大會」由主管安撫下屬,詎料隨即立刻逐一接見員工派信。有員工向本報表示,裁員行動來得非常突然,「有同事中午還在開會,下午就要『執包袱』走人,事前毫無先兆」。他表示,由於昨日收到「大信封」的員工來自多個部門,因此公司內部人心惶惶。有職員指被炒員工起碼逾200人。

消息稱,匯豐員工大致會被分成4種「命運」﹕

一)平安過渡;

二)部門「消失」獲調配至其他部門;

三)即時離職,獲一定賠償;

四)須在一至兩個月內,自行在公司內部尋找其他部門空缺,如在緩衝期仍未求得一職,便「無得留低」,而且賠償額亦會較即時被裁員工為少。

有匯豐企業融資部的員工透露,昨晨獲主管通知,其部門即時「瓦解」,30多名員工受到牽連,部分人要轉職至其他部門,亦有人要即時離職。

聘速遞協助 門外不見員工捧紙箱

太古城匯豐分部亦成為重災區,有員工透露擁有20人的環球金融及市場部即時消失,所有員工即時離職,但記者昨日在太古城一座外觀察,未見有匯豐員工拿着紙皮箱「執包袱」,據悉是由於被裁員工均電召速遞公司協助收拾細軟,而且匯豐更主動「出錢送人走」。

香港銀行業僱員協會副總幹事譚建新表示,昨日收到會員反映已收到匯豐解僱信,但目前仍未掌握被裁員工數目。協會主席李麗貞亦指出,被裁員工有來自資訊科技及財資管理部,主要向表現欠佳員工「開刀」。她認為,部分員工可能獲資方安排「肥雞餐」離職,暫未收到會員求助,呼籲受影響僱員尋求工會協助。

議員批措施無良 促盡企業責任

立法會勞工界議員葉偉明批評,匯豐要求員工自行於內部求得一職否則「即炒」的做法無良,「實際上令員工心理壓力更大,簡直是壓迫裁員!」他促請匯豐盡企業責任。

明報記者
 
http://tvnz.co.nz/business-news/hsbc-cut-hundreds-jobs-4521371

HSBC to cut hundreds of jobs

Published: 5:34AM Friday November 11, 2011 Source: Reuters

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HSBC to cut hundreds of jobs (Source: Reuters)
HSBC - Source: Reuters
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HSBC bank might leave UK
Euro crisis puts pressure on NZ banks watch

HSBC Holdings is laying off several hundred investment bankers in London, Hong Kong and elsewhere this week as part of its jobs cull to save billions of dollars, people familiar with the matter said.

Staff in the global banking and markets (GBM) investment bank arm were being told of the cuts this week, and some had already been told, several sources said. It is expected to affect several hundred of GBM's 20,000 staff.

Europe's biggest bank plans to axe 30,000 jobs by the end of 2013 under a revamp by Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver to cut annual costs by $US3.5 billion.

It has shed 5,000 to date, it said today.

The bank had 296,000 staff at the end of 2010, so the cuts represent 10% of the workforce.

That would equate to about 2,000 staff at GBM, although that could be more as investment banking revenue has been hit hard by recent euro zone turmoil, especially in credit and rates. The bank has also said it will hire in some growth areas and countries.

HSBC has pinpointed five countries and its UK headquarters for the first wave to face cuts, mostly by the end of the year.

It has said 3,000 jobs would go in Hong Kong, but not detailed any more specific cuts. The other affected countries are the United States, Brazil, Canada and Mexico.

"We are not commenting on specifics but HSBC is going through an efficiency programme as described at the investor day in May. The programme is about reducing bureacracy and enhancing organisational effectiveness," a spokesman for the bank said.
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Gulliver has said the cost base is "unacceptable" and wants to get expenses below 52% of income.

He has some way to go - costs represented 59.1% of underlying income in the first nine months of this year, up from 54.4% a year ago.
 
USA Ang Moh O$P$ no pay then HSBC cut jobs.


http://www.businessweek.com/news/20...bank-profit-drops-u-s-bad-loans-increase.html

Bloomberg
HSBC’s Investment Bank Profit Drops, U.S. Bad Loans Increase
November 10, 2011, 11:50 AM EST

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More From Businessweek

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World Dodges Slump With China-U.S. Buoy in Europe Crisis

By Howard Mustoe and Gavin Finch

Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- HSBC Holdings Plc, Europe’s largest bank by market value, said investment banking profit fell in the third quarter amid Europe’s sovereign debt crisis and posted higher bad-debt provisions for its U.S. unit.

Pretax profit at the investment bank, led by Samir Assaf, fell 53 percent to about $1 billion in the third quarter from a year-earlier, London-based HSBC said in a statement yesterday. Bad loan provisions increased to $3.89 billion from $3.15 billion, a rise attributed to its U.S. unit, the bank said. The shares fell.

HSBC has so far set aside more than $65 billion for souring loans in North America following its purchase of U.S. subprime lender Household International in 2003. This quarter’s increase in loan impairment charges is a consequence of foreclosure moratoriums in some U.S. states, Finance Director Iain Mackay told journalists yesterday. HSBC, like Barclays Plc and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, also recorded a slowdown in revenue from investment banking amid volatile European markets.

“The big humdinger, which has caught everybody on the hop, is the bad debt charge,” said Christopher Wheeler, a London- based analyst with Mediobanca SpA. HSBC made provisions against its Household business at the onset of the financial crisis in 2006, Wheeler said. “Here we are again, doing the same thing.”

HSBC fell 5.8 percent to 506.3 pence in London yesterday, the eighth-worst performer in the Bloomberg Europe Banks and Financial Services index, valuing the bank at 90.4 billion pounds ($144 billion).

‘Significant Headwinds’

Bad loan provisions in the U.S. rose 21 percent to $2.39 billion, as HSBC yesterday warned of “pressure on future credit performance” in the U.S. and “further house price weakness” as more properties come onto the market. The bank has about $50 billion of U.S. subprime mortgages in runoff, Mackay told analysts yesterday.

“We are unable to foreclose on a broad base of customers who are delinquent,” Mackay said. “If they stop paying there’s very little we can do in terms of foreclosure. People are taking payment holidays” because “their bank cannot foreclose on them.”

Bad loan provisions in Hong Kong rose to $112 million from $35 million, the company said.

The pick-up in Asian loan impairments could have a “negative read across” for Standard Chartered Plc, Credit Suisse Group AG analysts including London-based Amit Goel wrote in a note to clients yesterday. Standard Chartered, which earns most of its profit in Asia, fell 2.6 percent to 1377 pence in London.

Headwinds

The banking industry also faces “significant headwinds” because of continuing political, regulatory and macroeconomic uncertainty, especially in Europe, Chief Executive Officer Stuart Gulliver said.

Investment banking revenue declined 19 percent to $3.5 billion because of its credit and rates business in Europe.

“Our fixed income business was very directly impacted by the uncertainty in the euro zone and to a lesser extent some of the events in the U.S. in the third quarter relating to the debt ceiling,” Mackay said. These lines of the business “will continue to be stressed for some period of time,” he said.

RBS, the U.K.’s biggest government-controlled bank, last week said third-quarter investment-banking revenue slipped 29 percent to 1.1 billion pounds from a year-earlier. Barclays said revenue at its Barclays Capital investment banking unit fell 15 percent to 2.25 billion pounds when it reported earnings on Oct. 31.

‘Softer End’

HSBC’s net trading income fell to $106 million from $1.39 billion, the company said. The lender’s cost-efficiency ratio for the nine-month period, minus a gain from its own debt, worsened to 59.1 percent from 54.4 percent a year-earlier.

The bank is seeking to meet the “softer end” of its target range for cost-efficiency of 48 percent to 52 percent by 2013, and a return on equity of 12 percent to 15 percent, Gulliver told analysts on a conference call yesterday.

The anticipated $2.4 billion joint cost of the U.K. bank levy on their foreign operations and the Independent Commission on Banking’s proposals is “too high,” Mackay said. HSBC would probably not be in a position to decide on whether to relocate its headquarters for at least another 12 to 18 months, Gulliver, said. “This is a non-trivial decision,” he said. “You don’t move your head office on a regular basis.”

Shield Taxpayers

Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne has pledged to implement the ICB’s proposals by 2019. The plans, aimed at shielding customers and taxpayers from another financial crisis, may cost the industry as much 7 billion pounds, according to the ICB.

The bank’s net investments in the sovereign debt of Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain fell 33 percent to $5.5 billion, from $8.2 billion in June.

“The outlook for the global economy is very challenging as problems in developed markets begin to affect growth rates around the world,” the company said. “Faster-growing markets clearly possess significant potential for growth, however, and continue to offer attractive business opportunities.”

Net income increased 66 percent to $5.22 billion from $3.15 billion a year-earlier, lifted by $4.1 billion gain on the value of its own debt, the lender said. That beat the $3.84 billion median estimate of eight analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

--Editors: Jon Menon, Francis Harris

To contact the reporter on this story: Howard Mustoe in London at [email protected]. Gavin Finch in London at [email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Edward Evans at [email protected]
 
Wow!!! Is this the start? Just yesterday from HSBC called me asking me to sign for a credit card.
 
i always think that banks are the worst place to work in, politicking and stressful environment. first one affected will be pple working in banks when crisis occurs.
 
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