HSBC has said it is considering moving its headquarters out of the UK.
The bank said the review followed "regulatory and structural reforms" since the financial crisis. HSBC's board
has asked its management to "look at where the best place is for HSBC
to be headquartered in this new environment," the bank said.
"The
question is a complex one and it is too soon to say how long this will
take or what the conclusion will be; but the work is under way." Shares in the company closed the day ahead by 2.86% after the news.
HSBC has not yet said where it may consider moving its headquarters to, although many expect Hong Kong to top the list.
'Big and sprawling'
"The only even faintly credible option is Hong Kong," said Alex Potter, banking analyst at Mirabaud Securities.
"HSBC
is so big and sprawling," said former banker and author Philip Augar.
"Would Hong Kong wish to have a bank this big on its balance sheet?"
But
the Hong Kong Monetary Authority has said that it would welcome HSBC
back to Hong Kong. "HSBC is the largest bank in Hong Kong and has deep
historical links with Hong Kong," it said in a statement.
However, a move to Hong Kong may not necessarily help the bank cut costs.
"HSBC
will pay several hundred million dollars more in tax in 2015 [if it
stays in the UK], but it would cost several hundred millions of dollars
to move the bank to another country," says Mr Potter.
And "the Chinese government may prove to be less predictable than the UK's," he added.
Analysis: Kamal Ahmed, BBC business editor
Regulatory pressure, political attacks following revelations of errant behaviour and hefty new taxes have sparked the decision.
HSBC
has also said that uncertainty over Britain's future in the European
Union is weighing on its future as well as new rules which oblige banks
to split their retail and investment banking activities - the
ring-fence.
The pressure to launch this review has come from the
HSBC board which has been pushed by investors worried about sub-par
performance. Profits are down at the bank and the share price is
under-performing.
If HSBC were to move - and that is a very big,
costly, politically difficult if - it would be a significant moment for
the City and Britain's place as the home of major global banks. Read Kamal's blog in full The review follows plans announced in the Budget to increase the bank levy from 0.156% to 0.21%.
The
levy particularly affects banks with large balance sheets, such as
HSBC. Last year it paid £750m of the £1.9bn raised by the government
through the tax.
"I think there have been a number of things that
have generated this review over the last few years," said Chris Wheeler,
banking analyst at Atlantic Equities. "What's really moved them on is
the increase in the bank levy."
HSBC also said that questions over the UK's continuing membership of the European Union were a source of "economic uncertainty".
The
bank has had its headquarters in the UK since 1992 but makes most of
its money overseas, with Asia accounting for about 80% of its profit.
HSBC
has threatened to exit the UK before. In 2010, it said it might move
from London if the UK government decided to break up big banks.
When
HSBC's present chief executive, Stuart Gulliver, took over he stopped
the bank's three-yearly review of where the bank has its headquarters.
HSBC's profit dropped 17% in 2014.
The bank blamed its "challenging year" on the $2.4bn it was forced to
pay in fines and settlements in relation to foreign exchange
manipulation and mis-selling of payment protection insurance.
The scandal-hit bank has also faced allegations that it helped people evade UK tax using hidden HSBC accounts in Geneva.
'Let down'
Shareholders attending the bank's annual general meeting on Friday were divided on whether HSBC should move its headquarters.
"I would prefer them to stay here really," said Gesila Wright.
Another
shareholder, Dr Diamond, said he was in favour of a move as it may save
the bank money and would "teach the politicians that you can't keep
hitting the bankers every time you need additional taxation."
"It's the scandals that I'm actually very concerned about," said Ann Fox. "I feel very let down by them."
Politicians were quick to react to the news.
When
asked about his view on HSBC's potential move, Liberal Democrat leader
Nick Clegg told the BBC: "They can make their own mind up… but I hope
they will stay in the UK."
Chancellor George Osborne echoed that sentiment but added that it
also was a warning about the dangers of anti-business policies.
Shadow
Chancellor Ed Balls said that HSBC was "one more in a long line of
companies and finance houses saying that Britain leaving the European
Union, if the Tories get back in, is the biggest risk to investment and
jobs".
UKIP leader Nigel Farage said he was worried by the news.
"There is genuinely a feeling (among workers) in the financial services
industry that everybody hates them. And that suddenly London isn't a
great place to be."
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