NYSE:HSBC HSBC Q4 2024 Earnings Report $51.94 -0.25 (-0.48%) As of 03:58 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast HSBC EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.45Consensus EPS $1.41Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPSN/AHSBC Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$11.56 billionExpected Revenue$13.79 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$2.22 billionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AHSBC Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2024Date2/19/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateWednesday, February 19, 2025Conference Call Time2:45AM ETUpcoming EarningsHSBC's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, April 29, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 2:45 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckInterim ReportAnnual ReportEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by HSBC Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 19, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 14 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Investor and Analyst Webinar for HSBC Holdings Plc's twenty twenty four annual results. At this time, I will hand the call over to Georges Elhedri, Group CEO. Speaker 100:00:20Welcome all to today's call. I'm joined by Pam, our new Group CFO. We're delighted to be here in Hong Kong, the city where HSBC was founded one hundred and sixty years ago. Our history and heritage stand us in good stead. In so many ways, adapting to new economic realities and technologies is what we have always done. Speaker 100:00:42It brings out the best in our people and culture, especially when acting as a trusted advisor to our customers as they navigate the world's economic uncertainties and look towards new opportunities. Before Pam takes you through the fourth quarter numbers, I will cover four items. First, I'll go through our full year 2024 results. Second, I will set out the changes implemented over the past few months to create a simple, more agile, focused bank addressing the ways we operate in a fundamental way. Third, I'll describe in some detail the solid foundations we are building on. Speaker 100:01:24And finally, I'll share with you what we plan to do next in order to deliver sustainable strategic growth and meet our return targets. So, starting with the full year numbers. 2024 performance was strong. We delivered record profit before tax of $32,300,000,000 or $34,100,000,000 excluding notable items. We generated a 14.6% return on tangible equity or 16% excluding notable items in line with our mid teens target. Speaker 100:02:01And we announced a total of $26,900,000,000 of distributions to our shareholders in respect of 2024, including $0.87 per share of dividends and $11,000,000,000 of share buybacks. While I took the role in September, my priority was to inject energy and intent in the way we deliver our strategy while maintaining continued focused cost discipline. At our third quarter results, I committed to provide you with more detail on the expected benefits from our organizational simplification. We have simplified HSBC in two important ways. We've elevated and empowered our two home markets of Hong Kong and The U. Speaker 100:02:44K. And our wealth proposition and we have combined our two wholesale businesses. In doing so, we have eliminated large parts of our complex matrix governance structure. This significantly improved operating model is now led by a tighter group operating committee. It has clarity of accountability, fewer management lines and layers, reducing the need for the number of committees we previously ran across the bank. Speaker 100:03:13This has increased our agility. As an illustration, previously, every dollar of revenue we generated had at least two accountable executives at the Group Executive Committee. Today, around 60% of our revenue has a single accountable executive at the Group Operating Committee. This will empower our people to make faster decisions, collaborate better and innovate for the benefits for our customers. In short, we've simplified our structure and we've aligned it to our strategy. Speaker 100:03:46This will enable us to deliver around $1,500,000,000 of annualized savings by the end of full year 2026, primarily through deduplication of loans. This represents circa 8% reduction of our global staffing costs. This will cost around $1,800,000,000 in severance and other upfront costs. Those $1,500,000,000 savings will have no meaningful impact on revenue and they will be taken straight to the bottom line. Separately, we will redeploy circa $1,500,000,000 of costs from non strategic or low returning activities as incremental investments to our priority growth areas where we have clear competitive advantages and generate accretive returns. Speaker 100:04:36We have started to do this by announcing that we will begin to wind down our M and A and ECM activities in The UK, Europe and The U. S. I will cover our priority growth areas shortly. These actions give us the confidence to target a mid teens return on tangible equity in 2025, '20 '20 '6 and 2027. Each of our four businesses are firmly rooted in our core strength. Speaker 100:05:04In our two home markets of Hong Kong and The U. K, we have two strong businesses. In both businesses, we serve personal banking customers as well as commercial banking in small and medium enterprises. We are a leading bank and are growing market share in key products. Importantly, in both, we are profitable and delivering very good returns. Speaker 100:05:28As for the large corporations with global banking needs in both home markets alongside individuals with multi country personal financial needs, they will be served by our two international businesses as I'm about to sit up. Corporate and institution banking, CIB, is a global wholesale bank with significant competitive advantages, has a powerful deposit franchise with strong financing capabilities and it also has a market leading transaction bank leveraging our global network. As the world's number one trade bank for the last seven consecutive years, we are exceptionally well placed to help our customers and capture global and intra regional trade flows as supply chains reconfigure, new trade routes emerge, economies grow, and our customer expectations evolve. CIB is also well positioned to help entrepreneurs secure the capital they need to build the businesses of the future, help our customers decarbonize. International Wealth and Premier Banking, IWPB, is ideally placed to capture the increasing number of affluent and high net worth customers, especially those with international banking needs who seek new investment opportunities to help them protect and grow their wealth. Speaker 100:06:56Our recognized brand financial strength complementary footprints across Asia and The Middle East reinforce our position in the world's fastest growing wealth markets. Let me now highlight our distinctive strength starting with our high quality revenue streams. Our franchise generates resilient recurring revenue from three key sources. As you can see in 2024, '2 thirds of revenue was from banking NIR. This is result of the strong deposit and lending positions in each of our four core businesses. Speaker 100:07:39As you know, we have built up the structural hedge to protect this revenue stream from falling interest rates. Pam will speak more about this. The remaining third was from fee and other income. Around half of this was from our market leading wholesale transaction banking business, which is built on our global network covering 85% of global trade and capital flows, including high growth markets such as India, ASEAN, of course Mainland China, The Middle East, Mexico. Around the third was from wealth, which I will talk about shortly. Speaker 100:08:16Taken together, this means that more than 90% of our revenue comes from three high quality streams. Moving to our strong deposit franchise. Our customers trust the strength of our balance sheet and have chosen us to look after their deposits. This gives us a highly liquid and profitable balance sheet, which provides greater flexibility through the cycle. Within our $1,700,000,000,000 deposit base, we have large deposit surpluses in each of our four businesses, giving us the funding capacity to support our clients. Speaker 100:08:56Turning now to our high quality loan portfolio. We've always maintained a conservative approach to risk management as evidenced by the quality of our loan portfolio. In the period since 2018, we have experienced a global pandemic, an energy crisis, and the real estate cycle in The U. S, in Hong Kong, and in Mainland China. Our average annual ECL charge over that period was 32 basis points of average customer loss, which is well within our medium term planning range of 30 to 40 basis points. Speaker 100:09:28On our disciplined capital management, over the last two years, our capital generation has enabled us to return $47,700,000,000 to our shareholders. This comprises of $27,700,000,000 of dividends and $20,000,000,000 of share buybacks, including those announced today. Through the rolling series of share buybacks we have undertaken since the start of 2023, we have now repurchased 11% of our year end 2022 issued checkout. We're targeting a mid teens return on tangible equity in each of the next three years. The external environment presents us with opportunities but also challenges. Speaker 100:10:14The interest rate outlook is benign but remains volatile. We can adapt to changing patterns of trade and economic growth but there is a risk of disruption. And we have a major opportunity in wealth in Asia and The Middle East but it is a highly competitive space. Despite these challenges, we have levers we can pull on to support us deliver on our target. We're confident we can take decisive action to do so. Speaker 100:10:43These levers are first, driving operating leverage as an ongoing process through cost efficiency and optimization as well as continuous improvements in productivity. Second, dynamic balance sheet management and capital allocation, which I'll cover shortly and third, investing for strategic long term growth. Let me turn to this next. We're creating the capacity to invest for growth in the business and to drive efficiencies. We're focusing our growing investment part as shown on this and the next slide. Speaker 100:11:23First, in our home markets, we intend to expand the number of wealth centers and enhance our wealth capabilities in Hong Kong, which is set to become the world's leading cross border wealth center. We attracted around 800,000 new to bank personal banking customers in Hong Kong last year and we are well positioned to capture growth opportunities as international customers choose Hong Kong as their cross border wealth hub. In The UK, we plan to also grow the wealth business and we plan to improve our SME coverage and proposition. This is an extremely attractive and profitable segment where we will intensify our focus. Second, in CIB, we intend to leverage our network and further enhance our transaction banking capabilities, including in high growth markets such as Mainland China, ASEAN, India, Middle East, Mexico. Speaker 100:12:20We are also looking to scale up our broad loan origination capabilities by underwriting more and distributing more to our institutional and wealth clients. This ability to leverage our loan origination for the purpose of distribution will give us larger opportunities to generate fee income, improve capital efficiencies, and in turn improve CIB returns. Third, in IWPB, we intend to accelerate the wealth build up in our home markets and particularly also in key growth markets such as Singapore, The UAE, India, and Mainland China. In each of these, we aim to accelerate the hiring of relationship managers, establish new web centers, and expand our product offering. While we are benefiting from an underlying growth in this segment, particularly in Asia and The Middle East, we also aim to grow our market share by, first, better driving wealth penetration within our own wholesale or premier customer second, better capturing cross border flows of our own customers in their outbound location. Speaker 100:13:36And third, increasing the proportion of mandates within our invested assets. Finally, underpinning all of this and across the Group, we aim to seize the opportunity of AI and generative AI. Our flagship initiatives will focus on improving customer service through both our mobile apps and our contact centers. We also intend to increase tech productivity with tools such as coding assistance and improve process efficiency in areas such as onboarding, KYC, credit applications and many others. Mid teens returns will give us a range of attractive options for capital deployment and will drive EPS and EPS growth over time. Speaker 100:14:24As the illustration on the right hand side of the slide demonstrates, The mid teens return on tangible equity will enable us to deliver the 50% dividend payout ratio in 2025 and still have sufficient capital to grow the balance sheet, buy back shares or both. Supporting our customers will always be our first priority and we expect our loan book to grow in the mid single digits over the medium to long term. However, fluctuations in customer demand for credit mean our loan book may grow at an uneven pace. Share buybacks remain our preferred method of returning excess capital to our shareholders because they drive growth in EPS and DPS. For instance, in 2024, while our earnings grew by circa 2%, our earnings per share grew by circa 9% reflecting the benefit from the circa 6% reduction of share count through share buybacks in this year. Speaker 100:15:28So in summary, we've simplified the Group and along with our continued focus on costs are committed to delivering circa $1,500,000,000 savings to the bottom line. We're focused on delivering for our customers by capturing growth opportunities where we have a clear competitive advantage and accretive returns. And we are eliminating over the medium term an additional circa $1,500,000,000 of costs from non strategic or low returning activities and redeploying them into these priority growth areas. We are targeting a mid teens return on tangible equity in each of 2025, '20 '20 '6 and 2027. And with that, let me hand over to Speaker 200:16:16Pa. Thanks, George. Thank you, everyone, for joining. I would like to begin by sharing my approach as group CFO. In short, I'm fully focused on discipline, performance, and delivery. Speaker 200:16:34Discipline means prioritizing with precision, maintaining strong cost control and ensuring investment rigor for growth. Performance means gearing our financial strategy towards achieving our mid teens returns target. Delivery means ensuring we remain agile and resilient, enhance operating leverage and are always well positioned to support our customers. Let me now turn to the Q4 numbers. Starting with the highlights. Speaker 200:17:11Profit before tax was $2,300,000,000 or $7,300,000,000 excluding notable items. This strong performance enabled us to announce a further $8,400,000,000 of distributions in respect of the fourth quarter. This consists of a fourth interim dividend of $0.36 per share and a share buyback of up to $2,000,000,000 which we intend to complete before our first quarter results in April. On this slide, you can see the impact of notable items on year on year revenue and profit growth. This was principally the $5,200,000,000 related to historical foreign exchange translation losses from the Argentina disposal. Speaker 200:18:14Excluding these, profit before tax was up 10% on the fourth quarter of last year. Excluding notable items, revenue of $16,500,000,000 was up $1,200,000,000 on the fourth quarter of last year, driven by banking NII and a strong performance in wealth. On banking NII, excluding the impact of Argentina and other notable items, the banking NII run rate remained broadly stable. Deposit growth and benefits from the structural hedge were partially offset by lower interest rates. Looking ahead, we expect banking NII of around $42,000,000,000 in 2025. Speaker 200:19:14To be clear, this is a change to the way we have given you guidance before. Around $42,000,000,000 is not an underpin. It is our expectation at the present time based on the current market rates outlook and our own projections. We also want to give you some additional detail on the structural hedge. As you know, we have been building up the structural hedge to help manage our interest rate sensitivity. Speaker 200:19:49During 2024, we increased the notional balance by around $50,000,000,000 We also extended the duration from two point eight years to three point one years. This contributed to a further reduction in the interest rate sensitivity of our banking NII last year. We have reduced our sensitivity to a 100 basis point rate shock from around $7,000,000,000 in June 2022 to around $2,900,000,000 at the end of twenty twenty four. We are also providing additional disclosures on the expected reinvestment profile of the structural hedge. We expect to reinvest around $95,000,000,000 of assets in each of '25 and '26 from a current average yield of around 2.8%. Speaker 200:20:51We also expect to reinvest around $90,000,000,000 of assets in '27 from a current average yield of around 3.4. Moving to fee and other income. Wholesale transaction banking was stable on last year's fourth quarter. Excluding the impact of strategic transactions, primarily the sale of Canada, it was up by 3% as we continue to leverage our global network and capitalize on our position as the world's number one trade bank. The standout performance was again in wealth, which was up 27% on the same quarter last year. Speaker 200:21:41This was our fourth consecutive quarter of double digit year on year growth. I'm pleased we added 234,000 new to bank personal banking customers in Hong Kong in the quarter. This brings the total number added in 24 to 799,000 as Hong Kong continues to grow in importance as a cross border wealth hub. I'm also pleased with the strong momentum in the business in January which is in line with previous years. All of this gives us confidence that we can continue to grow this business further. Speaker 200:22:28Our medium term target is to continue to grow fee and other income by double digit CAGR. There are three trends that underpin this ambition. First, the multiyear growth in new to bank customers in Hong Kong underlines that the city is on track to becoming the number one cross border wealth hub before the end of this decade. Our past experience suggests that new customers grow their total balances in wealth products over time. So this is expected to provide a tailwind. Speaker 200:23:06Second, the strength of our business in key international wealth hubs, particularly Hong Kong, has enabled us to grow invested assets in Asia at 17% CAGR. This was also the key driver of our 13% CAGR growth in invested assets at the group level. There have also been strong multiyear inflows of net new invested assets with Asia accounting for the majority. Finally, our CSM balance is a third bigger than it was two years ago despite the reclassification of our French life insurance business in the fourth quarter. This reflects continued year on year growth in new business, CSM, from higher volumes particularly in Hong Kong. Speaker 200:24:04As you know, the CSM balance is a store of future earnings which relates into the P and L at between 910% in the last two years. All things being equal, this means that future earnings growth has been built in. Also last year, the value of new business CSM was substantially greater than the CSM released to the P and L. On credit, our fourth quarter ECL charge was $1,400,000,000 1 billion dollars of this was in wholesale including around $300,000,000 from two clients, one in The UK and one in Mainland China commercial real estate sector. Overall, our portfolios in our home markets remained strong. Speaker 200:25:00This brought our 24 charge to 36 basis points of average loans, which is within our medium term planning range of 30 to 40 basis points. We expect our 25 charge to be within our medium term planning range. On costs, we are committed to deliver $1,500,000,000 of simplification savings from our reorganization to the bottom line of which around $300,000,000 will be recognized in our '25 P and L. We expect to incur around $1,800,000,000 of severance and other upfront costs by the end of twenty six. The bulk of these costs will be incurred this year. Speaker 200:25:57Separately, we are also aiming to reallocate a further around $1,500,000,000 of costs from non strategic activities to priority growth areas. You will have seen that we have announced that we will begin to wind down our ECM and M and A activities in The UK, Europe, and The US while refocusing on Asia. Those businesses were not materially profitable and exiting them will make around $300,000,000 of costs available for reinvestment in our priority growth areas. The slide also shows some businesses that we have recently agreed to dispose off. German private banking and French life insurance to which I'll add the sale of our retail banking operations in Bahrain which was announced today. Speaker 200:26:58These were not aligned with our four businesses where we will focus our investment dollars and our time. Through these actions, we are creating investment space in our priority areas within our strict cost discipline. As George said, these include wealth in Asia and The Middle East, UK SME coverage and wholesale transaction banking. Entry to the extra investment list is a high hurdle requiring strategic alignment and financial returns. As we continue to work through exits of low return and non strategic activities, we are confident the investment dollars they provide will deliver a higher return to the bank. Speaker 200:27:49The actions taken last year mean that 24 costs were in line with our guidance of around 5% growth on a target basis. We remain fully committed to cost discipline. We expect 25% costs to grow by around 3% compared with 24% on a target basis, which excludes notable items and the direct costs of Canada and Argentina disposals. Our guidance of around 3% growth includes up to 4% underlying growth from inflation and investment, partly offset by around $300,000,000 of efficiency cost savings that we expect to realize this year. Loans and deposits. Speaker 200:28:44Loan balances were stable. Deposits were up 3% in the fourth quarter. This included an increase in Hong Kong supported by customer growth as well as seasonality. As we have said before I would caution you against annualizing that number. Our CET1 ratio was 14.9% above our target range of 14% to 14.5%. Speaker 200:29:17We expect the buyback of up to $2,000,000,000 announced today to have an impact of around 0.2 percentage points in the first quarter. We have reclassified our $7,000,000,000 legacy French home loan portfolio as hold to collect and sell in the first quarter. This will lead to recognition of an estimated $1,000,000,000 pretax loss in other comprehensive income equivalent to around 0.1 percentage points of CET1. In summary, we have set out our current expectations in respect of 25 and the medium term. But our key target is mid teens return on tangible equity in each of the next three years. Speaker 200:30:11We will run the bank to deliver this. Neil, can we go to Q and A please? Speaker 300:30:21Thanks, Pat. We'll go to Q and A now. We'll start with questions from the room. We'll start with you, Gurpreet, and please just wait for the microphone and remember to say your name and the name of your firm. Thank you. Speaker 400:30:38Thank you. Gurpreet Sahi from Goldman Sachs. If I can have two, please. The first is on CIB. Thank you for the 14% trailing ROTE. Speaker 400:30:49So with the cost saves, etcetera, where do we expect the CIB ROTE to trend over the next couple of years? And how would the management think about incremental capital allocation in that business division? I know that interest rates are having an impact. So implied question is, let's say interest rates were a lot lower and payments, cash management, etcetera, earn us less. And then the second one is on the International Wealth and Premier Bank. Speaker 400:31:18Thanks again for the 16% ROT. So how should we think about incremental technology or new app or kind of gaining market share in the cross border area as it relates to international wealth given that the ROT is not so high? So how would we, for example, XING and those kind of apps where we were looking at competing with the fintech, how competitive would we want to be? Thank you so much. Speaker 100:31:46Thank you very much, Koparit. I will handle I'll handle the two questions. On CIB, we haven't given specific returns, medium term returns for CIB. As Pam said, we've given a bank wide target of mid sorry, mid teens return on tangible equity for 2025, '20 '20 '6, '20 '20 '7 that we haven't given the business specific. Let me give you some indications how we're looking at the business. Speaker 100:32:14First, this business will benefit from the largest of the reorganization related cost saves because this business is the result of the merger of two wholesale businesses. And then, as per any merger, you would expect a lot of cost synergies in areas where we had duplicative activities, be it mostly back office activities that are duplicative where we will achieve the savings. This business also will benefit from additional we called it also the investment space from additional capital allocation efficiencies. We will be looking for more originate and distribute model. We will be looking to churn the balance sheet more, sweat the balance sheet more, drive higher earnings and fee income from this balance sheet and create better efficiency in the capital. Speaker 100:33:07And therefore, we have a number of activities that will support this business' return on tangible equity performance. I remember also this business is a leading business in wholesale transaction banking where the largest trade bank in the world for seven consecutive years. We're top two bank in payments and top two bank in foreign exchange. We're the largest bank in security services across Asia and The Middle East. So we're benefiting from an amazing transaction banking capability. Speaker 100:33:37We're also benefiting from an amazing deposit franchise. I've seen these businesses in the 50s percent loan to deposit ratio, and that is a highly stable and highly profitable proposition. So, you know, a lot of investment in this business is to support this direction of severance. I didn't mention the, you know, activities such as debt capital markets, etcetera, which also remain core in the wider capital solutions we provide to our customers. On your second question about IWPB, I think you have to look at this business as one of the largest growth engines of this firm. Speaker 100:34:14I mean starting with Hong Kong. Hong Kong is on track to become the largest, the world's largest cross border hub wealth hub ahead of Switzerland by the end of this decade. We're talking a few years. Eight hundred thousand Nutubank customers and we see this trend continuing. Then you look at various other, you know, parts of our network. Speaker 100:34:36I mean, Singapore is a major financial hub. The UAE has become a major wealth hub. We are the leading international wealth provider in Mainland China and in India. So we continue to invest in these areas and that investment will come in all forms like more relationship managers, more wealth centers, more products on the shelf, more technology capabilities. And therefore, you have to expect that a lot of investment will go to this business but this business is exhibiting already double digit growth. Speaker 100:35:08I mean this business the wealth in particular has grown more than 20% year on year and if you look at Asia alone our wealth business in '24 has grown more than 30% year on year and therefore it deserves a lot of investment even if that means we will eat a little bit on our return growth because we want to really secure our future as a leading provider. And our brand in parts of the world such as Asia and The Middle East is frankly second to none in our capability to attract this. Cross border is a very important area for us. Frankly, we have to punch at our weight. We're punching below our weight and cross border. Speaker 100:35:45You know, our customers are with us in a given location and then we lose them as their wealth or part of their wealth moves to another location. But just setting the right referral mechanisms, the product capabilities cross border, you know, the internal incentives. There is so much we can capture. It's our own customers. So the reach is fairly easy. Speaker 100:36:07It's a self help mechanism that we're trying to just recover on. As for ZING, Fusing is a was a fantastic technology platform which we built and were rolling out to non clients that we were building from scratch and built few tens of thousands. What we did is we flipped it over its head and we bring in the technology platform right in the core proposition. As we roll this technology platform within our core proposition in The UK, Fifteen Million clients will be able to benefit from it practically straight away. And, and we, you know, we shouldn't be preventing that. Speaker 100:36:46That on contrary accelerates our acquisition of international customers. And then as we start thinking rolling these kind of new technologies, you know, widely in our world business, there's a lot of potential we can get there and that is a much faster gain than trying to build it from scratch in an area where we have non customers working with a different brand than our very strong brand for HSBC. Thank you, Gurpreet. Speaker 300:37:11Yeah. Let's take a couple from the Zoom and then we'll come back with Kuompang and Jeremy. So, we'll take our first question from Kian Abu Asain from JPMorgan. Please just remember, if you're asking a question from the Zoom, mute off, camera on and please so we can get to as many of you as possible. Please limit yourselves to two questions each. Speaker 300:37:33Thank you. Ian? Ian, you're still on mute. Speaker 500:37:43Yes. Hi. Thanks for taking my questions. The first one is related to the R1.5 billion reallocation of costs. I just wanted to understand a bit if you could talk around the revenues associated, the capital and the risk weighted assets, so we get a bit of an idea of the optimization of this capital. Speaker 500:38:07And secondly, also what the return on investment on this that you expect you mentioned a high hurdle rate. And then the second question is more general to you, George. I mean, you are a CIB guy. You think about curveball issues all the time, spillover effect. So I'm quite interested about how you are planning for tariffs within the group. Speaker 500:38:29And in particular how you're thinking about the curve balls not the direct impact but the indirect impacts that impacting you from CRE to wealth growth etcetera FX and how you basically putting that in your planning on your outlook and sensitivities around that. Thanks. Speaker 100:38:51Thank you, Kean. Okay, I'll take the two questions. But if there are more details, you know, or, you know, additional granularity on CRE, I'm sure Pan can handle that. But I'll just give you a general sense. So far, on your first question, $1,500,000,000 reallocation of cost. Speaker 100:39:08So, what we did say is we were reallocated from non strategic or low returning activities into activities where we have a competitive edge, where we have better returns and where we have opportunities to grow. So, you have to look at this as returns incremental. Just as an illustration, the wind down of our M and A and ECM activities in The U. K, U. S. Speaker 100:39:31And Europe will give us $300,000,000 of saves as we achieve them that we can redeploy elsewhere. This cost was generating broadly breakeven profit. So, we're broadly broadly marginally profitable in these activities. We do expect these to give us much higher return as they reinvested and we haven't quantified that, but that's the expectation is there is an accretion of return. Second, if you look at the areas we're looking to invest in, wealth transaction banking has big callouts, they are actually, non or low balance sheet consuming businesses. Speaker 100:40:12They're materially fee and other income driving businesses with low, if any, impact on RWA growth. And then if you look at the SME business, this business is essentially liability driven and transaction banking driven. The loans portion of this business is relatively small. The loan to deposit ratio is in the low teens percentage points, which means, again, it's a low RWA impact high in banking NII from deposits, but or transaction banking, but lower RWA impact. In terms of your CIB curveball question, look, tariffs is not a new feature of global trade, right? Speaker 100:40:51There has always been various forms of tariffs on various products along various corridors and we've always navigated those with our clients and supported them along the route. I think what's changed now is maybe the speed at which the landscape will be evolving, the speed at which we may see new tariffs or change in tariffs. But with a bank present on 85% of the trade corridors with our global network, with our deep knowledge in all the markets where we operate, deep understanding of local rules and regulations, deep understanding of global rules and regulations, we're actually very well placed to support our customers adjust and position their businesses to navigate these tariffs. Now, I add to that also, remember, most of the jurisdictions we operate have pro growth government policies. Now, UK is a good example, pro growth government policy. Speaker 100:41:41US is a very good example. The Mainland China pro growth initiatives, consumer support initiatives. You look at Hong Kong, you know, the, you know, removal of the cooling off measures on the commercial real estate or the real estate in general. These measures have been effective and we're seeing the benefits in economy and economic growth. So, there are a number of positive factors that also we can benefit from. Speaker 100:42:07We've seen that in January, by the way. The start of this year has been very encouraging. And, look, the idea of all the simplification work we've done is that so we are simple. So we are agile. And agile means we can dynamically react and support our customers. Speaker 100:42:22And we will adapt quickly, we will react, we will make sure that we're supporting our customers along these journeys. Thank you, Kean. Speaker 300:42:32Yes. Let's take one more from the call. Ben Thoms from RBC. Speaker 600:42:43Morning, both. Thank you for taking my questions. The first one is on capital, please. In relation to your C2M ratio guidance of 14% to 14.5%, before today, this used to have a caveat. You'd aim to manage this down further over time. Speaker 600:42:56I just note that that hasn't been mentioned in today's update. What are your latest thoughts on your medium term ambitions for the C2M ratio and has there been any change in sentiment? And then secondly, on costs in relation to 1,500,000,000.0 of savings, you note that they will be taken to the bottom line, although presumably there'll be offsets from drivers such as inflation. Maybe you could just clarify directionally what you expect the shape of cost will do coming out 2025 and going into 2026 and 2027. Thank you. Speaker 100:43:27Thank you, Ben, for the two questions. I am going to ask Pam to address both your questions, Ben. But remember, our capital our CET1 ratio today is at 14.9%. So, we're well above our medium term operating range and expect to remain soft, you know, this quarter. So, you know, the, you know, the the question is really a medium to long term as opposed to anything now. Speaker 200:43:52Yeah. Thanks, George. And, Ben, coming to your first question, we are very comfortable operating between the 14 to 14.5% range. The comment on, you know, looking at again was removed some time ago. So no change for now in that respect. Speaker 200:44:07I want to just unbundle a little bit more on the cost point. So on the cost point, if you look at the guidance that we have and this is the $1,500,000,000 of cost savings that are going straight to the bottom line. So the way we've looked at is that it's about 4% if you look at inflation as well as, you know, BAU investment. The benefit of that 1,500,000,000.0 this year that we are taking straight to the bottom line is 300,000,000. So if you compare to on a target basis and you're starting excluding disposals and hyperinflation, you start from 2024, it's going to be a 3% year on year growth. Speaker 200:44:53So that's what we are looking at. Now severance and other one off costs, they will be treated as notable items. Now the timing of the 1,500,000,000.0 yen, yes, is 300,000,000 yen this year. There'll be more to come clearly in 2026. We see the full benefit of the 1,500,000,000.0 savings coming through for the full year 2027 and the severance costs etcetera will be more upfront. Speaker 300:45:23Thank you, Ben. Thank you. Let's come back to the room. So I think we have Kunpeng and then Jeremy. Speaker 700:45:31Thank you. Thank you for taking my question. This is Kunpeng of China Securities. Congratulations to the very strong result. I also have two questions. Speaker 700:45:40The first question is a little bit out of the bank itself. George, could you please share us your some color on the global trade business and also the wealth management business. I mean, your feelings about the trends in these two businesses. I think as a CEO your feeling must be quite insightful. Yeah. Speaker 700:46:01The second is about the new areas, new business areas you mentioned around, along with your reform. I think many of them are non capital consuming. So should to what level should we expect the revenue structure to change to going forward maybe the non NII portion will be much higher than one third yeah that's my two questions thank you. Speaker 100:46:28Thank you Kun. I'll take your first question and I'll ask Lam to address your second question. Surik, trade and wealth. First, it's very difficult to predict what will happen to global trade in an uncertain environment. But what we can say is for the last eight years that trade has started to become more disrupted. Speaker 100:46:50Global trade has continued growing low single digit percentage point. The trade routes have reconfigured. ASEAN has become the largest trading partner of China ahead of The US and Europe. We've seen more intra regional trade pickup. We've seen more fragmentation of trade routes. Speaker 100:47:10So rather than the goods moving from point a to point b from say manufacturing to consumption they're usually going through multiple legs of on the journey you know across various other jurisdictions that now it so happens that there's still we still have expectations that global trade will grow at low single digit percentage points and it so happens that this reconfiguration segmentation is playing to our strength because many of these new jurisdictions that have become major participants in global trade are jurisdictions where we have deep presence in in some cases leading presence as an international bank and we are able to capture these flaws and we will be supporting our customers along these routes in wealth again if you look at various analysts and you know consultants consideration, Asia and Middle East wealth is expected to grow at high single digit into 10% CAGR for the next five years. So the underlying trend of the growth of the middle class in many of these Asian economies is there And simply being a leading bank in the space, we benefit from this underlying trend. But what we are doing is we will also want to increase our market share because in some areas, apart from Hong Kong, where we've really been a leading player, in other places we've been punching below our weight and the idea is to be able to you know step up our product capabilities our customer reach you know our you know the various metrics which I shared in the slide without repeating and the additional investment is not only to capture the underlying trend but also to grow to our more natural share this will be focused essentially on Asia and The Middle East we you know we recognize there are other pockets of the wealth that would be important for us but we're not going to be a wealth player in The U. Speaker 100:49:00S. Because we don't have the right to win. Beth. Speaker 200:49:04Thank you George. So just in terms of our focus on both NII and fee income, clearly as we sit today, our NII given our strong balance sheet, deposit base, loans and advances is a much bigger proportion of earnings compared to fee income. But given the guidance we've just shared with you that we are looking at double digit growth in wealth over the medium term even though it's on a smaller base. Whereas on loans and advances, we are looking at a mid single digit growth in the medium term. So that balance will tilt, but I won't go over my skates just as yet because the baseline starting point is so much bigger for balance sheet driven business as opposed to fee income. Speaker 200:49:54But in direction of travel, absolutely. And also the two things are a bit correlated hopefully with your customers when you do more. It's not just balance sheet related products, you do more fee income driven. And we think that really gets us more into the space of hearts and minds of our customers, which is what we are here for. Speaker 100:50:12Thank you, Koon. Speaker 300:50:13Jeremy? Let's go to Jeremy. Speaker 800:50:19Thank you for taking up my question. My first question is related to the capital distribution, so thank you for elaborating on the capital distribution hierarchy, but I recognize that you are guiding a meetings royalty for the next three years but only 50% dividend payout for twenty twenty five so what are the implications behind it and we can see the bank share price is above one time price to book so will that affect your future consideration between buybacks and maybe raise the dividend payout? And second question is on the loan growth. HSBC has been consistently guiding a median sorry, mid single digit loan growth for the medium to long term but it's still very challenging in the near term. So what circumstances you think that might be necessary for the bank to finally hit the target and to what extent is that loan growth assumption baked into our banking and AI guidance? Speaker 800:51:24Thank you. Speaker 100:51:26Thank you very much, Gerry. I'll ask Pam to address both questions. Let me share some kind of insight on capital distribution. So, look, with a 50% with a mid teens return guidance, there's plenty of space to do the 50% dividend payout ratio and support the businesses to grow, which has always been the priority use of additional capital. But as you said, the loan growth hasn't been there for the last many quarters. Speaker 100:51:55And, you know, the opportunity for us was to return the excess capital through share buyback. It remains our intention to return excess capital to our shareholders through share buybacks because we see this also as a means to create an accretion in our dividend per share earnings per share and dividend per share by reducing the share count. Speaker 200:52:18Thank you, George. So firstly, in terms of our views on the 50% earnings per share, we are very comfortable with that number. And as you can see, we look at, obviously, distribution, but also opportunities for growth that we can deploy our surplus capital. I'm very pleased that we are trading above tangible book value, and we absolutely don't consider the tangible book value to be a ceiling for our buybacks. Share buybacks will continue to be our preferred mode of distribution going forward. Speaker 200:52:58The other thing on, you know, dividend is you obviously have to look at where your CET1 is at a point of time. You have to look at regulatory changes. So for now, 50% very comfortable with. Now in terms of your next question on loan growth, we need to unbundle it a bit. So, yes, loan growth is flat. Speaker 200:53:19It was down 3,000,000,000 in Hong Kong, up 3,000,000,000 for the rest of Asia, up 1,000,000,000 for The UK, down 1,000,000,000 for the rest of the world. We are optimistic that as the interest rate trajectory stabilizes, there'll be customer demand. And when there's customer demand, we'll be there to obviously support our customers. But what's also really important is as we're seeing that from a Hong Kong perspective, there is some momentum coming back. We expect at least the loan trajectory in Hong Kong to stabilize and not reduce. Speaker 200:53:52And once that happens, given the other breakdown I've given you, that gives us more optimism in terms of loan growth. Speaker 300:54:02Thank you, Jerry. Thank you. Let's go back to the call. Andy Coombs from Citigroup, please. Speaker 600:54:13Good morning. If I could have a couple of follow ups, please. Firstly, on the capital return and secondly, on the costs. On the buybacks, if you could just clarify the $2,000,000,000 is obviously a step down from three. Should we think about that as a permanent step down given that you now need to absorb these upfront restructuring charges or just the 2,000,000,000 reflect a shorter timing period between the q four and q one results compared to other quarters? Speaker 600:54:39So that's the first question. Second question, I will have another stab at the costs. Ben asked about this. I think the walk to 2025 is very clear, but if we then think about the walk to 2026, should we assume a similar level of inflation investment? So is 4% a fair assumption for future years in your view as well? Speaker 600:55:01And then when we eyeball slide '29, which has that cost phasing, And it looks like there's a $600,000,000 7 hundred million dollars step up in the cost saves in 2026 before the full run rate is recognized in '27. So are we looking at a 4% increase in '26 from that '25 guide less another incremental 700,000,000 of cost saves? So sub 34,000,000,000 cost number. Anything you can give us in terms of how to frame more explicitly that '26 and '27 cost base would be really helpful. Thank you. Speaker 100:55:38Thank you, Andy. Let me deal with your capital question and I'll ask Pam to talk you through costs. But remember, we only guided return on tangible equity for, 'twenty six and 'twenty seven. We haven't given additional specific guidance. So, look, on capital, 2,000,000,000 because we have two months until April and that amount will be reviewed on a case by case quarter by quarter basis. Speaker 100:56:00So, we do not pre commit on any future amounts. It will depend on the outlook and the loan growth and the, you know, other parameters as we get to it. But the current 2,000,000,000 is obviously because we have two months until the results in April. Speaker 200:56:16Beth? Thank you, George. So in terms of costs, we are not giving a cost guidance beyond full year '25. So the big moving parts always when we look at our cost is what's the underlying inflation, staff costs, and we also track very closely what's the increase in sort of fixed pay from a staff cost perspective. So it was, 3.6% in '25. Speaker 200:56:41It was 4.4% in '24. So you can see the trajectory shifting as obviously inflation is coming down. We also include in that 4% and we have for '25 additional investments. So you can do the maths in terms of where we go through for '26. But also let's be mindful, so far we are seeing for '25, you're only taking 300,000,000 of the 1,500,000,000.0 down to the savings line. Speaker 200:57:07So there is an absolute tailwind for the rest of it coming through for '26. So that's how the maths works. And as we go into '27, I would expect two things to happen. You'll see some kind of a normalization on the inflation and the underlying built number. We will have the BAU investments, so that continues to the same building block. Speaker 200:57:29But what's important is even though the 1,500,000,000.0 has been taken down to the bottom line, we expect through our simplification some of the additional efficiency costs beyond just, you know, FTE related costs, I. E. The ways are working. So that will give us some tailwind, but obviously not to the same extent as you've had in 2026. Thank you, Andy. Speaker 300:57:50Yes. Our next question is from Amit Goel at Mediobanca. Amit, you're on mute. Speaker 100:58:12Amit, you may be still on mute. Speaker 300:58:18Okay. Amit, well, we can come back to you. Let's go to It's it's now Sorry. Speaker 900:58:22It's actually it the system wouldn't allow allow me to unmute myself. Thank you. So so, two two questions then from me. So one is, again, just when you're talking about the mid teens ROTI target, you know, so this year, on a reported basis, it was, 14.6 on a x notable item, 16%. Just wanted to see, are are you thinking about that, more in line with the kind of underlying x notable items level that you've achieved this year and that you can maintain that given the cost savings and wealth management growth that you're targeting? Speaker 900:59:05Or are you, looking at it more closer to the to the kind of the reported number that you achieved in 2024? And then secondly, just wanted to dig in a bit more in terms of, the kind of the potential revenue impact or lack of, from the cost actions, including the reprioritization, just to understand how you're thinking about the kind of the marginal or negligible revenue impact. Is that because you just expect the revenue growth elsewhere from the reallocation of cost or, you know, how you're thinking about that? Thank you. Speaker 100:59:50Thank you very much, Amit. Amit, I'll take your first question and I'll ask Pam to address your second question about how we're looking to face cost and reallocation and the revenue impact of that. Look, so it's quite simple for the first question. What we mean by mid teens is around 14 to 16% and our target is on return on tangible equity excluding notable items this is how you should look at it. Speaker 201:00:20Thank you, George. And Amit, just adding a little bit to the ROTI question. Mid teens is mid teens what it says on the ten, fourteen to 16%. And it's a target. And obviously, if the world's in a better place, there is an upside, but you also have to look at the downside and that's how we look at all scenarios in our assumptions. Speaker 201:00:41Coming back to your second question on the 1,500,000,000.0. So firstly, I want to clarify The first one point five billion dollars which is simplification savings has no revenue impact because it's literally more senior roles, deduplication, simplifying the matrix. So on that, there is no revenue impact. And the whole sort of savings is a tailwind goes straight to the bottom line. On the second one point five percent which is different, it is clearly a reallocation which will happen at the from the individual business level, but we'll take it all to the group level. Speaker 201:01:22Now when you take it all to the group level, there is going to be some time lag between the cost coming up and reinvesting. But we do think that the payback period is pretty quick because we know it's in existing areas we want to reinvest. So that time lag on the revenue should not be that long and that will get compensated. But as we have said before, we are taking this reallocation of cost particularly from two areas. Ones where which are subscale and so materially don't really make an impact in terms of your profit. Speaker 201:01:56They're small scale divestments. But there are others where in terms of profitability, they are not materially profitable like we said on the investment bank. So therefore, as we take them through into new areas with higher returns and being very focused on those which are our competitive strengths, we do think that that positivity will come back pretty quickly. Speaker 301:02:21Thank you, Amit. Thank you. Any more in the room before we go back to the is that Catherine? Okay, Catherine, please. Speaker 1001:02:29Yeah. Thank you. I'm Catherine from JPMorgan. I just want to I just want to clarify on the cost questions. I would like to ask about the second one point five billion. Speaker 1001:02:39Have we factored that in in the meetings royalty guidance? Like, because with when we are exiting some business, we need some regulatory approval and it's hard to gauge the timeline. So, like, what kind of, like, assumptions that we have regarding this parts, in our meeting royalty guidance? Like, the underlying question is that will we see some upside because if we do it faster or or slower like that. The second one, I still want to ask about CRE question. Speaker 1001:03:06I think it's our old questions, but I think still have a lot of people, a lot of investors care about it. So both in Hong Kong and China in last quarter, we heard some events, which lead to some concerns on these areas. If I look at our 4Q numbers, I know that some are edging up on the ECL charges. Is any parts of that related to CRE and what is our outlook on CRE in both region? Thank you. Speaker 101:03:33Thank you, Katherine. Katherine, I'm going to ask Pam to address both your questions. But let me share with you just briefly my outlook on the cre situation so first the in Mainland China the we believe that we've had to trough really in the challenges that the sector has faced. We believe the measures that have been taken to stabilize and start a normalization process are working their way effectively through the economy. But more importantly, our exposure has materially reduced and therefore, it is not going to be any more any major driver for ECL. Speaker 101:04:15Second, about Hong Kong. So, we're actually positive about the outlook of Hong Kong. Hong Kong, first, the economy and certainly rate trajectory is going to support that. We're seeing growth manifest in '24 and growth outlook in '25 and a number of sectors have really have revived. But also in the CRE space, the underlying CRE market in Hong Kong is strong and resilient. Speaker 101:04:40The supply demand equation is very supportive for the medium to long term. And, you know, as we said, the rate outlook will also support that. But then, if you look at our exposure to many of the borrowers in this space, the borrowers are much stronger and much less leveraged than what we've seen in the China CRE space. They're in better balance sheet position, albeit they may have cash flow challenges due to high rates, etcetera. But the loan to valuation we have on our exposure is also very strong. Speaker 101:05:14We're in the 50s percent. Therefore, we do not think the Hong Kong CRE exposure in our books will be any material driver of our future ECLs. Pam, can I address your questions on cost and take you more specifically in the CRE elements? Speaker 201:05:32Thank you for your question. So firstly, yes, we have factored the reallocation into our mid teen ROTI guidance and we'll work as quickly as we can to reallocate cost to higher return areas. Obviously, if it is faster than our assumptions, we tend to be a bit conservative, which is good space to be in, then there'll be some upside, but given regulatory approvals, etcetera, things can be slower. But all in all, we are still very comfortable to have a mid teen ROTI for each of the next three years. So in terms of, I'll take the China Three question first, then I'll do Hong Kong three. Speaker 201:06:09Now China Three, we've always been very comfortable with our onshore exposure, which has been secured. The issue really has been with the offshore exposure, which was unsecured. But that number is way down from where we started. You know, we are now down to sort of 2,200,000,000.0 net of ECLs. And out of that, there is very little of the exposures that we feel that there is more headwind. Speaker 201:06:35And as you can see, the charge for ECL in last year was much lower than the prior years. So that I think gives me a sense of optimism with regard to the trajectory of the the China CRE outlook. And of course, you can have one off cases and things move on, but but overall, it's based upon our exposure. Now on Hong Kong CRE, now this is a starting point. As long as the interest rate trajectory is high, of course, you can see some customers facing headwinds, you know, because it's a cash flow issue fundamentally and that makes you bring more names into the stage threes. Speaker 201:07:14But what's very important to note is that despite them coming into stage threes, our ECLs haven't increased. And the answer is quite simple that the most of the names coming through the stage threes last year have been from a secured portfolio, which is 54% of our total portfolio. And as George said, there's a very high level of collateralization. I mean, average LTV on substandard is 46% and on the impaired is at 58%. So there's enough room in that space and there is strong collateral. Speaker 201:07:48So even when they go to stage three, there's not an ECL increase and the ECL increase this year has been minimal and we see nothing changing there. On the unsecured, 90% of it is investment grade. So 46% of portfolio is unsecured, 96 90% is investment grade. And it's primarily with your conglomerates and strong developers. And because they have diversified cash flows, the influence of the stage three from this portion of the book is very small. Speaker 201:08:16So all in all, even though with the increase in S3s, you see a minimal uplift in RWAs and the capital impact, but very small capital impact. From an ECL perspective, there is really no material change in the ECL trajectory at this point of time and we are very comfortable that it's all well within our midterm guidance of 30 to 40 basis points. Thank you, Catherine. Speaker 301:08:49Thank you. Let's go to Joe Dickerson from Jefferies, please. Speaker 1101:08:58Hi. Thank you for taking my question. Just a quick one following on from the Hong Kong CRE question. If I look at the ECL allowance to Stage three, it was like 67 FY23 million dollars and that's fallen at I think about 2625%, twenty six % in respect of full year for the Hong Kong piece. So I guess I'm just wondering what explains that decline. Speaker 1101:09:27Is it the proportion of the stage threes that are secured that's driving that reduction in coverage? Or what's what's the answer there, and how low can that number go? Speaker 201:09:40Yeah. Happy to take the question. Thank you. You're absolutely right. It is really the because all of the stage threes virtually, very large majority is coming through from the secured and given the cover, you know, it's, ECLs are the ECL coverage is dropping through. Speaker 201:09:58But also, we've written off some of the China CRE exposure overall and should link think in terms of of total exposures that we have and that's also reducing the ECL coverage. Speaker 101:10:09Thank you, Joe. Speaker 301:10:11Thank you. Our next question is from Aman Raker at Barclays. Speaker 1201:10:19Hey, guys. Yeah, good morning, Tom. Good morning, George. You had two questions. I think you're pointing to a much, much better free provision profit outlook and consensus. Speaker 1201:10:38I guess we've labored the discussion around cost. But my takeaway is that it is broadly flattered beyond 25, maybe a bit of growth, but well lower than where the three is. I think banking and II guide will take on a seat for itself. So, the two kind of related questions for that. One is around non interest income. Speaker 1201:11:01I think you're coming in there's a lot of moving parts on non interest income, but I think you're coming in with significant momentum on non interest income in excess of consensus. But we do have a lot of moving parts there. I mean, is there anything you can do to help us? I know you don't like to talk too much about non interest income because there's volatile line items in it, but got double digit growth momentum and wealth management. Freight that's probably growing low to mid single digit. Speaker 1201:11:34Who knows what markets do, but they're probably not going backwards. And you got a retail piece as well. But it just does feel like that is something that is trending well in excess. So if you are able to and comment in respect to 25, that would be really helpful. The second is about banking and II. Speaker 1201:11:55So the 40,000,000,000 guide this year is obviously great. And I know there's a lot of focus on lending, but really the policy that matter, right? I mean, you alluded to the strength of your franchise. And loans are going to be subdued for a while, but deposits are already growing and indeed they're going to continue growing from here. So can you try and help us with that? Speaker 1201:12:21Are you able to quantify the kind of deposit growth and kind of average interest earning asset growth that we might expect? Because I think you can comfortably grow your balance sheet despite the demand dynamic in your key markets. And I think that really helped underpin the kind of banking NII beyond '25. My kind of slight half question then is I'm going to sneak it in, but it's just around FX. And if you were to mark to market any of the kind of cost guide, for example, for the spot FX rate, if that would affect any of your kind of guidance or commentary today that'd be really helpful thanks so much Speaker 301:12:58thank Speaker 101:12:58you ema last plan to handle your banking nii question and and the effects question which obviously will have an impact on our banking NII guidance. And I'll take your first question by saying, nice try. Unfortunately, I cannot give you more than what we shared. Look, we've what we've shared is a confidence that we're running the bank towards a mid teens target on return tangible equity excluding notable items for '25, '20 '6, and '27. We're also guiding to a medium term outlook on wealth at double digit growth, which we're comfortable with given this is an area where we're investing in and we see the underlying trend supportive. Speaker 101:13:43But this is more a medium term guidance. It's difficult to evaluate what it means on a year on year or quarter on quarter basis. And we're also comfortable that our wholesale transaction banking given our strong leadership position in many of these areas, we will be able to ride the wave and we think the wave say the macro is in a low single digit percentage growth, you know, but is subject to possible disruptions, but the underlying trend, if you look at global trade with all forms of corridors, not just some of the disrupted corridors other corridors are likely to continue growing I think this is how you should look at it and remember the rate trajectory as well it's still uncertain but that will be you know that will be a way if we see a faster rate cuts than than we've implied. Let me just pause here on on the, you know, on that part of the question, ask them to take you through bank NII and FX. Speaker 201:14:41Thank you, Aman. So firstly, our cost guidance is on a cost currency on a constant currency basis. So clearly, from an FX perspective, there could be an impact. In terms of the $42,000,000,000 guidance, you're right. I mean, loans, we say it's mid single digit, medium term, and lower rates will help to get some momentum back, but it's also driven by overall market confidence. Speaker 201:15:12So can't really call out the timing of the return to to loan growth exactly. Now deposits clearly was a key one in fourth quarter, but we know that in fourth quarter, there's always a bit of a seasonality effect. So, you know, I would I would very much caution you against, you know, annualizing that number. But I think in terms of deposits, if I look at just the drivers for the 42 guidance, there's obviously interest rates. There is the benefit which is a headwind at this point of time given the the the market, the market implied rate curves and then there is structural hedge which will be a tailwind. Speaker 201:15:52Loans we've talked about. On deposits, we feel very lucky to have a strong deposit base as you've said. And the trust of our customers to give us those deposits is a cornerstone for a strong balance sheet. The deposit benefit for next year is driven by what's going to be the time deposit mix because that sort of helped through in the in the fourth quarter. And that deposit mix, as the interest rates come down, we expect the time deposit mix to also come down. Speaker 201:16:26So in that context, you can factor that in as part of your overall calculation in terms of the headwinds and the tailwinds. Speaker 301:16:37Perfect. Thank you, Aman. And our last question today comes from Rob Noble at Deutsche Nummis. Speaker 1301:16:47Morning. Thank you for taking my questions. I just wanted to ask a little bit more on the $1,500,000,000 of reallocation in the strategy. How much line of sight do you have on it at this point? So I presume GBM, Germany, and and France is around 500,000,000 in cost. Speaker 1301:17:06So do do you know where the other billion is coming from and the and the phasing of it and then links that? So what are the restructuring charges from this part, of of the strategy? Should I still be thinking about, you know, 1.2 times the cost saves as as additional below the line items against that 1.5? Or is that the wrong way to think about it? Thanks Speaker 101:17:30okay thank you rob for the question look let me let me handle the reallocation and I'll ask bam to comment on the cost implication and treatment if you want so first look your math is right I mean there are a number of activities we already called out. The investment banking refocus that would generate around 300,000,000 of saves and would lose about $300,000,000 of revenue against it. So, so that's quite there. We did announce the German private bank, the French insurance. We announced this morning also the sale of our Bahrain retail business. Speaker 101:18:11So those are kind of in motion. There are a number of other things we've called out that are in motion. There are a number of, you know, selectively identified a number of activities that are non strategic which we're working on and there'll be, you know, continuation of that journey. If you just you know kind of note that we said this is a medium this is a medium term number we haven't given a strict deadline because some of these actions may take longer or may be subject to various approvals that are beyond our control and we will be able to share with you as and when we move forward. Pam? Speaker 201:18:49Thanks. So first yes we have identified the rest of the costs. We can't give a precise cost at this point of time. We'll obviously keep you updated over the next quarters. Now in terms of the one off costs, yes, there will be severance and other one off costs and we will be looking at those costs as in a to a large extent given the materiality where there is from a notable as notable items. Speaker 201:19:19So that's kind of the broad picture in terms of how we're progressing. So good broad line. We own where we are but can't give you any more precision at this point of time. Speaker 101:19:33Perfect. Thank you very much, Rob. Okay. Well, thank you all for your questions. So, in closing, strong 2024 performance. Speaker 101:19:44This provides us firm foundations upon which we are building. We've simplified the group and along with our continued focus on costs, as said, we are committed to delivering circa $1,500,000,000 of savings to the bottom line. We're also focused on delivering for our customers by capturing growth opportunities where we have a clear competitive advantage and accretive returns. And we are eliminating over the medium term an additional circle $1,500,000,000 of cost from non strategic or low returning activities and redeploying them into these priority growth areas. We're also targeting the mid teens return on tangible equity in each of '25, '20 '6 and '20 '7. Speaker 101:20:31As usual, Neil and the team are available for any follow-up. Meanwhile, Pam and I hope to see many of you here in Hong Kong next month for our second HSBC Global Investment Summit. Enjoy the rest of your day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallHSBC Q4 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckInterim reportAnnual report HSBC Earnings HeadlinesHSBC Joins the Downward Dog of Oil Price ForecastingApril 16 at 11:41 AM | oilprice.comFactbox-HSBC trims Brent crude oil price forecasts for 2025 and 2026April 16 at 11:41 AM | msn.comM.A.G.A. is Finished – This Could be even BetterYou’ve no doubt heard Trump’s rally cry: Make America Great Again. But recently the President made a big change. Make America Wealthy Again (M.A.W.A).April 16, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)HSBC Research Updates Investment Ratings for Chinese Tech StocksApril 16 at 5:56 AM | gurufocus.comWhy wouldn't HSBC let me withdraw more than £1,000 in cash?April 16 at 1:40 AM | msn.comHSBC lowers Brent price forecasts on trade tensions, sluggish oil demandApril 15 at 6:50 PM | reuters.comSee More HSBC Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like HSBC? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on HSBC and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About HSBCHSBC (NYSE:HSBC) provides banking and financial services worldwide. The company operates through Wealth and Personal Banking, Commercial Banking, and Global Banking and Markets segments. The Wealth and Personal Banking segment offers retail banking and wealth products, including current and savings accounts, mortgages and personal loans, credit and debit cards, and local and international payment services; and wealth management services comprising insurance and investment products, global asset management services, investment management, and private wealth solutions. This segment serves personal banking and high net worth individuals. The Commercial Banking segment provides credit and lending, treasury management, payment, cash management, commercial insurance, and investment services; commercial cards; international trade and receivables finance services; foreign exchange products; capital raising services on debt and equity markets; and advisory services. It serves small and medium sized enterprises, mid-market enterprises, and corporates. The Global Banking and Markets segment offers financing, advisory, and transaction services; and credit, rates, foreign exchange, equities, money markets, and securities services; and engages in principal investment activities. It serves government, corporate and institutional clients, and private investors. HSBC Holdings plc was founded in 1865 and is headquartered in London, the United Kingdom.View HSBC ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Tesla Stock Eyes Breakout With Earnings on DeckJohnson & Johnson Earnings Were More Good Than Bad—Time to Buy? 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There are 14 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Investor and Analyst Webinar for HSBC Holdings Plc's twenty twenty four annual results. At this time, I will hand the call over to Georges Elhedri, Group CEO. Speaker 100:00:20Welcome all to today's call. I'm joined by Pam, our new Group CFO. We're delighted to be here in Hong Kong, the city where HSBC was founded one hundred and sixty years ago. Our history and heritage stand us in good stead. In so many ways, adapting to new economic realities and technologies is what we have always done. Speaker 100:00:42It brings out the best in our people and culture, especially when acting as a trusted advisor to our customers as they navigate the world's economic uncertainties and look towards new opportunities. Before Pam takes you through the fourth quarter numbers, I will cover four items. First, I'll go through our full year 2024 results. Second, I will set out the changes implemented over the past few months to create a simple, more agile, focused bank addressing the ways we operate in a fundamental way. Third, I'll describe in some detail the solid foundations we are building on. Speaker 100:01:24And finally, I'll share with you what we plan to do next in order to deliver sustainable strategic growth and meet our return targets. So, starting with the full year numbers. 2024 performance was strong. We delivered record profit before tax of $32,300,000,000 or $34,100,000,000 excluding notable items. We generated a 14.6% return on tangible equity or 16% excluding notable items in line with our mid teens target. Speaker 100:02:01And we announced a total of $26,900,000,000 of distributions to our shareholders in respect of 2024, including $0.87 per share of dividends and $11,000,000,000 of share buybacks. While I took the role in September, my priority was to inject energy and intent in the way we deliver our strategy while maintaining continued focused cost discipline. At our third quarter results, I committed to provide you with more detail on the expected benefits from our organizational simplification. We have simplified HSBC in two important ways. We've elevated and empowered our two home markets of Hong Kong and The U. Speaker 100:02:44K. And our wealth proposition and we have combined our two wholesale businesses. In doing so, we have eliminated large parts of our complex matrix governance structure. This significantly improved operating model is now led by a tighter group operating committee. It has clarity of accountability, fewer management lines and layers, reducing the need for the number of committees we previously ran across the bank. Speaker 100:03:13This has increased our agility. As an illustration, previously, every dollar of revenue we generated had at least two accountable executives at the Group Executive Committee. Today, around 60% of our revenue has a single accountable executive at the Group Operating Committee. This will empower our people to make faster decisions, collaborate better and innovate for the benefits for our customers. In short, we've simplified our structure and we've aligned it to our strategy. Speaker 100:03:46This will enable us to deliver around $1,500,000,000 of annualized savings by the end of full year 2026, primarily through deduplication of loans. This represents circa 8% reduction of our global staffing costs. This will cost around $1,800,000,000 in severance and other upfront costs. Those $1,500,000,000 savings will have no meaningful impact on revenue and they will be taken straight to the bottom line. Separately, we will redeploy circa $1,500,000,000 of costs from non strategic or low returning activities as incremental investments to our priority growth areas where we have clear competitive advantages and generate accretive returns. Speaker 100:04:36We have started to do this by announcing that we will begin to wind down our M and A and ECM activities in The UK, Europe and The U. S. I will cover our priority growth areas shortly. These actions give us the confidence to target a mid teens return on tangible equity in 2025, '20 '20 '6 and 2027. Each of our four businesses are firmly rooted in our core strength. Speaker 100:05:04In our two home markets of Hong Kong and The U. K, we have two strong businesses. In both businesses, we serve personal banking customers as well as commercial banking in small and medium enterprises. We are a leading bank and are growing market share in key products. Importantly, in both, we are profitable and delivering very good returns. Speaker 100:05:28As for the large corporations with global banking needs in both home markets alongside individuals with multi country personal financial needs, they will be served by our two international businesses as I'm about to sit up. Corporate and institution banking, CIB, is a global wholesale bank with significant competitive advantages, has a powerful deposit franchise with strong financing capabilities and it also has a market leading transaction bank leveraging our global network. As the world's number one trade bank for the last seven consecutive years, we are exceptionally well placed to help our customers and capture global and intra regional trade flows as supply chains reconfigure, new trade routes emerge, economies grow, and our customer expectations evolve. CIB is also well positioned to help entrepreneurs secure the capital they need to build the businesses of the future, help our customers decarbonize. International Wealth and Premier Banking, IWPB, is ideally placed to capture the increasing number of affluent and high net worth customers, especially those with international banking needs who seek new investment opportunities to help them protect and grow their wealth. Speaker 100:06:56Our recognized brand financial strength complementary footprints across Asia and The Middle East reinforce our position in the world's fastest growing wealth markets. Let me now highlight our distinctive strength starting with our high quality revenue streams. Our franchise generates resilient recurring revenue from three key sources. As you can see in 2024, '2 thirds of revenue was from banking NIR. This is result of the strong deposit and lending positions in each of our four core businesses. Speaker 100:07:39As you know, we have built up the structural hedge to protect this revenue stream from falling interest rates. Pam will speak more about this. The remaining third was from fee and other income. Around half of this was from our market leading wholesale transaction banking business, which is built on our global network covering 85% of global trade and capital flows, including high growth markets such as India, ASEAN, of course Mainland China, The Middle East, Mexico. Around the third was from wealth, which I will talk about shortly. Speaker 100:08:16Taken together, this means that more than 90% of our revenue comes from three high quality streams. Moving to our strong deposit franchise. Our customers trust the strength of our balance sheet and have chosen us to look after their deposits. This gives us a highly liquid and profitable balance sheet, which provides greater flexibility through the cycle. Within our $1,700,000,000,000 deposit base, we have large deposit surpluses in each of our four businesses, giving us the funding capacity to support our clients. Speaker 100:08:56Turning now to our high quality loan portfolio. We've always maintained a conservative approach to risk management as evidenced by the quality of our loan portfolio. In the period since 2018, we have experienced a global pandemic, an energy crisis, and the real estate cycle in The U. S, in Hong Kong, and in Mainland China. Our average annual ECL charge over that period was 32 basis points of average customer loss, which is well within our medium term planning range of 30 to 40 basis points. Speaker 100:09:28On our disciplined capital management, over the last two years, our capital generation has enabled us to return $47,700,000,000 to our shareholders. This comprises of $27,700,000,000 of dividends and $20,000,000,000 of share buybacks, including those announced today. Through the rolling series of share buybacks we have undertaken since the start of 2023, we have now repurchased 11% of our year end 2022 issued checkout. We're targeting a mid teens return on tangible equity in each of the next three years. The external environment presents us with opportunities but also challenges. Speaker 100:10:14The interest rate outlook is benign but remains volatile. We can adapt to changing patterns of trade and economic growth but there is a risk of disruption. And we have a major opportunity in wealth in Asia and The Middle East but it is a highly competitive space. Despite these challenges, we have levers we can pull on to support us deliver on our target. We're confident we can take decisive action to do so. Speaker 100:10:43These levers are first, driving operating leverage as an ongoing process through cost efficiency and optimization as well as continuous improvements in productivity. Second, dynamic balance sheet management and capital allocation, which I'll cover shortly and third, investing for strategic long term growth. Let me turn to this next. We're creating the capacity to invest for growth in the business and to drive efficiencies. We're focusing our growing investment part as shown on this and the next slide. Speaker 100:11:23First, in our home markets, we intend to expand the number of wealth centers and enhance our wealth capabilities in Hong Kong, which is set to become the world's leading cross border wealth center. We attracted around 800,000 new to bank personal banking customers in Hong Kong last year and we are well positioned to capture growth opportunities as international customers choose Hong Kong as their cross border wealth hub. In The UK, we plan to also grow the wealth business and we plan to improve our SME coverage and proposition. This is an extremely attractive and profitable segment where we will intensify our focus. Second, in CIB, we intend to leverage our network and further enhance our transaction banking capabilities, including in high growth markets such as Mainland China, ASEAN, India, Middle East, Mexico. Speaker 100:12:20We are also looking to scale up our broad loan origination capabilities by underwriting more and distributing more to our institutional and wealth clients. This ability to leverage our loan origination for the purpose of distribution will give us larger opportunities to generate fee income, improve capital efficiencies, and in turn improve CIB returns. Third, in IWPB, we intend to accelerate the wealth build up in our home markets and particularly also in key growth markets such as Singapore, The UAE, India, and Mainland China. In each of these, we aim to accelerate the hiring of relationship managers, establish new web centers, and expand our product offering. While we are benefiting from an underlying growth in this segment, particularly in Asia and The Middle East, we also aim to grow our market share by, first, better driving wealth penetration within our own wholesale or premier customer second, better capturing cross border flows of our own customers in their outbound location. Speaker 100:13:36And third, increasing the proportion of mandates within our invested assets. Finally, underpinning all of this and across the Group, we aim to seize the opportunity of AI and generative AI. Our flagship initiatives will focus on improving customer service through both our mobile apps and our contact centers. We also intend to increase tech productivity with tools such as coding assistance and improve process efficiency in areas such as onboarding, KYC, credit applications and many others. Mid teens returns will give us a range of attractive options for capital deployment and will drive EPS and EPS growth over time. Speaker 100:14:24As the illustration on the right hand side of the slide demonstrates, The mid teens return on tangible equity will enable us to deliver the 50% dividend payout ratio in 2025 and still have sufficient capital to grow the balance sheet, buy back shares or both. Supporting our customers will always be our first priority and we expect our loan book to grow in the mid single digits over the medium to long term. However, fluctuations in customer demand for credit mean our loan book may grow at an uneven pace. Share buybacks remain our preferred method of returning excess capital to our shareholders because they drive growth in EPS and DPS. For instance, in 2024, while our earnings grew by circa 2%, our earnings per share grew by circa 9% reflecting the benefit from the circa 6% reduction of share count through share buybacks in this year. Speaker 100:15:28So in summary, we've simplified the Group and along with our continued focus on costs are committed to delivering circa $1,500,000,000 savings to the bottom line. We're focused on delivering for our customers by capturing growth opportunities where we have a clear competitive advantage and accretive returns. And we are eliminating over the medium term an additional circa $1,500,000,000 of costs from non strategic or low returning activities and redeploying them into these priority growth areas. We are targeting a mid teens return on tangible equity in each of 2025, '20 '20 '6 and 2027. And with that, let me hand over to Speaker 200:16:16Pa. Thanks, George. Thank you, everyone, for joining. I would like to begin by sharing my approach as group CFO. In short, I'm fully focused on discipline, performance, and delivery. Speaker 200:16:34Discipline means prioritizing with precision, maintaining strong cost control and ensuring investment rigor for growth. Performance means gearing our financial strategy towards achieving our mid teens returns target. Delivery means ensuring we remain agile and resilient, enhance operating leverage and are always well positioned to support our customers. Let me now turn to the Q4 numbers. Starting with the highlights. Speaker 200:17:11Profit before tax was $2,300,000,000 or $7,300,000,000 excluding notable items. This strong performance enabled us to announce a further $8,400,000,000 of distributions in respect of the fourth quarter. This consists of a fourth interim dividend of $0.36 per share and a share buyback of up to $2,000,000,000 which we intend to complete before our first quarter results in April. On this slide, you can see the impact of notable items on year on year revenue and profit growth. This was principally the $5,200,000,000 related to historical foreign exchange translation losses from the Argentina disposal. Speaker 200:18:14Excluding these, profit before tax was up 10% on the fourth quarter of last year. Excluding notable items, revenue of $16,500,000,000 was up $1,200,000,000 on the fourth quarter of last year, driven by banking NII and a strong performance in wealth. On banking NII, excluding the impact of Argentina and other notable items, the banking NII run rate remained broadly stable. Deposit growth and benefits from the structural hedge were partially offset by lower interest rates. Looking ahead, we expect banking NII of around $42,000,000,000 in 2025. Speaker 200:19:14To be clear, this is a change to the way we have given you guidance before. Around $42,000,000,000 is not an underpin. It is our expectation at the present time based on the current market rates outlook and our own projections. We also want to give you some additional detail on the structural hedge. As you know, we have been building up the structural hedge to help manage our interest rate sensitivity. Speaker 200:19:49During 2024, we increased the notional balance by around $50,000,000,000 We also extended the duration from two point eight years to three point one years. This contributed to a further reduction in the interest rate sensitivity of our banking NII last year. We have reduced our sensitivity to a 100 basis point rate shock from around $7,000,000,000 in June 2022 to around $2,900,000,000 at the end of twenty twenty four. We are also providing additional disclosures on the expected reinvestment profile of the structural hedge. We expect to reinvest around $95,000,000,000 of assets in each of '25 and '26 from a current average yield of around 2.8%. Speaker 200:20:51We also expect to reinvest around $90,000,000,000 of assets in '27 from a current average yield of around 3.4. Moving to fee and other income. Wholesale transaction banking was stable on last year's fourth quarter. Excluding the impact of strategic transactions, primarily the sale of Canada, it was up by 3% as we continue to leverage our global network and capitalize on our position as the world's number one trade bank. The standout performance was again in wealth, which was up 27% on the same quarter last year. Speaker 200:21:41This was our fourth consecutive quarter of double digit year on year growth. I'm pleased we added 234,000 new to bank personal banking customers in Hong Kong in the quarter. This brings the total number added in 24 to 799,000 as Hong Kong continues to grow in importance as a cross border wealth hub. I'm also pleased with the strong momentum in the business in January which is in line with previous years. All of this gives us confidence that we can continue to grow this business further. Speaker 200:22:28Our medium term target is to continue to grow fee and other income by double digit CAGR. There are three trends that underpin this ambition. First, the multiyear growth in new to bank customers in Hong Kong underlines that the city is on track to becoming the number one cross border wealth hub before the end of this decade. Our past experience suggests that new customers grow their total balances in wealth products over time. So this is expected to provide a tailwind. Speaker 200:23:06Second, the strength of our business in key international wealth hubs, particularly Hong Kong, has enabled us to grow invested assets in Asia at 17% CAGR. This was also the key driver of our 13% CAGR growth in invested assets at the group level. There have also been strong multiyear inflows of net new invested assets with Asia accounting for the majority. Finally, our CSM balance is a third bigger than it was two years ago despite the reclassification of our French life insurance business in the fourth quarter. This reflects continued year on year growth in new business, CSM, from higher volumes particularly in Hong Kong. Speaker 200:24:04As you know, the CSM balance is a store of future earnings which relates into the P and L at between 910% in the last two years. All things being equal, this means that future earnings growth has been built in. Also last year, the value of new business CSM was substantially greater than the CSM released to the P and L. On credit, our fourth quarter ECL charge was $1,400,000,000 1 billion dollars of this was in wholesale including around $300,000,000 from two clients, one in The UK and one in Mainland China commercial real estate sector. Overall, our portfolios in our home markets remained strong. Speaker 200:25:00This brought our 24 charge to 36 basis points of average loans, which is within our medium term planning range of 30 to 40 basis points. We expect our 25 charge to be within our medium term planning range. On costs, we are committed to deliver $1,500,000,000 of simplification savings from our reorganization to the bottom line of which around $300,000,000 will be recognized in our '25 P and L. We expect to incur around $1,800,000,000 of severance and other upfront costs by the end of twenty six. The bulk of these costs will be incurred this year. Speaker 200:25:57Separately, we are also aiming to reallocate a further around $1,500,000,000 of costs from non strategic activities to priority growth areas. You will have seen that we have announced that we will begin to wind down our ECM and M and A activities in The UK, Europe, and The US while refocusing on Asia. Those businesses were not materially profitable and exiting them will make around $300,000,000 of costs available for reinvestment in our priority growth areas. The slide also shows some businesses that we have recently agreed to dispose off. German private banking and French life insurance to which I'll add the sale of our retail banking operations in Bahrain which was announced today. Speaker 200:26:58These were not aligned with our four businesses where we will focus our investment dollars and our time. Through these actions, we are creating investment space in our priority areas within our strict cost discipline. As George said, these include wealth in Asia and The Middle East, UK SME coverage and wholesale transaction banking. Entry to the extra investment list is a high hurdle requiring strategic alignment and financial returns. As we continue to work through exits of low return and non strategic activities, we are confident the investment dollars they provide will deliver a higher return to the bank. Speaker 200:27:49The actions taken last year mean that 24 costs were in line with our guidance of around 5% growth on a target basis. We remain fully committed to cost discipline. We expect 25% costs to grow by around 3% compared with 24% on a target basis, which excludes notable items and the direct costs of Canada and Argentina disposals. Our guidance of around 3% growth includes up to 4% underlying growth from inflation and investment, partly offset by around $300,000,000 of efficiency cost savings that we expect to realize this year. Loans and deposits. Speaker 200:28:44Loan balances were stable. Deposits were up 3% in the fourth quarter. This included an increase in Hong Kong supported by customer growth as well as seasonality. As we have said before I would caution you against annualizing that number. Our CET1 ratio was 14.9% above our target range of 14% to 14.5%. Speaker 200:29:17We expect the buyback of up to $2,000,000,000 announced today to have an impact of around 0.2 percentage points in the first quarter. We have reclassified our $7,000,000,000 legacy French home loan portfolio as hold to collect and sell in the first quarter. This will lead to recognition of an estimated $1,000,000,000 pretax loss in other comprehensive income equivalent to around 0.1 percentage points of CET1. In summary, we have set out our current expectations in respect of 25 and the medium term. But our key target is mid teens return on tangible equity in each of the next three years. Speaker 200:30:11We will run the bank to deliver this. Neil, can we go to Q and A please? Speaker 300:30:21Thanks, Pat. We'll go to Q and A now. We'll start with questions from the room. We'll start with you, Gurpreet, and please just wait for the microphone and remember to say your name and the name of your firm. Thank you. Speaker 400:30:38Thank you. Gurpreet Sahi from Goldman Sachs. If I can have two, please. The first is on CIB. Thank you for the 14% trailing ROTE. Speaker 400:30:49So with the cost saves, etcetera, where do we expect the CIB ROTE to trend over the next couple of years? And how would the management think about incremental capital allocation in that business division? I know that interest rates are having an impact. So implied question is, let's say interest rates were a lot lower and payments, cash management, etcetera, earn us less. And then the second one is on the International Wealth and Premier Bank. Speaker 400:31:18Thanks again for the 16% ROT. So how should we think about incremental technology or new app or kind of gaining market share in the cross border area as it relates to international wealth given that the ROT is not so high? So how would we, for example, XING and those kind of apps where we were looking at competing with the fintech, how competitive would we want to be? Thank you so much. Speaker 100:31:46Thank you very much, Koparit. I will handle I'll handle the two questions. On CIB, we haven't given specific returns, medium term returns for CIB. As Pam said, we've given a bank wide target of mid sorry, mid teens return on tangible equity for 2025, '20 '20 '6, '20 '20 '7 that we haven't given the business specific. Let me give you some indications how we're looking at the business. Speaker 100:32:14First, this business will benefit from the largest of the reorganization related cost saves because this business is the result of the merger of two wholesale businesses. And then, as per any merger, you would expect a lot of cost synergies in areas where we had duplicative activities, be it mostly back office activities that are duplicative where we will achieve the savings. This business also will benefit from additional we called it also the investment space from additional capital allocation efficiencies. We will be looking for more originate and distribute model. We will be looking to churn the balance sheet more, sweat the balance sheet more, drive higher earnings and fee income from this balance sheet and create better efficiency in the capital. Speaker 100:33:07And therefore, we have a number of activities that will support this business' return on tangible equity performance. I remember also this business is a leading business in wholesale transaction banking where the largest trade bank in the world for seven consecutive years. We're top two bank in payments and top two bank in foreign exchange. We're the largest bank in security services across Asia and The Middle East. So we're benefiting from an amazing transaction banking capability. Speaker 100:33:37We're also benefiting from an amazing deposit franchise. I've seen these businesses in the 50s percent loan to deposit ratio, and that is a highly stable and highly profitable proposition. So, you know, a lot of investment in this business is to support this direction of severance. I didn't mention the, you know, activities such as debt capital markets, etcetera, which also remain core in the wider capital solutions we provide to our customers. On your second question about IWPB, I think you have to look at this business as one of the largest growth engines of this firm. Speaker 100:34:14I mean starting with Hong Kong. Hong Kong is on track to become the largest, the world's largest cross border hub wealth hub ahead of Switzerland by the end of this decade. We're talking a few years. Eight hundred thousand Nutubank customers and we see this trend continuing. Then you look at various other, you know, parts of our network. Speaker 100:34:36I mean, Singapore is a major financial hub. The UAE has become a major wealth hub. We are the leading international wealth provider in Mainland China and in India. So we continue to invest in these areas and that investment will come in all forms like more relationship managers, more wealth centers, more products on the shelf, more technology capabilities. And therefore, you have to expect that a lot of investment will go to this business but this business is exhibiting already double digit growth. Speaker 100:35:08I mean this business the wealth in particular has grown more than 20% year on year and if you look at Asia alone our wealth business in '24 has grown more than 30% year on year and therefore it deserves a lot of investment even if that means we will eat a little bit on our return growth because we want to really secure our future as a leading provider. And our brand in parts of the world such as Asia and The Middle East is frankly second to none in our capability to attract this. Cross border is a very important area for us. Frankly, we have to punch at our weight. We're punching below our weight and cross border. Speaker 100:35:45You know, our customers are with us in a given location and then we lose them as their wealth or part of their wealth moves to another location. But just setting the right referral mechanisms, the product capabilities cross border, you know, the internal incentives. There is so much we can capture. It's our own customers. So the reach is fairly easy. Speaker 100:36:07It's a self help mechanism that we're trying to just recover on. As for ZING, Fusing is a was a fantastic technology platform which we built and were rolling out to non clients that we were building from scratch and built few tens of thousands. What we did is we flipped it over its head and we bring in the technology platform right in the core proposition. As we roll this technology platform within our core proposition in The UK, Fifteen Million clients will be able to benefit from it practically straight away. And, and we, you know, we shouldn't be preventing that. Speaker 100:36:46That on contrary accelerates our acquisition of international customers. And then as we start thinking rolling these kind of new technologies, you know, widely in our world business, there's a lot of potential we can get there and that is a much faster gain than trying to build it from scratch in an area where we have non customers working with a different brand than our very strong brand for HSBC. Thank you, Gurpreet. Speaker 300:37:11Yeah. Let's take a couple from the Zoom and then we'll come back with Kuompang and Jeremy. So, we'll take our first question from Kian Abu Asain from JPMorgan. Please just remember, if you're asking a question from the Zoom, mute off, camera on and please so we can get to as many of you as possible. Please limit yourselves to two questions each. Speaker 300:37:33Thank you. Ian? Ian, you're still on mute. Speaker 500:37:43Yes. Hi. Thanks for taking my questions. The first one is related to the R1.5 billion reallocation of costs. I just wanted to understand a bit if you could talk around the revenues associated, the capital and the risk weighted assets, so we get a bit of an idea of the optimization of this capital. Speaker 500:38:07And secondly, also what the return on investment on this that you expect you mentioned a high hurdle rate. And then the second question is more general to you, George. I mean, you are a CIB guy. You think about curveball issues all the time, spillover effect. So I'm quite interested about how you are planning for tariffs within the group. Speaker 500:38:29And in particular how you're thinking about the curve balls not the direct impact but the indirect impacts that impacting you from CRE to wealth growth etcetera FX and how you basically putting that in your planning on your outlook and sensitivities around that. Thanks. Speaker 100:38:51Thank you, Kean. Okay, I'll take the two questions. But if there are more details, you know, or, you know, additional granularity on CRE, I'm sure Pan can handle that. But I'll just give you a general sense. So far, on your first question, $1,500,000,000 reallocation of cost. Speaker 100:39:08So, what we did say is we were reallocated from non strategic or low returning activities into activities where we have a competitive edge, where we have better returns and where we have opportunities to grow. So, you have to look at this as returns incremental. Just as an illustration, the wind down of our M and A and ECM activities in The U. K, U. S. Speaker 100:39:31And Europe will give us $300,000,000 of saves as we achieve them that we can redeploy elsewhere. This cost was generating broadly breakeven profit. So, we're broadly broadly marginally profitable in these activities. We do expect these to give us much higher return as they reinvested and we haven't quantified that, but that's the expectation is there is an accretion of return. Second, if you look at the areas we're looking to invest in, wealth transaction banking has big callouts, they are actually, non or low balance sheet consuming businesses. Speaker 100:40:12They're materially fee and other income driving businesses with low, if any, impact on RWA growth. And then if you look at the SME business, this business is essentially liability driven and transaction banking driven. The loans portion of this business is relatively small. The loan to deposit ratio is in the low teens percentage points, which means, again, it's a low RWA impact high in banking NII from deposits, but or transaction banking, but lower RWA impact. In terms of your CIB curveball question, look, tariffs is not a new feature of global trade, right? Speaker 100:40:51There has always been various forms of tariffs on various products along various corridors and we've always navigated those with our clients and supported them along the route. I think what's changed now is maybe the speed at which the landscape will be evolving, the speed at which we may see new tariffs or change in tariffs. But with a bank present on 85% of the trade corridors with our global network, with our deep knowledge in all the markets where we operate, deep understanding of local rules and regulations, deep understanding of global rules and regulations, we're actually very well placed to support our customers adjust and position their businesses to navigate these tariffs. Now, I add to that also, remember, most of the jurisdictions we operate have pro growth government policies. Now, UK is a good example, pro growth government policy. Speaker 100:41:41US is a very good example. The Mainland China pro growth initiatives, consumer support initiatives. You look at Hong Kong, you know, the, you know, removal of the cooling off measures on the commercial real estate or the real estate in general. These measures have been effective and we're seeing the benefits in economy and economic growth. So, there are a number of positive factors that also we can benefit from. Speaker 100:42:07We've seen that in January, by the way. The start of this year has been very encouraging. And, look, the idea of all the simplification work we've done is that so we are simple. So we are agile. And agile means we can dynamically react and support our customers. Speaker 100:42:22And we will adapt quickly, we will react, we will make sure that we're supporting our customers along these journeys. Thank you, Kean. Speaker 300:42:32Yes. Let's take one more from the call. Ben Thoms from RBC. Speaker 600:42:43Morning, both. Thank you for taking my questions. The first one is on capital, please. In relation to your C2M ratio guidance of 14% to 14.5%, before today, this used to have a caveat. You'd aim to manage this down further over time. Speaker 600:42:56I just note that that hasn't been mentioned in today's update. What are your latest thoughts on your medium term ambitions for the C2M ratio and has there been any change in sentiment? And then secondly, on costs in relation to 1,500,000,000.0 of savings, you note that they will be taken to the bottom line, although presumably there'll be offsets from drivers such as inflation. Maybe you could just clarify directionally what you expect the shape of cost will do coming out 2025 and going into 2026 and 2027. Thank you. Speaker 100:43:27Thank you, Ben, for the two questions. I am going to ask Pam to address both your questions, Ben. But remember, our capital our CET1 ratio today is at 14.9%. So, we're well above our medium term operating range and expect to remain soft, you know, this quarter. So, you know, the, you know, the the question is really a medium to long term as opposed to anything now. Speaker 200:43:52Yeah. Thanks, George. And, Ben, coming to your first question, we are very comfortable operating between the 14 to 14.5% range. The comment on, you know, looking at again was removed some time ago. So no change for now in that respect. Speaker 200:44:07I want to just unbundle a little bit more on the cost point. So on the cost point, if you look at the guidance that we have and this is the $1,500,000,000 of cost savings that are going straight to the bottom line. So the way we've looked at is that it's about 4% if you look at inflation as well as, you know, BAU investment. The benefit of that 1,500,000,000.0 this year that we are taking straight to the bottom line is 300,000,000. So if you compare to on a target basis and you're starting excluding disposals and hyperinflation, you start from 2024, it's going to be a 3% year on year growth. Speaker 200:44:53So that's what we are looking at. Now severance and other one off costs, they will be treated as notable items. Now the timing of the 1,500,000,000.0 yen, yes, is 300,000,000 yen this year. There'll be more to come clearly in 2026. We see the full benefit of the 1,500,000,000.0 savings coming through for the full year 2027 and the severance costs etcetera will be more upfront. Speaker 300:45:23Thank you, Ben. Thank you. Let's come back to the room. So I think we have Kunpeng and then Jeremy. Speaker 700:45:31Thank you. Thank you for taking my question. This is Kunpeng of China Securities. Congratulations to the very strong result. I also have two questions. Speaker 700:45:40The first question is a little bit out of the bank itself. George, could you please share us your some color on the global trade business and also the wealth management business. I mean, your feelings about the trends in these two businesses. I think as a CEO your feeling must be quite insightful. Yeah. Speaker 700:46:01The second is about the new areas, new business areas you mentioned around, along with your reform. I think many of them are non capital consuming. So should to what level should we expect the revenue structure to change to going forward maybe the non NII portion will be much higher than one third yeah that's my two questions thank you. Speaker 100:46:28Thank you Kun. I'll take your first question and I'll ask Lam to address your second question. Surik, trade and wealth. First, it's very difficult to predict what will happen to global trade in an uncertain environment. But what we can say is for the last eight years that trade has started to become more disrupted. Speaker 100:46:50Global trade has continued growing low single digit percentage point. The trade routes have reconfigured. ASEAN has become the largest trading partner of China ahead of The US and Europe. We've seen more intra regional trade pickup. We've seen more fragmentation of trade routes. Speaker 100:47:10So rather than the goods moving from point a to point b from say manufacturing to consumption they're usually going through multiple legs of on the journey you know across various other jurisdictions that now it so happens that there's still we still have expectations that global trade will grow at low single digit percentage points and it so happens that this reconfiguration segmentation is playing to our strength because many of these new jurisdictions that have become major participants in global trade are jurisdictions where we have deep presence in in some cases leading presence as an international bank and we are able to capture these flaws and we will be supporting our customers along these routes in wealth again if you look at various analysts and you know consultants consideration, Asia and Middle East wealth is expected to grow at high single digit into 10% CAGR for the next five years. So the underlying trend of the growth of the middle class in many of these Asian economies is there And simply being a leading bank in the space, we benefit from this underlying trend. But what we are doing is we will also want to increase our market share because in some areas, apart from Hong Kong, where we've really been a leading player, in other places we've been punching below our weight and the idea is to be able to you know step up our product capabilities our customer reach you know our you know the various metrics which I shared in the slide without repeating and the additional investment is not only to capture the underlying trend but also to grow to our more natural share this will be focused essentially on Asia and The Middle East we you know we recognize there are other pockets of the wealth that would be important for us but we're not going to be a wealth player in The U. Speaker 100:49:00S. Because we don't have the right to win. Beth. Speaker 200:49:04Thank you George. So just in terms of our focus on both NII and fee income, clearly as we sit today, our NII given our strong balance sheet, deposit base, loans and advances is a much bigger proportion of earnings compared to fee income. But given the guidance we've just shared with you that we are looking at double digit growth in wealth over the medium term even though it's on a smaller base. Whereas on loans and advances, we are looking at a mid single digit growth in the medium term. So that balance will tilt, but I won't go over my skates just as yet because the baseline starting point is so much bigger for balance sheet driven business as opposed to fee income. Speaker 200:49:54But in direction of travel, absolutely. And also the two things are a bit correlated hopefully with your customers when you do more. It's not just balance sheet related products, you do more fee income driven. And we think that really gets us more into the space of hearts and minds of our customers, which is what we are here for. Speaker 100:50:12Thank you, Koon. Speaker 300:50:13Jeremy? Let's go to Jeremy. Speaker 800:50:19Thank you for taking up my question. My first question is related to the capital distribution, so thank you for elaborating on the capital distribution hierarchy, but I recognize that you are guiding a meetings royalty for the next three years but only 50% dividend payout for twenty twenty five so what are the implications behind it and we can see the bank share price is above one time price to book so will that affect your future consideration between buybacks and maybe raise the dividend payout? And second question is on the loan growth. HSBC has been consistently guiding a median sorry, mid single digit loan growth for the medium to long term but it's still very challenging in the near term. So what circumstances you think that might be necessary for the bank to finally hit the target and to what extent is that loan growth assumption baked into our banking and AI guidance? Speaker 800:51:24Thank you. Speaker 100:51:26Thank you very much, Gerry. I'll ask Pam to address both questions. Let me share some kind of insight on capital distribution. So, look, with a 50% with a mid teens return guidance, there's plenty of space to do the 50% dividend payout ratio and support the businesses to grow, which has always been the priority use of additional capital. But as you said, the loan growth hasn't been there for the last many quarters. Speaker 100:51:55And, you know, the opportunity for us was to return the excess capital through share buyback. It remains our intention to return excess capital to our shareholders through share buybacks because we see this also as a means to create an accretion in our dividend per share earnings per share and dividend per share by reducing the share count. Speaker 200:52:18Thank you, George. So firstly, in terms of our views on the 50% earnings per share, we are very comfortable with that number. And as you can see, we look at, obviously, distribution, but also opportunities for growth that we can deploy our surplus capital. I'm very pleased that we are trading above tangible book value, and we absolutely don't consider the tangible book value to be a ceiling for our buybacks. Share buybacks will continue to be our preferred mode of distribution going forward. Speaker 200:52:58The other thing on, you know, dividend is you obviously have to look at where your CET1 is at a point of time. You have to look at regulatory changes. So for now, 50% very comfortable with. Now in terms of your next question on loan growth, we need to unbundle it a bit. So, yes, loan growth is flat. Speaker 200:53:19It was down 3,000,000,000 in Hong Kong, up 3,000,000,000 for the rest of Asia, up 1,000,000,000 for The UK, down 1,000,000,000 for the rest of the world. We are optimistic that as the interest rate trajectory stabilizes, there'll be customer demand. And when there's customer demand, we'll be there to obviously support our customers. But what's also really important is as we're seeing that from a Hong Kong perspective, there is some momentum coming back. We expect at least the loan trajectory in Hong Kong to stabilize and not reduce. Speaker 200:53:52And once that happens, given the other breakdown I've given you, that gives us more optimism in terms of loan growth. Speaker 300:54:02Thank you, Jerry. Thank you. Let's go back to the call. Andy Coombs from Citigroup, please. Speaker 600:54:13Good morning. If I could have a couple of follow ups, please. Firstly, on the capital return and secondly, on the costs. On the buybacks, if you could just clarify the $2,000,000,000 is obviously a step down from three. Should we think about that as a permanent step down given that you now need to absorb these upfront restructuring charges or just the 2,000,000,000 reflect a shorter timing period between the q four and q one results compared to other quarters? Speaker 600:54:39So that's the first question. Second question, I will have another stab at the costs. Ben asked about this. I think the walk to 2025 is very clear, but if we then think about the walk to 2026, should we assume a similar level of inflation investment? So is 4% a fair assumption for future years in your view as well? Speaker 600:55:01And then when we eyeball slide '29, which has that cost phasing, And it looks like there's a $600,000,000 7 hundred million dollars step up in the cost saves in 2026 before the full run rate is recognized in '27. So are we looking at a 4% increase in '26 from that '25 guide less another incremental 700,000,000 of cost saves? So sub 34,000,000,000 cost number. Anything you can give us in terms of how to frame more explicitly that '26 and '27 cost base would be really helpful. Thank you. Speaker 100:55:38Thank you, Andy. Let me deal with your capital question and I'll ask Pam to talk you through costs. But remember, we only guided return on tangible equity for, 'twenty six and 'twenty seven. We haven't given additional specific guidance. So, look, on capital, 2,000,000,000 because we have two months until April and that amount will be reviewed on a case by case quarter by quarter basis. Speaker 100:56:00So, we do not pre commit on any future amounts. It will depend on the outlook and the loan growth and the, you know, other parameters as we get to it. But the current 2,000,000,000 is obviously because we have two months until the results in April. Speaker 200:56:16Beth? Thank you, George. So in terms of costs, we are not giving a cost guidance beyond full year '25. So the big moving parts always when we look at our cost is what's the underlying inflation, staff costs, and we also track very closely what's the increase in sort of fixed pay from a staff cost perspective. So it was, 3.6% in '25. Speaker 200:56:41It was 4.4% in '24. So you can see the trajectory shifting as obviously inflation is coming down. We also include in that 4% and we have for '25 additional investments. So you can do the maths in terms of where we go through for '26. But also let's be mindful, so far we are seeing for '25, you're only taking 300,000,000 of the 1,500,000,000.0 down to the savings line. Speaker 200:57:07So there is an absolute tailwind for the rest of it coming through for '26. So that's how the maths works. And as we go into '27, I would expect two things to happen. You'll see some kind of a normalization on the inflation and the underlying built number. We will have the BAU investments, so that continues to the same building block. Speaker 200:57:29But what's important is even though the 1,500,000,000.0 has been taken down to the bottom line, we expect through our simplification some of the additional efficiency costs beyond just, you know, FTE related costs, I. E. The ways are working. So that will give us some tailwind, but obviously not to the same extent as you've had in 2026. Thank you, Andy. Speaker 300:57:50Yes. Our next question is from Amit Goel at Mediobanca. Amit, you're on mute. Speaker 100:58:12Amit, you may be still on mute. Speaker 300:58:18Okay. Amit, well, we can come back to you. Let's go to It's it's now Sorry. Speaker 900:58:22It's actually it the system wouldn't allow allow me to unmute myself. Thank you. So so, two two questions then from me. So one is, again, just when you're talking about the mid teens ROTI target, you know, so this year, on a reported basis, it was, 14.6 on a x notable item, 16%. Just wanted to see, are are you thinking about that, more in line with the kind of underlying x notable items level that you've achieved this year and that you can maintain that given the cost savings and wealth management growth that you're targeting? Speaker 900:59:05Or are you, looking at it more closer to the to the kind of the reported number that you achieved in 2024? And then secondly, just wanted to dig in a bit more in terms of, the kind of the potential revenue impact or lack of, from the cost actions, including the reprioritization, just to understand how you're thinking about the kind of the marginal or negligible revenue impact. Is that because you just expect the revenue growth elsewhere from the reallocation of cost or, you know, how you're thinking about that? Thank you. Speaker 100:59:50Thank you very much, Amit. Amit, I'll take your first question and I'll ask Pam to address your second question about how we're looking to face cost and reallocation and the revenue impact of that. Look, so it's quite simple for the first question. What we mean by mid teens is around 14 to 16% and our target is on return on tangible equity excluding notable items this is how you should look at it. Speaker 201:00:20Thank you, George. And Amit, just adding a little bit to the ROTI question. Mid teens is mid teens what it says on the ten, fourteen to 16%. And it's a target. And obviously, if the world's in a better place, there is an upside, but you also have to look at the downside and that's how we look at all scenarios in our assumptions. Speaker 201:00:41Coming back to your second question on the 1,500,000,000.0. So firstly, I want to clarify The first one point five billion dollars which is simplification savings has no revenue impact because it's literally more senior roles, deduplication, simplifying the matrix. So on that, there is no revenue impact. And the whole sort of savings is a tailwind goes straight to the bottom line. On the second one point five percent which is different, it is clearly a reallocation which will happen at the from the individual business level, but we'll take it all to the group level. Speaker 201:01:22Now when you take it all to the group level, there is going to be some time lag between the cost coming up and reinvesting. But we do think that the payback period is pretty quick because we know it's in existing areas we want to reinvest. So that time lag on the revenue should not be that long and that will get compensated. But as we have said before, we are taking this reallocation of cost particularly from two areas. Ones where which are subscale and so materially don't really make an impact in terms of your profit. Speaker 201:01:56They're small scale divestments. But there are others where in terms of profitability, they are not materially profitable like we said on the investment bank. So therefore, as we take them through into new areas with higher returns and being very focused on those which are our competitive strengths, we do think that that positivity will come back pretty quickly. Speaker 301:02:21Thank you, Amit. Thank you. Any more in the room before we go back to the is that Catherine? Okay, Catherine, please. Speaker 1001:02:29Yeah. Thank you. I'm Catherine from JPMorgan. I just want to I just want to clarify on the cost questions. I would like to ask about the second one point five billion. Speaker 1001:02:39Have we factored that in in the meetings royalty guidance? Like, because with when we are exiting some business, we need some regulatory approval and it's hard to gauge the timeline. So, like, what kind of, like, assumptions that we have regarding this parts, in our meeting royalty guidance? Like, the underlying question is that will we see some upside because if we do it faster or or slower like that. The second one, I still want to ask about CRE question. Speaker 1001:03:06I think it's our old questions, but I think still have a lot of people, a lot of investors care about it. So both in Hong Kong and China in last quarter, we heard some events, which lead to some concerns on these areas. If I look at our 4Q numbers, I know that some are edging up on the ECL charges. Is any parts of that related to CRE and what is our outlook on CRE in both region? Thank you. Speaker 101:03:33Thank you, Katherine. Katherine, I'm going to ask Pam to address both your questions. But let me share with you just briefly my outlook on the cre situation so first the in Mainland China the we believe that we've had to trough really in the challenges that the sector has faced. We believe the measures that have been taken to stabilize and start a normalization process are working their way effectively through the economy. But more importantly, our exposure has materially reduced and therefore, it is not going to be any more any major driver for ECL. Speaker 101:04:15Second, about Hong Kong. So, we're actually positive about the outlook of Hong Kong. Hong Kong, first, the economy and certainly rate trajectory is going to support that. We're seeing growth manifest in '24 and growth outlook in '25 and a number of sectors have really have revived. But also in the CRE space, the underlying CRE market in Hong Kong is strong and resilient. Speaker 101:04:40The supply demand equation is very supportive for the medium to long term. And, you know, as we said, the rate outlook will also support that. But then, if you look at our exposure to many of the borrowers in this space, the borrowers are much stronger and much less leveraged than what we've seen in the China CRE space. They're in better balance sheet position, albeit they may have cash flow challenges due to high rates, etcetera. But the loan to valuation we have on our exposure is also very strong. Speaker 101:05:14We're in the 50s percent. Therefore, we do not think the Hong Kong CRE exposure in our books will be any material driver of our future ECLs. Pam, can I address your questions on cost and take you more specifically in the CRE elements? Speaker 201:05:32Thank you for your question. So firstly, yes, we have factored the reallocation into our mid teen ROTI guidance and we'll work as quickly as we can to reallocate cost to higher return areas. Obviously, if it is faster than our assumptions, we tend to be a bit conservative, which is good space to be in, then there'll be some upside, but given regulatory approvals, etcetera, things can be slower. But all in all, we are still very comfortable to have a mid teen ROTI for each of the next three years. So in terms of, I'll take the China Three question first, then I'll do Hong Kong three. Speaker 201:06:09Now China Three, we've always been very comfortable with our onshore exposure, which has been secured. The issue really has been with the offshore exposure, which was unsecured. But that number is way down from where we started. You know, we are now down to sort of 2,200,000,000.0 net of ECLs. And out of that, there is very little of the exposures that we feel that there is more headwind. Speaker 201:06:35And as you can see, the charge for ECL in last year was much lower than the prior years. So that I think gives me a sense of optimism with regard to the trajectory of the the China CRE outlook. And of course, you can have one off cases and things move on, but but overall, it's based upon our exposure. Now on Hong Kong CRE, now this is a starting point. As long as the interest rate trajectory is high, of course, you can see some customers facing headwinds, you know, because it's a cash flow issue fundamentally and that makes you bring more names into the stage threes. Speaker 201:07:14But what's very important to note is that despite them coming into stage threes, our ECLs haven't increased. And the answer is quite simple that the most of the names coming through the stage threes last year have been from a secured portfolio, which is 54% of our total portfolio. And as George said, there's a very high level of collateralization. I mean, average LTV on substandard is 46% and on the impaired is at 58%. So there's enough room in that space and there is strong collateral. Speaker 201:07:48So even when they go to stage three, there's not an ECL increase and the ECL increase this year has been minimal and we see nothing changing there. On the unsecured, 90% of it is investment grade. So 46% of portfolio is unsecured, 96 90% is investment grade. And it's primarily with your conglomerates and strong developers. And because they have diversified cash flows, the influence of the stage three from this portion of the book is very small. Speaker 201:08:16So all in all, even though with the increase in S3s, you see a minimal uplift in RWAs and the capital impact, but very small capital impact. From an ECL perspective, there is really no material change in the ECL trajectory at this point of time and we are very comfortable that it's all well within our midterm guidance of 30 to 40 basis points. Thank you, Catherine. Speaker 301:08:49Thank you. Let's go to Joe Dickerson from Jefferies, please. Speaker 1101:08:58Hi. Thank you for taking my question. Just a quick one following on from the Hong Kong CRE question. If I look at the ECL allowance to Stage three, it was like 67 FY23 million dollars and that's fallen at I think about 2625%, twenty six % in respect of full year for the Hong Kong piece. So I guess I'm just wondering what explains that decline. Speaker 1101:09:27Is it the proportion of the stage threes that are secured that's driving that reduction in coverage? Or what's what's the answer there, and how low can that number go? Speaker 201:09:40Yeah. Happy to take the question. Thank you. You're absolutely right. It is really the because all of the stage threes virtually, very large majority is coming through from the secured and given the cover, you know, it's, ECLs are the ECL coverage is dropping through. Speaker 201:09:58But also, we've written off some of the China CRE exposure overall and should link think in terms of of total exposures that we have and that's also reducing the ECL coverage. Speaker 101:10:09Thank you, Joe. Speaker 301:10:11Thank you. Our next question is from Aman Raker at Barclays. Speaker 1201:10:19Hey, guys. Yeah, good morning, Tom. Good morning, George. You had two questions. I think you're pointing to a much, much better free provision profit outlook and consensus. Speaker 1201:10:38I guess we've labored the discussion around cost. But my takeaway is that it is broadly flattered beyond 25, maybe a bit of growth, but well lower than where the three is. I think banking and II guide will take on a seat for itself. So, the two kind of related questions for that. One is around non interest income. Speaker 1201:11:01I think you're coming in there's a lot of moving parts on non interest income, but I think you're coming in with significant momentum on non interest income in excess of consensus. But we do have a lot of moving parts there. I mean, is there anything you can do to help us? I know you don't like to talk too much about non interest income because there's volatile line items in it, but got double digit growth momentum and wealth management. Freight that's probably growing low to mid single digit. Speaker 1201:11:34Who knows what markets do, but they're probably not going backwards. And you got a retail piece as well. But it just does feel like that is something that is trending well in excess. So if you are able to and comment in respect to 25, that would be really helpful. The second is about banking and II. Speaker 1201:11:55So the 40,000,000,000 guide this year is obviously great. And I know there's a lot of focus on lending, but really the policy that matter, right? I mean, you alluded to the strength of your franchise. And loans are going to be subdued for a while, but deposits are already growing and indeed they're going to continue growing from here. So can you try and help us with that? Speaker 1201:12:21Are you able to quantify the kind of deposit growth and kind of average interest earning asset growth that we might expect? Because I think you can comfortably grow your balance sheet despite the demand dynamic in your key markets. And I think that really helped underpin the kind of banking NII beyond '25. My kind of slight half question then is I'm going to sneak it in, but it's just around FX. And if you were to mark to market any of the kind of cost guide, for example, for the spot FX rate, if that would affect any of your kind of guidance or commentary today that'd be really helpful thanks so much Speaker 301:12:58thank Speaker 101:12:58you ema last plan to handle your banking nii question and and the effects question which obviously will have an impact on our banking NII guidance. And I'll take your first question by saying, nice try. Unfortunately, I cannot give you more than what we shared. Look, we've what we've shared is a confidence that we're running the bank towards a mid teens target on return tangible equity excluding notable items for '25, '20 '6, and '27. We're also guiding to a medium term outlook on wealth at double digit growth, which we're comfortable with given this is an area where we're investing in and we see the underlying trend supportive. Speaker 101:13:43But this is more a medium term guidance. It's difficult to evaluate what it means on a year on year or quarter on quarter basis. And we're also comfortable that our wholesale transaction banking given our strong leadership position in many of these areas, we will be able to ride the wave and we think the wave say the macro is in a low single digit percentage growth, you know, but is subject to possible disruptions, but the underlying trend, if you look at global trade with all forms of corridors, not just some of the disrupted corridors other corridors are likely to continue growing I think this is how you should look at it and remember the rate trajectory as well it's still uncertain but that will be you know that will be a way if we see a faster rate cuts than than we've implied. Let me just pause here on on the, you know, on that part of the question, ask them to take you through bank NII and FX. Speaker 201:14:41Thank you, Aman. So firstly, our cost guidance is on a cost currency on a constant currency basis. So clearly, from an FX perspective, there could be an impact. In terms of the $42,000,000,000 guidance, you're right. I mean, loans, we say it's mid single digit, medium term, and lower rates will help to get some momentum back, but it's also driven by overall market confidence. Speaker 201:15:12So can't really call out the timing of the return to to loan growth exactly. Now deposits clearly was a key one in fourth quarter, but we know that in fourth quarter, there's always a bit of a seasonality effect. So, you know, I would I would very much caution you against, you know, annualizing that number. But I think in terms of deposits, if I look at just the drivers for the 42 guidance, there's obviously interest rates. There is the benefit which is a headwind at this point of time given the the the market, the market implied rate curves and then there is structural hedge which will be a tailwind. Speaker 201:15:52Loans we've talked about. On deposits, we feel very lucky to have a strong deposit base as you've said. And the trust of our customers to give us those deposits is a cornerstone for a strong balance sheet. The deposit benefit for next year is driven by what's going to be the time deposit mix because that sort of helped through in the in the fourth quarter. And that deposit mix, as the interest rates come down, we expect the time deposit mix to also come down. Speaker 201:16:26So in that context, you can factor that in as part of your overall calculation in terms of the headwinds and the tailwinds. Speaker 301:16:37Perfect. Thank you, Aman. And our last question today comes from Rob Noble at Deutsche Nummis. Speaker 1301:16:47Morning. Thank you for taking my questions. I just wanted to ask a little bit more on the $1,500,000,000 of reallocation in the strategy. How much line of sight do you have on it at this point? So I presume GBM, Germany, and and France is around 500,000,000 in cost. Speaker 1301:17:06So do do you know where the other billion is coming from and the and the phasing of it and then links that? So what are the restructuring charges from this part, of of the strategy? Should I still be thinking about, you know, 1.2 times the cost saves as as additional below the line items against that 1.5? Or is that the wrong way to think about it? Thanks Speaker 101:17:30okay thank you rob for the question look let me let me handle the reallocation and I'll ask bam to comment on the cost implication and treatment if you want so first look your math is right I mean there are a number of activities we already called out. The investment banking refocus that would generate around 300,000,000 of saves and would lose about $300,000,000 of revenue against it. So, so that's quite there. We did announce the German private bank, the French insurance. We announced this morning also the sale of our Bahrain retail business. Speaker 101:18:11So those are kind of in motion. There are a number of other things we've called out that are in motion. There are a number of, you know, selectively identified a number of activities that are non strategic which we're working on and there'll be, you know, continuation of that journey. If you just you know kind of note that we said this is a medium this is a medium term number we haven't given a strict deadline because some of these actions may take longer or may be subject to various approvals that are beyond our control and we will be able to share with you as and when we move forward. Pam? Speaker 201:18:49Thanks. So first yes we have identified the rest of the costs. We can't give a precise cost at this point of time. We'll obviously keep you updated over the next quarters. Now in terms of the one off costs, yes, there will be severance and other one off costs and we will be looking at those costs as in a to a large extent given the materiality where there is from a notable as notable items. Speaker 201:19:19So that's kind of the broad picture in terms of how we're progressing. So good broad line. We own where we are but can't give you any more precision at this point of time. Speaker 101:19:33Perfect. Thank you very much, Rob. Okay. Well, thank you all for your questions. So, in closing, strong 2024 performance. Speaker 101:19:44This provides us firm foundations upon which we are building. We've simplified the group and along with our continued focus on costs, as said, we are committed to delivering circa $1,500,000,000 of savings to the bottom line. We're also focused on delivering for our customers by capturing growth opportunities where we have a clear competitive advantage and accretive returns. And we are eliminating over the medium term an additional circle $1,500,000,000 of cost from non strategic or low returning activities and redeploying them into these priority growth areas. We're also targeting the mid teens return on tangible equity in each of '25, '20 '6 and '20 '7. Speaker 101:20:31As usual, Neil and the team are available for any follow-up. Meanwhile, Pam and I hope to see many of you here in Hong Kong next month for our second HSBC Global Investment Summit. Enjoy the rest of your day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by