Annual Financial Report - 20 of 54

RNS Number : 0744I
HSBC Holdings PLC
20 March 2015
 



Latin America

Our operations in Latin America principally comprise HSBC Bank Brasil S.A.-Banco Múltiplo, HSBC México, S.A. and HSBC Bank Argentina S.A. In addition to banking services, we operate insurance businesses in Brazil, Mexico and Argentina.

 



2014


2013

 

2012



US$m


US$m

 

US$m



 


 

 

 

Net interest income


5,310


6,186

 

6,984

Net fee income


1,415


1,701

 

1,735

Net trading income


856


936

 

971

Other income


691


1,745

 

1,261

 


 


 

 

 

Net operating income4


8,272


10,568


10,951



 


 

 

 

LICs43


(2,124)


(2,666)


(2,137)



 


 

 

 

Net operating income


6,148


7,902


8,814



 


 

 

 

Total operating expenses


(5,932)


(5,930)


(6,430)



 


 

 

 

Operating profit


216


1,972


2,384



 


 

 

 

Income from associates44




-



 


 

 

 

Profit before tax


216


1,972


2,384

 







Cost efficiency ratio


71.7%


56.1%


58.7%

RoRWA36


0.2%


2.0%


2.4%

 







Year-end staff numbers


41,201


42,542


46,556

Further progress made in repositioning
our businesses in Brazil and Mexico

Loan House and Bond House of the Year
(LatinFinance, 2014)

#1
in Domestic Cash Management
in Argentina and Mexico

(Euromoney Cash Management Survey, 2014)

For footnotes, see page 109.

 


Economic background

Data for the third quarter of 2014 suggested that Latin America may have seen a material slowdown in its average real annual GDP growth in 2014 to nearly 1.0% from 2.6% in 2013.

A slowdown in the Brazilian economy explains much of this weakness. The level of economic activity was broadly unchanged in 2014 following growth of 2.5% in 2013, but deteriorating business confidence and the resulting contraction in business investment spending were the main factors behind the economic slowdown. To mitigate inflationary pressures from a weakening currency, the central bank raised the key policy rate by 75bps in the fourth quarter to 11.75%.

Mexico's economic growth accelerated in 2014 after low real GDP growth of only 1.1% in 2013. Consumer spending, the main area of weakness in 2013, accelerated during the year and the improvement in US demand served to boost exports. Inflationary pressures remained muted and the Mexican central bank cut its key policy rate to 3% from 3.5% at the start of the year.

The Argentinian economy contracted in 2014 due to falling commodity prices, a stagnant Brazilian economy and a technical default on the dollar-denominated external debt of the country. A significant devaluation of the Argentine peso at the beginning of 2014 fuelled higher inflation.

Financial overview

Profit before tax (US$m)

 

 

Latin America reported a profit before tax of US$216m in 2014 compared with US$2.0bn in 2013. The reduction was due to lower revenue, primarily driven by the non‑recurrence of the US$1.1bn gain on sale of our operations in Panama in 2013 partly offset by a decrease in LICs.

Adjusted profit before tax decreased by US$326m, and included a loss before tax in Brazil. The reduction in profit primarily reflected higher operating expenses, mainly due to inflationary and union-agreed salary increases in Brazil and Argentina, and lower revenue in Mexico and Brazil as we progressed with repositioning our business. These factors were partly offset by an increase in revenue in Argentina and a reduction in LICs, primarily in Mexico.


Profit/(loss) before tax by country within global businesses



Retail Banking
and Wealth
Management

US$m

 

Commercial Banking
US$m

 

Global Banking and
Markets

US$m

 

Global

Private
Banking
US$m

 

Other
US$m

 

Total
US$m



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Argentina


52

 

135

 

219

 

 

(22)

 

384

Brazil


(174)

 

(153)

 

115

 

(2)

 

(33)

 

(247)

Mexico


36

 

(52)

 

89

 

(2)

 

(20)

 

51

Other


(4)

 

7

 

27

 

 

(2)

 

28

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year ended 31 December 2014


(90)

 

(63)

 

450

 

(4)

 

(77)

 

216

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Argentina


97

 

142

 

170

 

 

(1)

 

408

Brazil


(114)

 

(43)

 

514

 

5

 

(11)

 

351

Mexico


154

 

(160)

 

115

 

(3)

 

11

 

117

Other


289

 

525

 

368

 

(1)

 

(85)

 

1,096

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year ended 31 December 2013


426

 

464

 

1,167

 

1

 

(86)

 

1,972

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Argentina


209

 

169

 

174

 

-

 

(46)

 

506

Brazil


94

 

359

 

696

 

17

 

(43)

 

1,123

Mexico


338

 

176

 

201

 

2

 

(18)

 

699

Other


(33)

 

47

 

82

 

1

 

(41)

 

56

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year ended 31 December 2012


608

 

751

 

1,153

 

20

 

(148)

 

2,384

 


Country business highlights

In 2014, in our priority growth markets of Brazil, Mexico and Argentina, we continued to implement strategic initiatives to improve future returns whilst we faced economic and inflationary pressures.

In Brazil, we made progress in our efforts to transform the business in order to ensure its long-term sustainability. In RBWM, we are updating our business model by concentrating RMs on specific client segments in order to better serve customer needs. We also updated certain features of our lending products to improve our competitiveness such as increasing the duration of some of our personal loans, and further strengthened our retail credit capabilities to improve the quality of originations. We continued to rationalise our branch network, closing 21 branches in areas with lower growth potential as we concentrated our efforts on city clusters with faster-growing revenue pools, and launching 60 client service units with a focus on sales and automated transactions. In CMB, we increased MME market presence and in RBWM we grew lending by 4% following contraction in the past two years. In addition, we saw increased client activity in GB&M, mainly in our Rates business.

In Mexico, we remained focused on achieving sustainable growth although revenue was subdued. In RBWM we introduced RMs dedicated to our Advance segment to improve productivity and customer experience. We launched a balance transfer campaign, selectively increased credit limits for lower risk customers and saw mortgage balances grow by 5% reflecting competitive pricing. In CMB we improved processes in the Business Banking segment to allow RMs to better support their clients. In GB&M, lending balances rose by 48% as a result of new business initiatives following energy reforms in the second half of 2014. We made strong progress on repositioning our business, which has reduced customer numbers, and continued to focus on streamlining, managing our cost base and strengthening our risk management and controls.

In Argentina, we continued to manage our business conservatively as the economic environment remained challenging. We focused our growth on GB&M and corporate CMB customers and continued to follow cautious lending policies in RBWM and Business Banking. We retained leading market positions in Trade and Foreign Exchange.

Review of adjusted performance45

Revenue (US$m)

 

 

Revenue was higher in Argentina due to favourable results in GB&M and growth in RBWM and CMB. This was partly offset by reductions in Mexico across all global businesses and in Brazil, primarily in CMB and GB&M.

Country view of adjusted revenue



2014


2013



US$m


US$m






Argentina


1,070


718

Brazil


4,821


4,932

Mexico


2,304


2,479

Other


58


(54)






Year ended 31 December


8,253


8,075

In Argentina, revenue increased by US$352m, primarily in GB&M, together with growth in RBWM and CMB. In GB&M, the increase reflected favourable trading results and higher revenue in Balance Sheet Management, as volumes and spreads related to short-term funds grew in a volatile market.

Revenue increased in RBWM, primarily due to growth in insurance revenue from higher investment income which reflected movements in the bond markets. In addition, revenue rose from increased net interest income, driven by wider spreads due to higher interest rates coupled with growth in average deposit balances. In CMB, revenue increased due to growth in net interest income reflecting wider spreads due to an increase in interest rates, higher average lending balances and growth in Payments and Cash Management deposit balances. Higher balances also led to increased fees from both Payments and Cash Management and Trade products.

In Mexico, revenue decreased by US$175m, mainly in RBWM and, to a lesser extent, in CMB and GB&M.

In RBWM, revenue fell primarily due to lower sales volumes in the insurance business. Revenue was also adversely affected as we continued to progress with repositioning the business. In addition, we experienced narrower liability spreads on current accounts, savings and deposits following a decrease in interest rates although the effect was partly offset by higher mortgage balances.

In CMB, net interest income decreased due to asset spread compression and a reduction in average lending balances. This was notably in Business Banking, where we continued to reposition the business, there were pre-payments by a small number of large corporates and a portion of loans to certain homebuilders were written off. Net interest income was also adversely affected by narrower deposit spreads following a decrease in interest rates. In addition, fee income decreased as a result of lower Account Services and Payments and Cash Management fees reflecting fewer customers, as we continued to reposition the business.

In GB&M, lower revenue was primarily due to market movements which affected counterparty credit spreads resulting in increased CVA charges, and lower gains on disposal of available-for-sale securities.

In Brazil, revenue decreased in CMB and GB&M, while RBWM remained broadly unchanged. In CMB, revenue was lower, despite growth in overall lending balances, as the portfolio mix changed to reflect an increase in lower-yielding MMEs.

In GB&M, revenue reduced in Balance Sheet Management, though this was partly offset by growth
in Rates revenue, driven by higher client activity. Revenue in RBWM was broadly unchanged. Insurance revenue increased due to favourable movements in the PVIF asset compared with adverse movements in 2013. This was offset by a decrease in fee income across a number of products, in part reflecting a change in mix by customers towards more secured, lower-yielding assets and strong market competition.

LICsfell, primarily in Mexico and, to a lesser extent, in Brazil.

In Mexico, LICs improved due to lower individually assessed charges in CMB, in particular relating to certain homebuilders following a change in the public housing policy in 2013, and in GB&M due to the non-recurrence of a large specific provision booked in 2013.

In Brazil, the fall was driven by changes to the impairment model and assumption revisions for restructured loan account portfolios which occurred in 2013 in both RBWM and CMB. In addition, collectively assessed impairments reduced in CMB, notably in Business Banking, reflecting improved delinquency rates. This was partly offset by an increase in GB&M driven by an individually assessed impairment and a provision made against a guarantee.

Operating expenses (US$m)

 

 

Operating expenses increased by US$796m, primarily in Brazil and Argentina, largely due to union-agreed salary increases and inflationary pressures. In addition, we saw higher transactional taxes in Argentina in line with a growth in revenue and increased infrastructure costs across the region. We also incurred specific costs in Brazil in 2014 relating to an accelerated depreciation charge and an impairment of an intangible asset in RBWM. Despite these factors, our strict cost control continued and we progressed with our strategic focus on streamlining, which resulted in sustainable cost savings of over US$155m.


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