4/4: CCF FY04
HSBC Holdings PLC
28 February 2005
CCF 2004 ANNUAL RESULTS - HIGHLIGHTS
(UK GAAP, French scope)
•The HSBC Group's profit before tax and goodwill amortisation in France^
(UK GAAP), increased by 48.5 per cent to US$689 million.
•Personal Financial Services maintained a firm pace of growth, with loans
outstanding up 10.9 per cent and sight deposits up 9.6 per cent.
•Commercial Banking scored a number of commercial successes, due in
particular to capital markets and cash management products developed by the
HSBC Group, which offset reduced demand for business borrowing.
•Corporate, Investment Banking and Markets, which is integrated with the
rest of the HSBC Group, continued to bolster its positions in the bond
market (origination, trading, structured products), syndicated loans and
mergers and acquisitions advisory.
•Asset Management achieved excellent commercial results, with assets under
management surging by 17.8 per cent to €56 billion.
•The reorganisation of the Private Banking segment was completed following
the four-way merger that took place in 2003.
^These consist of CCF's activities in France and the operating activities of
HSBC Bank plc's Paris branch.
Charles-Henri Filippi, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of CCF, made the
following comments on these results: "In 2004, CCF continued to strengthen its
positions in many areas (retail banking, asset management, bond markets,
corporate finance) and launched new initiatives to attract medium-sized and
large corporations and to develop structured products.
"As a result, our 2004 performance provides a solid base for our 2005-2008
strategic plan, entitled 'Efficacite pour la croissance' ('Managing for
Growth'), which was presented on 13 January 2005.
"This plan is based on the quality of CCF's customer base and of its staff,
along with the HSBC Group's support in terms of international presence,
financial clout and technological skills. It should enable the HSBC Group to
achieve substantially stronger positions in its target markets in France."
Financial Results
The HSBC Group in France: 2004 results (UK GAAP)
In France, the HSBC Group generated profit before tax and goodwill amortisation
of US$689 million, up 48.5 per cent relative to 2003. Stated in euros, the
increase was 35.1 per cent to €555 million.
This strong growth was driven by:
- brisk top-line performance (revenues up 3.8 per cent^^);
- higher costs attributable in particular to the launch of investments
needed for future growth and the major regulatory projects (up 9.0 per
cent);
- an improvement in the situation concerning a number of risks, on which
there were net recoveries, with the cost of current risk stabilising at a
moderate level of 0.23 per cent of loans outstanding.
^^Change calculated in euro figures, excluding the impact of items related to
the acquisition of CCF.
Outlook for 2005
As Charles-Henri Filippi announced when he was appointed Chairman and CEO of CCF
on 1 March 2004, the entire company has joined forces to prepare an ambitious
strategic plan entitled 'Efficacite pour la croissance', which echoes the HSBC
Group's 'Managing for Growth' plan.
The aim of this plan is to step up the pace of the Group's growth in its target
customer segments and to set the standards in terms of quality of advice and
service in the banking sector.
With competition getting fiercer all the time, the Group's objective is to grow
its revenues by around 40 per cent between 2004 and 2008^^^.
For the future, CCF will continue to pursue its expansion strategy, which is
underpinned by the following aims:
- rebranding CCF as HSBC and rolling out the new brand across the entire
CCF, UBP and Banque de Picardie networks, as well as Banque Hervet's
branches in the Paris region;
- increasing the networks' geographical coverage;
- strengthening their commercial teams by creating almost 1,300 jobs across
all the banking activities;
- expanding the product and service offering for all customer segments
using the expertise of the HSBC Group;
- unlocking efficiency gains by reorganising each of the business segments
and rolling out the most effective information technologies as part of the
Group's worldwide strategy. The French implementation of the HUB system is
set to continue, following its introduction at Banque de Picardie in
November 2004.
^^^Figures calculated based on the operating activities of the HSBC Group in
France (including the HSBC Paris branch) under UK GAAP before goodwill
amortisation. The impact of IFRS has not been shown at this stage.
Business Segment Results
Personal Financial Services
In 2004, the Personal Financial Services segment posted brisk growth. Revenues
rose by 6.0 per cent relative to 2003:
- average loans to personal customers grew by 10.9 per cent, with a 14.7
per cent increase in mortgage loans;
- sight deposits rose by 9.6 per cent;
- amounts held in special regulated savings accounts posted a rise of 8.9
per cent.
Fee income advanced by 6.5 per cent on the back of financial fees, which
benefited from the recovery in stockmarkets, along with privatisations and
especially a significant increase in the sales of life insurance products during
2004.
In line with the strategic plan for 2008, CCF has already made clear headway
among:
- wealth management customers, with the number of Premier customers rising
18 per cent;
- non-resident customers.
Meanwhile, the expansion of activity in remote banking continued in 2004:
- over one million transactions on the web site, representing an increase
of 30 per cent on the 2003 level;
- all in all, there were more than 11 million logins on the www.ccf.fr
website, almost double the 2003 level.
Commercial Banking
In a depressed context of demand for business investment, with average loans
outstanding down 2.5 per cent, the key figures for 2004 were revenue growth of
4.0 per cent. This was achieved through improving the range of products and
services offered, with an increase in sight deposits of 7.7 per cent and growth
in fund transfer fees of 7.2 per cent.
Supported by the HSBC Group's recognised expertise in cash management and
international trade finance and by its exceptionally strong international
network the development of business with commercial banking clients was driven
by:
- a richer range of products and services, resulting from organisational
improvements;
- additional remote banking services based on cutting-edge technology.
In a bid to strengthen the Group's positions in various categories of business
customers greater co-operation between the business customer line and the
Group's other customer lines has helped to enhance the product and service
offering, including:
- the introduction of structured investment products offering capital and
performance guarantees, and therefore providing an alternative to
money-market funds products (Sinopia's Protectissimo);
- the launch of a PERCO (mutual employee retirement savings plan);
- the launch of interest rate hedging products for SMEs by Regional
Treasury Centres.
As a result of organisational improvements with the implementation of a unit
dedicated to business clients with sales in excess of €150 million, which
provides globally co-ordinated relationship management coverage, these
businesses can now be offered the full range of investment banking products
backed by a more responsive lending policy.
In alternative channels, CCF's aim is to integrate its remote banking services
with its product and service offering and to progress from a variety of channels
to a genuinely integrated multi-channel approach.
In 2004, Internet Elys PC attracted 40 per cent of new users, and the number of
online transactions rose by 55 per cent.
The launch of hsbc.net (cash management) will give CCF an excellent internet
distribution channel in the French market and will represent a major competitive
edge in the commercial customer segment.
Corporate, Investment Banking and Markets
The HSBC Group's financial and commercial strength and the performance of CCF's
teams enabled this segment to generate strong business volumes in 2004. This
limited the impact of adverse market conditions in bonds and corporate
financing.
HSBC has seen strong commercial performance in Global Markets in France
highlighted by:
- HSBC CCF's ranking in the top five counterparties serving French clients
in all product areas;
- the first-class service delivered by its sales teams, as confirmed by
various external surveys (Greenwich);
- the presence in Paris of three product expertise and production
platforms, benefiting from the exceptional leverage afforded by the HSBC
Group network, especially among institutional clients:
•a structured interest rate derivatives platform, with international
sales tripling in 2004;
•a trading platform (European government bonds), which enabled HSBC
CCF to rank among the top three market makers in French government debt
in 2004;
•a structured equity derivatives product platform.
- HSBC CCF maintained its position in the league tables, ranking second in
2005 in French corporate Eurobond issues (source: Bondware).
HSBC CCF has become a major player in France for corporate and investment
banking. With the support of the HSBC Group's financial strength and its
excellent relations with large corporates, the bank has continued to grow its
positions:
- HSBC CCF ranked sixth in mergers and acquisitions (source: Merger
Market), a rise of eight places relative to 2003 thanks to deals completed
in France (Picard Surgeles, GrandVision, Rue Imperiale etc.) and some
impressive cross-border advisory mandates handled in conjunction with the
HSBC Group network (e.g. sale of Rhodia's phosphates business in the USA,
the sale of RPG in India etc.);
- it also ranked sixth in primary equity issues in the French league tables
based on its numerous successes (privatisation of APRR, Snecma, Aeroports de
Paris, etc.) (source: Bondware);
- HSBC CCF holds a very strong position in LBO financing and handled the
largest LBO financing deal in 2004 (Rexel);
- in syndicated loans, HSBC CCF now ranks among the top five players;
- in subordinated debt and quasi-equity: one of the leading players in
France.
Under its strategic plan, HSBC CCF aims to become:
- one of the top three banks for at least 50 per cent of its corporate
clients;
- a leading bank in international services for these priority clients;
- a leader in capital markets and financing (in the top three or top five,
varying from product to product);
- a major player in mergers and acquisitions (top five).
Growth will also be driven by the introduction of a first-rate offering of
interest rate and equity derivatives, efforts to strengthen coverage of
corporate clients and the range of value-added products, and efficiency
improvements in support functions.
Asset Management
Assets under management grew by 17.8 per cent to €56 billion. This growth was
fuelled by a combination of strong commercial impetus, innovation and good
investment performance.
HSBC Asset Management Europe's (HSBC AME) assets under management rose by 19.8
per cent to €40 billion. Of this increase, 75 per cent consisted of net new
money.
In France, HSBC AME won a number of new mandates and was one of the 38 asset
managers selected by France's FRR (Fonds de Reserve des Retraites - pensions
reserve fund) from among 400 applicants, and was retained by many institutional
clients following tenders concerning socially responsible investment.
HSBC AME continued to grow in continental Europe. For instance:
- the Italian branch doubled assets under management in 2004, due to a
sharp rise in its financial customer base;
- the Stockholm office, which opened in January 2004, did very well with
financial and institutional customers in Nordic countries by selling the
HSBC Group's equity products (HGIF Chinese Equity, HGIF Indian Equity).
HSBC AME also successfully launched some innovative value-added products in
2004, such as dynamic money-market funds (HSBC AM Multicash and HSBC AM Prime
ABS), along with high-yield 'equity' funds focused on dividends. In this latter
category, HSBC AM Valeurs Haut Dividende was ranked by Agefi as the third best
fund in terms of one-year performance in the retail bank category.
The 13.3 per cent rise in Sinopia's assets under management to €16 billion was
due in particular to net new money flowing into hedge funds.
Sinopia maintained a high level of research activity in 2004, enabling it to
offer innovative new products such as Evolissime, based on market volatility,
and Predictime, an equity fund based on anticipating earnings surprises.
Sinopia's asset management business won several awards for its ability to create
products that deliver superior long-term performance. In the Agefi Awards,
Sinopia America EUR Hedge was named 'top performer over three years' in the
North American equities category, while Monde PEA was named 'top performer over
three years' in the international equities category.
Sinopia, the HSBC Group's quantitative asset management specialist, is
continuing to develop its business in Asia and continental Europe.
Employee savings unit HSBC CCF Epargne Entreprise won a series of new mandates,
enabling it to keep assets under management stable relative to 2003 despite the
'Sarkozy' measure to allow early withdrawals of employee savings.
HSBC CCF Epargne Entreprise also launched a PERCO offering.
Capitalising on the strength of the Group's position, the Asset Management
segment will expand across all customer segments and will contribute to the
growth plan by delivering a tangible increase in total assets under management.
Its strategy will notably be predicated on the following goals:
- a new organisation based on the HSBC Investments and HSBC Alpha Business
platforms;
- greater co-operation with the Personal Financial Services and Private
Banking segments;
- a richer wealth management offering;
- commercial expansion underpinned by the strengths of the HSBC network.
Private Banking
Private Banking's results were again affected by high exceptional costs
resulting notably from the move into a new location and the unification of IT
systems. Assets under management fell by 8.9 per cent to €15 billion (of which
6.4 per cent comes from volumes). As a result, this reduction dragged down
revenues by 11.9 per cent.
As in previous years, HSBC Private Bank France and its subsidiary Louvre Gestion
won awards for their short and long-term performance from Mieux Vivre Votre
Argent magazine, ranking second over five years (all institutions) and third
over one year (specialist banks).
The goals of the strategic plan for 2008 are highly ambitious. In particular,
the segment aims to achieve a 60 per cent increase in the penetration rate among
very wealthy clients, by offering them a richer range of products and services
and by adopting a co-ordinated approach across the HSBC Group. The target is to
make HSBC CCF Private Bank France a key player in its market.
Transition to International Financial Reporting Standards
The adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards ('IFRS') from 1
January 2005 is the most significant accounting development for HSBC. The
European Union ('EU') requires that listed European companies prepare their 2005
financial statements in accordance with EU-approved IFRS. HSBC's 2005 interim
financial statements will, therefore, be prepared in accordance with IFRS. The
European Union endorsement process for IFRS is ongoing but the majority of
standards are now endorsed. HSBC has substantially completed its transition to
IFRS. The process of refining systems and processes in order to collect data on
a fully IFRS-compliant basis for 2005 reporting is well advanced. On 10 December
2004, HSBC filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission a summary of the
applicable differences between UK GAAP and IFRS. This should be referred to for
details of the major expected IFRS effects on HSBC Group, and is available from
http://www.hsbc.com/hsbc/investor_centre/financial-results, although, as work
continues and standards develop other effects may emerge. HSBC currently intends
to file restated 2004 comparative data and the 2005 opening balance sheet on an
IFRS basis. However, HSBC's results for periods prior to 2004 will not be
restated and its results for 2005 and subsequent years will not be comparable to
these prior periods.
Main Items of Consolidated Profit and Loss Accounts
Results from the HSBC Group's operating activities in France (UK GAAP)
The French scope includes CCF's French activities, with the exception of results
from entities that belong legally to CCF but are located outside France (mainly
Groupe Dewaay in Belgium, CMSL and Framlington in the UK and branches in Belgium
and Greece) and the operating results of HSBC Paris branch (the French branch of
HSBC Bank plc UK).
Figures in US$ million 2004 2003 % change
Contribution to the HSBC Group's profit on
ordinary activities before tax and goodwill
amortisation 689 464 48.5
By business line:
Personal Financial Services 230 165 39.4
Commercial Banking 274 257 6.6
CIBM 327 129 153.4
Private Banking (21) 21 -
Other (121) (108) -
CCF consolidated results (French GAAP, legal scope)
Figures in €million 2004 2003 % change
Operating income 2,440 2,345 4.0
General operating expenses and
depreciation charges^^^^ (1,784) (1,614) 10.6
Operating profit before
provisions 656 731 (10.3)
Bad and doubtful debt charge^^^^^ 43 (138) -
Operating profit 699 594 17.8
Gains/(loss) on disposal of fixed
assets 16 33 -
Profit from associated undertakings 23 16 -
Profit on ordinary activities before
tax 738 643 14.8
Exceptional items - 10 -
Corporation tax (93) (44) -
Goodwill amortisation (112) (65) -
Net recoveries from RGBR 194 85 -
Minority interests 2 (2) -
Profit attributable 729 627 16.2
ROE (%) 20.2 18.8 -
^^^^Total change of €170 million, including strategic investments (€35 million),
such as the HUB IT platform, and a change in the accounting treatment of
IT development costs (€27 million).
^^^^^Total change of €181 million, including €189 million in change in sector
risks (€162 million relating to two specific industrial sectors).
The main differences between UK GAAP and French GAAP, relating to the P&L
account, fall into two categories:
- differences that have no impact on net profits and correspond to
different classifications of items within the P&L account. Examples include
the classification of some capital gains on property or securities being
treated as capital gains on fixed assets under UK GAAP rather than
operating income under French GAAP.
- differences that affect net profit. This category includes differences in
the methods used for asset consolidation, valuation and impairment (market
value under UK GAAP, historical value under French GAAP) and risk
assessment and hedging (general provision or collective impairment under
UK GAAP, RGBR under French GAAP).
Positions of CCF Group in France - 2004
Personal Financial Services (penetration rate - among customers with at least
€150,000 in financial assets).
France: 5%
Paris region: 10%
Commercial Banking (account relationship rate)
Large SMEs: 58%
Medium SMEs: 20%
Small SMEs: 18%
Very Small Enterprises: 30%
CIBM (league tables)
2004 position 2000 position
Syndicated Loans:5th (Bondware) 5th (Bondware) 10th (Bondware)
Bonds - all issuers 3rd (Bondware)
Bonds - Corporate issuers 2nd (Bondware) 12th (Bondware)
Mergers & Acquisitions 6th (Merger Market) 24th(Merger Market)
PCM (cash management) 5th (HSBC no.2 worldwide)
Trade Services 12.4% of market share (HSBC
no.1 worldwide)
Asset Management
Market share: 3.5%
Rank 2004: 8th (I&PE ranking - by FUM distributed in
Europe, all networks/customers)
Contact Details
For more information about CCF, its activities, products and services, visit
www.ccf.com.
This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange