Today Hemscott said, in part: “HSBC’s recent stumble with Household, which suffered deep losses in the U.S. mortgage crisis and was shuttered in 2009, demonstrates the inherent difficulty in managing disparate operations. When HSBC acquired Household in 2002, it trumpeted the firm’s risk-modelling systems, which it anticipated would enable it to judge the riskiness of loans more accurately than competitors could. As it turned out, HSBC placed too much faith in its newly acquired expertise and failed to adequately supervise its U.S. managers. It has since admitted that the acquisition was a mistake–and a very costly one at that.” (see full article here)
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Business Standard says there is an “inevitable eastward shift in HSBC’s business. The bank has already issued a renminbi-denominated bond, and has applied for a listing in Shanghai in an attempt to appear more local. As income, assets and the investor base become more Asian, more of the senior team will be packing their trunks.”
Potential regulatory flight and lower taxes may be behind HSBC’s move from London to Hong Kong. This appeared in Business Insider:
The brother-in-law of New York businessman and prominent Democratic fund-raiser Hassan Nemazee was charged Friday with allegedly helping Mr. Nemazee in a scheme to defraud three banks out of $292 million in loans.
Will HSBC’s focus on emerging markets come at the cost of markets ruined by subprime and predatory lending? The answer remains to be seen but HSBC wants to expand in the U.S.. Said another way, HSBC wants deposits from anywhere.

