HSBC to cut 30,000 jobs in global overhaul

LONDON (AP) — British banking company HSBC said Monday it will cut 30,000 jobs worldwide by 2013 and sell almost half its bank branches in the U.S., part of a new strategy to cut back on retail operations in some parts of the world and focus instead on fast-growing emerging markets.
  • Customers use ATM machines at the HSBC headquarters in Hong Kong on Monday.
    By Laurent Fievet, AFP/Getty Images
    Customers use ATM machines at the HSBC headquarters in Hong Kong on Monday.
By Laurent Fievet, AFP/Getty Images
Customers use ATM machines at the HSBC headquarters in Hong Kong on Monday.
The bank, which reported a 3 percent increase in pretax profits to $11.5 billion in the six months to June, has already cut 5,000 jobs this year.
Bank spokesman Patrick Humphris said another 25,000 will be slashed by 2013. HSBC currently employs about 296,000 people worldwide.
Humphris declined to give details of where the job cuts would be but said the group is still hiring in emerging economies such as Brazil and Mexico.
As part of its restructuring, HSBC will sell 195 retail banking branches in the United States to First Niagara Bank for about $1 billion. Most of the branches to be sold are in upstate New York, while six are in Connecticut. Four more are in northern Westchester County, and two in Putnam County.

The bank is still dealing with the legacy of bad loans in the U.S. from the 2003 acquisition of consumer lender Household International Inc. The acquisition made HSBC the biggest subprime lender in the United States at the time, which resulted in billions of losses to HSBC leading up to the financial crisis of 2008.
"I am pleased with their results, which mark a first step in the right direction on what will be a long journey," new chief executive Stuart Gulliver said in a statement.
The bank also increased its dividend by 12.5 percent to 18 cents per share.
News of the bank's overhaul and its profit — earnings per share rose to 51 cents in the first half from 38 cents a year earlier, allowing for a 12.5 percent divident increase to 18 cents — boosted the company's share price.
By mid morning in London, shares in HSBC Holdings PLC were up 4.4 percent at 620.80 pence (10.19).