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HSBC writes down $3.9 billion

by Morgan on August 4, 2008

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HSBC reported $10 billion worth of bad debt charges, including $3.9 billion in mortgage-related write downs today in its earnings call.  The company bet big on the US subprime market during the bubble including the purchase of Decision One and Homecomings and the extension of large lines of credit to subprime mortgage originators.  We should expect to see HSBC take more writedowns on those bad bets in future quarters.

From Market Watch:

HSBC Holdings on Monday reported a 29% drop in first-half net income as bad-debt charges surged to more than $10 billion and write-downs continued to mount, though the banking giant increased its payout as profits in Europe and Latin America grew.

Europe’s largest bank said it wrote down $3.9 billion in its global banking and markets division on mortgage assets, leveraged loans and exposure to bond insurers. The write-downs led to a 35% drop in pretax profit generated by the division, to $2.7 billion.
Loan-impairment charges and other provisions jumped 58% to $10 billion, with the majority of those bad-debt charges stemming from its U.S. business in personal financial services.
Overall, its North American operations reported a $2.89 billion pretax loss, compared to a profit of $2.4 billion in the first six months of 2007.

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  5. Goldman: Citi Exposed to $15 Billion in Write Downs

  • You have to wonder how many more hits some of these bank can take...and it sounds like there'll be more coming. No matter the bank size, these are massive losses.
  • They are massive losses, but for a bank like HSBC they can leverage income from other parts of the world and also raise equity as they haven't had to go to that well. HSBC will make it out of this. There are plenty of other characters to keep an eye on though.
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