Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

HSBC Bank Canada Reports Q4 Profit Lower Due To Low Interest Rates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Feb, 2015 01:07 PM
    VANCOUVER — HSBC's Canadian subsidiary says its fourth-quarter profit was lower last year than in 2013 because of less income from consumer lending, higher operating expenses and a smaller share of profit from associated companies.
     
    Vancouver-based HSBC Bank Canada — a subsidiary of Europe's largest bank — said it had C$118 million in net income attributable to common shareholders in the fourth quarter, down 28 per cent from a year earlier.
     
    Excluding income tax, HSBC Canada's fourth-quarter profit was down 11.2 per cent from a year earlier to $206 million.
     
    Net interest income for the quarter was $295 million, down $21 million or seven per cent from a year earlier. Its share of profit in associates dropped to $2 million, down $15 million or 88 per cent from a year earlier. Total operating expenses increased to three per cent or $8 million to $278 million.
     
    On the positive side, HSBC Canada said it had increased fee income from credit and wealth management was up $18 million or 12 per cent to $169 million,  while trading income was $39 million, up $5 million or 15 per cent.
     
    Total assets under management as of Dec. 31 was $88.2 billion, up $3.9 billion from a year earlier.
     
    The company's London-based parent, which is a global bank, saw its full-year net income drop by 16 per cent to $13.7 billion amid geopolitical headwinds and consolidation in the group.
     
    HSBC chief executive officer Stuart Gulliver acknowledged Monday that 2014 profits disappointed, but said a tough fourth quarter "masked some of the progress made over the preceding three quarters."
     
    The disappointing results come as HSBC is being pummelled by allegations that its Swiss private bank helped the wealthy evade taxes.
     
    HSBC chairman Douglas Flint insisted the bank had cleaned up past behaviour and said the Swiss allegations "remind us of how much there still is to do and how far society's expectations have changed in terms of banks' responsibilities."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge expected to deliver verdict in threats case involving Nelson Hart

    Judge expected to deliver verdict in threats case involving Nelson Hart
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A verdict is expected today in the case of a Newfoundland man whose murder conviction was thrown out, but who was tried for allegedly threatening prison guards and assaulting them.

    Judge expected to deliver verdict in threats case involving Nelson Hart

    City says false positive behind Winnipeg 48-hour boil-water advisory

    City says false positive behind Winnipeg 48-hour boil-water advisory
    WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government has ordered an investigation into the susceptibility of Winnipeg's drinking water after a false E. coli result prompted a boil-water advisory last month for the capital's 700,000 residents.

    City says false positive behind Winnipeg 48-hour boil-water advisory

    Amber Alert over for Saskatchewan teen; girl found safe, but man dead in house

    Amber Alert over for Saskatchewan teen; girl found safe, but man dead in house
    LAC LA RONGE, Sask. — RCMP say a Saskatchewan teen who was the subject of an Amber Alert has been found safe, but they are still searching for the man believed to have abducted her and who is a suspect in a homicide investigation.

    Amber Alert over for Saskatchewan teen; girl found safe, but man dead in house

    Quebec education minister wants to tighten school strip-search rules

    Quebec education minister wants to tighten school strip-search rules
    Quebec Education Minister Yves Bolduc says he wants to tighten the rules surrounding how high schools in the province are allowed to conduct strip searches.

    Quebec education minister wants to tighten school strip-search rules

    BC Tables Balanced Budget: Poor Parents Can Keep Child-Support, But Little Else In It For Families

    BC Tables Balanced Budget: Poor Parents Can Keep Child-Support, But Little Else In It For Families
    VICTORIA — B.C.'s latest budget will allow poor single parents to keep more money from social assistance, but otherwise there are few new measures that will directly benefit families in the province.

    BC Tables Balanced Budget: Poor Parents Can Keep Child-Support, But Little Else In It For Families

    Summer Job Seekers May Need To Broaden Search Following Retail Closures

    Summer Job Seekers May Need To Broaden Search Following Retail Closures
    With Target shuttering its 133 Canadian locations and Jacob, Mexx, Sony, Parasuco and Jones New York closing up shop, will short-term job opportunities be tougher to come by with so many workers getting pink-slipped?

    Summer Job Seekers May Need To Broaden Search Following Retail Closures