Skip to main content

HSBC acquired the UK arm of SVB.

 

HSBC building
HSBC has acquired the UK arm of Silicon Valley Bank for £1 after a weekend of crisis talks with the Bank of England and government ministers following the collapse of the bank’s US parent.

Noel Quinn, chief executive of HSBC, said the acquisition made strategic sense for its business in the UK. «It strengthens our commercial banking franchise and enhances our ability to serve innovative and fast-growing firms, including in the technology and life-science sectors, in the UK and internationally».

In a brief stock exchange statement, Europe’s biggest bank said SVB UK had loans of about £5.5 billion and around £6.7 billion in deposits. For the financial year ending 31 December 2022, SVB UK recorded a profit of £88 million before tax. It said it would update shareholders further alongside first-quarter results in May.

Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, spent the weekend in talks with the Bank of England and financial regulators to contain the fallout from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in America on Friday.

Hunt said this morning: «The UK’s tech sector is genuinely world-leading and of huge importance to the British economy, supporting hundreds of thousands of jobs. I said yesterday that we would look after our tech sector».

He said the sale of Silicon Valley Bank UK to HSBC «ensures customer deposits are protected and can bank as normal, with no taxpayer support».

In a separate announcement, the Bank of England said it had taken to sell the SVB to HSBC has been taken in consultation with the Prudential Regulation Authority, HM Treasury and the Financial Conduct Authority.

www.sba.tax

Comments

  1. That was fast! But I guess they got it at a good price and it was a good deal for both parties overall. SVB is trying to reduce the impact of what happened in the US and HSBC needs to expand.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They saw an opportunity and took it. SVB is in dire need of funds right now and anything helps. It's important to remember that what happened to SVB can happen to pretty much any bank, if the conditions are right or in this case "wrong".

      Delete

Post a Comment

Cloud Bookkeeping

US FED rate rise.

  The US Federal Reserve officials have indicated that they plan to resume increasing interest rates to control inflation in the world's biggest economy. During the June meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee reached a consensus to keep interest rates stable for the time being to evaluate whether further tightening of policy would be necessary. However, the majority of the committee anticipates that additional rate increases will be required in the future. The minutes of the meeting have recently been made public. According to the minutes, most participants believed maintaining the federal funds rate at 5 to 5.25 per cent was appropriate or acceptable, despite some individuals wanting to raise the acceleration due to slow progress in cooling inflation. Although Fed forecasts predicted a mild recession starting later in the year, policymakers faced challenges in interpreting data that showed a tight job market and only slight improvements in inflation. Additionally, officials gr...

EU business slide.

  S&P Global’s flash eurozone composite purchasing managers’ index, a key gauge of business conditions for the manufacturing and services sector, fell 1 point to 47.1, figures showed yesterday. That is its lowest level since November 2020 and the fourth consecutive month below the crucial 50 mark separating growth from contraction. One of the few bright spots in the survey was that companies in all sectors reported a slight easing of cost pressures, price growth and supply chain constraints. However, prices charged for goods and services still rose at the sixth fastest rate since such data started in 2002. Jobs growth increased marginally from October but remained low compared with the past 18 months. Following a few months of falling price pressure in manufacturing and services, the October print shows an overall stabilisation said Jens Eisenschmidt, chief European economist at Morgan Stanley. However, German businesses, at the hub of Europe’s energy crisis, reported that manu...

EU debt reduction

  Brussels wants to give EU capitals extra time to curb their debts and create space for public investment as part of an overhaul of the EU’s deficit rules .  The European Commission would table a proposal at the end of the month to reform the Stability and Growth Pact ,  under which it would work out multi-year ,  country-specific plans with capitals for getting their debt burdens under control ,  EU officials said .  The proposals come as member states face mounting fiscal burdens as they spend hundreds of billions of euros sheltering businesses and households from the energy crisis .  Under the new blueprint ,  the commission would propose a four- or five-year plan to an EU member state to get its public debt burden on a credible ,  downward trajectory ,  officials said . The national fiscal plan would need to pass a debt sustainability analysis and be approved by the commission and EU council .  The new regime would ditch an EU ...