by winston » Mon Aug 04, 2008 9:50 pm
Not vested.
Hang Seng Bank ekes out H1 profit growth
HONG KONG - Hang Seng Bank, a unit of global lender HSBC Holdings, posted a smaller-than-expected 2.2 per cent rise in first-half earnings on Monday, with interest margins and fee income driving growth.
Analysts said Hong Kong banks have fared better than most financials in Asia in the past year, but are unlikely to repeat that outperformance in this second half as a US economic slowdown will curb Hong Kong's growth and fuel worries about asset quality.
Hong Kong-based Hang Seng, 62 per cent-owned by HSBC, posted January-June profit of HK$9.06 billion (US$1.16 billion), compared with HK$8.87 billion a year ago. Analysts had predicted net profit of HK$9.13 billion, based on forecasts by six analysts polled by Reuters.
'Economic growth in Hong Kong and on the mainland will likely be affected by the US economic slowdown as well as growing inflationary pressures,' chairman Raymond Ch'ien said in a statement.
'However, domestic demand remains resilient on the back of the tight employment market and relatively low interest rate environment, pointing to moderate expansion,' he added.
Excluding a gain of nearly HK$1.5 billion last year on the listing of China's Industrial Bank, Hang Seng's pretax profit rose 20 per cent in the first half. Hang Seng owns 12.78 per cent of mid-sized Industrial Bank, which raised US$2.1 billion in a domestic A-share IPO in February 2007.
Hang Seng, which unlike other Hong Kong banks steered clear of exotic investments such as CDOs (collateralised debt obligations) and SIVs (structured investment vehicles), said first-half net interest income rose 23.2 per cent. Net interest margins improved by 32 basis points to 2.43 per cent.
Net fees and commissions increased 5.8 per cent to HK$3.03 billion thanks to sales of investment products and credit cards.
Hang Seng has 30 outlets in the mainland, where total operating income grew 67 per cent. Including profit from Industrial Bank, mainland business contributed 9.4 per cent of total pretax profit, up from 5.9 per cent a year ago. The bank is aiming to grow this to 10 per cent by 2010.
Industrial Bank estimated earlier that its first-half net profit rose at least 70 per cent, due to wider interest margins.
Hang Seng trades at a robust premium to its local peers, at more than 5 times book value. By comparison, Bank of East Asia trades at 2 times book and BOC Hong Kong trades at 2.3 times book.
Shares in Hang Seng have lost 3.4 per cent this year, outperforming a 19 per cent drop in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. -- REUTERS
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"