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HSBC sets aside US$3 billion for buy-back as result beats estimates in tribute to retiring CEO

  • HSBC said it would pay a quarterly dividend of 10 US cents a share and announced a new round of US$3 billion share buy-back

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Signage outside HSBC’s headquarters in Hong Kong. Photo: Bloomberg
Mia Castagnonein ShanghaiandEnoch Yiuin Hong Kong

HSBC, the biggest of Hong Kong’s three currency-issuing banks, announced a new round of share buy-backs after its second-quarter defied naysayers with a smaller-than-expected drop, bookending the tenure of its chief executive Noel Quinn.

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The London-based bank, which earns most of its revenue in Asia, set aside another US$3 billion to buy back its own shares after completing the previous US$3 billion repurchase budget on May 7.

The buy-back was announced after HSBC’s second-quarter net profit fell 3.6 per cent to US$6.4 billion, beating the US$5.7 billion expected by analysts. The bank earned US$6.64 billion in the same quarter last year.

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Pre-tax profit rose 2 per cent to US$8.9 billion, better than the US$7.88 billion expected by analysts, said the bank that traces its roots to Hong Kong and Shanghai nearly two centuries ago.

HSBC said it would pay a quarterly dividend of 10 US cents per share in addition to its share buy-back.

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