Alphen, Netherlands. 12
June. Many years ago when I first arrived in Hong Kong I opened an account at
the local branch of my local bank, the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking
Corporation. It was clearly an important
moment in the bank’s history as since then HSBC has grown into one of the world’s
largest banks. When Hong Kong was
returned to China in 1997 HSBC moved its headquarters to London. Threatening to move the bank back to Hong
Kong HSBC Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver this week said, “We recognise the
world has changed and we need to change with it”. Is this sound business strategy or yet another
big bank gamble?
All things being equal Gulliver’s
threat makes business sense. Excluding Japan Asia grew by 6% in 2014. China’s economy grew by 8%, although down
from the stunning 14% in 2007. These growth figures compared with a lamentable
0.5% in the Eurozone, the real EU. Predictions of structural economic shift are
even more compelling. According to
American investment bankers Goldman Sachs, China’s gross domestic product (GDP)
surpassed that of Britain in 2005 and Germany in 2008, and could even surpass
the Americans as early as next year. The
Carnegie Foundation for International Peace suggests that by 2050 the three
so-called ‘mega-economies’ China, India and the US will enjoy a combined GDP
worth 70% more than the combined economies of all the remaining G20 states.
It is also true that
HSBC has been particularly hit hard by the cult of ‘banker bashing’ beloved of the
British media, the British government’s use of a banking levy to boost the
national exchequer, and efforts by the European Commission to impose a whole
raft of regulation on the City of London.
London clearly is no longer the the unregulated casino that a) made the
City attractive to global banks; and b) encouraged casino banking.
However, all things are
not equal in the world in which mega-banks live. ‘The world’s local bank’, like many such
super-corporations, believes it is too big for any single national regulator. However, no institution bank of government is
bigger than geopolitics, something British Chancellor George Osborne also fails
to appreciate. In other words, being
domiciled in a place which offers sound regulation and the rule of established law
clearly benefits corporations.
There is as ever a
bigger picture (to which this blog is slavishly devoted). Asia might indeed be growing
faster than Europe, which remains mired in the Euro crisis, the longest economic
suicide in history. However, for all of
its many challenges Europe, and indeed the UK remains far more politically
stable than Asia. First, while bankers
lament the regulation that has been imposed upon them their own egregious disregard
for law means such regulation is self-inflicted and clearly necessary. Second, banks need a sound legal framework in
which to conduct their business and Europe/UK offers such legal stability. Third, much of Asia’s recent growth is the
function of an asset bubble and could crash at any moment. Fourth, many Asian economies remain
unreformed and are probably less prepared than many European economies for the
inevitable next crash. Fifth, the
emergence of an assertive China has raised the prospect of real conflict in Asia,
possibly war.
Now, if the United
States succeeds in establishing a Trans-Pacific Partnership alongside a Transatlantic
Trade and Investment Partnership then Asia’s economic dynamism might become
more embedded in stable pan-regional politics.
However, stabilising institutions, such as ASEAN and the APEC regime,
remain weak. China, not without reason, is suspicious that the TPP is an
American attempt to constrain and contain Beijing. Nor is the future attitude or political
direction of China at all clear, not least in its treatment of Hong Kong. HSBC might well find that having moved its
headquarters back to Hong Kong it is subject to the most arbitrary of
regulatory regimes with no legal recourse or redress.
Furthermore, the
evidence suggests that many Western-based or inspired corporations are ever
more conscious of the trade-off to be made between the promise of short-term
growth and the need for political stability.
In his January 2015 State of the Union Address President Obama said, “More
than half of manufacturing executives have said they are actively looking at
bringing back jobs from China”. Just as
HSBC thinks about de-shoring from London many corporations are considering
re-shoring.
So, Mr Gulliver and his
team have a very important strategic decision to make when they make their
final judgment at year’s end whether or not to quit London. The world is indeed changing but not as much
as Mr Gulliver would seem to believe.
And. all things being equal, London remains a haven of stability in an
unstable world, open to the world (in spite of EU efforts to prevent that) with
a culture of government that remains sensitive to the needs of big business, at
times far more than I believe appropriate for a modern Western democracy.
My bet is that in a decade
or so we will look back at those who predicated the economic eclipse of the
West by Asia as misguided prophets.
Rather like today we look at Francis Fukuyama and his 1990 prediction
that liberal-democracy and free markets represented the perfect political state
and thus the end of history. Sound
business strategy or gamble?
Julian Lindley-French
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