Title: HSBCs Acquisition
1HSBCs Acquisition
2Company Background
- 1992 acquisition of Midland Bank by HSBC created
a financial institutions with assets of 170
billion - Desire to create a truly global banking
organization - Ensure HSBCs growth worldwide as
re-strengthening its relationship with
multinationals
3HSBC Holdings
- Main member is HK Shanghai Banking Corporation
Ltd. formed in HK in early 1860s - Opened its office (HQ) in HK at 1 Queens Road on
March 1865 and in Shanghai on 3 April 1865
4HSBC Holdings
- After WWII, expansion thru acquisition
- 1959 UK registered Mercantile Bank
- 1960 British Bank of the Middle East
- 1965 Hang Seng Bank
- In 1972, it created an investment Banking
arm-wardley - In 1970s, it acquired Marine Midland Bank of
Buffalo, NY
5HSBC Holdings
- On 2 April 1991, Hong Kong Bank became
wholly-owned subsidiaries of HSBC Holdings PLC - HSBC enjoyed the unique benefit of being an UK
company paying taxes in HK - Trading on SEHK and LSE
6HSBC Holdings
- Major Business
- Retail and corporate banking
- Trade services
- Investment banking
- Private banking
- Trustee services
- Pension and investment-fund management
7HSBC Holdings
- Major Business
- Treasury capital market services
- Consumer business finance
- Securities custody services
- Insurance
- From 1980-1991, profit increased
8Midland Bank PLC
- Midland started in Birmingham in 1836
- In 1905, the first to introduce Foreign Exchange
Department - By 1934, largest deposit bank in the world, with
457 million in effects - By 1939, Midland had 2,100 branches
9Midland Bank PLC
- The 1980s were a disastrous decade
- It paid US820 million for a 57 in Crocker
National Bank the 4th largest bank in Cal. And
12th largest in the US - Crocker lost US62 million in 4th quarter of 1983
- Suffered from bad real estate loans massive
debts in South America - Lost US324 million in 1984
10Midland Bank PLC
- Shares of Crocker worth US90 (1983) down to
US16.25 in 1985 - Midland bought the other 43 of Crocker
- Midland sold Crocker the year later
- This acquisition took a severe toll on Midlands
capital base - In late 1987, HSBC offered to make a friendly
acquisition of 14.9 of Midlands stock
11Midland Bank PLC
- Late 1980s, Midland introduces 2 innovative
banking products. The Switch debt card, a
paperless check of electronic payments at the
point of sale, and First Direct, a 24-hour
person-to-person tele-banking service - Both projects were pended because the bank was
short of cash
12Midland Bank PLC
- Overhead were growing at a rate of 10 a year
while revenues were increasing by 1. In 1989,
the bank lost 261 million.
13Reasons for the Acquisition
- Globalization
- Increasing competition for local and
international banks - In 1991, pre-tax profits of HSBC was US6.7
billion - HK operations 81.3
- UK operations 1
14Attractiveness of the European Markets
- HSBCs subsidiary HS Bank played a dominated role
in HK - Diversification to reduce risk
- Unification of European markets will lead to more
business transaction among European nations and
with Asia
15Attractiveness of the European Markets
- HSBC specialized in the fast-growing Asia-Pacific
region. Midland Bank has a strong retail banking
business in Britain and deep roots in trade and
wholesale lending in Europe - Both banks could be complementary functionally
geographically
16Attractiveness of the European Markets
- Global network with a unique combination of
international capabilities local strengths - A merger with Midland Bank doubled HSBCs total
assets - 86 billion to 170 billion in 1992
- 3,200 branches in 70 countries
17To serve global customers
- HSBCs customers in Asia-Pacific had begun
looking for trade investment opportunities
elsewhere in the world - European companies looked for business partners
in Asia - The merger could build up a global network to
serve the major multinationals
18Uncertainty
- Problem of 1997
- If anything goes wrong, HSBC has a chance to go
Europe
19Financial Package
20Major Events
- The 1987 HSBC acquisition of 14.9 of Midland
Bank and promised not to increase its stack in
Midland until December 1990 - Speculation that a merger would happen in 1990,
but actually not - HSBC became a wholly owned company by HSBC PLC in
1991
21Major Events
- Midland announced better-than-expected results
with pre-tax profits up from 11 million to 36
million against a widely expected lost in 1992 - On 10 March, HSBC announced 82.9 rise in
disclosed profit attributed to shareholders, from
HKD3,096 million to HKD5,664 million
22Major Events
- On 17 March 1992, HSBC Midland announced plan
to merge - Share price of Midland was trading at 253 pence
- On 17 April 1992, HSBC valued Midland at about
3.1 billion at 378 pence per share
23Major Events
- For each share of Midland, one new HSBC shares
and 100 pence of new HSBC Holdings bonds were
offered - On 4 April 1992, Lloyds Bank announced an offer
for Midland for one Lloyds share plus 30 pence in
cash - Referred to Monopolies and Mergers Commission
24Major Events
- Lloyds would cut staff by 20,000 over 4 years and
close 1,000 branches to produce annual savings of
over 700 million - Midland preferred HSBCs bid
- On 8 May 1992, HSBC Holdings valued Midlands
share at 401 pence (because HSBCs price went up
from 2.93 to 3.13)
25Major Events
- On 19 May 1992, approved by BOE and two days
later from EC - HSBC did not have any substantial overlapping
business with Midland but Lloyds did
26Major Events
- On 2 June 1992, HSBC announced a second bid of
120 new shares of HSBC 65 in either new HSBC
bonds or cash for 100 Midland shares, than valued
at 471 pence on shares - Lloyds withdrew its offer
27Analysis of effects of corporate announcement
- HSBC wanted to move back to UK
- Analysis were negative on the merge
28Geographical Contribution of the Pre-tax Profit
of the HSBC Group, 1992-1995
29Financial Data of HSBC, 1992-1995
30Financial Data for Midland Bank, 1992-1995
31Aftermath
32Aftermath
- 1992 represented an increase of 59.2 over 1991,
mainly from the HK UK operations - HSBCs 3.7 billion bid for Midland in 1992 was
the largest cross-border takeover in Europe that
year - HSBC became the 2nd largest (non-Japanese) bank
in the world (12th in terms of assets)
33Aftermath
- In 1994, HSBC group handled 25 of all trade form
China into the UK. It handled 30 of trade from
HK and 20 from India - First Direct, the telephone-banking service was
successfully launched and became the most popular
one in the UK
34Cumulative Abnormal Return of HSBC Holdings,
December 1991- September 1996
35Abnormal Return and Cumulative Abnormal Return of
HSBC, March 1992- July 1992
36Abnormal Return and Cumulative Abnormal Return of
Midland Bank, March 1992 July 1992
37Lessons
- Diversification to hedge against risk
- Timing is important
38END