Reported pretax profit for Europe's biggest bank by assets came in
at $3.1 billion for the quarter ended Sept. 30, down from $4.8 billion in the
same period a year earlier.
HONG KONG/LONDON
(Reuters) - HSBC
Holdings PLC posted a 35% drop in quarterly profit, better than expected,
as higher loan loss provisions on the economic fallout from the coronavirus
pandemic were cushioned by the reining in of expenses.
Reported pretax
profit for Europe's biggest bank by assets came in at $3.1 billion for the
quarter ended Sept. 30, down from $4.8 billion in the same period a year
earlier.
The profit was
higher than the $2.07 billion average of analysts' estimates compiled by the
bank.
While economic
conditions improved in some markets in the third quarter as lockdowns were
lifted and forbearance measures helped businesses and consumers, global banks'
provisions have remained high as they assess the impact of the pandemic.
Asia-focused HSBC
said it expected losses from bad loans to be at the lower end of the $8 billion
to $ 13 billion range it set out earlier this year.
Faced with fewer
options to bolster revenue growth, HSBC has been looking to reduce costs
globally and in June resumed plans to cut around 35,000 jobs it had put on ice
after the coronavirus
outbreak.
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