HSBC fined a record $51M over Lehman product sales

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HSBC's private-banking unit was fined a record HK$400 million ($51 million) over sales of structured products linked to Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong.

HSBC will have its license to advise on securities suspended for a year, while its dealing license will be partially suspended, the Securities and Futures Appeals Tribunal said in a ruling Tuesday, as it upheld previous findings by the Securities and Futures Commission. HSBC said the suspensions won't affect private-banking operations in Hong Kong.

The SFC had originally imposed a fine of HK$605 million, penalizing the private bank for alleged failures of its internal controls and sales practices in relation to the sale of Lehman notes and products in the five years leading up to the bank's bankruptcy in 2008. The subsequent collapse of the Lehman investment products sold to individuals roiled Hong Kong, causing street protests and prompting banks to overhaul sales procedures. The HK$400 million penalty is a record sum, the SFC said on its website.

A sign for the London Congestion Charge stands outside a HSBC bank branch in London.

"The bank's failings were serious; they were systemic in nature, extended over a relatively lengthy period of time and not only put clients at risk but caused loss to many," the tribunal said in its ruling. "Against that, however, it has to be recognized that the bank's failings were not shown to be dishonest, they were not shown to be intentional or reckless."

HSBC's private-banking business in Hong Kong no longer operates as HSBC Private Bank (Suisse) SA, the responsible legal entity between 2003 and 2008, according to a statement from spokesman Gareth Hewett. The business now operates under the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp., a legal transfer that was completed in 2013 "to simplify governance requirements and administrative processes," he said.

"HSBC Private Bank (Suisse) SA's systems and controls for selling structured products fell significantly short of the standards expected of them," Ashley Alder, the chief executive officer of the SFC, said in an emailed statement. "In combination with flawed practices and intrinsically high risk products, the bank's failures magnified the risk and occurrence of significant losses for customers."

The latest appeal hearings began in May 2016. HSBC's lawyer had said the original HK$605 million penalty was excessive, and that the SFC had wrongly applied "retail standards" to a private bank, when it is a different type of business, with a particular relationship with its clients.

The result is the latest episode in an almost decadelong saga involving Lehman products, which saw thousands of individual investors lose money on notes linked to the investment bank. The losses resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars in settlements paid out by banks that had sold the products. The SFC subsequently moved to strengthen protections for retail investors.

HSBC is among global lenders that have been battered by billions of dollars in fines for misconduct since the global financial crisis.

Bloomberg News
Penalties and fines HSBC
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