UAE Takes Step for Banking Sector

February 5th, 2009 admin Banking 0

dubai towers1 238x300 UAE Takes Step for Banking SectorThe UAE Government announced on Wednesday that it is going to implement a special action plan under which it will inject 4.36 billion dollars extra capital into the following financial institutions in the state. The institutions are National Bank of Abu Dhabi, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, First Gulf Bank, Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank, and Union National Bank. The recent step is aimed at strengthening confidence in the financial sector which has been shaken as a result of the global financial crisis.

The UAE Government said that it would purchase bonds with no maturity date from five banks as a precautionary step to boost confidence into the UAE banking sector. It is recalled that November 2008 Barclays announced plans to lift 11.8 billion dollars, by selling shares to Abu Dhabi and Qatar as a means of meeting the new capital requirements imposed by the UK government on banks which were looking for government support. Under the plan announced by Barclays Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed al-Nahyan would own up to 16% of Barclays. Zayed al-Nahyan is a member of the royal family of Abu Dhabi and chairman of the International Petroleum Investment Company.

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HSBC Cuts its Workforces

October 21st, 2008 admin Banking 0

HSBCHSBC, fourth largest bank in the world in terms of assets, has announced that it is going to cut 1,100 jobs worldwide in its banking operation. With approximately half of the job losses to take place in HSBC headquarters and UK based international banking division and markets operation in Canary Wharf in the UK. Another 100 of the job are losses in Hong Kong, where the large Asian operations are based of this bank. Here the jobs would be cut in both front divisions and back office operations.

In a statement the company said that global pre-tax profits for the segment were 2.7 billion dollars in the early half of the year 2008, drop 35% over the early half of the year 2007 although it is 37% higher than in the next half of the year 2007. Moreover its half-year earnings drop almost 30 percent to £5.2 billion as the bank was forced to write-off $14 billion from bad debts and asset write-downs in the U.S.A.

On the other hand, an HSBC official said the firm had opted to cut its employees, “because of market conditions and the economic environment, and our cautious outlook for 2009.” He also added, “Markets continue to be challenging and difficult but our strategy leaves us well positioned for the next wave of global growth, when it comes.”

After the announcement to the news of job cuts among the 330,000 workforces worldwide, the market responded positively. Hong Kong-traded shares of HSBC increased 0.5 percent against a decreasing overall market.