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Narayana
Murthy on HSBC board as profits rise on Asian success
By Dipankar De Sarkar, London, March 3, 2008 (IANS)
Infosys
founder N.R. Narayana Murthy is to be inducted as a non-executive
director of HSBC Holdings, Europe's largest bank, which Monday reported
second-half profits as rising 17% on the back of emerging market
lending. The induction of Murthy was part of a board revamp with
the bank expected to focus on China, India and other emerging markets.
The move to induct Murthy came as the bank, which has 1,500 branches
in Britain, announced that it will focus on emerging markets to
help it tide over the fallout from the US crisis.
"The
economic slowdown and the credit outlook in the US may well get
worse before they get better," Group chairman Stephen Green
said. "With significant parts of the international financial
system in developed markets still in difficulties, HSBC's emphasis
on faster-growing emerging markets means that we are better positioned
than many of our competitors."
The
bank said second-half profits rose 17% as emerging-markets accounted
for 78% of earnings, compared to 55% in the second half of 2006,
and outweighed losses resulting from the US subprime mortgage. The
company reported a $2.34 billion loss in North America but earnings
rose 59% to $4 billion in Hong Kong and 43 % to $2.67 billion for
the rest of Asia Pacific. Bad loans rose to $17.2 billion in 2007,
compared with $10.6 billion in 2006.
The
bank said Stuart Gulliver, chief executive of HSBC's investment
bank, and Sandy Flockhart, global head of commercial banking, will
join the executive board May 1, taking their place alongside Vincent
Cheng, recently appointed chairman of HSBC Asia-Pacific. "These
are three of our most talented and experienced executives - all
emerging market specialists," said Green.
Green,
chief executive Mike Geoghegan and finance director Douglas Flint
are the other three executive directors. Three members of the non-executive
board - Baronness Dunn, Sir Brian Moffat and Lord Butler - are to
step down to make way for Murthy and Safra Catz, President and CFO
of Oracle.
The
British media has previously reported that new appointments were
being planned to address criticism that the board is not independent
enough and that they might eventually lead to the appointment of
a non-executive group chairman.
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