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HSBC (Canada)

HSBC (Canada), formerly the Hongkong Bank of Canada, is a bank in Canada of British banking giant HSBC or Hongkong Shanghai Banking Corporation (global headquarters in London, UK) and a major banking company in Hong Kong, China (corporate headquarters). HSBC Canada is the seventh largest bank in Canada, with offices throughout the country (excluding PEI), and is the largest foreign-owned bank and the seventh largest in Canada. Unusually for a foreign bank, corporate headquarters is in Vancouver, rather than Toronto.

Contents

1 Divisions
2 Timeline
3 Executives
4 Membership
5 External link

History

  • 1979 HSBC buys a Vancouver based acceptance company that finances machinery and equipment for small companies operating in British Columbia.
  • 1981 HSBC incorporates Hongkong Bank of Canada (HBC), in Vancouver as a chartered bank effective July 1, 1981 under the Bank Act of Canada. HBC uses its subsidiary as a base. HBC has a few retail branches primarily focused on Asian-Canadians but the major portion of the bank's business is with commercial enterprises. HBC opens branches in major cities in western Canada and in Toronto and Montreal but growth is slow. HBC seeks to grow by acquisition but the first three attempts to buy an existing institution are unsuccessful. The fourth attempt succeeds.
  • 1986 November 27 HBC acquires the assets of Bank of British Columbia, which had essentially failed. HBC gains $2.6 billion in assets and adds 41 branches in British Columbia and Alberta. Overnight, HBC moves from 20th largest to 9th largest bank in Canada.
  • 1988 May 20 HBC amalgamates Midland Bank Canada, thereby increasing assets by $472 million, gaining many new corporate banking relationships, and expanding to Eastern Canada.
  • 1990 May 29 HBC amalgamates Lloyd's Bank of Canada, thereby increasing assets by $4.4 billion and adding 53 branches across Canada, mostly in Ontario and Quebec. HBC’s assets after this acquisition are $10.2 billion at October 31, 1990. This merger doubles its the branch network, substantially increases HBC’s exposure in eastern Canada, and makes it truly bilingual with branches in eight Quebec communities. HBC becomes the largest foreign bank. (Lloyds Bank had acquired Continental Bank in 1986. This began in 1973 as Niagara Finance Company, became IAC Limited, and then Continental Bank.)
  • 1993 April 30 HBC acquires ANZ Bank Canada consisting of one office in Toronto, which it merged with its 70 York Street branch. This purchase moves HBC to seventh largest bank in Canada with branches in every province except Prince Edward Island. (ANZ had acquired Grindlays Bank Canada with its acquisition of Grindlays but management was more interested in expanding in the Asia-Pacific area.)
  • 1995 August 1 HBC acquires Metropolitan Trust Company of Canada (1 branch)
  • 1996 August 31 HBC amalgamates Barclays Bank Canada. Barclays had re-entered Canada in 1979 and developed a diversified but modest range of activities that it later shrank. Barclays' Canadian operations lost approximately $120-million between 1992 and 1996. In 1994 Barclays closed 6 branches (Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg, London, Montreal and Halifax) retaining only its head office. In 1993 it had closed Edmonton. In 1985 it bought the assets of Wells Fargo Bank (Canada). Wells Fargo sold its operations in Alberta (and in Florida) to Barclays as part of a re-focusing on its home market. HBC acquires the Seattle, Washington and Portland, Oregon branches of HSBC. The growing north-south trade occasioned by the adoption of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994 made this move into the United States seem a natural expansion along with the business interests of many of the bank's customers.
  • 1998 May 1 HBC acquires National Westminster Bank of Canada, which has assets of C$844.5 million. Nat West had entered in 1982.
  • 1999 June 21 HBC changes its name to HSBC Bank Canada, consistent with the HSBC Group's strategy of creating the global brand, HSBC.

December 3 it acquired Prenor Trust Company of Canada.

  • 2000 HSBC Bank Canada acquires Republic National Bank of New York (Canada) after HSBC acquires the parent bank. (In 1996 Republic bought Israel Discount Bank of Canada’s operations. In 1994 Israel-based Bank Hapoalim (Canada) sold its operations to Republic National Bank of New York (Canada). Bank Leumi Le Israel (Canada) was taken over by Republic National Bank of New York (Canada) in 1993.) Republic had entered Canada in 1982.
  • 2001 April 1 HSBC (Canada) acquires CCF Canada after HSBC acquires CCF. CCF had just acquired Credit Lyonnais Canada. Credit Commercial de France (Canada) sold out to Societe Generale (Canada) in 1990, having entered in 1982 in Montreal. CCF had returned to Canada in 2000.
  • 2002 HSBC Holdings merges its Canadian and US operations to create a North American transnational bank. HSBC Bank USA of New York, with assets of US$87bn, and HSBC Canada, with assets of C$34bn, will share some operating resources but remain separate units.

Divisions

Operating divisions of HBC:

  • HSBC Asset Management
  • HSBC Capital
  • HSBC Trust
  • HSBC Investment Direct
  • HSBC Insurance

Timeline

  • HBC formed 1981
  • Acquired Bank of British Columbia 1986
  • Acquires Midland Bank Canada 1988
  • Acquired Lloyds Bank Canada 1990
  • Acquired ANZ Bank Canada 1993
  • Income Trust Company 1995
  • Acquired National Westminster Bank of Canada 1998
  • Hongkong Bank of Canada renamed HSBC Bank Canada 1999
  • Acquired Republic National Bank of New York (Canada) 2000

Executives

  • Lindsay Gordon, President and Chief Executive Officer
  • Sean O'Sullivan - Chief Operating Officer
  • Jeff Dowle, Executive Vice President
  • Jim Mahaffy, Executive Vice President, Corporate and Institutional Banking
  • Brad Meredith, Executive Vice President,

Corporate, Investment Banking & Markets

  • Sarah Morgan-Silvester, Executive Vice President
  • Graham McIsaac, Chief Financial Officer

See also: List of Canadian banks

Membership

HSBC Canada is a member of the Canadian Bankers Association (CBA) and registered member with the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC), a federal agency insuring deposits at all of Canada's chartered banks. It is also a member of:

External link



07-14-2008 23:18:10
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