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HSBC HOLDINGS PLC. (HSBC) Q2 2020 Earnings Call Transcript

HSBC HOLDINGS PLC. (NYSE: HSBC) Q2 2020 earnings call dated Aug. 03, 2020

Corporate Participants:

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Analysts:

Martin Leitgeb — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Tom Rayner — Numis — Analyst

Ed Firth — KBW — Analyst

Guy Stebbings — Exane — Analyst

Manus Costello — Autonomous — Analyst

Fahed Kunwar — Redburn — Analyst

Rob Noble — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Joe Dickerson — Jefferies — Analyst

Aman Rakkar — Barclays — Analyst

Presentation:

Operator

This presentation and subsequent discussion may contain certain forward-looking statements with respect to the financial condition, results of operations, capital position and business of the group. These forward-looking statements represent the group’s expectations or beliefs concerning future events and involve known and unknown risks and uncertainty that could cause actual results, performance or events to differ materially from those expressed or implied in such statements. Additional detailed information concerning important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially is available in our interim report. Past performance cannot be relied on as a guide to future performance.

This presentation contains non-GAAP financial information. Reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measurements to the most directly comparable measures under GAAP are provided in the reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measure supplements available at www.hsbc.com. The analyst and investor conference call for HSBC Holdings plc’s interim results will begin in two minutes. Following the presentation there will be an opportunity to address question to HSBC’s Executive Directors. [Operator Instructions].

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Investor and Analyst Conference Call for HSBC Holdings plc’s Interim Results 2020. [Operator Instructions]

At this time, I will hand the call over to your host, Mr. Noel Quinn, Group Chief Executive.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Thank you, Sharon. Good morning in London, and good afternoon in Hong Kong, and thank you for joining us. I’ve got Ewen with me today, and he will present the numbers in detail before we then go to Q&A.

Let me start by saying that it’s been another difficult quarter for our customers, colleagues and communities. But I have been pleased with how HSBC has responded. This is still a hugely unpredictable environment. We are conscious of that on both the human and at financial level. And we are doing all we can to support our customers and colleagues through this very difficult period.

Against that backdrop, we are satisfied with our first half performance. Our Asia business held up well and our fixed income businesses delivered strong revenue growth. This compensated for challenges in parts of the world that have been harder hit by the impact of COVID-19. The businesses that performed less well are those we are already changing. We will be accelerating our transformation in the second half of the year and making other necessary changes in light of the new circumstances since February.

There’s still a lot of uncertainty around, now at least from the ebb and flow of COVID-19 and the steps needed to contain it. Our improved capital position and excellent funding and liquidity are the hallmarks of our strength and resilience, helping us to be there for our customers, while also building the future of the firm. Our focus remains on helping our customers through this immediate period, while making the changes necessary to serve them better over the long term.

The current geopolitical environments is clearly complex. Tensions between China and the US inevitably create challenging situations for an organization with our footprint. But our businesses in Asia have shown good resilience and we will face any political challenges that arise with a focus on the long term needs of our customers and the best interests of our investors.

Turning to our second quarter performance. Our Asia businesses continued to show good resilience, contributing $3.6 billion of reported pre-tax profit. And Global Markets grew adjusted revenue by 55%. Our profitability was most challenged in the businesses at the center of our transformation. Europe, the US and the non-ring-fenced bank, which were severely impacted by high expected credit losses.

Overall, pretax profits of $1.1 billion, were down 82% and adjusted profits were down 57% on last year’s second quarter. ECL’s of $3.8 billion were up on the first quarter, reflecting updated forward economic guidance in the UK, in particular. We’ve updated our 2020 range for ECL’s, which Ewen will talk about later.

The interest rate cuts made earlier in the year began to impact our revenue from March onwards. We responded by pulling the cost levers available to us, reducing operating expenses by 7% compared with last year’s second quarter. We continued to attract significant deposits in the quarter. I’m pleased to say that our capital ratio increased to 15%, providing a strong and resilient platform from which to serve our customers and manage the economic environment.

Turning to slide three. The resilience of our Asia franchise continues to underpin our financial performance. This was due to the quality and strength of our business and client list [Phonetic] and for the speed and decisiveness of the COVID response, which allowed many economies to restart sooner than others. The activity underpinning our Asia performance remains robust.

We’ve increased our trade finance market share. Clients FX volumes are lower, but relatively resilient. And retail card transaction volumes recovered in June, following a dip during the pandemic. Adjusted revenues in individual markets have been broadly stable despite the economic slowdown. And Asia lending is up 1% and deposits up 7% in the last 12 months. First half expected credit losses of $1.8 billion in Asia included a large single name provision in Singapore in the first quarter.

Looking to the second half, parts of Asia and Hong Kong in particular have tightened COVID restrictions in recent days. This is something that we are all getting used to as cases rise and fall. And we are hopeful that the quick response of the authorities will contain any new outbreak and minimize the impact.

Looking at slide four. We remain focused on helping our customers, colleagues and communities through the pandemic with high operational resilience in the face of unprecedented volumes and customer interaction. Around 94% of our branches are currently open, and all our customer contact centers have been fully operational throughout. We have now granted around $30 billion of debt relief for our personal lending customers, through more than 700,000 payment holidays on loans, credit cards and mortgages. More than 172,000 wholesale customers have received more than $52 billion of lending support. $33 billion of that through government schemes and $19 billion through HSBC back lending.

We arranged more than $1.1 trillion of loan, debt and equity financing for wholesale customers in the first half, including more than $48 billion of social and COVID bonds. We also retained our number one ranking for sustainable finance bonds in a rapidly expanding market. We’ve invested heavily in technology, driving digital transformation to connect more customers remotely and increased digital engagement during lock down. Downloads of our HSBC net mobile app for business were up 157% on last year’s first half.

The value of mobile payments in the second quarter was up more than 200% on the same period last year. And digital wealth sales rose significantly year-on-year, up 44% in Singapore, 38% in Hong Kong and 29% in Mainland China. The strength of our COVID response contributed to a sharp increase in customer satisfaction, with double-digit increases in several retail markets. Record satisfaction scores in trade and Global Liquidity and Cash Management. And Global Banking and Markets being voted number one standard FX dealer for global corporates in the recent Greenwich Buy-Side study.

Throughout all this, we maintained exceptional balance sheet strength and strong funding and liquidity, with a CET1 ratio of 15% and $133 billion of first half deposit growth.

Turning to our transformation program. While we slowed progress in some areas in response to the pandemic, we laid good ground work for the rest of the year. And we will be accelerating our plans in the second half. We lifted the pause on redundancies in June and we will be moving forward with those plans thoughtfully but purposefully. We’ve already seen around $300 million of cost savings in the first half, with a further $500 million estimated in the second half from our transformation activities. This is slightly below the $1 billion of transformation savings we promised for this year, because of the pause on redundancies. But we expect to make up the difference in 2021.

In the meantime, we’ve taken additional action on discretionary costs and we expect to make many of those savings permanent. On the rest of our transformation, we’ve completed the combination of RBWM and Global Private Banking and we’re making strong progress in the back office integration of Commercial Banking and Global Banking.

As you’ve seen the areas of weakness in the second quarter with the areas that we’re already committed to changing. We’re confident that the actions we’ve identified in February are the right actions to take, but we’re obviously looking at what more we need to do given the changed economic and monetary environment. We’ve created the structures to reduce RWA’s in Global Banking and Markets and made a gross RWA reduction of $21 billion in GB&M in the first half of the year.

In the US, lower interest rates posed a challenge to our US retail strategy and that’s something we’re looking at. But the US business has already closed 80 branches and we are on track to reduce US Global Markets RWAs by around 45% by the year end. In Europe, we simplified our management structure and have a new team in place to push through the transformation. We remain committed to the Europe RWA reduction targets we announced in February and we will execute those plans in earnest as the economy starts to recover.

I want to finish by talking about one of the most exciting growth businesses, and that’s wealth. In 2018 we set out a plan to capture the growing global wealth opportunity centered on Asia, and we’ve been investing to grow that business at the soonest. In the last 12 months, we’ve grown our Jade and Premier customer numbers by 6% and our wealth balances by 3% with around half of this growth coming in Asia.

In our Asset Management business, we’ve grown assets under management by 5% and Private Bank client assets by 4% over the same period. In June, we launched Pinnacle, which is a new platform to significantly step up our wealth business in Mainland China. This allows customers to access a full suite of wealth services, including insurance, in one place, which is unique for any Chinese wealth platform. We are investing to bring our wealth capabilities to new customers in China and we intend to grow the number of wealth planners in phases over the next four years.

The Greater Bay Area Area Wealth Management Connect program, which was announced in June only enhances the wealth opportunity. And we are excited at the chance this gives us to serve more people in the region.

With that, I’ll pass over to Ewen to go through the numbers.

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Noel. And good morning, or afternoon all. Given the impact of COVID-19, our second quarter was tough, we had an 82% fall on reported profit before tax and a 57% drop in adjusted profit before tax. There were a couple of bright spots, fixed income and Global Markets was a standout, together with a resilient performance by Hong Kong and other parts of our Asian franchise. Overall, our results were heavily impacted by lower revenues from subdued customer activity in many parts of our business and the building effect of ultra-low interest rates. The second quarter in a row with very high ECL and a $1.2 billion software intangible write-off. Largely as a result of the weak return outlook for our non-ring-fenced bank.

Adjusted revenue was down 4%, this included a $507 million benefit from volatile items, which in part reduce reverse some of the negative impacts we saw from mark-to-market movements in the first quarter. ECL’s were up on the first quarter at $3.8 billion or 148 basis points of gross loans. With the largest impacts in the UK in Commercial Banking we’ve continue to take action on cost to adjust for the weakened revenue environment, our adjusted operating costs fell by 7% against the second quarter of last year. Despite the weak macro environment our balance sheet metrics continue to improve, our core Tier 1 ratio was up 40 basis points to 15% in the quarter. And customer deposits grew by $85 billion.

Our first half return on tangible equity was 3.8%, that’s down from 11.2% for the same period last year. And our tangible net asset value per share of $7.34 was down $0.10 on the first quarter due to movements in own credit adjustments.

Turning to slide nine. Looking across the three global businesses. In Wealth and Personal Banking revenues were down 12%, with Retail Banking revenues falling by $809 million, due largely to the impact of falling interest rates and liability spreads. At a headline level, Wealth Management revenues were broadly stable, but excluding positive market impacts and insurance manufacturing down 17% due to lower sales volumes.

Commercial Banking revenues were 14% lower, due mainly to the impact of lower margins on Global Liquidity and Cash Management and lower volumes and trade finance. In Global Banking and Markets revenues were up 24%, global Markets grew by $755 million, which we achieved while keeping traded value at risk broadly stable. This included an excellent performance in our fixed income franchises, up 79%. Principle investments revenue grew by $185 million, primarily due to a material reversal of the mark-to-market losses we saw in the first quarter.

In Corporate Centre, revenues were $90 million lower, with $157 million of adverse movements in valuation differences on our long-term debt and associated swaps. Just to remind you all that the second half usually sees lower revenues from not interest — from non-interest income and Global Banking and Markets and Wealth. And given the buoyant Global Markets revenues in the first half, we expect that seasonality to be more pronounced this year.

On slide 10, net interest income was $6.9 billion, down 9% against the first quarter. The net interest margin was 133 basis points, down 21 basis points on the first quarter, of which, 20 basis points came from the fall in interest rates. While we’re beginning to see some modest asset repricing, we still expect recent interest rate cuts to have a negative impact of more than $3 billion for 2020 with a further significant negative impact expected in 2021.

Turning to slide 11. Adjusted operating costs were 7% lower than the second quarter in 2019 and down 5% in the first half relative to the first half of 2019. As a result of the operational impact of COVID-19 we’re spending less on certain discretionary cost line items. We expect this to lead to some permanent benefits in our cost structure relative to previous planning assumptions.

We’re being disciplined on variable pay accrual in line with lower expected profits this year. And we have restarted the cost reduction program that we announced in February. At the end of June, headcount including contractors was down 8,300 in the last 12 months, and down 3,800 since the start of the year.

As we signaled at our first quarter results, we’re now planning for full-year 2020 cost to be below 2019 run rate. As you do your model on our operating costs for the second half, please don’t use the first-half run rate as a guide. Second quarter costs were low due to COVID-19 and we expect both the step-up in investment and technology spending and the high UK bank levy due to strong growth in our deposit base.

On the next slide, we saw a further substantial ECL charge in the second quarter, some $3.8 billion or 148 basis points of gross loans. $3.3 billion of which were Stage 1 and Stage 2 charges. This reflected extra forward economic outlook charges across all global businesses and regions, particularly in respect of the UK and Commercial Banking. UK expected credit losses were $1.1 billion higher than in the first quarter, reflecting the worsening economic outlook, of which, $900 million of these related to our UK ring-fenced bank. Stage 3 ECL charges were broadly stable at around $1.5 billion in both the first and second quarters. Although the first quarter did include a significant charge on a single name corporate exposure in Singapore.

Recognizing the deterioration in the economic outlook in the second quarter, we’ve updated our range for full year group expected credit losses to $8 billion to $13 billion. Given the first half ECL charge of $6.9 billion adding the current run rate of Stage 3 losses for the second half gives the full year ECL charge of around $10 billion. The range either side of those broadly reflects our disclosed economic sensitivities. The lower end, reflects the part closer to our consensus central economic scenario, reflecting a strong economic rebound in 2021 with some unwinding of the economic adjustments taken to date. The higher end of the range reflects a part closer to our downside economic scenario, with a much more muted economic rebound in 2021 leading to further negative ECL adjustments for forward economic guidance in the second half.

I would caution that there is — remains a wide range of potential outcomes, including the risk that the upper end of the range might need to increase further. And in that respect, I would encourage you to read our expected credit loss sensitivities in the interim report.

On slide 13, our core Tier 1 ratio at the end of the second quarter was 15%, that’s up 40 basis points in the quarter. Core Tier 1 capital increased by $3.2 billion, this reflected lower regulatory deductions for expected losses, FX movements, fair value gains through other comprehensive income and a reduced prudent valuation adjustment.

On the next slide, risk-weighted assets rose by $11.2 billion in the first half or $33.2 billion excluding FX movements. This was mainly due to $23.3 billion asset side movement, mostly relating to first quarter lending growth and also a $16.8 billion increase from changes in asset quality due to credit rating migration. $100 billion gross risk weighted asset reduction program is underway, with $12 billion of additional savings from Global Banking and Markets in the second quarter. We continue to expect credit migration to cause RWA inflation in the second half, partially offset by progress against our gross RWA reduction program.

So in summary, a difficult quarter overall. I see bright spots, Asia resilience and a strong quarter for fixed income. But overall, many parts of the business were hit by very high ECLs and significant revenue pressures. As we look out to the second half, there remains considerable uncertainty, the continuing impact of COVID-19, the ongoing Brexit negotiations and US-China tensions and any impact this has on our Hong Kong franchise.

As such, it’s too early to discuss distribution policy or medium-term return targets and we don’t expect to do so until our full-year 2020 results in February. However, we are pleased that we faced into this uncertainty with the strength in core Tier 1 ratio of 15%, an extra $85 billion in customer deposits, continued vigor in managing our cost base, and the benefit of a diversified portfolio of franchises globally.

Noel and I remain very committed to the plan we announced in February, namely: a material reduction in RWAs, particularly focused on the US, the non-ring-fenced bank and Global Banking and Markets, with a reallocation of capital towards our strongly performing Asian franchise, a significant reduction in the operating cost base of the bank and a material reduction in the operating complexity of the bank.

With that, Sharon, if we could please open up for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you, Mr. Stevenson. [Operator Instructions] Your first question this morning comes from the line of Martin Leitgeb, Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead, your line is open.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Hi, Martin.

Martin Leitgeb — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Good morning, and thank you very much for the presentation and the remarks. And my first question, I was just wondering in terms of the tougher revenue outlook you’re pointing out. I was just wondering, what could potentially offset to this be? Is there a difference now? How you think about the prospects of some of the smaller retail franchise that you have? And I think you mentioned, obviously, the revisiting of the US strategy there? Or could there be other offsets in terms of volume growth for — even more pronounced volume growth like in UK mortgages or maybe changes in the way you charge for our accounts, so that the current accounts or corporate deposits in order to try to mitigate some of those revenue headwinds?

And the second question, just on capital. In terms of core Tier 1 trajectory from the overseas [Phonetic]. I was just wondering should most of the credit migration you’re guiding for, sort of mid to high single-digit RWA inflation this year, so most of the credit migration occurred this year or could this also go well into 2021? And I’m just trying to look at the numbers here in the guidance here, because it would appear like given your impairment guidance that you’re are likely to remain well within the mid to upper range of your core Tier 1 target range? Thank you.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Okay. Martin. Thank you. Let me deal with some of the revenue offsets first. And then ask Ewen to comment on that and the capital position. With respect to our US business, they actually had a very strong Q2 in the US business. Their revenue in Q2 of this year was the highest quarterly revenue since Q4 of 2017.

I’m also pleased with the way that Michael and the team have started to execute on the transformation plan. They’ve already closed around 80 branches — retail branches on the East Coast of America, which is around about 50% reduction and they’ve been successful in retaining around about 85% for the deposit base, even though they’ve gone through that reduction program. And they are also well on track on the cost reduction plans as well, where they’ve already completed 50% of the planned 2020 staff exits and are on track to meet or exceed the goal we set them back in February of this year.

So, progress on the transformation. We clearly need to understand the full economic impact of the lower interest rate environment, but we are committed to transforming that business and improving the returns. On a broader basis on revenue, we’re clearly looking at what other options we have to mitigate some of the revenue shortfall from lower interest rates. And we see wealth and growth in our Wealth business as an opportunity for that. And I’ll ask Ewen to comment more on that in detail, but we are exploring all options to look at revenue mitigation.

Ewen, do you want to pick up on that and the capital comment?

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Martin, so on net interest income, I think, we are beginning to see some asset side re-pricing, particularly in Asia. It’s relatively modest at this point, but we do think there is an opportunity. Secondly, we are seeing, particularly in Hong Kong, a changing mix back towards current accounts and away from term deposits, which again, I think, it’s not unexpected given the rate environment, but will help alleviate some of the pressure on liability margins.

On non-interest income, what we’re seeing at the moment is a very subdued customer activity, which we attribute predominantly to the impacts of COVID. So I would think coming into ’21, you will and should expect to see some recovery in that customer activity. We are in some of the government-related lending activity, for example, in the UK, we’ve been taking more than natural market share. We’ve taken of that 15% share in the bounce back loans, a 20% share in some of the other lending schemes, which is well above our natural market share in commercial. I do think in terms of the UK mortgage opportunity, potentially we will be relatively cautious there, given the outlook for the UK economy, I think and until we get a better sense of direction of travel on Brexit.

And the other area where, obviously, we can help offset revenue losses by doing a better job at costs. And I think you saw this quarter some progress on that. It was an unusual quarter because of COVID and the fact that no one was flying, a lot of our head offices were largely shutdown. But we do think coming out of COVID, there will be an opportunity to make permanent some of those shifts in business operations that we’re beginning to see.

On RWAs, yeah, similar to ECLs, they should peak this year. And therefore, you should begin to get a reversal in ratings migration into ’21 and into ’22, I would think. Although it will lag, I think, the trends on ECLs, but we definitely see a predominant theme in the second half of this year, as being additional ratings migration pressure, which is why we’re still sticking with a RWA guidance of mid to high single-digit growth in RWAs this year.

In terms of what that means for capital. I think, second half of this year, obviously, we don’t expect on the profitability side, we don’t expect Global Markets to repeat their first half performance of just over $4 billion, they made $2.6 billion in the second half of last year. The — and also, we’ve got the UK bank levy, and we do think given the strength of deposit growth that we’ve seen, that bank levy may trend up rather than down for us this year. So we do think that the balance of that and some additional RWA inflation will mean that core Tier 1 should come down between here and the end of the year. Yeah, previously, we’ve guided pre-COVID at the full year results, we’ve guided to 14% to 15% — a range of 14% to 15% for our capital and wanting to be at the higher end of that range during 2021. I think today, if we were to sort of repeat that we would be comfortable, I think, in a sort of 14% to 14.5% range, rather than up towards 15%.

Martin Leitgeb — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Perfect. Very, clear. Thank you. Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Tom Rayner, Numis. Please go ahead.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Hi, Tom.

Tom Rayner — Numis — Analyst

Yes. Good morning, everyone. Good morning. Can I just ask you, please a bit more color on the net interest income guidance. It’s sort of greater than $3 billion. Looking at the disclosure on page 87, the sensitivity analysis, there’s been quite a big increase in rate sensitivity both in sort of year one and year two impact and, obviously, rates have sort of moved down pretty much across the board. So, has there been any change within that greater than $3 billion? I mean, from so many — just a bit greater to significantly greater? And just looking into sort of 2021, how confident can you be now that, that will be the trough year for net interest income? I mean, are we — it’s a little bit hard. I know as you look out to 2022, but would you be confident that some recovery in volume and asset repricing should start to offset the other negative impacts from rates? Thanks.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Yeah. So there is no — there is no change, I think in terms of net interest income guidance for this year. You do have to adjust for the shift in dollars, FX movements. But I mean, mainly cautious — caution around that is obviously HIBOR has come down a bit further in July relative to the end of Q2. That interest rate sensitivity is the interest rate sensitivity from here with lower interest rates, so it has gone up because of the flooring effect on some of the liability product. But that’s a interest rate shift down from here. I think — you will in some books, obviously, see accumulating effect as you can see in those interest rate sensitivity table. So we do think there’ll be another meaningful net interest income hit in 2021, as we currently saw.

Yeah, as you look out to ’22, when I checked a few days ago, consensus views on policy rates where they were broadly going to stay at current levels, ’20, ’21 and ’22 and begin to rise in ’23. I would hope by the time we got into ’22, unless you are complete there, that you would be seeing sustained economic recovery, which means back to grow in loan books, again asset side repricing coming through more powerfully. And therefore, the start of a recovery in net interest income.

Tom Rayner — Numis — Analyst

Yeah. Okay. Thank you. And just a quick second question. So just, could you give us any size of the scale of the capital benefits that you flagged coming through in the second half. I think from the software and SME changes? Material, they may or may not be.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Yeah. I mean that was the — I mean, there’s a whole bunch of things going on in the second half. We’re expecting sort of core asset growth to be relatively muted. You’ve got some benefit from the RWA rundown program, which is continuing, probably some modest benefit from — net benefit from regulatory changes, although we have got some offset going in the other way like TRIM in Europe. And the dominant theme, I think will be ratings migration, but all of that is captured into the guidance of sort of mid to high single digit RWA growth. Yeah, software is — the software intangible is probably no more than 20 basis points benefit to core Tier 1.

Tom Rayner — Numis — Analyst

Okay. Lovely. Thanks a lot.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Ed Firth, KBW. Please go ahead.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Good morning.

Ed Firth — KBW — Analyst

Yeah. Good morning, everybody. I just have two quick questions actually. One was just on this NII thing, just to get absolutely clear what you’re saying. If I look at the implied second half from your — from the current run rate, it looks like your second half is annualizing at around $25 billion. So when you say further pressure into 2021, is that further pressure from the second-half run rate? Or is that effect to be factoring in that pressure you’re seeing? So, I mean are we expecting to see further pressure from here? Or are we at that right now and it’s just the sort of annualizing effect as we go into next year that you’re looking to highlight? I guess that was question number one.

And then the second question, did you — could you just talk a little bit more about all the sort of US-China pressures at the moment. And in particular, how you expect that to be able to implement the sanctions, have you had some chats about. Have you had — what the sort of feedback you’re getting from Chinese authorities etc. You seem to be in a very invidious position through no fault of your own or might had. But I just — it would be very helpful, just to get some sense of how you’re thinking about that and how that might sort of play out over the rest of the year? Thanks so much.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Ewen, do you want to take the first one and then I’ll take the second one?

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. You can get there various ways, but if you annualize the second half as you set out, I think you’re sort of broadly in the ballpark of where you need to be.

Ed Firth — KBW — Analyst

Okay. That’s great, thanks.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

On the US-China pressures. I mean, as you see from the first half results, we’ve had a very strong performance in our Asia business. So we — and we’ve had a particularly strong performance in China in the second quarter. I think our profit in China in the second quarter was up around about 29%, we’ve seen strong deposit growth in our Asia business. Given the deposit growth in Asia in the second half of the year or in Q2…

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

$27 billion.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

$27 billion. So we’re not seeing any material impact of any sort on our business performance in the second quarter or the first half from the US-China pressures. And in respect to looking forward, we are still committed read principally to supporting our customers in all of the geographies that they operate in. We believe there is still a strong role for an international bank in meeting the needs of our clients as they want to trade internationally or expand internationally and we’re very focused on that. And it’s not right or proper for me to speculate on what might or might not happen with regard to sanctions. But I’ll come back to, we’ve seen a very, very strong performance in the first half of this year from our business in Asia.

Ed Firth — KBW — Analyst

Okay. Thanks so much.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Guy Stebbings, Exane. Please go ahead, your line is open.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Hi, Guy.

Ed Firth — KBW — Analyst

Hi there, thanks for taking the question. Firstly, can I just ask on Wealth. It was quite a good quarter if we included the insurance manufacturing that we — if we adjust for that, I think, it was down around about some 10% in the second quarter. Just trying to think how should we be thinking about that line going forward, because we’ve seen quite a lot of disruption in that business, but I was hoping that maybe it was improving versus the first quarter.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Yeah, I’ll give you — I mean, first response on that is, clearly, new business activity will be down from normal levels of new business activity. So you would have seen a rebound in the financial performance because of the manufacturing part of the business, had a call back on some of the mark-to-market adjustments that were experienced in Q1, but new business activity of selling Wealth products would have been impacted in April and May. But we saw — started to see a pickup in that activity in June. So I think that — that’s what you would have expected to have seen, given the impact of COVID.

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. We’ve seen some shifts supported by the regulators to be able to shift some of that face-to-face business to be able to sell wealth product by — through digital channels, but 2020 should be a trough year for Wealth if you believe in an economic recovery into ’21. So — and then other things to watch for are things like the reopening of the Mainland China border with Hong Kong, which will, obviously, help as well.

Guy Stebbings — Exane — Analyst

Okay. Pretty good. Thank you. And then the second question is just on your costs in the context of the NII headwinds which we’ve already talked through. And obviously, a very good quarter, down 7%, so just the run rate could be quite a lot more than the targeted 3% plus, but you’ve called out that investments were a bit low in Q2, I think Q2 ’19 was particularly elevated. So, just trying to gauge how much should we be tempering our enthusiasm relative to the 7% we saw in the second quarter? Thank you.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Yeah. This is [Indecipherable]. In second quarter, effectively, most of our workforce, roughly 200,000 out of the 235,000 employees who are working from home. No one was traveling, office costs — central office costs were very low. So I would just be cautious at using that as a guidance. In addition, marketing spend was materially down too, because we took a very conscious decision to market less in the second quarter. I would think, if you — and then offsetting that, I said we’re planning to step up investment spend a bit in the second half. We think bank levy is probably going to go up rather than down this year. So, probably 3% to 4% down for the full year feels better than what you saw in the second quarter.

Guy Stebbings — Exane — Analyst

Okay. Very helpful. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Manus Costello, Autonomous. Please go ahead.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Hi, Manus.

Manus Costello — Autonomous — Analyst

Hi. I just had a question about the retail business. Your big improvement in NPS is very impressive. I wondered, to what extent is the flip side of weaker returns for shareholders, customers, obviously, feel like they’re getting a good deal. And you mentioned this, I know. But I wonder, if you could give a bit more detail, how might you think about addressing that balance between customers and shareholders in the retail business going forward, such that you can release shareholder returns and maybe spend some of that NPS improvement?

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Manus, thank you. I’m really pleased with the NPS performance in both retail and the bank as a whole. And I think, we look at that very much as a positive. I attributed to two things, and that is, the quality of the support our colleagues provided to customers in the first and the second quarter of this year. They really responded amazingly well with lots of outreach to our clients to make sure they understood where they stood and responded to their concerns.

Plus, we put in place some new digital support programs to make sure that we had regular dialog with them. And they were able to transact despite the fact that we couldn’t serve them face-to-face. And I would also point to the fact that we provided our customers, particularly in retail with circa $30 billion of payment holidays support and our commercial or wholesale customers with around about $52 billion of credit support in response to COVID. So I think those were the right things to do. And I believe supporting clients at the time of stress is a good thing for any bank to do.

In terms of translating that into higher returns for the future, we’re clearly looking to extend the use of digital and lower the cost to serve. We’re looking to increase further our penetration of the Wealth market, particularly in Asia, and to diversify our revenue stream away from pure NIM or NIM and into NFI sources of revenue. And we believe there are opportunities to grow Wealth in China strong and our wealth in the Rest of Asia is strong. And that can lead to higher returns. We’re also looking to improve the returns in our retail business by taking down our cost base.

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Manus. I wouldn’t think the two are inconsistent in the slightest improved NPS where we have the highest NPS scores, they typically correlate with digital distribution. And digital distribution, as you know is lower cost to serve than physical distribution. So actually, I view that improvement in NPS as excellent and reflects a lot of work that Charlie Nunn and his team have been putting in to improving the quality of the digital offering we’ve got. And you saw in the slide that Noel put up earlier, one of the outcomes of COVID has been a very rapid acceleration in some cases by several years in terms of digital engagement from our customer base. Yeah, that’s both good for NPS, but it also should be good over the medium term for how we can adjust and accelerate our cost structure.

Manus Costello — Autonomous — Analyst

So it will be more a question of, as you say, the cost structure rather than thinking about changing fee structures or anything to help improve the top line, it will be about…

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

I think, it’s a combination. I think it’s adjusting to the new revenue realities of today’s world, plus continued focus on cost and continued focus on providing good quality service. It’s a combination of those three things together.

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

I mean, the thing that we are going to have to think about on revenue, Manus, is just in an environment of ultra-low interest rates where you’re not earning a return on your liability product, do we need to think about adjusting some of the cost structure to a more fee-based cost structure, but we’re sort of early into that thinking.

Manus Costello — Autonomous — Analyst

That’s what I was driving at. Okay. I look forward to hearing more. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from Fahed Kunwar, Redburn. Please go ahead.

Fahed Kunwar — Redburn — Analyst

Hi. Good morning, thanks for taking my questions. Just a couple of questions. The first one, just back I think I heard you say the first half ’21 run rate, if you annualize that, that was broadly correct. So I just want to understand why that’s the case, because the HIBOR looks like it’s down probably about 100 basis points, kind of first half versus where it is right now. So how has — how does 2H ’20 NII hold up so well in the face of HIBOR coming down to that extent?

And the second question I had was just on the US-China situation, which is quite a difficult question to answer, but could you give us a sense of how you think profitability might be impacted and where your biggest concerns are when you think about the kind of political noise coming up between China and the US? Now, what — looking at your numbers, I appreciate you said deposit growth has been strong, but looking forward, where do you see the potential risk to your profitability from that kind of unstopped in two countries? Thanks.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Ewen enjoy doing…

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. On NII, we had always assumed that HIBOR was going to normalize towards dollar interest rates in the second half, so that might be the disconnect in your modeling. But, I don’t have the benefit of your model, but I think what we said is broadly true that in terms of the previous answer to the other question.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

In think on your second point [Multiple Speech]

Fahed Kunwar — Redburn — Analyst

[Multiple Speech] Sorry, as follow-up, I think your sensitivity saw about a 30% increase in terms of the year two impact on NII versus the year one impact. Is that a decent kind of way to think about the cumulative hit to year two NII? Or is there anything to mitigate that size of increase?

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. But I think, as you think about that interest rate sensitivity, its interest rate sensitivity from here, i.e. that we’ve already had the first-half impact on rates. So it’s not a clean read across I think. So, be careful about how you interpret that interest rate sensitivity, because it’s from here or rather than where it was at the start of the year.

Fahed Kunwar — Redburn — Analyst

Okay. Thank you.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

On your second point, I think there are — I’m not going to get into speculating on what actions may or may not be taken between respective governments, it’s not my role to do that. At the end of the day, I’m a banker, I’m not an economist or a politician. But clearly, there are potential impacts on general economic confidence from any form of trade tensions. And that will have an impact on all financial institutions.

Clearly there is the potential for change in supply chains and over 155 years, we’ve seen many changes to supply chain activity over that time and we’ll continue to respond to anything that comes our way going forward. We absolutely believe strongly in the strength of the PEGs. So we do not see that as a viable risk. We believe the PEG is strong and is well supported and see no risk to that. And clearly, there are the potential for sanctions against individuals or entities. But again, I’m not going to speculate whether they will or won’t happen or if they do, what impact it may have, that’s not my place to do so.

I think to be honest, I’ll return back to — if you look at the first six months’ performance, it’s been mainly impacted by COVID, it has not been significantly or materially impacted by political tensions or geopolitics, most of the impacts in the first six months is COVID-related.

Fahed Kunwar — Redburn — Analyst

Perfect. Thank you, guys. Cheers.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Rob Noble, Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Rob Noble — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Good morning.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Good morning.

Rob Noble — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Just a clarification, do you have any more excess expected loss within — as it was — any excess expected loss deduction in capital anymore, is that all gone. And just to rebuild that, as we go forward into 2022, ’23 whenever it is. Thanks?

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. We’ve got some disclosure, I think at the back of the slide pack on that chart, just trying to find it, but it is our slide pack and if not, I can get, I ought to follow up with you.

Rob Noble — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

All right. Thank you.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Okay, next question.

Operator

Thank you. Our final question is from Joe Dickerson from Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Joe Dickerson — Jefferies — Analyst

Hi, just a quick one. So, you’re taking this extra charge, provision charge in the UK and noted the downside risks to the economy, and I think you’ve made some similar comments of Q1 about the relative weakness in the UK. Can you just help me square the circle. And if I look at your mortgage balances, they’re up 6% year-on-year in the ring-fenced-bank, which is like 2 times the industry growth. Can you just help me square the circle between the two views? And whether or not you feel like you’re being appropriately paid for this risk, the vendor caution around the UK? Thanks.

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

I mean, I think, we were concerned about credit in the UK, I think is more on the commercial side than the retail side. The mortgage book, if you look at the average LTV of new lending, you look at where their book is overall in terms of the average LTV, you look at the returns that we’re still generating out of that business, I think we’re getting adequately and more than adequately compensated for a downside risks in mortgages. Consumer debt, credit card spending has declined markedly over the last few months as a result of COVID. And I think folks have been using things like mortgage relief to pay down consumer debt. So consumer balances have fallen, as a result of that and therefore less for us the ECLs. It’s really on the commercial side, that I think we’ve got more sensitivity and you can see that. And the overall level of commercial provisions, commercial ECLs which are over $2 billion in the quarter relative to retail.

But I don’t think the two view are inconsistent at all, our sweet spot on mortgage lending is typically prime mortgage lending where we think we are running relatively low risk and getting adequately compensated. The other thing I would say, as you can look at the stress characteristics of our portfolios in the Bank of England’s ACS results, what you see there is a relatively strong outperformance in retail and still outperforming in wholesale versus UK peers.

Joe Dickerson — Jefferies — Analyst

That’s very helpful. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our final question comes from the line of Aman Rakkar, Barclays. Please go ahead.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Hi, Aman.

Aman Rakkar — Barclays — Analyst

Good morning, gentlemen. Good morning, good morning. Just actually, there was a couple of them benn addressed. Two follow-up questions. So as you know, the comment on the dividend, could I ask — if you came in at the top end of your ECL guidance? I mean there is a chance that you make very, very little profits this year. I mean, you could potentially even dip into being loss making. Interested if your best guess at the moment was as to whether that may preclude you from resuming a dividend in February, if you were indeed loss-making or do you think there is strong capital wins out?

And then secondly just on restructuring. I mean, is it the right read from the tone of everything today is, you clearly faced much weaker revenue environment than you thought in February, and it sounds like you are doing the work on some additional restructuring. You’ve obviously not provided a new target in terms of saves — cost saves or RWAs. But is it right to assume that the work is happening in the background, we’re perhaps just not ready to announce something? Or do you think I’m just getting a little bit ahead of myself? Thank you.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Let me deal with the second one first. I mean, we are clearly committed to delivering on the cost reduction program that we identified in February. We also need to reflect the fact or respond to the fact that the revenue is softer now than it was in February. I mean, looking at what additional measures we need to take. So you’re right to say that we are looking at what other additional actions we can take on revenue or costs or capital to improve the returns.

But we’ve got no detailed talk through on that at this point in time. And we have to see how COVID develops over the next quarter or two quarters to determine how enduring this revenue position and cost position is going to be. But we’re committed to delivering that which we said in February, and looking at additional actions as required. Ewen, on the first point?

Ewen Stevenson — Group Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So maybe just a couple of other things on, I mean COVID clearly does open up, I think some opportunity and time will tell how permanent some of this is, but we talked earlier about the fact that we’ve seen a substantial acceleration in digital engagement from our customers. I think that will allow us to think more carefully over the medium term about some of our assumptions around the mix between physical and digital distribution.

And also how we work and seek to go back to work as a workforce, what that means for our commercial real estate portfolio, what that means for previous assumptions on traveling, etc. Again, I think over the medium term, COVID has opened up a unique opportunity for us to rethink how we engage and work as a workforce. But as Noel said, it’s too early to sort of model that out for you at the moment and I suspect by the time we get to full year results, we’ll be able to be more focused on then what we can say around that.

On dividend, I think it’s also — yeah, those two ends of the ECL range I think signal different things. The high end of the range means that you’re facing into probably other line items being severely impacted, because you’ve got a more meaningful economic recession going on and a much more muted recovery into 2021. You’re also going to see much greater levels of RWA inflation. So it’s not just the impact on profitabilitym, it’s also the impact on RWA, which means your core Tier 1 is going to be under a lot more pressure at — and at the other end of the range, yeah, you’re facing a much more benign stronger recovery into ’21. RWA migration will be a lot less and you’ve got a lot more confidence thinking about the outlook for ’21 and ’22 at that point.

So it’s sort of spec out of moment, we don’t know, we think we’re going to learn a lot in the next six months on COVID, both in terms of the impact of second and third waves on various economies around the world and the likelihood of an effective vaccine in ’21. We know where we are in relation to Brexit, we’ll have had another six months on geopolitics and I think and have a much better grounded view on what, if any impact that’s having on our business, particularly Hong Kong. And that’s why we sort of pushed the discussion on dividends to full year results. But, we clearly understand the importants of it to the equity story, we clearly want to return to — making distributions again as soon as we can. But we don’t want to come out with definitive statements until we’ve got more clarity on the economic outlook [Indecipherable].

Aman Rakkar — Barclays — Analyst

That’s fair. All right, thank you very much both.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. I will now hand back for closing remarks.

Noel Quin — Group Chief Executive

So, thank you so much for joining us today. And it was good talking to you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

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