Page
|
App1
|
Tables
|
Page
|
|||
Market risk in 2013 ...................................
|
231
|
|||||
Overview of market risk in global businesses ..
|
281
|
|||||
Monitoring and limiting market risk exposures ...................................................................
|
281
|
|||||
Sensitivity analysis ....................................
|
282
|
|||||
Value at risk and stressed value at risk ............
|
282
|
|||||
Stress testing ..................................................
|
283
|
|||||
Trading and non-trading portfolios ..........
|
231
|
Types of risk by global business ....................................
|
231
|
|||
Market risk reporting measures ......................
|
232
|
Overview of risk reporting ............................................
|
232
|
|||
Trading portfolios .......................................
|
232
|
284
|
||||
Value at risk of the trading portfolios .............
|
232
|
Trading value at risk ....................................................
|
232
|
|||
Daily VaR (trading portfolios) ......................................
|
232
|
|||||
VaR by risk type for trading activities ...........................
|
233
|
|||||
Backtesting of trading intent VaR against hypothetical
profit and loss for the Group ....................................
|
234
|
|||||
Stressed value at risk of the trading portfolios
|
234
|
Stressed value at risk (one-day equivalent) ..................
|
234
|
|||
Gap risk .........................................................
|
284
|
|||||
ABS/MBS exposures .......................................
|
285
|
|||||
Non-trading portfolios ...............................
|
234
|
285
|
||||
Value at risk of the non-trading portfolios .....
|
234
|
Non-trading value at risk .............................................
|
234
|
|||
Daily VaR (non-trading portfolios) ..............................
|
234
|
|||||
VaR by risk type for non-trading activities ....................
|
235
|
|||||
Credit spread risk for available-for-sale debt securities ....................................................
|
235
|
|||||
Equity securities classified as available for sale ...................................................................
|
235
|
285
|
Fair value of equity securities ......................................
|
235
|
||
Market risk balance sheet linkages ........
|
236
|
Market risk linkages to the accounting balance sheet ...
|
236
|
|||
Balances included and not included in trading VaR .....
|
237
|
|||||
Structural foreign exchange exposures ...
|
237
|
285
|
||||
Non-trading interest rate risk ..................
|
237
|
|||||
Interest rate risk behaviouralisation ...............
|
238
|
|||||
Balance Sheet Management .....................
|
238
|
Analysis of third-party assets in Balance Sheet
Management ............................................................
|
239
|
|||
Sensitivity of net interest income ............
|
239
|
286
|
Sensitivity of projected net interest income ...................
|
240
|
||
Sensitivity of reported reserves to interest rate movements .................................................................................
|
240
|
|||||
Defined benefit pension schemes ............
|
241
|
286
|
HSBC's defined benefit pension schemes ......................
|
241
|
||
Additional market risk measures
applicable only to the parent company
|
241
|
286
|
||||
Foreign exchange risk ....................................
|
241
|
HSBC Holdings - foreign exchange VaR ......................
|
241
|
|||
Sensitivity of net interest income ..................
|
241
|
Sensitivity of HSBC Holdings net interest income to interest rate movements ............................................
|
242
|
|||
Interest rate repricing gap table .....................
|
242
|
Repricing gap analysis of HSBC Holdings ...................
|
243
|
|||
1. Appendix to Risk - risk policies and practices.
|
A summary of our current policies and practices regarding market risk is provided in the Appendix to Risk on page 281.
|
· Trading portfolios comprise positions arising from market-making and warehousing of customer-derived positions.
|
· Non-trading portfolioscomprise positions that primarily arise from the interest rate management of our retail and commercial banking assets and liabilities, financial investments designated as available for sale and held to maturity,
and exposures arising from our insurance operations (see page 234). |
· sensitivity analysis measures the impact of individual market factor movements on specific instruments or portfolios including interest rates, foreign exchange rates and equity prices for example the impact of a one basis point
change in yield; |
· value at risk ('VaR')is a technique that estimates the potential losses that could occur on risk positions as a result of movements in market rates and prices over a specified time horizon and to a given level of confidence; and
|
· in recognition of VaR's limitations we augment it with stress testing to evaluate the potential impact on portfolio values of more extreme, though plausible, events or movements in a set of financial variables. Examples of scenarios
reflecting current market concerns are the slowdown of mainland China and the potential effects of a sovereign debt default, including its wider contagion effects. |
Risk types
|
Global businesses
|
Trading risk
|
GB&M including Balance
|
- Foreign exchange
|
Sheet Management ('BSM')
|
and commodities
|
|
- Interest rate
|
|
- Equities
|
|
- Credit spread
|
|
Non-trading risk
|
GB&M including BSM,
|
- Foreign exchange (structural)
|
RBWM, CMB and GPB
|
- Interest rate
|
|
- Credit spread
|
Portfolio
|
|||
Trading
|
Non-trading
|
||
Risk type
|
|||
Foreign exchange and commodity .....................
|
VaR
|
VaR
|
|
Interest rate ........................
|
VaR
|
VaR/
Sensitivity
|
|
Equity .................................
|
VaR
|
Sensitivity
|
|
Credit spread .......................
|
VaR
|
VaR
|
|
Structural foreign exchange .
|
n/a
|
Sensitivity
|
For a description of the parameters used in calculating VaR, see the 'Appendix to Risk' on page 282.
|
2013
|
2012
|
||
US$m
|
US$m
|
||
At 31 December ..................
|
52.1
|
78.8
|
|
Average ...............................
|
49.9
|
74.2
|
|
Minimum ............................
|
38.6
|
47.3
|
|
Maximum ............................
|
81.3
|
130.9
|
Foreign exchange and
commodity
|
Interest
rate
|
Equity
|
Credit
spread
|
Portfolio
diversification49
|
Total50
|
||||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
||||||
At 31 December 2013 .
|
16.0
|
33.4
|
9.2
|
14.2
|
(20.7)
|
52.1
|
|||||
Average ........................
|
15.2
|
33.4
|
5.1
|
16.5
|
(20.3)
|
49.9
|
|||||
Minimum ......................
|
6.5
|
22.8
|
2.2
|
11.2
|
-
|
38.6
|
|||||
Maximum .....................
|
26.4
|
71.9
|
14.1
|
25.5
|
-
|
81.3
|
|||||
At 31 December 2012 ...
|
20.5
|
37.5
|
17.7
|
16.1
|
(12.9)
|
78.8
|
|||||
Average ........................
|
23.5
|
42.7
|
9.3
|
26.8
|
(28.1)
|
74.2
|
|||||
Minimum ......................
|
6.9
|
29.5
|
2.7
|
12.2
|
-
|
47.3
|
|||||
Maximum .....................
|
46.0
|
60.0
|
24.9
|
77.9
|
-
|
130.9
|
For footnotes, see page 265.
|
2013
|
2012
|
||
US$m
|
US$m
|
||
At 31 December ..................
|
92.7
|
172.4
|
2013
|
2012
|
||
US$m
|
US$m
|
||
At 31 December ..................
|
154.6
|
119.2
|
|
Average ...............................
|
170.2
|
197.9
|
|
Minimum ............................
|
114.7
|
118.1
|
|
Maximum ............................
|
252.3
|
322.5
|
At 31 December
|
|||||||
Interest
rate
|
Credit
spread
|
Portfolio
divers-
ification
|
Total
|
||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
||||
2013 ..............
|
150.6
|
80.4
|
(76.4)
|
154.6
|
|||
Average .........
|
145.7
|
106.6
|
(82.1)
|
170.2
|
|||
Minimum .......
|
84.6
|
80.4
|
114.7
|
||||
Maximum ......
|
221.7
|
135.7
|
252.3
|
||||
2012 ..............
|
89.6
|
113.4
|
(83.7)
|
119.2
|
|||
Average .........
|
103.7
|
179.9
|
(85.7)
|
197.9
|
|||
Minimum .......
|
81.1
|
111.3
|
118.1
|
||||
Maximum ......
|
122.8
|
322.1
|
322.5
|
2013
|
2012
|
||
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
||
Private equity holdings51 ........
|
2.7
|
2.9
|
|
Funds invested for short-term
cash management ...............
|
-
|
0.2
|
|
Investment to facilitate
ongoing business52 ..............
|
1.2
|
1.1
|
|
Other strategic investments ...
|
5.2
|
1.6
|
|
9.1
|
5.8
|
Trading assets and liabilities
The Group's trading assets and liabilities are in substantially all cases originated by GB&M. The assets and liabilities are classified as held for trading if they have been acquired or incurred principally for the purpose of selling or repurchasing in the near term, or form part of a portfolio of identified financial instruments that are managed together and for which there is evidence of a recent pattern of short-term profit-taking. These assets and liabilities are treated as traded risk for the purposes of market risk management, other than a limited number of exceptions, primarily in Global Banking where the short-term acquisition and disposal of the assets are linked to other non-trading related activities such as loan origination.
Financial assets designated at fair value
Financial assets designated at fair value within HSBC are predominantly held within the Insurance entities. The majority of these assets are linked to policyholder liabilities for either unit-linked or insurance and investment contracts with DPF. The risks of these assets largely offset the market risk on the liabilities under the policyholder contracts, and are risk managed on a non-trading basis.
Financial liabilities designated at fair value
Financial liabilities designated at fair value within HSBC are primarily fixed-rate securities issued by HSBC entities for funding purposes. An accounting mismatch would arise if the debt securities were accounted for at amortised cost because the derivatives which economically hedge market risks on the securities would be accounted for at fair value with changes recognised in the income statement. The market risks of these liabilities are treated as non-traded risk, the principal risks being interest rate and/or foreign exchange risks. We also incur liabilities to customers under investment contracts, where the liabilities on unit-linked contracts are based on the fair value of assets within the unit-linked funds. The exposures on these funds are treated as non-traded risk and the principal risks are those of the underlying assets in the funds.
Derivative assets and liabilities
We undertake derivative activity for three primary purposes; to create risk management solutions for clients, to manage the portfolio risks arising from client business and to manage and
|
hedge our own risks. Most of our derivative exposures arise from sales and trading activities within GB&M and are treated as traded risk for market risk management purposes.
Within derivative assets and liabilities there are portfolios of derivatives which are not risk managed on a trading intent basis and are treated as non-traded risk for VaR measurement purposes. These arise when the derivative was entered into in order to manage risk arising from non-traded exposures. They include non-qualifying hedging derivatives and derivatives qualifying for fair value and cash flow hedge accounting. The use of non-qualifying hedges whose primary risks relate to interest rate and foreign exchange exposure is described on page 285. Details of derivatives in fair value and cash flow hedge accounting relationships are given in Note 18 on the Financial Statements. Our primary risks in respect of these instruments relate to interest rate and foreign exchange risks.
Loans and advances to customers
The primary risk on assets within loans and advances to customers is the credit risk of the borrower. The risk of these assets is treated as non-trading risk for market risk management purposes.
Financial investments
Financial investments include assets held on an available-for-sale and held-to-maturity basis. An analysis of the Group's holdings of these securities by accounting classification and issuer type is provided in Note 19 on the Financial Statements and by business activity on page 69. The majority of these securities are mainly held within Balance Sheet Management in GB&M. The positions which are originated in order to manage structural interest rate and liquidity risk are treated as non-trading risk for the purposes of market risk management. Available-for-sale security holdings within insurance entities are treated as non-trading risk and are largely held to back non-linked insurance policyholder liabilities.
The other main holdings of available-for-sale assets are the ABSs within GB&M's legacy credit business, which are treated as non-trading risk for market risk management purposes, the principal risk being the credit risk of the obligor.
The Group's held-to-maturity securities are principally held within the Insurance business. Risks of held-to-maturity assets are treated as non-trading for risk management purposes.
|
At 31 December 2013
|
|||||||
Balance
sheet
|
Balances
included in
trading VaR
|
Balances not
included in
trading VaR
|
Primary
market risk
sensitivities
|
||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
|||||
Assets
|
|||||||
Cash and balances at central banks ....................................
|
166,599
|
166,599
|
B
|
||||
Trading assets ...................................................................
|
303,192
|
283,390
|
19,802
|
A
|
|||
Financial assets designated at fair value .............................
|
38,430
|
38,430
|
A
|
||||
Derivatives .......................................................................
|
282,265
|
274,881
|
7,384
|
A
|
|||
Loans and advances to banks ............................................
|
211,521
|
211,521
|
B
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers ......................................
|
1,080,304
|
1,080,304
|
B
|
||||
Financial investments .......................................................
|
425,925
|
425,925
|
A
|
||||
Assets held for sale ...........................................................
|
4,050
|
4,050
|
C
|
||||
Liabilities
|
|||||||
Deposits by banks .............................................................
|
129,212
|
129,212
|
B
|
||||
Customer accounts ............................................................
|
1,482,812
|
1,482,812
|
B
|
||||
Trading liabilities ..............................................................
|
207,025
|
189,929
|
17,096
|
A
|
|||
Financial liabilities designated at fair value ........................
|
89,084
|
89,084
|
A
|
||||
Derivatives .......................................................................
|
274,284
|
269,657
|
4,627
|
A
|
|||
Debt securities in issue ......................................................
|
104,080
|
104,080
|
C
|
||||
Liabilities of disposal groups held for sale ..........................
|
2,804
|
2,804
|
C
|
The table represents account lines where there is some exposure to market risk according to the following asset classes:
|
A Foreign exchange, interest rate, equity and credit spread.
|
B Foreign exchange and interest rate.
|
C Foreign exchange, interest rate and credit spread.
|
· those that are included in the trading book and measured by VaR; and
|
· those that are not in the trading book and/or measured by VaR.
|
For our policies and procedures for managing structural foreign exchange exposures, see page 285 of the Appendix to Risk.
|
For our policies regarding the funds transfer pricing process for non-traded interest rate risk and liquidity and funding risk, see page 280 and page 276, respectively, of the Appendix to Risk.
|
· to define the rules governing the transfer of non-traded interest rate risk from the global businesses to BSM;
|
· to define the rules governing the interest rate risk behaviouralisation applied to non-trading assets/liabilities (see below);
|
· to ensure that all market interest rate risk that can be neutralised is transferred from the global businesses to BSM; and
|
· to define the rules and metrics for monitoring the residual interest rate risk in the global businesses, including any market risk that can be neutralised.
|
· risk which is transferred to BSM and managed by BSM within a defined market risk mandate, predominantly through the use of fixed rate liquid assets (government bonds) held in available-for-sale portfolios and/or interest rate
derivatives which are part of fair value hedging or cash flow hedging relationships. This non- traded interest rate risk is reflected in non-traded VaR, as well as in our net interest income or economic value of equity ('EVE') sensitivity (see below); |
· risk which remains outside BSM because it cannot be hedged or which arises due to our behaviouralised transfer pricing assumptions. This risk is not reflected in non-traded VaR, but is captured by our net interest income or EVE
sensitivity and corresponding limits are part of our global and regional risk appetite statements for non-trading interest rate risk. A typical example would be margin compression created by unusually low rates in key currencies; |
· basis risk which is transferred to BSM when it can be hedged. Any residual basis risk remaining in the global businesses is reported to ALCO. This risk is not reflected in non-traded VaR, but is captured by our net interest income
or EVE sensitivity. A typical example would be a managed rate savings product transfer-priced using a Libor-based interest rate curve; and |
· model risks which cannot be captured by non-traded VaR, net interest income or EVE sensitivity, but are controlled by our stress testing framework. A typical example would be prepayment risk on residential mortgages or pipeline
risk. |
· the assessed re-pricing frequency of managed rate balances;
|
· the assessed duration of non-interest bearing balances, typically capital and current accounts; and
|
· the base case expected prepayment behaviour or pipeline take-up rate for fixed rate balances with embedded optionality.
|
· the amount of the current balance that can be assessed as 'stable' under business-as-usual conditions; and
|
· for managed rate balances the historic market interest rate re-pricing behaviour observed; or
|
· for non-interest bearing balances the duration for which the balance is expected to remain under business-as-usual conditions. This assessment is often driven by the re-investment tenors available to BSM to neutralise the risk
through the use of fixed rate government bonds or interest rate derivatives, and for derivatives the availability of cash flow hedging capacity. |
At 31 December
|
|||
2013
|
2012
|
||
US$m
|
US$m
|
||
Cash and balances at central banks ...............................
|
134,086
|
93,946
|
|
Trading assets ......................
|
5,547
|
8,724
|
|
Financial assets designated
at fair value .....................
|
72
|
74
|
|
Loans and advances:
|
|||
- to banks ..........................
|
86,406
|
72,771
|
|
- to customers ....................
|
34,063
|
22,052
|
|
Financial investments ..........
|
314,427
|
293,421
|
|
Other ..................................
|
3,700
|
2,948
|
|
578,301
|
493,936
|
US dollar
bloc
US$m
|
Rest of
Americas
bloc
US$m
|
Hong Kong
dollar
bloc
US$m
|
Rest of
Asia
bloc
US$m
|
Sterling
bloc
US$m
|
Euro
bloc
US$m
|
Total
US$m
|
|||||||
Change in 2014 projected net interest income arising from
a shift in yield curves of:
|
|||||||||||||
+25 basis points at the
beginning of each quarter ..
|
(107)
|
12
|
327
|
236
|
598
|
(128)
|
938
|
||||||
-25 basis points at the
beginning of each quarter ..
|
(291)
|
(23)
|
(412)
|
(233)
|
(761)
|
(14)
|
(1,734)
|
||||||
Change in 2013 projected net interest income arising from
a shift in yield curves of:
|
|||||||||||||
+25 basis points at the
beginning of each quarter ..
|
133
|
64
|
246
|
237
|
679
|
44
|
1,403
|
||||||
-25 basis points at the
beginning of each quarter ..
|
(366)
|
(52)
|
(305)
|
(168)
|
(602)
|
(57)
|
(1,550)
|
US$m
|
Maximum
impact
US$m
|
Minimum
impact
US$m
|
|||
At 31 December 2013
|
|||||
+ 100 basis point parallel move in all yield curves ........................................
|
(5,762)
|
(5,992)
|
(5,507)
|
||
As a percentage of total shareholders' equity ................................................
|
(3.2%)
|
(3.3%)
|
(3.0%)
|
||
- 100 basis point parallel move in all yield curves ........................................
|
5,634
|
5,786
|
4,910
|
||
As a percentage of total shareholders' equity ................................................
|
3.1%
|
3.2%
|
2.7%
|
||
At 31 December 2012
|
|||||
+ 100 basis point parallel move in all yield curves ........................................
|
(5,602)
|
(5,748)
|
(5,166)
|
||
As a percentage of total shareholders' equity ................................................
|
(3.2%)
|
(3.3%)
|
(2.9%)
|
||
- 100 basis point parallel move in all yield curves ........................................
|
4,996
|
5,418
|
4,734
|
||
As a percentage of total shareholders' equity ................................................
|
2.9%
|
3.1%
|
2.7%
|
2013
|
2012
|
||
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
||
Liabilities (present value) ....
|
40.5
|
38.1
|
|
%
|
%
|
||
Assets:
|
|||
Equities ...............................
|
18
|
18
|
|
Debt securities .....................
|
70
|
71
|
|
Other (including property) ..
|
12
|
11
|
|
100
|
100
|
2013
US$m
|
2012
US$m
|
||
At 31 December ........................
|
54.1
|
69.9
|
|
Average .....................................
|
51.1
|
51.4
|
|
Minimum ...................................
|
46.7
|
39.2
|
|
Maximum ..................................
|
64.1
|
69.9
|
US dollar bloc
|
Sterling bloc
|
Euro bloc
|
Total
|
||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
||||
Change in projected net interest income as at 31 December arising from a shift in yield curves
|
|||||||
2013
|
|||||||
of + 25 basis points at the beginning of each quarter
|
|||||||
0-1 year .....................................................................
|
104
|
(14)
|
2
|
92
|
|||
2-3 years ....................................................................
|
382
|
(93)
|
38
|
327
|
|||
4-5 years ....................................................................
|
245
|
(101)
|
38
|
182
|
|||
of - 25 basis points at the beginning of each quarter
|
|||||||
0-1 year .....................................................................
|
(53)
|
13
|
(2)
|
(42)
|
|||
2-3 years ....................................................................
|
(300)
|
91
|
(33)
|
(242)
|
|||
4-5 years ....................................................................
|
(243)
|
101
|
(38)
|
(180)
|
|||
2012
|
|||||||
of + 25 basis points at the beginning of each quarter
|
|||||||
0-1 year .....................................................................
|
83
|
(23)
|
4
|
64
|
|||
2-3 years ....................................................................
|
303
|
(108)
|
37
|
232
|
|||
4-5 years ....................................................................
|
319
|
(120)
|
37
|
236
|
|||
of - 25 basis points at the beginning of each quarter
|
|||||||
0-1 year .....................................................................
|
(34)
|
21
|
(2)
|
(15)
|
|||
2-3 years ....................................................................
|
(139)
|
65
|
(17)
|
(91)
|
|||
4-5 years ....................................................................
|
(306)
|
118
|
(35)
|
(223)
|
Total
|
Up to
1 year
|
From
over 1
to 5 years
|
From
over 5
to 10 years
|
More than
10 years
|
Non-interest
bearing
|
||||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
||||||
At 31 December 2013
|
|||||||||||
Cash at bank and in hand:
|
|||||||||||
- balances with HSBC undertakings ..........
|
407
|
357
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
50
|
|||||
Derivatives ..................................................
|
2,789
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,789
|
|||||
Loans and advances to HSBC undertakings ..
|
53,344
|
49,979
|
290
|
1,239
|
645
|
1,191
|
|||||
Financial investments ..................................
|
1,210
|
300
|
-
|
731
|
-
|
179
|
|||||
Investments in subsidiaries ...........................
|
92,695
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
92,695
|
|||||
Other assets .................................................
|
391
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
391
|
|||||
Total assets .................................................
|
150,836
|
50,636
|
290
|
1,970
|
645
|
97,295
|
|||||
Amounts owed to HSBC undertakings ..........
|
(11,685)
|
(10,865)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(820)
|
|||||
Financial liabilities designated at fair values .
|
(21,027)
|
(1,928)
|
(4,655)
|
(7,810)
|
(4,325)
|
(2,309)
|
|||||
Derivatives ..................................................
|
(704)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(704)
|
|||||
Debt securities in issue .................................
|
(2,791)
|
(1,722)
|
-
|
-
|
(1,069)
|
-
|
|||||
Other liabilities ............................................
|
(1,375)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,375)
|
|||||
Subordinated liabilities .................................
|
(14,167)
|
-
|
(3,030)
|
(2,066)
|
(8,912)
|
(159)
|
|||||
Total equity .................................................
|
(99,087)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(99,087)
|
|||||
Total liabilities and equity ............................
|
(150,836)
|
(14,515)
|
(7,685)
|
(9,876)
|
(14,306)
|
(104,454)
|
|||||
Off-balance sheet items attracting interest
rate sensitivity .........................................
|
-
|
(18,620)
|
4,382
|
9,876
|
4,421
|
(59)
|
|||||
Net interest rate risk gap .............................
|
-
|
17,501
|
(3,013)
|
1,970
|
(9,240)
|
(7,218)
|
|||||
Cumulative interest rate gap ........................
|
-
|
17,501
|
14,488
|
16,458
|
7,218
|
-
|
At 31 December 2012
|
|||||||||||
Cash at bank and in hand:
|
|||||||||||
- balances with HSBC undertakings ..........
|
353
|
312
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
41
|
|||||
Derivatives ..................................................
|
3,768
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,768
|
|||||
Loans and advances to HSBC undertakings ..
|
41,675
|
38,473
|
-
|
1,477
|
630
|
1,095
|
|||||
Financial investments ..................................
|
1,208
|
-
|
300
|
731
|
-
|
177
|
|||||
Investments in subsidiaries ...........................
|
92,234
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
92,234
|
|||||
Other assets .................................................
|
246
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
246
|
|||||
Total assets .................................................
|
139,484
|
38,785
|
300
|
2,208
|
630
|
97,561
|
|||||
Amounts owed to HSBC undertakings ..........
|
(12,856)
|
(12,259)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(597)
|
|||||
Financial liabilities designated at fair values .
|
(23,195)
|
(1,654)
|
(6,334)
|
(7,708)
|
(4,301)
|
(3,198)
|
|||||
Derivatives ..................................................
|
(760)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(760)
|
|||||
Debt securities in issue .................................
|
(2,691)
|
-
|
(1,648)
|
-
|
(1,051)
|
8
|
|||||
Other liabilities ............................................
|
(1,048)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,048)
|
|||||
Subordinated liabilities .................................
|
(11,907)
|
-
|
(808)
|
(2,110)
|
(8,828)
|
(161)
|
|||||
Total equity .................................................
|
(87,027)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(87,027)
|
|||||
Total liabilities and equity ............................
|
(139,484)
|
(13,913)
|
(8,790)
|
(9,818)
|
(14,180)
|
(92,783)
|
|||||
Off-balance sheet items attracting interest
rate sensitivity .........................................
|
-
|
(18,583)
|
6,348
|
7,341
|
4,325
|
569
|
|||||
Net interest rate risk gap .............................
|
-
|
6,289
|
(2,142)
|
(269)
|
(9,225)
|
5,347
|
|||||
Cumulative interest rate gap ........................
|
-
|
6,289
|
4,147
|
3,878
|
(5,347)
|
-
|
Page
|
App1
|
Tables
|
Page
|
|||
Operational risk ........................................
|
287
|
|||||
Operational risk management framework
|
244
|
Three lines of defence ..................................................
|
244
|
|||
Operational risk management framework ....................
|
245
|
|||||
Operational risk in 2013 ...........................
|
245
|
|||||
Frequency and amount of operational risk losses
|
246
|
Frequency of operational risk incidents by risk category .....................................................................................
|
247
|
|||
Distribution of operational risk losses in US dollars by
risk category ............................................................
|
247
|
|||||
Compliance risk .........................................
|
247
|
287
|
||||
Legal risk ....................................................
|
288
|
|||||
Global security and fraud risk .................
|
288
|
|||||
Systems risk ...............................................
|
289
|
|||||
Vendor risk management ..........................
|
289
|
|||||
Fiduciary risk .............................................
|
248
|
289
|
||||
1 Appendix to Risk - risk policies and practices.
|
A summary of our current policies and practices regarding operational risk is provided in the Appendix to Risk on page 287.
|
· RCAs are used to inform the evaluation of the effectiveness of controls over top risks.
|
· KIs are used to help monitor the risks and controls.
|
· TRAs (scenarios) provide management with a quantified view of our top and emerging operational risks.
|
· Internal incidents are used to forecast typical losses.
|
· External sources are used to inform the assessment of extreme TRAs.
|
· making specific changes to strengthen the internal control environment;
|
· investigating whether cost-effective insurance cover is available to mitigate the risk; and
|
· other means of protecting us from loss.
|
· fraud risks: the threat of fraud perpetrated by or against our customers, especially in retail and commercial banking, may grow during adverse economic conditions. We have increased monitoring, analysed root causes and
reviewed internal controls to enhance our defences against external attacks and reduce the level of loss in these areas. In addition, Group Security and Fraud Risk worked closely with the global businesses to continually assess these threats as they evolve and adapt our controls to mitigate these risks; |
· level of change creating operational complexity: management and the Risk function are engaged in business transformation initiatives to ensure robust internal controls are maintained. This includes Risk participating in all
relevant management committees. The Global Transactions team has developed a framework to be applied to the management of disposal risks; |
· information security: the security of our information and technology infrastructure is crucial for maintaining our banking applications and processes while protecting our customers and the HSBC brand. A failure of our defences
against such attacks could result in financial loss and the loss of customer data and other sensitive information which could undermine both our reputation and our ability to retain the trust of our customers. |
· vendor risk management: we remain focused on the management of vendor risks and a pilot has commenced with our most critical suppliers to introduce a global performance tracking process; and
|
· compliance with regulatory agreements and orders: in relation to the DPAs, the Group has committed to take or continue to adhere to a number of remedial measures. Breach of the DPAs at any time during its term may allow the
DoJ or the New York County District Attorney's Office to prosecute HSBC in relation to the matters which are the subject of the DPAs. For further details see Note 43 on the Financial Statements. |
· manage different types of regulatory and financial crime compliance risk more effectively;
|
· focus our efforts appropriately in addressing the issues highlighted by regulatory investigations and reviews, internal audits and risk assessments of our past business activities; and
|
· ensure we have in place clear, robust accountability and appropriate expertise and processes for all areas of compliance risk.
|
· anti-money laundering, counter terrorist financing and proliferation finance;
|
· sanctions; and
|
· anti-bribery and corruption.
|
· conduct of business;
|
· market conduct; and
|
· other applicable laws, rules and regulations.
|