HSBC,
JPMorgan may move parts of businesses to Luxembourg: The Times
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[June 16, 2015]
(Reuters) - HSBC Holdings Plc and
JPMorgan Chase & Co are in talks to relocate parts of their businesses
to Luxembourg from the UK as they weigh the possibility of a British
exit from the European Union, the Times reported.
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JPMorgan is close to setting up a bank based in Luxembourg to handle
the clearing of eurozone transactions, paving the way for the U.S.
bank to transfer more of its business out of the UK in the event of
a Brexit, the Times reported. (http://thetim.es/1GIE2d9)
The banks are also considering the tougher rules imposed by the
European Union for conducting business outside of the eurozone, the
Times said.
The changes are not likely to lead to a large number of jobs moving
to Luxembourg and London would remain the European headquarters of
JPMorgan for the present, the Times cited a source familiar with the
matter as saying.
Representatives at HSBC and JPMorgan were not available for comment
outside regular business hours.
A British exit, known as a Brexit, would take some time to implement
after a vote to leave, JPMorgan said in a research note last week,
adding that the uncertainty over an exit could hurt business
sentiment, investment decisions and headline growth.
"The transitional costs are likely to be substantial, as uncertainty
over future arrangements would likely cause investment to fall and
consumers to defer spending," said the bank, which has assets of
$2.6 trillion.
HSBC is understood to have told the UK Treasury that it was
considering moving its headquarters to Luxembourg from London, and
the discussions with officials are part of the its domicile review
announced in April, the Times reported.
Shareholders had in April urged HSBC, Europe's biggest bank, to
consider moving its headquarters to Asia due to a hefty UK bank tax
and other costs associated with being based in London.
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Reuters had reported in March that Asia-focused banks Standard
Chartered and HSBC could be tempted to abandon their London
headquarters to avoid a jump in the UK bank tax set to cost them a
combined $2 billion a year.
More than 300 companies, including PepsiCo Inc AIG Inc and
Deutsche Bank AG, secured secret deals from Luxembourg to
slash their tax bills, the International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists (ICIJ) reported last year, quoting leaked documents.
The leaked documents reviewed by ICIJ journalists included hundreds
of private tax rulings – known as comfort letters – that Luxembourg
provided to corporations seeking favorable tax treatment.
(Reporting by Shivam Srivastava in Bengaluru; Editing by Anupama
Dwivedi)
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