MSCI brush-off for China
shares spells more pain for Hong Kong brokers
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[June 16, 2016]
By Denny Thomas, Saikat Chatterjee and Michelle Chen
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong stock
brokers' year has gone from bad to worse after index provider MSCI
decided not to add mainland Chinese shares to a benchmark indexed
tracked by $1.5 trillion in global assets, dashing the hopes of a
sector struggling with tumbling business.
Average trading volumes on the Kong Kong stock exchange in the first
five months of 2016 are down 43 percent on a year ago, and the stock
market is down 30 percent, its worst performance since the global
financial crisis.
Without any external shocks to account for the weakness, analysts
fear a longer-term structural decline for the city's finance sector,
which acts as a conduit for investment into the mainland, including
'A' shares listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen.
The hoped-for inclusion of those shares in MSCI's Emerging Markets
Index, which could draw up to $400 billion into Chinese markets, had
been a glimmer of light for brokers in Hong Kong.
Indeed nearly $8 billion had flown into various China access
products in recent weeks ahead of the decision, according to UBS
calculations, mostly through Hong Kong.
"The MSCI decision is yet another blow to what has been a very
challenging environment for banks and financial institutions in the
sales and trading business," said John Mullally, director of
financial services at Robert Walters in Hong Kong.
"Recruitment picks up when banks feel confident about their
operating environment, and current market conditions are the worst I
have seen in a while," he said.
On some days, trading across the entire Hong Kong stock market floor
is lower than trading volumes for Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba
Group on the New York Stock Exchange, Thomson Reuters data show.
Hong Kong's prosperity is intrinsically linked to the mainland, its
dominant trading partner, where growth has slowed to a 25-year low.
Its own GDP shrank for the first time in nearly two years in the
first quarter of 2016, as China's slowdown hit its neighbor's
property market and retail industry.
Weakness in the finance sector, which accounts for 17 percent of
GDP, claimed a first major victim earlier this month, when
family-run Hong Kong lender Bank of East Asia Ltd closed its entire
stock-broking unit, laying off 180 people.
Another local firm, AMTD, laid off almost 100 employees in their
wealth management division, according to local media reports.
IPO DROUGHT
In addition to falling volumes, brokers who have been slow to
embrace new technology are feeling the pressure of a shift towards
automated trading, which cuts into fees and bypasses traditional
trading staff.
About 44 percent of retail trading in Hong Kong is now online, up
from just 13 percent a decade ago, according to Greenwich
Associates.
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(L-R) The Hong Kong Exchanges flag, Chinese national flag and Hong
Kong flag are hoisted outside the Hong Kong Stocks Exchange in Hong
Kong June 7, 2016. REUTERS/Bobby Yip
There has also been a sharp fall in new listings on the local bourse. The city
has seen only $5.4 billion of initial public offerings (IPOs) this year,
compared with $13.3 billion at this time last year.
"People are going to revisit their whole cost base in the next six to nine
months because the revenues are settling at a much lower level, and there aren't
many IPOs either," said Rahul Chada, co-chief investment officer at Mirae Asset
Global Investments.
"Bank of East Asia is just one example. You will see others trying to reduce
structure, unless the volumes pick up."
Some foreign banks, including Barclays plc, BNP Paribas, Goldman Sachs, Morgan
Stanley, have cut a combined 100 or so research analysts and equity trading jobs
in recent weeks alone, according to four sources.
Others are looking beyond their home turf to keep their heads above water.
"I am trying to save my job by following different Asian markets than just
focusing on Hong Kong," said one head of institutional equities at a European
bank.
"While that means longer hours on the desk, it means I am slightly more
valuable."
As Wall Street banks and Hong Kong brokers struggle, however, mainland Chinese
brokers are grabbing market share, albeit from a low base.
State-backed firms such as CITIC Ltd and Haitong Securities have expanded into
Hong Kong and taken prime offices, betting they can ride out the downturn with
strong backing from their mainland parents.
A spokeswoman for CITIC Securities International said the company has no plans
to lay off staff. Quite the opposite - it said it was hiring in legal and
compliance and fixed-income sectors.
(This story has been refiled to give full name of CITIC unit in final paragraph)
(Additional reporting by Tris Pan; Editing by Will Waterman)
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