The five biggest challenges facing new HSBC CEO Georges Elhedery

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By Lawrence White, Selena Li and Sinead Cruise

LONDON/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Delivering growth amid falling interest rates, navigating tensions between China and the West, and managing HSBC's exposure to China's lingering bad loans crisis will be among the top challenges facing the bank's new CEO Georges Elhedery.

Outgoing boss Noel Quinn addressed many long-standing problems at Europe's biggest bank, selling underperforming businesses in markets such as Canada and France, and slashing its retail banking business in markets where it lacked scale.

But his five-year tenure saw HSBC's share price gain just 4%, against a 53% surge in Europe's benchmark STOXX banking sector index, and a 15% increase in a UK sector index.

Here are Elhedery's five biggest challenges, according to analysts, investors and insiders.

FALLING INTEREST RATES

Two years of interest rate hikes as the world battled inflation helped to propel HSBC to record profit of $30 billion in 2023, as it makes more money when it can lend at higher rates than it pays on its $1.7 trillion deposit base.

HSBC's net interest income, which accounts for half its revenues, rose $5.4 billion in 2023 to nearly $36 billion. But it is expected to fall back to $33 billion this year and next, according analyst forecasts, as central banks cut rates.

"For HSBC, like many banks, a key reason for the sub-par valuation is an inherent scepticism around the sustainability of earnings as interest rates come off their peak," said Benjie Creelan Sandford, financial equity portfolio manager at Algebris Investments, which holds HSBC shares.

"Demonstrating the alternative growth levers that can be pulled will be key to support a re-rating going forward."

GROWTH PLANS UNPROVEN

A fall in interest-based income would raise the pressure on HSBC to deliver growth from fee-based products such as wealth management.

The bank's net new invested assets increased by 6% in 2023 to $84 billion, with a 7% gain in Asia wealth revenue, its wealth head Nuno Matos said in an investor presentation in June.

The bank has invested billions in raising stakes in insurance and securities joint ventures in China, as well as growing its private banking presence onshore.

It has hired around 1,700 wealth managers in China since 2021 and is on track to meet a target of 3,000 by 2025, executives told Reuters in April.

Despite this, HSBC's wealth and personal banking unit posted an operating loss of $90 million in China last year.

Even as Beijing pursues its "common prosperity" campaign to close the widening gap between the Chinese rich and poor, the wealth pool is expected to grow at a much slower pace.