HSBC may move from London if the UK government decides to break up big banks, a senior executive has said.
Stuart Gulliver, head of the firm’s investment banking division, made the warning at a banking conference, according to newspaper reports.
He said he was “genuinely concerned” that the UK’s banking commission would recommend splitting up banks.
“[That] has significant implications clearly for where we may choose to headquarter our institution.”
“I want to be crystal clear. Our preference is to be headquartered in the UK,” added Mr Gulliver.
He also noted that no other country was looking at breaking up banks in response to the 2008 financial crisis.
Mr Gulliver made his comments in response to an audience question at the financial industry conference on Thursday in London.
The UK’s coalition government set up the independent banking commission in June with a broad remit to consider possible reforms of the banking system.
The Liberal Democrats campaigned during the election in favour of splitting up the banks, separating their traditional commercial banking activities from their riskier investment banking business.
The commission could also consider other structural reforms, such as breaking up High Street banks to increase competition, or forcing the banks to simplify their international structures to make any future bankruptcies easier.
The Liberal Democrat Business Secretary, Vince Cable, is the commission’s deputy chairman.
Many economists and policymakers concluded in the wake of the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers that the large international banks had become “too big to fail”.
If a bank is so big that its collapse would bring down the entire financial system, governments would always be forced to rescue them.
The concern is that if banks know that governments will always come to their rescue, they may be encouraged to take on too much risk.
HSBC moved its headquarters from Hong Kong to London in 1991 after its acquisition of Midland Bank.
It currently occupies one of the largest tower blocks in Canary Wharf.
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