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tv   Bloombergs Studio 1.0  Bloomberg  December 17, 2016 9:30am-10:01am EST

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♪ francine: hsbc is europe's largest bank with more than 235,000 employees across 71 countries. douglas flint is the bank chairman, a role he has held for six years. he's helped guide the bank during its economic realities and this year's wave of populism has brought a raft of new realities. i sat down with him and how he would rate -- asked how he would
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rate 2016. mr. flint very interesting year. so theturbulent market beginning of the year, things quiet down a bit, and we have these two unexpected political events, the brexit referendum in the presidential election in the united states, which produce results that were not expected. that led to some volatility and uncertainty in the thinking about what the implications would he, but we closed 2016 beingoth those events factored in better than expected. so it has been a very interesting year. lots of supplies is, but one of the great things was how well markets and institutions of the marketscope. was there a sense of not being able to trust the polls and not knowing what his next?
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mr. flint: we're sort of leaving the honeymoon period and you get to the hard realities and find out if the promises can be delivered. we have five or six really important elections in europe next year, which could add to clarity or add to elements of uncertainty, so i think it will be interesting. we have finalization of the , so a lot ofrk things have been bubbling for a year. francine: what can you tell me with certainty about the markets of 2017? more volatility? mr. flint: more volatility, which in many respects is good for the banking business in the sense that people think carefully about what they need to hedge and how they position themselves, but on the other hand, it's bad for economics to
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the extent it slows down people making investment decisions and sort of holding back on strategic options because they do not know what will happen next. francine: it's hard to argue it has not been difficult being a given that you have low rates, low growth around the world, regulation. what is the biggest risk in 2017? the biggest risk must be something you have not fully factored in. it has been a period of unusual uncertainty, but to an extent, you factor that in. something that would be completely unexpected would be something you fear more than anything else, and that's why i think banks are pretty cautious about their financial position, can be sure that event catered for. i think one of the great advances since the financial crisis has been the depth of the
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stress tests regulated by legislators around the world that have supplemented what we already. you have gone through many stressed defense in theory, but it gives you confidence that if it came to the real thing, even if it was not what you plan for, that you have a lot of levers you can pull and reserves you can draw on, so i think that is one of the positive things. in thesual uncertainty political sphere is very difficult to call. francine: does that impact banks, or are you thinking of something more systemic? another lehman brothers type of moment? flint: i think you saw the markets react very well to individual institutional ignorance in 2016. extraordinary parts of the referendum in june was people went to bed that night with markets, commentators, pundits, pollsters predicting
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one result and woke up in the morning with a different outcome. market volumes were six times normal, huge volatility. banking stocks predominantly based in europe with european customer bases suffered 20%, 30% declines, commodity prices were all over the place, and everything worked. everything settled. all the trades could be executed. there was liquidity to do everything. you stand back and say the system has been built that can thattand the system, so gives you confidence that the system in aggregate is a great deal more resilient than it was. francine: what worries you now about brexit? mr. flint: just the uncertainty. you could model almost every option that you think might happen. the sooner there is some clarity means you can
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discard some of the options and get on with prosecuting the others to make sure that for our clients and staff, that they are impacted. can begin to find their affairs and it can be business as usual. the sooner we get to some kind of element of clarity -- francine: what kind of clarity? for example a buffer or transitional agreement? would that be the most helpful thing for banks? mr. flint: when we think it needs to be. in the sense when you think of the regulatory reforms we have them through, implementation so people can collect the information they are presented with without being required. it's difficult to think about something as significant as changing the relationship with europe, you can hardly say day
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zero, we move from the system and day one, you can accommodate everything that has changed within your system, so i think there has to be some transition. again, in terms of the planning, if there's not a belief that there will be some sort of transition, you have to plan for the fact that there might be none, and that accelerates decisions. francine: and you have not got in expectation that they have a transition very days they are planning for? mr. flint: nobody has clarified that, but at the same time, everybody recognizes the importance of making sure the arrangements on both sides of the equation are as smooth or customers as possible. what is reflection of happening to our customers, so if our customers find rings awkward and ugly, that will affect economic activity, which is not good for the economy. so i think it is in everyone's interest to make it as smooth as possible, which, as i said, i
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think is necessary. francine: what does the government need to do today? do they need to give assurances to workers tackle would that be a first step? mr. flint: i think that would be a good step, but all the stings are known. at this point, it's a question finalizet point you your approach and negotiating position. to workthat you need out what your underlying framework is going to be and then you have something you can talk about. francine: next, hsbc chairman douglas flint weighs in on president-elect donald trump and his plans to deregulate wall street. ♪
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francine: welcome back. u.s. president-elect donald trump has made financial deregulation a priority, promising to roll back on dodd-frank.
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in my exclusive and rare conversation with hsbc chairman douglas flint, i asked the beltran plus plans for wall street and what that could mean for european banks. plusasked about trump plans for wall street. how much will donald trump deregulate wall street? mr. flynt: no one knows. i don't think there is a chance anywhere in the world of regulation going back to where it was. that was not a good time. our biggest risk is our industry. you do not want a will -- a world where people can do things with capital than is economically advisable. it's a really bad form of banking, and i don't think it would help. what we might see is some moderation of reporting rules, which are onerous in terms of capacity systems and so on, and
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there are multiple different ways of reporting around the world. we haven't got a harmonized set yet. we might see some relaxation. perhaps that's on his mind. i don't know. he's got a lot of things to think about. that would not necessarily be first. francine: if it in on his mind -- if it is on his mind, does it impact european banks and put you in a worse position? do you think regulators in europe would look at what is happening in the u.s. and respond? mr. flynt: i don't think so, and i don't think they should. i think you're a decision as to what kind of investment banking capability it wants or if it simply wants to import the skills that exist in wall street and say, "that's fine. we would rather not have the risk of the activity if that is the way it's judged." i think that would be a mistake. another thing that is
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interesting, particularly in the we are of exit, is inching a world where in wholesale activities, the u.s. and european union have agreed that they are equivalent, which is important in terms of doing business in each of those markets. the u.k., of course, is in europe at the moment, so it is important, but you can have a scenario where the u.k. has left awaye and over time moves from european regulation. i think unlikely but possible. the u.s. could change its regulation and therefore no equivalent. that would be a pity. the fragmentation of the global framework would be i think expensive for our customers and systemically riskier than bringing together in the way it has been done successfully since 2008. francine: do you think that increase inh will 2017?
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mr. flynt: yes. thinkk two things -- i the measures president-elect trump has talked about in -- capacity reflate in, building infrastructure, beginning to tighten the tax code to bring money that is sitting offshore back home -- are things he has talked about for some time and he is saying let's have a go at doing it. china is beginning to reflate again, and those are the two most important economies in the mostly ani think uptick in growth in 2017. the difficult one to predict is he europe because you have so many elections. there's all this discussion around brexit and if that encourages activity to take advantage of what exists today
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or if people react to what they see the landscape going forward. francine: are you concerned u.s. may stoke inflation worldwide? mr. flynt: there are those who would argue that is a good in, so theoretically, it should. actually, interest rates should begin to rise, and there are ways these kind of interest 0%es rose because zero or policy rates have no flexibility, and you begin to anda risk curve again people begin to see some reward for their savings. you can argue either side, and economists do. francine: you are of course a lot more concerned about the economies of europe. is there anything politicians can do to stave off -- i don't know if you want to call it a wave of populism or being more
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in touch with voter angst -- let's call it that. mr. flynt: i'm not a politician or social scientist, but it does seem that people react badly to uncertainty in their own position. they want to believe that the future will give them more opportunities to be able to do more for their families. their kids will have a better life than they have had and so on and so forth, and i think that means giving some confidence to populations about the kind of work that will be available in the future. we are entering a time of enormous technology change where technology will transform many of the industries that have been than manufacturing. that will have a big impact on the job market, so what will governments do to reassure people that they will invest in the retraining, the rehabilitation of people whose jobs are going to be affected by the digitalization and
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artificial intelligence and all ? ese things that are coming a road which will be very positive in many ways but also will impact some of the job sectors that exist today, so how do we retrain people and make sure the benefits of technology the globalell as industry and the value of the benefits to reach rein and create opportunities for those who have then affected. francine: is it is that what president trump is trying to do economy and bring america back to its manufacturing glory days? does this not almost go against what you said? an flynt: i think there is element. the rhetoric around bringing jobs back is a popular one, but the extent to which some industries can come back to hire
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which economies is doubtful. economiese specializing in certain industries and exporting that across the world. we are in a world where the way people consume is not based on states at all. it's based on the internet. they clicked on something, and it arrives the next day, and they have no idea where the order was fulfilled or manufactured. again, there is a bit of consumer preference to take into account as well. francine: next, in my conversation with douglas flint, will talk about the possibility of trade wars in 2017 and doing business in china. ♪
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francine: welcome back.
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it just bc plans on beefing up its presence in asia. president-elect donald trump already conspired with china, could be ofcies particular concern to hsbc. in my conversation with shared douglas flint, i asked him if he ceased trade wars and 2017. mr. flynt: i think we will see a lot of dialogue as to how the benefits of globalization should be shared, particularly around how intellectual property is manufactured. we're in a situation with three major trading zones in the world -- europe, the united states, -- wheresean countries it is so intertwined that it's
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difficult to see where you could have a trade war without massively impacting your own company and the investors and your friends able to get goods and services from the other part of the world that are extremely good value, so it is a double-sided coin. francine: you believe the u.s. and china are both only aware of that? mr. flynt: absolutely you wear. francine: there's not a risk in that something happens between donald trump and the president of china in 2017? both sides are fully aware of the implications, so i think that is unlikely. -- you believe the u.s. and china are both fully aware of that? mr. flynt: absolutely fully aware. the question is if you can make a change from a heavy
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infrastructure-led, export-led economy to a consumer driven technology-savvy, research and development economy smoothly. the transition is under way. big steps have been taken. heavy restructuring is under way. the population is supporting the transition. that is reflected in political support, but it is a massive thertaking, but you can see research side, the consumer side, the tech side is going very, very strongly. are beginning to invest in lower wage economies in the same way that other businesses used to invest in china, so they are going into , andam, myanmar, africa
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effectively replicating the stage of development that they went through in other countries and building infrastructure to create trade flows, trade s.rridor' as ever when you try to do something ambitious, you worry something interrupts it, but i think china has managed it successfully so far. francine: how many roads do you think chinese banks have? mr. flint: you can see what they report. i actually think it is less relevant than how they are managed. managing impairment is about managing in a smooth way without causing disruption. china has not borrowed heavily from the rest of the world so it is an internal issue.
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can you manage effectively without causing disruption and slump? nd an economic so far, they have done it. i'm relatively confident they will continue to do it. their model is different from ours, and it's difficult to say -- they will not do at the same way it has been done in the u.s. or europe, but they know exactly what they have to do to manage the recycling of capital efficiently, but they have the capacity to do it. francine: do you think investors are underestimating the perils of policies in china? flint: the volume of an asset safely put depends on the cash flow that asset can generate. depends on successful economic policy and no disruption to that. if you have an economic event like the explosion of shale gas
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in america that disrupts a market or the decision in germany to move away from nuclear power, you have a disruption to people's expectations in the future. disruptive events which are more around political events than economics that are unpredictable. francine: the chinese trinity of the reserves, currency, and outflow -- how should we determined that? a netint: china is exporter which is important for the rest of the world and the diversification of the chinese savings probe. they want to manage it in a way that they do not have severe volatility in the currency or reserved movements that make people nervous about their
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ability to control things. combination of market tools and regulatory tools and so on to do that. i think again from my side, we tend to extrapolate single month movements much more dramatically than they would internally, but you are absolutely right. it is a challenge to manage all isse things, but china becoming one of the major investors in the world, and i think that is a very positive for globalization it it's good form. francine: douglas, thank you so much. mr. flint: you are welcome. it's a pleasure. ♪
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>> "hello, world." it's time for a thought experiment. let's imagine the cold war went another way. , the the nazis surrendered soviet union flexed its muscles and asserted its imperial might from tokyo to tacoma. memorials to the fatherland popped up around the globe. this would

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