Mon May 12, 4:54 AM ET
HSBC said in a trading statement on Monday it was increasingly likely the United States economy will go into recession this year.
It said the bad debt charge related to its U.S. consumer finance business was $3.2 billion for the first quarter and it wrote down almost as much for a deterioration in the value of risky assets amid the credit crunch.
The latest U.S. home-loan impairment charge was in line with expectations and down from $4.6 billion in the previous quarter but double the level of the first quarter of 2007 as problems in the subprime housing market work through its loan book.
By 4:40 a.m. EDT (0840 GMT), HSBC shares were up 1.9 percent at 882 pence.
HSBC said its underlying revenue growth in the first quarter was comfortably ahead of a year earlier, even after absorbing a $2.6 billion writedown in its global banking and markets investment banking unit.
Group revenue growth remained positive after also excluding a $2.7 billion gain on the fair value of debt it carries on its own books.
Underlying cost growth during the quarter was modest, it said, and its capital ratios remained broadly in line with those at the end of 2007.
(Reporting by Steve Slater; Editing by Quentin Bryar)
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