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  28 July 2005

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Quote of the Week

“It was the devil’s work and commands what I can only call awe and horror for the total lack of morality or legality. It was wrongful, inequitable, against the conscience and not bona fide.”

Mr Justice William Waung Sik-ying, in a High Court judgment against HSBC for forcing troubled Esquire (Electronics) Limited to sell it flagship property and then liquidating it when it raised questions over the sale.

HSBC given second chance to show true colours
Loose Cannon, RICHARD LATKER, SCMP 23 July 2005

Poor HSBC. The world's local bank has had a rough time recently.

Earlier this month, Loose Cannon impugned the efficiency of the bank's remittance services to India, even if he had been enamoured by the diligence of one of its customer service officers.

Adding insult to injury, a High Court justice excoriated the lender a week later for its "total lack of morality or legality" after it was found to have bullied a struggling local firm into selling a flagship property, and forced the company into liquidation when it tried to defend itself.

What's a banking behemoth to do? It isn't its fault that in the course of day-to-day business its actions might occasionally result in ruin for the people and small businesses that interact with it.

Loose Cannon understands you, HSBC, and is offering you a chance to make amends. Deep down, all of us know that you are not the cruel, arrogant corporate thug that Justice William Waung Sik-ying believes you to be. Dealing with the following humble complaint quickly would show your true colours.

A local China researcher, consultant and loyal Loose Cannon reader submitted a letter this week that led with: "Herewith I present my own recent travails with Horror Story Banking Corp."

Uh oh.

It seems our correspondent has banked with HSBC as a business customer for five years. He set up a new HSBC account recently to handle income from the consulting side of his business.

Two months after the account opened, he received a US dollar cheque from a consulting client and posted it to the bank. He foresaw no problems, as he had been depositing such cheques into his old account for years.

A few days later, the cheque came back rejected, along with a note indicating - in tick box form - that it would not be honoured because the new account had been "opened less than one year". The note was signed illegibly, and included no telephone number, fax number or address.

Over the course of three conversations with an HSBC customer service representative named Sanna, the complainant was informed that acceptance of US dollar cheques drawn on overseas banks - in this case an obscure American lender called JPMorgan Chase - was a discretionary matter assessed on a case-by-case basis.

He was then given a number to which he was to fax a copy of the cheque, so that "relevant departments" could adjudicate whether it was worthy of deposit.

Loose Cannon combed HSBC's online information during the week looking for published material that might shed light on its foreign cheque-cashing policy.

A customer service officer informed him by telephone that "depositing foreign cheques was no problem, but the bank reserves the right not to credit the account holder until the cheque has [been] cleared".

Fair enough. Transparent, too, was the bank's policy of charging either a flat $200 cashing fee for foreign cheques or 0.375 per cent of their face value. But nothing explained why HSBC would spit a foreign cheque back at a small business client without explanation, or why it had arrogated to itself the discretion to deny such a basic service without publishing criteria that might warn clients in advance.

A second call to the business customer service line, this time asking directly whether Loose Cannon could please deposit a US dollar cheque from a foreign bank in his business account, was answered with an unambiguous "of course"!

Finally, Loose Cannon confronted Sanna about the issue. Understandably flustered, she referred his call to HSBC media relations.

While none too happy to learn of the complaint just hours before Loose Cannon intended to publicise it, HSBC spokesman Gareth Hewett said the matter would receive his full attention.

Bulletin Board Postings & Responses

1. VW Passat for sale
2. Volvo Coupé for Sale
3. Bob Lloyd's Dream Lions XV
4. Wanted!!! Porsche 968
5. China: An Environmental A disaster in the making

News Headlines

A floating heliport 'still reclamation'
WINNIE YEUNG, SCMP 26 July 2005
While still debating a plan to reclaim 25 hectares on the Wan Chai waterfront, the government said yesterday that a private-sector proposal for a heliport a hundredth that size looked like unjustified reclamation - even if it was floating.

$5b battle on to save Central Market
CHLOE LAI, SCMP 25 July 2005

A planning battle is brewing over the future of what could be the last example in Hong Kong of one of the 20th century's major architectural styles, with billions of dollars at stake for the government and developers.

The Winner Again
SCMP 24 July 2005

Frozen in time, 25 July 1999

A popular choice
SCMP 24 July 2005 Photo: Martin Chan

Kayee Wong Ka-yee, a Miss Hong Kong Contestant, presents Stephen Wong Cheung-Hing, 26, with a garland. Wong was elected by Miss Hong Kong contestants as their favorite Mr. Hong Kong. The final of the Mr Hong Kong contest will be held today.

China Star Guo weathers storm to secure gold
SCMP, 24 July 2005 Photo: AP

China’s Guo Jingjing performs in the final round of the three-metre event winning the gold medal.


Friendship Scarred
Kyodo, SCMP 24 July 2005 Photo: EPA

A Japanese engineer was killed and several workers remain missing after this crane on a bridge being built over the Mekong River collapsed on Friday

China International Automobiles Model Competition
SCMP, 24 July 2005 Photo: Xinhua

Models parade at the China International Automobiles Model Competition in Beijing. After the event, 30 girls were chosen to compete in a final round of judging.

Shooting for goal in the China Market
SCMP 23 July 2005

ATV starlets welcome the ManU team at the airport. Picture by David Wong

Toll take up $12m despite 22pc fewer vehicles
ELAINE WU, SCMP 23 July 2005

Owners of the Eastern Harbour Tunnel made more money in May after its toll increase came into effect, even though traffic fell by an average of 22 per cent a day.

Subsidised flats going for $99,000
CHLOE LAI, SCMP 23 July 2005
The Housing Authority will begin selling its last batch of public rental units to tenants next month, ending one of former chief executive Tung Chee-hwa's legacies.

Eternal Light
SCMP, 23 July 2005 Photo: AP.

Buddhists walk with candles and lotus buds at a temple in Bangkok on Thursday during a ceremony to mark Asarnha Bucha Day, which commemorates the first occasion when the Buddha, his teachings and his five disciples were gathered after his enlightenment. It was a public holiday in Thailand with banks and government offices closed for the day.

Heliport noise will be as loud as jackhammer: study
WINNIE YEUNG, SCMP 23 July 2005

A commercial heliport near Golden Bauhinia Square would create noise levels equivalent to a jackhammer 10 metres away, according to a working group report.

Study finds DDT in new mothers' breast milk
REUTERS and MARY ANN BENITEZ, SCMP 23 July 2005
High levels of the long-banned pesticide DDT have been found in the breast milk of new mothers in Hong Kong, probably because the pesticide is being used illegally on the mainland, scientists said.

Two-time British Open Champion.
USA Today, Friday 22 July 2005

Accenture congratulates Tiger Woods on his second British Open victory and tenth major championship. It’s high performance taken to an even higher level.

Unstoppable
USA Today, 22 July 2005


Unstoppable: Lance Armstrong, in the yellow jersey - seventh Tour De France Victory. Photo: Eric Gaillard, Reuters

Kerry Properties clinches $2.5b urban renewal project
Raymond Wang, The Standard 22 July 2005

Kerry Properties won the right to develop the HK$2.5 billion urban renewal project in Western district, beating out 10 rivals.

'Double standards' jibe on harbor plan
Dennis Chong, The Standard 22 July 2005

Another round of controversy over the highly-contentious Central-Wanchai bypass - which the government has insisted on building above newly-reclaimed land - is likely to be sparked today when two consultant reports are presented to the Town Planning Board.

One-developer idea slides
Gavin Bowring, The Standard 21 July 2005

The government has agreed ''in principle'' that more than one property developer will be allowed to participate in the West Kowloon Cultural District Project, according to Macau casino tycoon Stanley Ho.

Developer eyes $2b from key projects
PEGGY SITO, SCMP 21 July 2005

Kowloon Development expects to raise nearly $2 billion from property sales in Hong Kong and Macau this year, chairman Or Wai-shen said yesterday.

Cultural heritage 'put at risk' on old Central Police Station site
CHLOE LAI, SCMP20 July 2005
Mid-sized builder Shui On Construction and Materials will go ahead with investments into cement of at least HK$590 million, despite the disappointing results of its mainland cement businesses.

Optimistic Shui On to pour $590m into cement
Danny Chung, The Standard 19 July 2005
Mid-sized builder Shui On Construction and Materials will go ahead with investments into cement of at least HK$590 million, despite the disappointing results of its mainland cement businesses.

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