''NOW that's what I call a real culture clash,'' laughed Sir William
Purves as he compared the proposed joining of Berwickshire to East
Lothian with the on-going merger of his Hongkong and Shanghai Bank with
the Midland.
Most exiles, particularly Scots, are not averse to playing up their
devotion to their origins, and Sir William fits the role of Border
reiver well enough. Hence the mock horror at the prospect of ''losing''
Berwickshire.
Almost 40 years of living in Hong Kong and climbing the corporate
ladder of the world's 10th biggest bank have eroded much of the Kelso
accent, but the Caledonian burr traditionally associated with top
doctors, engineers and financiers is still very evident.
Willie Purves -- Sir William since the New Year Honours -- was in
Glasgow this week to open the new Midland Bank branch. He also travelled
to Edinburgh to scold, albeit gently, the current generation of Scottish
entrepreneurs who appear to be failing in their God-given mission to
spread capitalism across the globe.
Speaking to The Herald in his first full interview since returning to
the UK, the chairman of HSBC bemoaned the air of business pessimism,
even hopelessness, which he thinks is prevalent in the country.
''I've only been back a few weeks, though I obviously have visited
Britain regularly, and I don't want to be too quick to judge. However,
there certainly seems to be an ebb in business confidence and a lack of
enterprising spirit at the moment.''
Such charges could never be levelled at Sir William who left Scotland
in 1954 to join the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank after war service in
Korea, where he was awarded the Distiguished Service Order for
gallantry.
His national service had given him his first glimpse of the Far East
and, like many compatriots before him, he fell under the spell of a
colourful region that had long offered high financial rewards to those
willing to take the corresponding risks.
''I have enjoyed a long career in probably the most exciting area of
the post-war world, and I insist that there are still as many
opportunities in the Far East now as there were when I started out.''
Chief executive of HSBC since 1986, Sir William stepped aside this
year to concentrate on the role of group chairman, just as the takeover
of Midland was completed. As part of the deal, the Bank of England
insisted that his office should be in London.
Almost 62 years old, he was due to come home to retire anyway so his
return has merely been brought forward a few years.
Since then it has not taken him long to find out that bankers, in
Britain anyway, are not exactly the flavour of the month.
''This won't change until we improve the services to our customers,
and the best way this can be done is by improving the computerised
systems currently in use,'' he said.
Far Eastern banks are far more advanced than the UK clearers in this
respect, though Britain appears to be finally catching up. ''The
Scottish banks in particular seem in better shape than those down south
as far as systems are concerned.''
Reminded that HSBC almost took over the Royal Bank of Scotland a
decade ago, Sir William admitted to the occasional what-might-have-been
daydream -- even hard-headed bankers indulge in these occasionally.
''You would have had the headquarters of the 10th largest bank in the
world in Scotland had that deal gone through,'' he insisted. Pointed
remarks about similar, ill-fated promises from Guinness met a cool
reception. ''They are not us,'' he snapped.
Describing someone like Sir William as tough, resourceful and wily is
redundant as nobody rises from the ranks to head the world's leading
trading bank by being weak and naive.
But he is widely known as a particularly single-minded financier who
is not afraid to speak his mind, as a black-tie audience of Edinburgh
financiers found out this week.
Defending his old stomping ground with a vengeance, he caused a
collective intake of breath by contrasting the West's ''slavish''
acceptance of Boris Yeltsin's recent crushing of a rebel uprising in
Moscow with the blanket condemnation of a ''similar but badly executed
restoration of order in Beijing in 1989''.
Most people would probably hesitate to describe the Tiananmen Square
massacre as a ''restoration of order'', and Sir William stressed during
the interview that he would not want to be perceived as an apologist for
the Chinese communist authorities.
Ironically, his DSO was won for bravery in the face of a Chinese
frontal assault which left him wounded.
''A realistic perspective must be maintained and any isolation of
China, the world's largest potential market, should be avoided,'' said
the ex-member of Hong Kong's executive council, the colony's main local
policy-making body.
With 17 branches in China and a firm commitment to retain the bank's
headquarters in Hong Kong after the 1997 handover, it is fair to assume
that HSBC will never be in the vanguard of any human rights campaign
targeted at Beijing.
Four decades of almost uninterrupted Asian exile have obviously left
their mark on the man who started his career as a teenager in his
hometown branch of the National Bank of Scotland.
Nonetheless, his relish for the less exotic task of lifting the
spirits of the struggling Midland Bank in his last few years before
retirement appears undimmed.
He said the Midland was currently undergoing a revamping of its
technology, an area which had not received the wisest investment before
the takeover.
''There are obviously problems marrying two different systems and two
different corporate cultures together, but we have made great progress
in only 14 months and I am convinced the long-term advantages will soon
emerge.''
Midland, once the UK's biggest bank, must devolve more decisions down
to branch level to get closer to the customer and impress on small
businesses that the debt problems of previous years have not left it
anti-risk.
Meanwhile, Sir William, never averse to the occasional risk himself,
will soon have to start contemplating a quiet life split between homes
in England, the Borders and the Highlands.
''I haven't thought much about what I'll do when I finally retire,
though I certainly won't be missing many Murrayfield matches.'' Spoken
like a true Borderer.