Bangkokcanuck said:
Whomever gave you the details on the bank account did not give you very good info. HSBC has an account class called Premier, I have Premier accounts in SG, HK, Panama and Canada and I can move between all four online, but most importantly I can have my "base" account in each country in the local currency and then another 11 currencies in what they call sub accounts of the main one. I move money all the time from where ever to SG (my fav banking spot) IN USD then out again in USD to whatever account I want.. there is a fee for this but it is a very very small % and a lot cheaper than doing a bunch of FX exchanges...I only have CAD, SG and USD on my SG account, and all three provide me with a unique ATM card and PIN number.. naturally I only carry the card I use most, which in most places is the USD card but that will be changing to the CAD one soon enough..
I don’t have a Premier account in Hong Kong; I have a Smartvantage account. Does this make a difference?
(Brief background: Only when I had an investment with HSBC in Britain did I have the requisite 60,000 EURO minimum to qualify for Premier. Now that I no longer have that investment, I have any idle cash ready to go at my brokerage firm, not in a bank – any bank.)
So, let’s use my HSBC (Hong Kong) account as an example. The base account is Hong Kong dollars (HKD). Yes, I can (and do) have sub-accounts in Euros, and US dollars.
If I am travelling in the USA, and use an ATM to withdraw US dollars, the cash does not come directly out of my US sub-account (which would be ideal). Instead it must come from my HK dollar account, and be converted into USD (at a small commission to HSBC), even though I already have USD in my sub-account.
If there is not enough money in my HK dollar account to provide the US dollars I want, I must go online to switch enough US dollars into my HK dollar account (small commission to HSBC) to allow the subsequent conversion back into US dollars at the ATM (another small commission to HSBC).
The only way I can see to avoid this plethora of commissions to HSBC is to have a base account in US dollars at an HSBC branch in the USA.
I have had this arrangement of withdrawing only from my base HK dollar account explained twice to me by HSBC, so I am sure I’ve got that part right.