LONDON, June 29, 2026, 09:12 BST
- HSBC’s London shares quoted at 1,424.0p, ticking up 1.0p, with data showing a delay, latest at 08:09 GMT.
- The stock trades about 2.2% under its 52-week high, with the Hong Kong listing around 2.3% off its own high.
- HSBC’s CET1 ratio was 14.0% at the end of March, right at the lower end of its 14.0%-14.5% target.
- HSBC posts interim results Aug. 4. Investors will look at capital, credit losses, and banking NII as the key share drivers.
HSBC Holdings Plc (LON:HSBA) hovered close to its 52-week high early Monday, raising the question of how much higher the stock can go before the bank moves to scale up buybacks. HSBC’s own share tape, delayed, put the London price at 1,424.0p, Hong Kong shares HKG:0005 at HK$147.10, and the New York ADR NYSE:HSBC at $93.75 at 08:09 GMT.
Trading was open as usual Monday on the London Stock Exchange, from 0800 to 1630 local time. HSBC’s first-quarter capital ratio now sits right at the bottom of management’s target after taking over Hang Seng Bank, which ties into the close range to recent highs.
| Listing | Latest delayed price | Day move | 52-week high | Gap to high |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| London (LON:HSBA) | 1,424.0p | up 1.0p | 1,456.0p | down 2.2% |
| Hong Kong HKG:0005 | HK$147.10 | off HK$0.60 | HK$150.50 | off 2.3% |
The stock doesn’t have a lot of headroom versus consensus after the run-up. LSEG numbers in Investors Chronicle put the median 12-month target from 14 analysts at 1,480.78p, about 4.09% over the last price of 1,422.60p. As of June 25, the breakdown was two buys, six outperforms, seven holds, and two sells.
HSBC’s first-quarter results offered some reassurance for bulls. Adjusted profit before tax came in at $10.1 billion. Adjusted revenue hit $19.1 billion. The bank posted an annualised RoTE of 18.7% on the same basis. Net interest income from banking rose $700 million to reach $11.3 billion.
| HSBC metric | Latest figure | Why it matters for the shares |
|---|---|---|
| Profit before tax, ex-notables | $10.1 bln | Payout questions less urgent with this result |
| Revenue, ex-notables | $19.1 bln | Revenue grew in every segment |
| RoTE, ex-notables | 18.7% | Beats the 17% goal |
| Banking NII guide for 2026 | Around $46 bln | Guidance counts on rates staying higher |
| CET1 ratio | 14.0% | Right at the low end of the target band |
| ECL guide for 2026 | Around 45 bps | Still watching the credit risk |
HSBC Group CEO Georges Elhedery told investors in May the bank is “confident in achieving the targets” it set out back in February. Those goals call for a RoTE of at least 17% in each of 2026, 2027 and 2028, with notable items stripped out. HSBC
Hang Seng pulled CET1 lower for HSBC. The bank said its buyout of Hang Seng Bank took effect Jan. 26, with shares delisted in Hong Kong a day later. That move leaves Hang Seng fully owned by HSBC. In Q1, HSBC reported its CET1 ratio dropped 0.9 percentage points versus Q4, blaming the Hang Seng deal, dividends, and more risk-weighted assets.
HSBC said the Hang Seng deal would hit its capital by about 125 basis points on day one, and it told the market it wouldn’t run new buybacks for three quarters after announcing. Reuters said back then the deal was valued at HK$106.1 billion, or $13.6 billion, covering the 36.5% stake in Hang Seng HSBC didn’t already hold.
Elhedery told Reuters at the time that HSBC was “capital generative” and had the “firepower” to pursue deals. Morningstar senior equity analyst Michael Makdad said there should be “opportunities for cost synergies.” HSBC shares dropped 6% right after the news, but the stock has since recovered. The buyback question is still on the table. Reuters
UK banks weren’t getting a lift from the wider market. Reuters said Friday’s FTSE 100 finished down 0.2%, and the banks sub-index lost 1.4%. By early Monday, the FTSE 100 held flat at 10,502.94 at 0827 BST. Brent added 0.4% to $72.30 after the U.S. and Iran agreed to pause hostilities and resume talks.
Patrick Munnelly at Tickmill Group said the “prospect of diplomacy restarting” has limited the geopolitical risk premium. HSBC now trades less on macro relief, and more on capital rebuild, NII and Hong Kong credit losses to back up a stock price near its highs. London South East
HSBC is set to report interim results Aug. 4.