London, July 6, 2026, 09:20 (BST)
- London trading was open at the dateline; the LSE’s regular session runs 08:00-16:30 BST.
- HSBC was quoted at 1,456.80p/1,457.00p, up 0.41%, with market value near £250 billion.
- Monday’s 6p gain equals about £1.0 billion of equity value using HSBC’s latest 17.18 billion voting-share count.
- The stock is about 1.3% below the 14-analyst median target price of 1,476.12p.
HSBC Holdings Plc (LON:HSBA) edged higher in London on Monday, but the more useful investor signal was not the half-percent move. It was the lack of room between the share price, the analyst median target and HSBC’s own capital-return constraints.
The bank’s shares were quoted at 1,456.80p to sell and 1,457.00p to buy, up 6p, or 0.41%, from the previous close. Volume on the delayed retail feed was 1.96 million shares, with AJ Bell putting market capitalisation at £249.75 billion.
| Market gauge | Latest reading |
|---|---|
| Sell/buy quote | 1,456.80p / 1,457.00p |
| Change | +6.00p / +0.41% |
| Previous close | 1,451.00p |
| Volume | 1.96 million shares |
| Market capitalisation | £249.75 billion |
Using HSBC’s June 30 voting-rights notice, which put shares with voting rights at 17,183,563,842, each 1p move in the ordinary shares is worth about £172 million of equity value. That makes Monday’s 6p rise worth roughly £1.0 billion.
The stock has almost caught the median sell-side target. Investors Chronicle data from LSEG dated July 2 showed 14 analysts with a median 12-month target of 1,476.12p, a high estimate of 1,689.56p and a low estimate of 1,093.42p. The recommendation split was two buy, six outperform, seven hold and two sell.
| Analyst view | Data |
|---|---|
| Median target | 1,476.12p |
| Gap to 1,457.00p | 1.3% |
| High estimate | 1,689.56p |
| Low estimate | 1,093.42p |
| Ratings mix | 8 positive, 7 hold, 2 sell |
The number matters because HSBC is already priced close to the median target while capital remains tight after the Hang Seng Bank deal. In the first quarter, HSBC reported profit before tax of $9.4 billion, revenue up 6% to $18.6 billion and annualised RoTE excluding notable items of 18.7%. Group CEO Georges Elhedery said HSBC was “creating a simple, more agile, growing HSBC.” Investegate
HSBC’s CET1 ratio fell to 14.0% at March 31 from 14.9% at the end of 2025, with the bank citing the Hang Seng privatisation, dividends and higher risk-weighted assets. The bank said it planned to manage CET1 within a 14%-14.5% range and that any buyback restart would be a quarterly decision.
| Capital and payout item | Investor read |
|---|---|
| CET1 ratio: 14.0% | Bottom of HSBC’s target range |
| First 2026 interim dividend: $0.10 a share | Paid June 26; sterling amount was about 7.4489p |
| Voting shares: 17.18 billion | Every 1p share move is about £172 million |
| 2026 banking NII guide: around $46 billion | Raised from at least $45 billion in Q1 |
The latest company notices were funding-related. HSBC gave notice on July 2 to redeem $2.3 billion of 5.887% fixed/floating senior unsecured notes due 2027 and $700 million of floating-rate senior unsecured notes due 2027 on Aug. 14, both at par. It had already called £1 billion of 1.750% fixed/floating senior unsecured notes due 2027 for July 24.
The Hang Seng deal is still the main Asia bet. HSBC said the privatisation became effective on Jan. 26 and Hang Seng Bank was delisted from the Hong Kong exchange on Jan. 27. Elhedery said Hang Seng “remains its own bank,” while HSBC’s first-quarter release said the group had identified about $1.4 billion of annualised cost savings toward a $1.5 billion target. HSBC
Reuters reported on June 5 that HSBC’s Hong Kong-listed shares fell nearly 2% after concerns that tighter China capital controls could hurt global financial firms with mainland exposure. That risk is still tied to the same earnings line investors like: wealth fees and cross-border client activity in Hong Kong and mainland China.
Investors Chronicle lists HSBC’s next earnings announcement as expected on Aug. 4.