HSBC slips after Australia fine, AI update

HSBC slips after Australia fine, AI update

June 18, 2026

London, June 18, 2026, 09:33 BST

  • HSBC London slipped around 0.4% to about 1,432 pence. The stock rose 1.94% Wednesday, setting a new 52-week high.
  • HSBC Australia has admitted to major failings in its scam detection systems. The Federal Court signed off on a joint plan for the bank to pay an A$35 million fine.
  • HSBC and Google Cloud plan over 200 new AI applications in the next two years, looking at wealth advice and financial crime controls.

HSBC Holdings Plc slipped early Thursday in London, pulling back from a one-year high with the stock off about 0.3% at 1,432 pence. Investors weighed fresh AI moves at the bank against news of an Australian regulatory knock. The FTSE 100 was down roughly 0.6%.

Timing is key here as the events push both ways. The Australian case brings more conduct risk. The Google programme is supposed to help drive revenue and cut costs while Chief Executive Georges Elhedery pushes for a leaner bank.

HSBC handled more than 1,000 unauthorised transaction reports totalling A$34.6 million from January 2020 to August 2024, according to Australia’s corporate regulator. The average case took 144 days to close. ASIC said reports of these transactions jumped about 380% in 2023 and 2024. “Protecting customers from scams is a core responsibility of banks,” ASIC Chair Sarah Court said. ASIC

HSBC has paid roughly A$21.5 million in compensation and got back another A$6.5 million for customers. The bank apologised, saying the settlement covers its redress programme and updates to how it handles fraud prevention, detection and response.

HSBC plans to bring more than 200 new AI applications to Google Cloud in the next two years, adding to the 600-plus HSBC programs already using the platform. The bank said each top project could bring in over $100 million, either in revenue or efficiency gains. “AI is becoming one of the defining technologies of our time,” Elhedery said. HSBC

HSBC traded higher Wednesday, moving with a broader rally in banks. Barclays jumped 3.4% after Bank of America lifted its price target. Standard Chartered, which is also focused on Asia, was up 2.0%.

HSBC posts steady numbers as financial base holds. The bank said first-quarter pretax profit was $9.4 billion with annualised return on tangible equity (RoTE) at 17.3%. RoTE compares profit to shareholder capital minus goodwill and other intangibles. Banking net interest income increased $700 million to $11.3 billion.

Asia still swings the needle. Hong Kong deposits at HSBC climbed 50% since early 2023, with Reuters Breakingviews reporting about 70% of the jump came from non-residents. But stricter money controls from China could cool cross-border wealth flows backing HSBC, Standard Chartered and Hong Kong insurance groups.

But risks remain. HSBC took a surprise $400 million loss tied to private credit in Q1, driving total credit charges up to $1.3 billion. KBW analyst Ed Firth described the quarter as “lacklustre.” More credit hits, weaker Hong Kong wealth flows or slower AI cost cuts could make it harder for HSBC to hold to its target of at least 17% RoTE through 2028. Reuters

The Bank of England will announce its rate call at noon, with Bank Rate now at 3.75%. HSBC is set to report interim earnings on August 4.

Artur Ślesik

Artur Ślesik is a technology and financial markets journalist at Bez-kabli.pl, covering artificial intelligence, semiconductors, technology stocks and emerging innovations. A graduate of Warsaw University of Technology, he combines a technical background with market analysis to explain how new technologies are shaping industries, businesses and investment trends worldwide.

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