LONDON, July 1, 2026, 15:04 BST
- HSBC is trading near its 52-week high, up 63.86% over the past year.
- LSEG consensus puts the 12-month median target at 1,474.09p. That’s just 3.03% higher than the last reference price.
- Next up for the Aug. 4 interim results are numbers on net interest income, credit costs and capital.
- HSBC Bank Plc will have to face a South African forex-rigging case after a court allowed the suit to move forward, giving markets a new legal watch item.
HSBC Holdings Plc (LON:HSBA) dipped 0.29% to 1,426.60p in London afternoon trade on Wednesday. That’s a pretty minor move, but shares are already close to their year high, and the latest median analyst target leaves just a small single-digit gain from here. The FTSE 100 lost 0.33% to 10,462.89.
HSBC traded at 1,426.60p, down 2.0% from the 1,456p high for the year, but still up 64.5% from a 867.20p low. AJ Bell said the market cap is £244.50 billion, so a 1% swing equals about £2.45 billion in equity value.
| Screen item | Latest reading | Investor read-through |
|---|---|---|
| HSBC price | 1,426.60p, down 0.29% | Still trades near highs for the year |
| One-year move | +63.86% | Most of the rebound is in the price |
| Analyst median target | 1,474.09p | Suggests 3.03% upside from the LSEG reference |
| Target range | 1,091.81p to 1,687.47p | Range is wide, median sits closer in |
| Recommendation split | 2 buy, 6 outperform, 7 hold, 2 sell | No clear consensus |
The difference is key as HSBC gets ready to post interim results Aug. 4. The bank’s financial calendar puts that day down for 2026 interim numbers, while Q3 results are set for Oct. 27.
HSBC cleared the first-quarter earnings test. The bank posted $10.1 billion in profit before tax, excluding notable items, and $19.1 billion in revenue on the same basis. Annualised return on average tangible equity came in at 17.3%. RoTE, leaving out notable items, was 18.7%. Banking net interest income climbed $0.7 billion year-on-year, reaching $11.3 billion.
| Q1 and 2026 guidepost | HSBC figure | Why investors care |
|---|---|---|
| Profit before tax ex-notables | $10.1 billion | Starting point for the 17%-plus RoTE goal |
| Revenue ex-notables | $19.1 billion | Has to hold up after the stock jump |
| Banking NII | $11.3 billion in Q1 | Biggest support for earnings while rates remain at current levels |
| 2026 banking NII guide | About $46 billion | Main figure to watch for August |
| 2026 expected credit-loss guide | About 45 bps of average gross loans | Top risk to earnings quality |
| CET1 ratio | 14.0% | At the floor of the 14.0%-14.5% band |
HSBC CEO Georges Elhedery said in May the bank was still “confident in achieving the targets” set in February. Elhedery said any call on restarting buybacks would come through the usual quarterly review, and CET1 capital would be kept in the 14.0%-14.5% band. HSBC
Morningstar’s Kathy Chan, CFA, lifted her fair value estimate on HSBC to 1,390p after the Q1 numbers, but called the shares “fairly valued” and expects credit costs to return to more normal levels. HSBC traded about 2.6% above that estimate Wednesday afternoon. Morningstar
Legal risk is back on the table. South Africa’s Constitutional Court said Tuesday that regulators can go after six banks including HSBC Bank Plc over alleged forex-rigging in dollar-rand trades from 2007 to 2013. The case will go back to a full hearing. HSBC wouldn’t comment, Reuters reported.
HSBC isn’t being valued as if it’s in trouble. The market is treating it as a bank expected to stick to its NII guidance, keep credit charges in check, and leave room for cash returns based on its capital. August numbers will be stacked against the $46 billion NII guide, the 45 basis point credit cost target, and the CET1 ratio in the 14.0%-14.5% band.