Foundation (waterfront), where the bank had leased its first Hong Kong office in 1865 , purchased by HSBC in 1874 and its Shanghai head office until reconstruction in the early 1920s and completed in 1886 on the former Wardley House location and creation of
Statue Square , photographed in 1890 in 1908 After the British established Hong Kong as a
crown colony in the aftermath of the
First Opium War, merchants from other parts of the British Empire, now in Hong Kong, felt the need for a bank to finance the growing trade, through Hong Kong and sometimes also through Shanghai, between China and
India, the rest of the
British Empire and Europe, of goods, produces and merchandises of all kinds, but especially
opium, cultivated in or transited (re-exported) through
the Raj. The founder,
Thomas Sutherland of
P&O, wanted a bank operating on "sound Scottish banking principles". Still, the original location of the bank was considered crucial and the founders chose
Wardley House in Hong Kong since the construction was based on some of the best
feng shui in
colonial Hong Kong. After raising a capital stock of HK$5 million, the bank commenced operations on 3 March 1865. It opened a branch in
Shanghai in April of that year and started issuing locally denominated banknotes in both the Crown Colony and Shanghai soon afterwards. The bank was incorporated in Hong Kong as
The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation by
the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank Ordinance (Numbers 2 and 5 of 1866), and a branch in
Japan was also established in
Yokohama in 1866. Shares of the bank were one of 13 securities initially traded on the
Shanghai Stock Exchange, and were traded on that exchange until
the Japanese closed the exchange in 1941.
Business development (1913, designed by William Campbell-Jones), replacing leased offices at 31 Lombard Street; maintained by HSBC until relocation to
99 Bishopsgate in 1976, and later converted into a
Club Quarters hotel and
Wetherspoons pub in the Gracechurch Street building, converted as the
Crosse Keys pub , the bank's Shanghai headquarters from 1923 to 1955, photographed in 2021
Sir Thomas Jackson became chief manager in 1876. During his twenty-six-year tenure, the bank became a leader in Asia. A period of expansion followed, with new buildings constructed in
Bangkok (1921),
Manila (1922) and
Shanghai (1923), and a new head office building in Hong Kong in 1935. Bank note issuance displaced other forms of the era and of the region, such as silver
taels, due to political and economic instability. HSBC gained significant influence as a result.
International expansion , HSBC's main London office from 1976 to 1993 and occupied by the bank until its move to
Canary Wharf in 2002-2003 , designed by
Norman Foster and completed in 1985 on the same location as the 1886 and 1936 predecessors
Michael Turner became chief manager in 1953 and set about diversifying the business. His tenure came to an end in 1962 having established The Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation of California 1955 and having acquired
The British Bank of the Middle East and the
Mercantile Bank (based in India) in Aug 1959. Turner was succeeded in 1962 by
Jake Saunders. In 1964 the Chief Managership was superseded as the top executive role in the bank by an Executive Chairmanship. During the
Konfrontasi period in the 1960s, a group of Indonesian forces
bombed the MacDonald House building in Singapore (at the time used by HSBC) just a few months after Singapore was granted its independence from Malaysia. Three people were killed, 33 injured, and the two Indonesian military officers responsible for the bombing were tried and executed. The present building in Hong Kong was designed by
Sir Norman Foster and was held as one of the most expensive and technologically advanced buildings in the world in 1986, costing HK$5.3 billion. On 6 October 1989, it was registered as a regulated bank with the
Banking Commissioner of the Government of Hong Kong. HSBC Holdings plc, originally incorporated in England and Wales, was a non-trading, dormant
shelf company when it completed its transformation on 25 March 1991 Major acquisitions in South America started with the purchase of the Banco Bamerindus of Brazil for $1 billion in March 1997 and the acquisition of Roberts SA de Inversiones of Argentina for $600 million in May 1997. In May 1999, HSBC expanded its presence in the United States with the purchase of
Republic National Bank of New York for $10.3 billion.
2000 to 2010 Expansion into
Continental Europe took place in April 2000 with the acquisition of
Crédit Commercial de France, a large French bank, for £6.6 billion ($8.85 billion). In July 2001 HSBC bought
Demirbank, an
insolvent Turkish bank. In July 2002,
Arthur Andersen announced that HSBC USA, Inc., through a new subsidiary, Wealth and Tax Advisory Services USA Inc. (
WTAS), would purchase a portion of Andersen's tax practice. The new HSBC Private Client Services Group would serve the wealth and tax advisory needs of high-net-worth individuals. Then in August 2002 HSBC acquired Grupo Financiero Bital, SA de CV, Mexico's third largest retail bank for $1.1 billion. In November 2002, HSBC expanded further in the United States. Under the chairmanship of John Bond, it spent £9 billion (US$15.5 billion) to acquire
Household Finance Corporation (HFC), a US credit card issuer and
subprime lender. In a 2003 cover story,
The Banker noted "when banking historians look back, they may conclude that [it] was the deal of the first decade of the 21st century". Under the new name of
HSBC Finance, the division was the second largest subprime lender in the United States. The new headquarters of HSBC Holdings at
8 Canada Square, London officially opened in April 2003. In July 2003, HSBC announced that it had agreed to acquire 82.19% of the Korean fund administrator, Asset Management Technology (AM TeK), for $12.47 million in cash; it was the largest fund administrator in South Korea, with $24 billion of assets under administration. In September 2003 HSBC bought Polski Kredyt Bank SA of Poland for $7.8 million. In June 2004 HSBC expanded into China buying 19.9% of the
Bank of Communications of Shanghai. In the United Kingdom HSBC acquired Marks & Spencer Retail Financial Services Holdings Ltd for £763 million in December 2004. Acquisitions in 2005 included Metris Inc, a US credit card issuer for $1.6 billion in August and 70.1% of Dar es Salaam Investment Bank of Iraq in October. In April 2006, HSBC bought the 90 branches in Argentina of
Banca Nazionale del Lavoro for $155 million. In December 2007 HSBC acquired the Chinese Bank in Taiwan. In May 2008, HSBC acquired
IL&FS Investment, an Indian retail broking firm. On 3 August 2008, HSBC began its banking operations in Algeria with the opening of a branch in Algiers. In 2005, Bloomberg Markets magazine accused HSBC of
money laundering for drug dealers and state sponsors of terrorism. Subsequent investigation indicated that it was accurate and proved that the bank was involved in money laundering for the
Sinaloa Cartel and throughout
Mexico. In July 2006, HSBC announced that it would acquire
Westpac's sub-custody operations in Australia and New Zealand for $112.5 million, making HSBC the leading sub-custody and clearing player in Australia and New Zealand. In 2007, HSBC wrote down its holdings of subprime-related mortgage securities by $10.5 billion, becoming the first major bank to report its losses due to the unfolding
subprime mortgage crisis. According to
Bloomberg, "HSBC is one of world's strongest banks by some measures". When
HM Treasury required all UK banks to increase their capital in October 2007, the group transferred £750 million ($1.006 billion) to London within hours, and announced that it had just lent £4 billion ($5.37 billion) to other UK banks. In March 2009, HSBC announced that it would shut down the branch network of its HSBC Finance arm in the United States, leading to nearly 6,000 job losses and leaving only the credit card business to continue operating. Chairman
Stephen Green stated, "HSBC has a reputation for telling it as it is. With the benefit of hindsight, this is an acquisition we wish we had not undertaken." According to analyst Colin Morton, "the takeover was an absolute disaster". In March 2009, it announced that it had made US$9.3 billion of profit in 2008 and announced a £12.5 billion (US$17.7 billion; HK$138 billion)
rights issue to enable it to buy other banks that were struggling to survive. However, uncertainty over the rights issue's implications for institutional investors caused volatility in the Hong Kong stock market: on 9 March 2009 HSBC's share price fell 24.14%, with 12 million shares sold in the last few seconds of trading.
2010 to 2013 On 25 April 2011, HSBC decided to shut down its retail banking business in
Russia and reduce its private banking presence to a representative office. HSBC announced renaming of its Personal Financial Services (PFS) business group to Retail Banking and Wealth Management (also known as RBWM) on HSBC's 2011 Investor Day. On 11 May 2013, the new chief executive
Stuart Gulliver announced that HSBC would refocus its business strategy and that a large-scale retrenchment of operations, particularly in respect of the retail sector, was planned. HSBC would no longer seek to be 'the world's local bank', as costs associated with this were spiraling and US$3.5 billion needed to be saved by 2013, with the aim of bringing overheads down from 55% of revenues to 48%. In 2010, then-chairman
Stephen Green planned to depart HSBC to accept a government appointment in the Trade Ministry. Group Chief Executive
Michael Geoghegan was expected to become the next chairman. However, while many current and former senior employees supported the tradition of promoting the chief executive to chairman, many shareholders instead pushed for an external candidate. HSBC's board of directors had reportedly been split over the succession planning and investors were alarmed that the row would damage the company. On 23 September 2010, Geoghegan announced he would step down as chief executive of HSBC. He was succeeded as chief executive by
Stuart Gulliver, while Green was succeeded as chairman by
Douglas Flint; Flint was serving as HSBC's finance director (chief financial officer). August 2011: Further to CEO Stuart Gulliver's plan to cut $3.5 billion in costs over the next two years, HSBC announced that it will cut 25,000 jobs and exit from 20 countries by 2013 in addition to 5,000 job cuts announced earlier in the year. The consumer banking division of HSBC will focus on the UK,
Hong Kong, high-growth markets such as Mexico, Singapore, Turkey, and Brazil, and smaller countries where it has a leading market share. According to Reuters, Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver told the media, "There will be further job cuts. There will be something like 25,000 roles eliminated between now and the end of 2013." In August 2011 "to align our U.S. business with our global network and meet the local and international needs of domestic and overseas clients", HSBC agreed to sell 195 branches in
New York and
Connecticut to
First Niagara Financial Group Inc, and divestitures to
KeyCorp,
Community Bank, N.A. and
Five Star Bank for around $1 billion, and announced the closure of 13 branches in Connecticut and
New Jersey. The rest of HSBC's U.S. network will only be about half from a total 470 branches before divestments. On 9 August 2011,
Capital One Financial Corp. agreed to acquire HSBC's U.S. credit card business for $2.6 billion, netting HSBC Holdings an estimated after-tax profit of $2.4 billion. In September it was announced that HSBC sought to sell its general insurance business for around $1 billion. In 2012, HSBC was the subject of hearings of the
U.S. Senate permanent subcommittee for investigations for severe deficiencies in its
anti-money laundering practices (see
Controversies). On 16 July the committee presented its findings. Among other things, it concluded that HSBC had been transferring $7 billion in banknotes from its Mexican to its US subsidiary (much of it related to
drug dealing), was disregarding terrorist financing links On 11 December 2012, HSBC agreed to pay a record $1.92 billion fine in this money laundering case. It was reported that bank officials consistently overlooked internal warnings about the inadequacy of HSBC's monitoring systems, according to the Justice Department. For example, in 2008, the CEO of HSBC Mexico was reportedly informed by Mexican law enforcement about a recording of a Mexican drug lord, who indicated that HSBC Mexico was a preferred location for money laundering. The
United States Department of Justice, however, decided not to pursue criminal penalties, a decision which the
New York Times labelled a "dark day for the rule of law." HSBC chief executive Stuart Gulliver said: "We accept responsibility for our past mistakes. We have said we are profoundly sorry for them, and we do so again." In June 2014, an indirect wholly owned subsidiary HSBC Life (UK) Limited agreed to sell its £4.2 billion UK pensions business to
Swiss Re. In February 2015 the
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists released information about the business conduct of HSBC under the title
Swiss Leaks based on the 2007 hacked HSBC account records from whistle-blower
Hervé Falciani. The ICIJ alleges that the bank profited from doing business with corrupt politicians, dictators, tax evaders, dealers of blood diamonds, arms dealers and other clients. US Senate investigators in 2012 had sought the hacked HSBC account records from Falciani and French authorities, but never received the data. HSBC announced in August 2015 that it would be selling its
Brazilian unit to
Banco Bradesco for $5.2 billion following years of disappointing performance. In 2015, HSBC was recognised as the most trusted foreign bank in India by The Brand Trust Report 2015. In 2016, the bank was mentioned numerous times in connection with the
Panama Papers investigation. Many Syrians were angered when their accounts were judged high-risk and closed, despite the bank reportedly telling
Mossack Fonseca it was "comfortable" with
Rami Makhlouf as a customer, even though US Treasury sanctions against him were in effect at the time. On 20 March 2017, the British newspaper
The Guardian reported that hundreds of banks had helped launder
KGB-related funds out of
Russia, as uncovered by an investigation named
Global Laundromat. HSBC was listed among the 17 banks in the UK that were "facing questions over what they knew about the international scheme and why they did not turn away suspicious money transfers," as HSBC "processed $545.3m in Laundromat cash, mostly routed through its
Hong Kong branch." Other banks facing scrutiny under the investigation included the
Royal Bank of Scotland,
NatWest,
Lloyds,
Barclays and
Coutts. In response, HSBC stated that it was against financial crime, and that the case "highlights the need for greater information sharing between the public and private sectors." On 1 October 2017,
Mark Tucker succeeded Douglas Flint as group chairman of HSBC, the first non-executive and outside chairman appointed by the group. Also in October 2017, HSBC announced that John Flint, chief executive of Retail Banking and Wealth Management, would succeed Stuart Gulliver as Group Chief Executive on 21 February 2018. It was further announced on 5 August 2019 that Flint was leaving and his role would be filled on a temporary basis by Noel Quinn, head of HSBC's global commercial bank. Noel Quinn was subsequently appointed to the role on a permanent basis in March 2020.
Since 2020 In February 2020, HSBC announced it would cut 35,000 jobs worldwide after it was announced corporate profits decreased by 33% in 2019. In 2020, HSBC announced merging two of its business lines: Retail Banking and Wealth Management & Global Private Banking to form a new business unit as Wealth and Personal Banking. In October 2020, HSBC committed to achieve zero-emission by 2050, e.g., by this year it would not only become carbon neutral by itself but also will work only with carbon-neutral clients. It also committed to providing 750–1,000 billion dollars to help clients make the transition. It also pledged to achieve
carbon neutrality in his own operations by 2030. In January 2021, HSBC announced that it would be closing 82 branches in Britain. In May 2021, HSBC announced the exit of US retail banking business by selling 10 California branches to
Cathay Bank and 80 branches to
Citizens Financial Group and closing the remaining branches. The bank said it intends to focus on the banking and wealth management needs of globally connected affluent and high net worth clients. In May 2021, HSBC committed to end the financing of the
coal industry, with a commitment to publish a new coal policy and provide further detail on its climate strategy by the end of 2021. The organisation's "Thermal Coal Phase-Out Policy" was published in December 2021. The company broke its coal pledge in 2023 when it helped raise $1 billion for Glencore, a mining giant that had ramped up coal production. In August 2021, HSBC announced the acquisition of
Axa Singapore. HSBC Insurance (Asia-Pacific) Holdings Ltd, an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of HSBC would acquire 100% of the issued share capital of Axa Singapore for $575m. In December 2021, HSBC Asset Management (India) Private Ltd, an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of HSBC announced it would acquire L&T Investment Management for $425 million from
L&T Finance Holdings. In June 2022, HSBC announced its intention to sell its business in Russia. This requires approval from the Russian government, and the deal is expected to close in the first half of 2024. The projected loss is $300 million. A possible buyer is the Russian
Expobank. In February 2024, the President of Russia allowed HSBC and Expobank to carry out this transaction. In July 2022, HSBC became the first foreign lender to open a
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) committee in its Chinese investment banking subsidiary. The subsidiary, HSBC Qianhai Securities, is a 90% HSBC-owned joint venture. HSBC has been under pressure to cut costs and divest non-Asian businesses. In February 2023, HSBC announced that its profits for the last quarter of 2022 had almost doubled compared to those at the same time the previous year. However, its pre-tax profit actually fell because it absorbed the cost of selling its French retail banking operations. The bank also announced that they were closing 114 branches in the United Kingdom. The move came as more people were using online banking since the pandemic, reducing the need for physical branches. The move has been criticized by
Unite. As
interest rates increased globally in May 2023, HSBC Holdings reported a 212% increase in
quarterly profit. In May 2023, HSBC defeated a proposal, backed by its largest stakeholder Chinese insurer
Ping An, to consider spinning off its Asia business into a Hong Kong-listed entity. In November 2023, HSBC agreed to sell its
hedge fund administration business in several markets, including Hong Kong, Singapore, Ireland, and Luxembourg to
BNP Paribas’ Securities Services. In December 2023, HSBC Asset Management announced they would be acquiring the Singapore Based Investment manager, Silkroad Property Partners. The proposed acquisition includes Singapore-based SilkRoad Property Partners Pte Ltd, along with its subsidiaries in Hong Kong, Shanghai and Tokyo, and the five general partner entities associated with its active funds. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed. The deal would expand HSBC's real estate fund management capabilities in the region by bringing on board a business with an estimated $2 billion in assets under management, primarily in value-add strategies, as well as a senior team with experience executing deals in the region's major cities. HSBC announced, in December 2023, that it intended to move its head office from
8 Canada Square to
81 Newgate Street when the lease on the former building expires in 2027. In 2024, HSBC, as part of the
Hong Kong Association of Banks, began developing a roadmap to phase out cheques in the city and switch to electronic payments. According to Hong Kong Interbank Clearing, cheque transactions in
Hong Kong fell to HK$488.6 billion (US$62.5 billion) in December, down 13 percent year-on-year. On 30 April 2024, Noel Quinn, the CEO for nearly five years, announced his retirement. In 2024, HSBC announced an international payments app, Zing, a competitor to
Revolut and
Wise apps. It will also focus on retail customers and low-cost currency exchange. In January 2025, HSBC decided to shut down the app only one year after its launch, as part of a cost-cutting drive. In 2024, HSBC Philippines launched "Omni Collect" to allow companies to connect to HSBC's single
API to offer and manage payments across multiple channels. "It supports multiple online and offline payment options for customers and delivers transaction data through HSBC’s global digital platform, HSBCnet," the bank Head Art Tanseco said. On 9 April 2024, HSBC announced the sale of its Argentina business to Galicia for $550 million. HSBC said that the deal awaited government approval but was expected to be finalized by the year-end. HSBC was also approved to exit its Armenia holdings by the central bank in a sale to
Ardshinbank on 27 August. In January 2025, HSBC announced the closure of some of its investment banking units in Europe, UK and US as part of the ongoing restructuring effort by its CEO
Georges Elhedery, followed by a new round of investment bank job cuts. These significant revamps were expected to bring $1.8 billion cost savings by the end of 2026. In May 2025, HSBC announced that group chairman Mark Tucker would retire by the end of 2025 after an eight-year stint at the bank. In June 2025, HSBC agreed the sales of its custody and depositary bank business in Germany to
BNP Paribas. In July 2025, HSBC has announced the sales of its fund administration business in Germany, i.e. Internationale Kapitalanlagegesellschaft (INKA), to a fund managed by BlackFin Capital Partners. In July 2025, HSBC became the first major UK bank to withdraw from the Net-Zero Banking Alliance, raising concerns about the future participation of other European banks amid shifting political and regulatory priorities. On 25 September 2025, HSBC announced that it had agreed to sell its retail banking operations in
Sri Lanka to
Nations Trust Bank, a local financial institution. HSBC stated that it would retain its corporate and institutional banking services in the country following the divestment. In September 2025, HSBC Asset Management launched a new investment strategy focused on trade finance, called
Trade & Working Capital Solutions. The move reflects broader trends in asset management and investment with third party investors. In October 2025, HSBC announced that it had acquired 100% of
Hang Seng Bank for a total of US$14 billion. In October 2025,
FirstRand officially took over the assets and customers of
HSBC's South African branch. In January 2026, it was revealed that HSBC was exploring the option of selling its insurance unit in Singapore, HSBC Life, which would be valued at more than US$1 billion. In January 2026, HSBC Group Chairman Brendan Nelson was one of the business representatives from the financial sector to accompany UK Prime Minister Sir
Keir Starmer at his meeting with Chinese President
Xi Jinping and Premier
Li Qiang to discuss trade, investment and national security. On 12 March 2026,
Sun Life and
Allianz began considering bids for HSBC Holdings' insurance unit in Singapore. A sale process was initiated in March, with non-binding bids materialising soon. In March 2026, HSBC announced that it would be engaging in a wave of deep job cuts over the coming years that could ultimately impact around 20,000 roles, or about 10 per cent of its total workforce. This would most heavily impact non-client-facing roles in global service centres as HSBC increases its reliance on AI. ==Operations==