Financial Results
Notable Items Cut 2025 Pre-Tax Profit At HSBC; Wealth Results Shine

While the reported profit showed the impact of one-off items, underlying profit for last year rose across the bank. The wealth management side of HSBC showed stronger results.
HSBC today announced
pre-tax profit for 2025 of $29.9 billion, falling from $32.3
billion a year before. The decline was mainly due to a $4.9
billion impact from notable items, the UK/Hong Kong-listed
banking group said.
Notable items last year included $2.1 billion of dilution and
impairment losses related to its associate Bank of Communications
Co, reserve recycling losses of $1.5 billion after HSBC completed
its sale of its French retained portfolio of home and other
loans, legal provisions of $1.4 billion, and restructuring and
related costs of $1.0 billion.
On a constant currency basis, and when notable items are stripped
out, profit before tax rose $2.4 billion year-on-year to $36.6
billion, helped by a “strong” performance from HSBC’s wealth,
Hong Kong businesses, and wholesale transaction banking. This was
partly outweighed by a rise in expected credit losses and credit
impairment charges.
Since the start of 2026, shares in HSBC have risen 8.14 per
cent.
“HSBC’s bullish outlook provided cheer, with shareholders
enthused about the revised guidance and increased revenues for
the year, despite one-off costs denting annual profits by more
than expected,” Susannah Streeter, chief investment strategist,
Wealth Club, said in a note.
Operating costs rose 10 per cent on a year ago to $36.4
billion.
HSBC said it had a Common Equity Tier 1 ratio – its capital shock
absorber – of 14.9 per cent; the bank’s board approved a fourth
interim dividend of $0.45 per share, equating to $0.75 per share
for the year.
Looking ahead, the bank said it is targeting a return on tangible
equity of 17 per cent or higher for this year, 2027 and 2028,
when notable items are excluded. It is targeting revenue growth
from this year to 2028, rising to 5 per cent in 2028 from 2027.
It expects banking net interest income of at least $45 billion
this year.
Wealth
Within the international wealth and corporate banking division,
HSBC logged pre-tax profit, on a constant currency basis, of
$4.367 billion in 2025, rising 14.6 per cent on the year before.
This division accounted for 12.3 per cent of the total
profit.
"Wealth fee and other income across all our businesses was $9.4
billion, up 24 per cent,” Georges Elhedery, group CEO, said in
his statement. He said that at the end of 2025, bank-wide wealth
balances were $2.1 trillion, of which more than $1 trillion was
booked in Asia.
“Given the importance of managing customer deposits as well as
their invested assets, we are changing our wealth disclosures. In
2026, we will replace invested assets (2025: $1.5 trillion) with
a new calculation of wealth balances. The new disclosure adds our
wealth customers' deposits of $608 billion and removes $580
billion of asset management third-party distribution assets. On
this new basis, wealth balances in 2025 were $1.6 trillion,” he
said.
The Hong Kong business segment of HSBC accounted for 28.2 per cent of the profit total; the UK was 21.1 per cent; corporate and institutional banking was 34.8 per cent; and the corporate centre arm was 3.6 per cent.