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FRESH Analysis Report
Jun 26, 2026
1 day ago · 100% complete · +9 refreshed

HSBC Holdings plc

HSBC NYSE Categories PDF
Financial Services · Banks - Diversified
London, E14 5HQ, United Kingdom IPO 1999 hsbc.com Updated Jun 26, 3:01am
Price
$95.06
Market Cap
$326.7B
Employees
211,940
Beta
0.58
Avg Volume
1,806,782
CEO
Georges Bahjat Elhedery
Business Description

HSBC Holdings plc functions as a prominent global entity, delivering a full spectrum of banking and financial services around the world. Its operations are structured into three key divisions: Wealth and Personal Banking, Commercial Banking, and Global Banking and Markets. The Wealth and Personal Banking unit is dedicated to individual customers, supplying a broad array of retail banking offerings. This includes essential services like current and savings accounts, various lending products such as mortgages and personal loans, a selection of credit and debit cards, and convenient local and international payment facilities. Furthermore, this segment provides in-depth wealth management solutions, encompassing insurance and investment products, worldwide asset management expertise, and tailored private wealth strategies for both general banking clients and affluent individuals. The Commercial Banking division targets businesses across the size spectrum. It extends crucial services such as credit and financing, treasury and cash flow management, payment processing, business insurance, and investment support. Additionally, it offers corporate cards, international trade and receivables financing, foreign exchange transactions, capital-raising capabilities via debt and equity markets, and strategic advisory services. Its client base spans from small and medium-sized enterprises to larger corporations. Lastly, the Global Banking and Markets segment focuses on advanced financial services for major organizations and investors. It provides sophisticated financing, expert advisory, and transaction execution across various asset classes, including credit, interest rates, foreign exchange, equities, and money market instruments, along with comprehensive securities services. This division also undertakes principal investment activities, serving governmental bodies, corporate entities, institutional clients, and high-net-worth private investors. Founded in 1865, HSBC Holdings plc maintains its central operations in London, United Kingdom.

Business History
Generated: Jun 26, 2026 3:02am
Price Overview
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:00am (1d ago)
$95.06
+1.21 (+1.29%)
Day Range
$94.88 – $96.04
52-Week Range
$59.92 – $96.90
50-Day MA
$91.62
200-Day MA
$81.14
Volume
1,135,550.00
Analyst Price Targets
Low $52.00
Consensus $52.00
High $52.00
(1 analysts)
Share Structure
Outstanding 3,436,720,000.00
Float 3,436,706,253.00
Free Float 100.0%
High free float — 100.0% of shares trade freely, ~0% held by insiders/institutions
Very liquid — most shares trade freely. Low insider ownership can mean less management alignment, but makes large position sizing straightforward.
Price History (1 Year)
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:05am (1d ago)
Revenue & Net Income Trend
The directional story — useful even when net income is negative.
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:05am (1d ago)
Revenue
The top line — total sales before any costs or taxes are subtracted. A measure of how much business the company is doing.
Net Income
The bottom line — profit left after subtracting all expenses, interest, and taxes from revenue. Reflects accounting profitability, but includes non-cash items like depreciation, so it isn't the same as cash earned.
Operating Cash Flow
The real cash generated by the day-to-day business — selling products, paying suppliers, collecting from customers. Calculated from net income by adding back non-cash items and adjusting for timing (unpaid bills, unsold inventory). When OCF consistently lags net income, the reported profit may not be converting to real money.
Period Revenue Net Income Net Margin YoY/QoQ
Key Metrics
API Direct from provider CALC Derived from statements
Industry comparison last run: Jun 26, 2026 3:01am
P/E Ratio (Price per dollar of earnings)
API
Stock Price / EPS (Diluted)
14.63
Stock Price: $95.06
EPS (Diluted): 6.05
P/B Ratio (Price vs net asset value)
API
Stock Price / Book Value Per Share
1.54
Stock Price: $95.06
Total Equity: $198.23B
Shares: 3,509,400,000
EV/EBITDA (Total value vs operating profit)
API
Enterprise Value / EBITDA
16.85
Market Cap: $326.69B
Total Debt: $256.14B
Cash: $307.74B
EBITDA: $29.03B
Enterprise Value (Takeover price (cap + debt - cash))
API
Market Cap + Total Debt - Cash
$483.1B
Market Cap: $326.69B
Total Debt: $256.14B
Cash: $307.74B
Gross Margin (Revenue left after direct costs)
API
Gross Profit / Revenue
54.6%
Gross Profit: $80.78B
Revenue: $147.86B
Operating Margin (Revenue left after all operations)
API
Operating Income / Revenue
20.3%
Operating Income: $29.98B
Revenue: $147.86B
Net Margin (Revenue left as actual profit)
API
Net Income / Revenue
15.1%
Net Income: $22.34B
Revenue: $147.86B
ROE (Profit from shareholder equity)
API
Net Income / Total Equity
12.1%
Net Income: $22.34B
Total Equity: $198.23B
ROIC (Profit from all invested capital)
API
NOPAT / Invested Capital
0.6%
Operating Income: $29.98B
Tax Rate: 25.1%
Equity: $198.23B
Total Debt: $256.14B
Cash: $307.74B
Current Ratio (Can it pay short-term bills)
API
Current Assets / Current Liabilities
2.62
Current Assets: $651.96B
Current Liabilities: $1,987.43B
Debt/Equity (Leverage — debt vs equity)
CALC
Total Debt / Total Equity
1.29
Short-Term Debt: $0.00
Long-Term Debt: $256.14B
Total Debt: $256.14B
Total Equity: $198.23B
Rev/Share (Top-line per share)
CALC
Revenue / Shares Outstanding
$42.13
Revenue: $147.86B
Shares: 3,509,400,000
Book Value/Share (Net assets per share)
CALC
(Total Assets - Total Liabilities) / Shares
$56.48
Total Equity: $198.23B
Shares: 3,509,400,000
FCF/Share (Real cash generated per share)
CALC
(Operating Cash Flow + CapEx) / Shares
$7.15
Operating CF: $29.77B
CapEx: -$4.66B
Shares: 3,509,400,000
CapEx is negative (outflow) — added to OCF to get FCF
Div Yield (Annual income from holding)
API
Last Annual Dividend / Stock Price
4.2%
Last Dividend: N/A
Stock Price: $95.06
Payout Ratio (Earnings paid out as dividends)
Dividends Paid / Net Income
Dividends Paid: N/A
Net Income: $22.34B
Dividends paid not available in cash flow statement
Industry Benchmarks
Last run: Jun 26, 2026 3:01am
Compares HSBC against LLM-researched typical ranges for its industry. One research call per industry, cached indefinitely — every stock in the same industry reuses the same baseline.
Advanced Analysis Forensic deep-dive · three lenses
Three separate reads — Company Quality (is it a great business?), Valuation (is it mispriced?), and General Sentiment (how macro + narrative are pushing it), kept deliberately apart · 2026-06-26 03:22:22
Delvantic - Cairn AI
Quality compounder — starter here, scale on weakness 7/10
Strong global bank (quality 75) trading at a modest 20-30% discount (value 32) with a quiet tailwind tape (sentiment +51) — own it now, but save real ammo for sub-$85.
The cruxWhether you trust the deserved-value band of $115-135 enough to pay $95 today, or hold out for the fat-pitch entry where bank opacity stops mattering.
Forensic checks Derived mechanically from HSBC's filed financials — not from the AI lenses
Liquidity & RunwayFortress Balance Sheet
DilutionShare Count Shrinking
Earnings QualityGood Earnings Quality
The three lensesswitch a tab for its full read — score + evidence
Company Quality
+75
Strong
edge √Σ 125 · risk √Σ 50 · conf 7/10

HSBC is throwing off real cash: FCF of $25.1B in 2025 against $22.3B net income (OCF/NI 2.98x, accruals -1.1% of assets) and revenue has climbed from $74B in 2021 to $148B in 2025 as the rate cycle lifted net interest income. Operating margin sits around 20-26% across the window and net income has roughly doubled from $13.9B (2021) to $22-24B (2023-2025), a clean re-rating of underlying earnings power. Capital return is disciplined: diluted shares fell from 4.06B to 3.51B (-3.6% CAGR), SBC is a trivial 0.4% of revenue, and buyback spend is ~14x SBC, so per-share value is being concentrated rather than diluted.

Strengths 3
m80
Genuine per-share compounding
Diluted share count down from 4.06B to 3.51B over four years (-3.6% CAGR), with buybacks running 1,418% of SBC. Management is a real net buyer, not a serial issuer.
m70
Earnings backed by cash
OCF/NI of 2.98x and accruals of -1.1% of assets indicate reported earnings are not flattered by accrual build; FCF of $25.1B in 2025 supports the dividend/buyback program.
m65
Revenue and net income step-up
Revenue nearly doubled from $74B (2021) to $148B (2025) and net income rose from $13.9B to $22-24B, reflecting higher NIM and improved cost discipline through the cycle.
Concerns 4
m35
Operating margin drift lower
OpM has slid from 25.6% (2021) to 20.3% (2025) even as revenue grew - some of the recent revenue gain is lower-quality and cost growth is outpacing the top line at the margin.
m25
Gross margin volatility
Reported GM swung from 86.9% (2021) to 49.8% (2023) to 54.6% (2025) - typical bank reclassification noise but signals the financial statements need cross-checking against the actual NII/fee disclosures.
m20
Altman Z and bank-model caveat
Altman Z of -0.28 prints distress, but the model is not designed for banks; HSBC is a CET1-regulated G-SIB so the right durability metric is capital ratios and LCR, not Z-score.
m15
Insider tape lightly negative
Officer Palomaki sold $419K in May 2026 versus a token $205 open-market buy by Bingham - not material, but no real insider conviction buying.
This is a high-quality mature global bank doing the right things for shareholders: shrinking the share count meaningfully, converting earnings into cash, and growing the absolute earnings base through the rate cycle. The two yellow flags are the slow operating-margin erosion and the inherent opacity of a G-SIB balance sheet - you cannot fully grade a bank's quality without seeing capital ratios, NPL trends, and Asian CRE exposure. Subject to those holding up, this is a Strong business; the Altman Z scare is a model artifact for a regulated bank and I am ignoring it.
Verify before trusting this (6)
  • CET1 ratio, LCR, and NSFR trajectory across 2021-2025 to confirm regulatory capital strength
  • Loan-loss provisioning and stage 3 / NPL ratios - is the cash flow strength masked by under-reserving?
  • Geographic exposure mix, particularly Hong Kong / mainland China commercial real estate writedowns
  • Whether the 2023 revenue jump reflects the sale of Canadian unit / Argentina divestiture or organic NII
  • Dividend payout ratio and buyback authorization remaining versus distributable reserves
  • Cost-to-income ratio trend explaining the OpM compression from 25.6% to 20.3%
Valuation / Mispricing
+32
Modestly Cheap
edge √Σ 93 · risk √Σ 61 · conf 6/10
Price $95 vs deserved ~$120-135, roughly 25-40% margin - cheap but not a fat pitch given bank opacity. attractive below $85.00

The e2e composite fair value sits at $137.51 with a signal-adjusted $143.01, implying ~45-50% upside. I haircut that: the EPV-floor of $174 looks runaway for a bank facing NIM compression and rate-cut headwinds, while the anchored-PE of $100.64 is the most credible peer-anchored read. Splitting the difference and giving credit for the Strong quality grade (buybacks shrinking the float, fat cash conversion, Asia franchise), a defensible deserved value lands in the $115-135 band. Against $95.06, that is a 20-30% gap - meaningful, not heroic.

Cheap signals 3
m55
Anchored-PE above price
Peer-anchored PE fair value of $100.64 sits ~6% above the $95.06 price; the most conservative method still says not expensive.
m60
Composite implies ~45% upside
Composite FV $137.51 and signal-adjusted $143.01 vs $95.06 give 45-50% theoretical upside; even haircut by a third, the gap remains material.
m45
Buyback math compounds the discount
Strong-quality lens flags meaningful float shrinkage; buying a shrinking share count below deserved value mechanically widens per-share value over time.
Rich / priced-in 2
m50
EPV floor looks runaway
EPV-floor of $174 is ~83% above price and assumes mid-cycle earnings persist; for a bank facing rate cuts and NIM compression, this input deserves heavy discount and I am not using it as the anchor.
m35
Bank opacity caps the deserved multiple
G-SIB balance sheet opacity and slow operating-margin erosion justify a structural discount to the composite - hence I land closer to anchored-PE than to EPV.
I think this is modestly cheap, not deeply cheap. The composite is dragged up by an EPV number I do not trust for a bank entering a rate-cut cycle, but even the conservative anchored-PE sits above spot and the buyback tailwind is real. A 20-30% gap on a Strong-quality global bank is worth owning, but I would get more aggressive below $85 where the margin of safety becomes hard to argue against.
Verify before trusting this (5)
  • NIM guidance and sensitivity to rate cuts in next results
  • Pace and authorization size of remaining buyback program
  • CET1 ratio trajectory and any capital return constraints
  • China/HK commercial real estate exposure and provisioning
  • Asia wealth fee growth trend
General Sentiment
+51
Tailwind
tail √Σ 94 · head √Σ 43 · conf 6/10

HSBC is a low-beta (0.58) diversified global bank in a neutral macro tape (VIX 18.9, S&P -3.3% off highs). The market regime barely touches this name - defensive, dividend-paying, Asia-exposed banks are exactly the kind of cohort that absorbs a wobbly tape without getting marked down. The narrative archetype is 'fallen-angel' with minimal intensity, meaning there is no euphoric story to deflate and no hostile narrative actively de-rating it either. That is itself a quiet tailwind: the stock has rallied 73% over the year on improving fundamentals rather than story-stock froth, so it is not vulnerable to a narrative crack. News flow is constructive - portfolio cleanup (Singapore insurance sale to Allianz, Indonesia wealth exit to OCBC), an AI integration with Google, and continued dividend credibility (27 straight years). These are 'boring good' headlines that reinforce the fortress-balance-sheet read. The one genuine divergence is analyst tone: consensus Hold with a $52 target versus a $95 price and zero recent revisions. That is a stale, backward-looking book that has not caught up to the re-rating - historically this kind of lagging downgrade gap creates upward revision pressure rather than selling pressure, because the analyst community will be forced to chase. Net: modest but real positive pressure, capped by the lack of any cult or momentum-chasing crowd.

Tailwinds 4
m55
Low beta insulates from wobbly tape
Beta 0.58 in a neutral-to-soft regime means the macro headwind (4.4% 10y, VIX 18.9) lands much more softly here than on high-beta growth names. Defensive dividend banks are a relative-strength bucket in this tape.
m50
Stale analyst book sets up revision tailwind
Targets sit at $52 vs a $95 stock with zero revisions this month after a 73% run. That gap will close UP not down - sell-side will be forced to chase, which is a mechanical positive pressure.
m45
Constructive housekeeping news flow
Singapore insurance sale to Allianz, Indonesia wealth exit to OCBC, Google AI tie-up, dividend stock features. All reinforce the simplification/fortress narrative without introducing controversy.
m35
Quiet narrative is durable narrative
Minimal intensity, low cult coefficient - there is no story-stock premium to puncture. The rally is on fundamentals, so a sentiment unwind is unlikely to be the trigger for a drawdown.
Headwinds 2
m35
Post-73% rally invites profit-taking chatter
News pieces are already asking 'is the rally justified' - classic late-stage framing. In a neutral tape, that question alone caps short-term upside sentiment.
m25
Generalized macro/rate overhang on banks
Higher-for-longer rates and a flattish curve (0.31) cap the sector multiple. Real but muted given HSBC's Asia mix and low beta.
Net pressure leans positive but not loudly. This is a low-beta defensive bank with no story-stock fragility, riding constructive housekeeping news, with a stale analyst book that has to chase a 73% rally - that is the kind of setup where sentiment quietly works in your favor rather than violently for you. The neutral tape barely scratches it. Only real risk to the read is 'rally fatigue' chatter after the run, which caps enthusiasm but does not flip the direction. Call it a Tailwind, confidence moderate.
Verify before trusting this (4)
  • Whether sell-side targets get revised up off the stale $52 - first upgrade is the catalyst
  • Any crack in the Asia/HK growth story or HK property/credit headlines that would reignite the bear narrative
  • VIX above 25 or a credit-spread widening event that would finally bite even low-beta banks
  • Pace of portfolio simplification - more disposal headlines reinforce the tailwind
The market-wide tape + this name's exposure to it (beta / sector / narrative durability). Context on the non-fundamental pressure — not a call on the business or the price. processId: detail-general-sentiment
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Three lenses kept deliberately separate — Company Quality (price-agnostic), Valuation (price-conditional), and General Sentiment (non-fundamental macro/narrative pressure). The scores are not blended. Filing-level items (convertibles, lock-ups, customer concentration) are v2 — see each lens's "verify."
Deep Analysis
Last run: Jun 26, 2026 3:04:21 am

Pre-flight intelligence scans the company first, then routes to the right analytical methods.

0 Company Classification — What type of company is this?
1 Industry Landscape — Where is the industry headed?
2 Company Momentum — Where is this company trending?
3 Forward Projection — 1Y & 2Y projected metrics (requires Layer 1 + 2)
4a DCF Valuation — Present value of future cash flows
4b Earnings Power Value — Floor value — worth with zero growth
4c Anchored PE — Industry PE adjusted for growth differential
4d Reverse DCF — What growth is the market pricing in?
4e Revenue-Based DCF — For growth/narrative companies (skip if mature earner)
Not applicable for Mature Earner companies
4f Anchored P/S — Price-to-Sales peer comparison (skip if mature earner)
Not applicable for Mature Earner companies
4g Scenario Analysis — Bull / Base / Bear (skip if mature earner)
Not applicable for Mature Earner companies
4h Dividend Discount Model — For dividend/income stocks only
Not applicable for Mature Earner companies
4i Book Value Analysis — For deep value / turnaround stocks only
Not applicable for Mature Earner companies
4j Insider Activity — Are insiders buying or selling?
4f Cash Flow Quality — How trustworthy is the FCF?
4g Debt Maturity Risk — Can it handle its debt?
4h Macro Environment — Rates, market valuation, volatility
4i Sector Intelligence — How does this company compare within its sector?
4j Revenue Confidence — How reliable is the growth projection?
4k Sensitivity Analysis — How fragile is the fair value estimate?
4l Sector Demand Cycle — Is the sector in a boom, steady state, or contraction?
5 AI Investigation — Adaptive research engine (Claude)
5b Thesis Evaluation — What does the market believe? (narrative/platform stocks only)
Not applicable for Mature Earner companies
6 Valuation Synthesis — Weighted verdict from all methods (requires Layer 4)
Income Statement (Annual)
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:05am (1d ago)
Metric 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Revenue $73.9B $76.2B $129.5B $143.3B $147.9B
Cost of Revenue $9.7B $22.4B $65.1B $75.9B $67.1B
Gross Profit $64.2B $53.7B $64.4B $67.4B $80.8B
Operating Expenses $45.3B $36.7B $34.1B $35.1B $50.8B
Operating Income $18.9B $17.1B $30.3B $32.3B $30.0B
Net Income $13.9B $15.6B $23.5B $24.0B $22.3B
EBITDA $23.2B $20.9B $33.8B $36.4B $29.0B
EPS $3.10 $3.60 $5.75 $6.25 $6.05
EPS (Diluted)
Balance Sheet (Annual)
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:00am (1d ago)
Metric 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Cash & Equivalents $422.4B $350.1B $299.6B $284.5B $307.7B
Total Current Assets $422.4B $350.1B $319.8B $298.3B $652.0B
Total Assets $3.0T $3.0T $3.0T $3.0T $3.2T
Current Liabilities $10.5B $12.4B $1.8T $1.8T $2.0T
Long-Term Debt $225.7B $204.2B $235.2B $242.3B $256.1B
Total Liabilities $2.8T $2.8T $2.8T $2.8T $3.0T
Total Equity $198.3B $177.8B $185.3B $185.0B $198.2B
Retained Earnings $144.5B $142.4B $152.1B $152.4B $169.6B
Cash Flow (Annual)
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:05am (1d ago)
Metric 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Operating Cash Flow $104.3B $26.4B $39.1B $65.3B $29.8B
Capital Expenditure -$3.6B -$4.4B -$3.7B -$3.9B -$4.7B
Free Cash Flow $100.7B $22.0B $35.4B $61.4B $25.1B
Acquisitions (net) -$106.0M -$989.0M -$453.0M -$2.7B -$325.0M
Debt Repayment
Dividends Paid
Stock Buybacks -$2.1B -$2.4B -$6.4B -$11.9B -$12.7B
Net Change in Cash $105.7B -$52.4B -$30.7B -$56.0B -$2.1B
Analyst Estimates (Annual)
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:00am (1d ago)
Metric 2027 2028 2029 2030
Revenue $77.3B
$76.9B – $77.6B
$81.3B
$80.0B – $82.1B
$84.5B
$83.2B – $85.3B
$87.7B
$86.3B – $88.5B
EBITDA $20.1B
$20.0B – $20.2B
$21.1B
$20.8B – $21.3B
$22.0B
$21.6B – $22.2B
$22.8B
$22.4B – $23.0B
Net Income $32.6B
$31.6B – $34.1B
$35.6B
$34.9B – $36.0B
$38.6B
$37.8B – $39.1B
$44.7B
$43.9B – $45.3B
EPS
Growth Trends (YoY %)
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:05am (1d ago)
Metric 2022 2023 2024 2025
Revenue Growth +3.0% +70.0% +10.6% +3.2%
Gross Profit Growth -16.4% +20.0% +4.6% +19.9%
Operating Income Growth -9.8% +77.9% +6.5% -7.2%
Net Income Growth +11.8% +51.3% +1.9% -6.8%
EBITDA Growth -9.8% +61.7% +7.6% -20.2%
Insider Trading (Recent)
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:04am (1d ago)
Type codes PPurchase SSale AAward / grant MOption exercise FIn-kind (tax) CConversion GGift DReturn to issuer
All SEC Form 4 codes
Open market
P Purchase
Open-market or private purchase of shares.
S Sale
Open-market or private sale of shares.
Compensation (Rule 16b-3)
A Award / grant
Grant or award of securities (RSUs, options, etc.) under Rule 16b-3.
D Return to issuer
Securities disposed back to the company under Rule 16b-3.
F In-kind (tax)
Shares withheld or delivered to pay the option-exercise price or tax — not an open-market sale.
I Discretionary
Discretionary transaction under an employee plan — Rule 16b-3(f).
M Option exercise
Exercise or conversion of a derivative (option/RSU) into shares — exempt.
Derivatives
C Conversion
Conversion of a derivative security into the underlying shares.
E Short expiration
Expiration of a short derivative position.
H Long expiration
Expiration or cancellation of a long derivative position with value received.
O OTM exercise
Exercise of an out-of-the-money derivative.
X ITM exercise
Exercise of an in-the-money or at-the-money derivative.
Other exempt
G Gift
Bona fide gift of securities.
L Small acquisition
Small acquisition under Rule 16a-6.
W Inheritance
Acquisition or disposition by will or the laws of descent.
Z Voting trust
Deposit into or withdrawal from a voting trust.
Other
J Other
Other acquisition or disposition (explained in a Form 4 footnote).
K Equity swap
Transaction in an equity swap or similar instrument.
U Tender / buyout
Disposition via tender of shares in a change-of-control transaction.

Compensation-plan codes (A, D, F, M) are routine and rarely directional. Open-market P (buy) and S (sale) carry the most signal.

Date Insider Type Shares Price Value
2026-05-22 Palomaki Daniel Scott A-Award 88.00 $0.00 $0
2026-05-07 Palomaki Daniel Scott S-Sale 23,123.00 $18.11 $418,667
2026-04-01 Palomaki Daniel Scott 0.00 $0.00 $0
2026-04-01 Palomaki Daniel Scott 15,241.00 $0.00 $0
2026-04-01 Palomaki Daniel Scott 428.00 $0.00 $0
2026-03-27 Bingham Jonathan P-Purchase 13.00 $15.81 $205
2026-03-20 Bingham Jonathan A-Award 792.00 $0.00 $0
2026-03-17 Bingham Jonathan 0.00 $0.00 $0
2026-03-17 Bingham Jonathan 0.00 $0.00 $0
2026-03-17 Bingham Jonathan 0.00 $0.00 $0
2026-03-17 Bingham Jonathan 28,081.00 $0.00 $0
Dividend History (Last 20)
Last updated: Jun 26, 2026 3:00am (1d ago)
Date Dividend Declaration Record Payment
2026-05-15 $0.50 2026-05-05 2026-05-15 2026-06-26
2026-03-13 $2.25 2026-02-25 2026-03-13 2026-04-30
2025-11-07 $0.50 2025-10-28 2025-11-07 2025-12-18
2025-08-15 $0.50 2025-07-30 2025-08-15 2025-09-26
2025-05-09 $0.50 2025-04-29 2025-05-09 2025-06-20
2025-03-07 $1.80 2025-02-19 2025-03-07 2025-04-25
2024-11-08 $0.50 2024-10-29 2024-11-08 2024-12-19
2024-08-16 $0.50 2024-07-31 2024-08-16 2024-09-27
2024-05-09 $1.55 2024-05-01 2024-05-10 2024-06-21
2024-03-07 $1.55 2024-02-22 2024-03-08 2024-04-25
2023-11-09 $0.50 2023-10-30 2023-11-10 2023-12-21
2023-08-10 $0.50 2023-08-01 2023-08-11 2023-09-21
2023-05-11 $0.50 2023-05-02 2023-05-12 2023-06-23
2023-03-02 $1.15 2023-02-21 2023-03-03 2023-04-27
2022-08-18 $0.45 2022-08-01 2022-08-19 2022-09-29
2022-03-10 $0.90 2022-02-24 2022-03-11 2022-04-28
2021-08-19 $0.35 2021-08-03 2021-08-20 2021-09-30
2021-03-11 $0.75 2021-02-23 2021-03-12 2021-04-29
2020-02-27 $1.05 2020-02-19 2020-02-28 2020-04-14
2019-10-10 $0.50 1900-01-01 2019-10-11 2019-11-20
Narrative Economics
The story the market is telling about this stock — the intangible X-factor (founder mythology, cult dynamics, TAM-of-imagination) that moves price beyond what cash flows alone explain. After Shiller, Narrative Economics.
No narrative profile yet for HSBC — it's generated by the pipeline (market-narrative step).
Delvantic AI Findings
Independent analyst synthesis · Delvantic - Cairn AI · generated 2026-06-26 03:04:56
Reviews the pipeline's own verdicts
Verdict Fairly valued income vehicle — fair value $100-110, not $137; own it for the 4.2% yield and modest re-rating optionality, but the synthesis's +50% upside double-counts a re-rating that already happened.

The raw numbers tell a less exciting story than the synthesis verdict implies. Annual revenue of $147.86B in 2025 vs $143.29B in 2024 is +3.2% growth, and net income actually *declined* from $23.98B to $22.34B — that's the opposite of "accelerating." The 6.9% revenue CAGR is flattered by the 2022→2023 jump (rates regime change: $76B to $129B), which is a one-time rate-cycle benefit, not a growth trajectory. Strip that out and HSBC is a flat-to-declining earnings franchise with a 4.2% dividend yield. ROE of 12% and ROA of 0.69% are pedestrian for a global bank — JPM runs 17%+ ROE. The quarterly print pattern (Q1 ~$7.3B NI, other quarters $4.7-5.3B) screams seasonality/one-offs, not a clean run-rate.

The synthesis's $137-143 fair value (+50% upside) deserves real skepticism. A DCF on a global bank with declining earnings, 12% ROE, and structural Asia/UK regulatory drag should not produce that gap unless you're assuming mean-reversion to a higher ROTE that management has been promising for a decade and not delivering. P/B of 1.54 is *not* cheap for a bank earning 12% ROE — that's roughly fair. The narrative layer correctly flags this: P/B of 0.6-0.8x was the old setup; at 1.54x P/B the "deep discount" thesis is largely played out. Someone is double-counting — the pre-flight thesis assumes 0.6-0.8x P/B, but the canonical metric says 1.54x. HSBC has already re-rated meaningfully (stock at $95 vs. sub-$40 in 2020). The "fallen angel at a discount" frame is stale.

A careful contrarian would argue: (1) HSBC's earnings are at peak NIM — as global rates normalize lower, that $22-24B NI compresses back toward $16-18B, making the current 14.6x P/E look like 18-20x on normalized earnings; (2) the Hong Kong/China commercial real estate exposure remains an unquantified tail, and the 1% margin print in Q4 2024 ($351M NI on $34.6B revenue) is a reminder that big writedowns happen with no warning; (3) buybacks have done the heavy lifting on EPS — without continued capital return at this pace, the dividend-income thesis weakens; (4) the insider sale of 23,123 shares in May 2026 with only token purchases is mildly negative, not "neutral." The market-forces "neutral" call and the narrative engine's "fundamentals-anchored, minimal narrative intensity" read are both more honest than the synthesis's +50% upside claim.

I dissent from the synthesis. Fair value is closer to $100-110, not $137-143 — that's 5-15% upside plus the 4.2% yield, which is a respectable total-return setup for a dividend-income name but not a screaming buy. The TTM-derived metrics (P/E 14.6, ROE 12%, EV/EBITDA 16.9) are reasonable but not anomalously cheap; the anomaly flags are technically correct but don't change the conclusion. The pre-flight's premise that this trades at "0.6-0.8x P/B" is factually wrong given the 1.54x canonical figure — that error inflates the entire undervaluation thesis downstream. What would change my mind: a clean Q2/Q3 2026 print showing the $7.3B Q1 NI is repeatable (implying $25B+ annualized), or evidence the Asia wealth franchise is compounding fee income at double digits. Until then, this is a hold-for-yield, not an aggressive buy.

GPT Critique
Second-opinion review · gpt-4o · generated 2026-06-26 03:05:04
Reviews the Opus findings above
Verdict I agree with Opus — fairly valued at $100-110, not $137; the synthesis overstates upside, but HSBC remains a solid income play with 5-15% upside plus yield.

In my own reading of HSBC's raw data, I see a mixed picture with some noteworthy points. The company's recent quarterly revenue is relatively stable, hovering around $33 billion, though the net income shows significant fluctuations. For instance, Q1 2026 saw a net income of $7.35 billion, a stark contrast to the $4.73 billion in Q2 2025. This indicates some seasonality or one-off effects, as Opus suggested. On an annual basis, HSBC's revenue growth from $129.51 billion in 2023 to $147.86 billion in 2025 reflects a modest CAGR of 6.9%. However, the declining net income from $23.98 billion in 2024 to $22.34 billion in 2025 suggests underlying margin pressures. The current P/E ratio of 14.6 and P/B of 1.54 imply that HSBC is trading at a fair valuation compared to its financial peer group, especially considering its ROE of 12%, which is below some global competitors like JPMorgan.

I agree with Opus's skepticism regarding the synthesis's valuation of HSBC. Opus rightly points out that the +50% upside potential from the synthesis is overly optimistic, especially given the company's flat-to-declining earnings profile. The assertion that HSBC's re-rating has already occurred is supported by the current P/B ratio of 1.54, which is not reflective of a deeply discounted stock. I concur with Opus that assuming a fair value of $100-110 is more plausible, recognizing the modest 5-15% upside plus the dividend yield. This is more aligned with the actual market sentiment and HSBC's financial performance trajectory.

However, I diverge from Opus on the impact of insider transactions. Opus notes the insider sale of 23,123 shares as mildly negative, whereas I would consider this within the context of typical trading patterns; one transaction is insufficient to imply a broader trend without additional context. Additionally, while Opus attributes the narrative engine's minimal intensity to a grounded fundamentals story, I would argue that the geopolitical risks and strategic identity issues might have a more pronounced impact on investor sentiment than Opus credits.

A careful skeptic might argue that both Opus and I are underestimating the potential impact of HSBC's strategic "pivot to Asia." If HSBC can effectively leverage its position in Asia-Pacific markets, particularly if China and other emerging markets stabilize economically, this could drive substantial future growth not currently reflected in the valuation. Additionally, the skeptic would point to the massive cash reserves of $307.74 billion as a buffer against potential geopolitical and market volatility, which could be used strategically to enhance shareholder value beyond current expectations.

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My Notes personal — only you see this
Data via Financial Modeling Prep · Cached for performance · fmp
v1.1.352 · d1100787 · 2026-06-26 11:39:30