London, Jan 9, 2026, 10:51 GMT — Regular session
- HSBC shares down about 0.2% in London; U.S.-listed stock up about 0.3%
- Bank agreed to pay 267.5 million euros to settle a French dividend-tax probe
- Hang Seng Bank buyout vote cleared; Hong Kong court hearing is the next gate
HSBC Holdings Plc shares edged lower on Friday after the bank agreed to pay 267.5 million euros ($312 million) to the French treasury to settle an investigation into alleged dividend tax fraud. The stock was down 2.8 pence at 1,192.6 pence in London, while its U.S.-listed shares were up 23 cents at $80.49.
The timing matters because HSBC has been trading near recent highs and investors have been counting on clean capital returns in 2026, not fresh legal bills. Any hit to capital, even if manageable, lands just as the bank heads toward its annual results later next month.
It also lands with another capital question hanging over the group: HSBC is moving to take Hang Seng Bank private in a deal worth about $13.6 billion. Together, the two developments keep attention on how much flexibility HSBC has as it leans harder into Hong Kong and wider Asia.
The French settlement, approved by a Paris court on Thursday, ends a probe covering practices between 2014 and 2019, Reuters reported. HSBC said it was “pleased to have resolved this matter which relates to certain historical trading which ended in 2019,” and said the settlement recognised its cooperation and corrective measures; it did not say whether it had made provisions or how the payment might affect results.
The case sits inside a broader European push against dividend-trading schemes commonly labelled “cum-cum” and “cum-ex” — rapid share trades around dividend dates that can muddy ownership and, prosecutors say, enable improper tax reclaims. Financial Times reported French prosecutors have also been probing other big banks including BNP Paribas and Société Générale.
In Hong Kong, Hang Seng Bank shareholders approved HSBC’s plan to buy the remaining 36.5% it does not already own, with around 86% backing, Reuters reported. HSBC CEO Georges Elhedery said the vote “reflects strong confidence” in Hang Seng’s franchise, while the unit has been under pressure from its exposure to the Hong Kong and mainland China property markets.
More immediately, traders are watching rate-sensitive bank stocks into U.S. labour data due at 08:30 a.m. ET on Friday, a release that can move bond yields quickly. In the UK, the Bank of England’s next rate decision is due on Feb. 5, with Bank Rate currently at 3.75%.
HSBC has not been far from its recent peak: it hit a 52-week high of about 12.27 pounds earlier this week, before slipping back. Some investors see a retest of that level as a near-term hurdle if headlines stay quiet.
But the downside case is not hard to sketch. Further legal costs tied to dividend-trade probes, or a deeper hit from Hong Kong and mainland China property stress through Hang Seng, could force HSBC to be more cautious on payouts and deal pace.
The next clear deal catalyst is in Hong Kong: a High Court hearing on Jan. 23 is expected to determine whether the Hang Seng privatisation can proceed, with delisting pencilled in for Jan. 27 if approved.