London, February 6, 2026, 08:01 GMT — Regular session underway.
- HSBC shares ticked up early Friday, bouncing back after a steep drop in UK bank stocks
- Traders ramp up bets on rate cuts following Bank of England’s tight vote
- Attention turns to HSBC’s annual results later this month, where guidance and dividends will come into focus
HSBC Holdings Plc shares held steady in early London trading Friday, bouncing back after UK banks took a hit following the Bank of England’s latest move.
The rate debate is back in focus as a near-term catalyst. A drop in policy rates can pinch net interest margins — the difference between bank earnings on loans and costs on deposits — and the market is rushing to factor that in.
HSBC heads into results season close to recent highs, with limited margin for error on guidance or capital returns.
HSBC shares ticked up 0.2% to 1,280 pence (£12.80) by 0800 GMT. The stock closed Thursday down 2.29% at 1,277.6 pence, slipping back from a weekly high of 1,320.4 pence hit on Wednesday. (Investing)
UK bank shares dropped Thursday after the BoE kept rates steady at 3.75%, with a surprisingly close 5-4 vote. The central bank flagged potential cuts if inflation drops as expected. HSBC, Lloyds, and NatWest slid between 2.3% and 6%, while sterling shed 0.76%, according to Reuters data. (Reuters)
“They have adjusted the cautious easing guidance, removing any mention of a gradual decline in the bank rate,” said Elias Haddad, senior markets strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in London. (Reuters)
Broker ratings data from London South East revealed that J.P. Morgan Cazenove kept its “neutral” call on HSBC on Thursday but raised the price target to 1,190 pence from 1,060. (London South East)
A regulatory filing on Thursday revealed HSBC has boosted its stake in International Personal Finance to 9.712% of voting rights, up from 8.682% before. (Investegate)
The bank move triggered a wider shake-up across Europe Thursday, with the STOXX 600 sliding 1% and the banking index plunging 3.5% as investors parsed through earnings reports and central bank cues. (Reuters)
Still, the very rate-cut optimism that often boosts the broader market could backfire on lenders. Quicker easing would squeeze their margins, and slower growth usually leads to higher credit losses down the line.
HSBC plans to release its Annual Results 2025 on February 25 at 4 a.m. GMT. An investor and analyst meeting will follow at 7:45 a.m. GMT. (HSBC)
Analysts and investors are keenly awaiting any news on return on tangible equity (ROTE) — a key profitability metric that excludes goodwill and other intangibles — along with clues on dividends and share buybacks. “UK banks have benefited from earnings resilience lasting longer than initially expected,” said Peter Rothwell, head of banking at KPMG UK. (Reuters)