London, Feb 19, 2026, 08:35 GMT — Regular session
- HSBC ticked up roughly 0.3% at the open, sticking close to its recent highs.
- UK inflation eased and the FTSE 100 notched yet another record finish on Wednesday.
- HSBC’s annual results are on deck, with investors watching closely for word on the dividend.
HSBC edged up in early London action Thursday, gaining roughly 0.3% to trade near 1,302 pence. (Hargreaves Lansdown)
The decision puts the bank squarely in the spotlight just a week ahead of annual results. Investors are eyeing potential guidance on payouts and waiting to see how executives describe the outlook for 2026, especially as rate-cut bets pick up.
The FTSE 100 in Britain locked in another record finish on Wednesday, its second in a row, after fresh data showed inflation cooling to 3.0% in January—something not seen in almost a year. That slowdown has markets betting the Bank of England could move to cut rates as early as March. “Investors keep piling into UK assets,” said Axel Rudolph, senior financial analyst at IG. (Reuters)
HSBC closed out Wednesday up 2.17% at 12.98 pounds, outpacing the FTSE 100’s 1.23% climb to 10,686.18. (MarketWatch)
The stock kicked off Thursday at 1,306.8 pence, then bounced between roughly 1,296 and 1,307 pence in early trading, according to data. (Hargreaves Lansdown)
UK-listed banks pushed higher in the previous session. Standard Chartered climbed 2.43% to finish at 18.10 pounds on Wednesday. (MarketWatch)
HSBC’s U.S. shares wrapped up Wednesday in New York with a 1.77% gain at $88.10, having peaked earlier at $88.56. (Yahoo Finance)
HSBC plans to release its Annual Results 2025 on Feb. 25 at 4 a.m. GMT, the bank’s investor calendar shows. An investor and analyst call will follow later in the morning. (HSBC)
Bank stocks that react to macro signals are likely to move on the Bank of England’s policy announcement set for March 19, as well as new economic and labor market figures. (Bank of England)
The path isn’t a straight shot. If rate cuts arrive faster or go deeper, banks’ interest margins take a hit. Toss in an unexpected spike in credit losses or costs when results land, and bids can unravel just as fast.