HSBC

HSBC HOLDINGS PLC-SPONS ADR Price

HSBC
$91,46
-$0,13(-%0,14)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-21 19:25 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-21 19:25, HSBC HOLDINGS PLC-SPONS ADR (HSBC) is priced at $91,46, with a total market cap of $317,34B, a P/E ratio of 12,27, and a dividend yield of %3,02. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $90,88 and $92,44. The current price is %0,63 above the day's low and %1,06 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 1,51M. Over the past 52 weeks, HSBC has traded between $83,45 to $92,98, and the current price is -%1,63 away from the 52-week high.

HSBC Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$92,15
Market Cap$317,34B
Volume1,51M
P/E Ratio12,27
Dividend Yield (TTM)%3,02
Dividend Amount$2,25
Diluted EPS (TTM)1,30
Net Income (FY)$22,33B
Revenue (FY)$147,86B
Earnings Date2026-05-05
EPS Estimate2,12
Revenue Estimate$18,55B
Shares Outstanding3,44B
Beta (1Y)0.555
Ex-Dividend Date2026-03-13
Dividend Payment Date2026-04-30

About HSBC

HSBC Holdings plc provides banking and financial services worldwide. The company operates through Wealth and Personal Banking, Commercial Banking, and Global Banking and Markets segments. The Wealth and Personal Banking segment offers retail banking and wealth products, including current and savings accounts, mortgages and personal loans, credit and debit cards, and local and international payment services; and wealth management services comprising insurance and investment products, global asset management services, investment management, and private wealth solutions. This segment serves personal banking and high net worth individuals. The Commercial Banking segment provides credit and lending, treasury management, payment, cash management, commercial insurance, and investment services; commercial cards; international trade and receivables finance services; foreign exchange products; capital raising services on debt and equity markets; and advisory services. It serves small and medium sized enterprises, mid-market enterprises, and corporates. The Global Banking and Markets segment offers financing, advisory, and transaction services; and credit, rates, foreign exchange, equities, money markets, and securities services; and engages in principal investment activities. It serves government, corporate and institutional clients, and private investors. HSBC Holdings plc was founded in 1865 and is headquartered in London, the United Kingdom.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryBanks - Diversified
CEOGeorges Bahjat Elhedery
HeadquartersLondon,None,GB
Official Websitehttps://www.hsbc.com
Employees (FY)47,00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$3,14M
Net Income per Employee$475,25K

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HSBC HOLDINGS PLC-SPONS ADR (HSBC) Latest News

2026-04-13 03:21

Hong Kong Monetary Authority vice president: The issuance timeline for the second batch of stablecoin licenses has not been determined, and the total number of licenses is extremely limited.

Gate News message. On April 13, Hong Kong Monetary Authority Deputy Chief Executive Officer Chen Weimin said that the timeline for issuing the second batch of stablecoin licenses has not yet been determined; it will be set according to how the first two licensed institutions are operating, and the total number of licenses in the future will be very limited. A source said that among the mainland Chinese institutions that had participated in submitting applications, they had all received window guidance from relevant authorities to temporarily hold off on participating in this stablecoin licensing application, but some mainland Chinese institutions have continued to communicate with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority over the past few months. After excluding mainland Chinese institutions, the vast majority of institutions planning to apply are relatively limited in strength, and there are not many qualified institutions that can fully meet the requirements of the Stablecoin Ordinance. Li Guankang, who oversees HSBC Payme, said that as long as someone is a Payme user, they can open a stablecoin account; within a stablecoin account, users can directly transfer funds to friends and family, transfer to merchants, or invest in products linked to stablecoins. Users in the HSBC app cannot open stablecoin accounts directly; they must apply after HSBC has screened out qualifying users. Opening a Payme account has required users to be Hong Kong residents, and HSBC app users also include users from the Mainland. Under the management framework in place in Hong Kong, only Hong Kong residents may participate in virtual asset trading; even Mainland clients who are mobile payment users of HSBC Hong Kong cannot apply for a stablecoin account.

2026-04-11 07:02

Hong Kong Monetary Authority Deputy Chief Executive: If a stablecoin issuer wants to issue a Renminbi-pegged stablecoin, it must obtain approval from mainland regulatory authorities

Gate News message, April 11, Hong Kong Monetary Authority Deputy Chief Executive Chen Weimin said that what type of coin stablecoin issuers choose to issue mainly depends on the applicant’s own choice. Launching a Hong Kong dollar stablecoin first, and in the future issuing other denominations including the renminbi, is allowed under Hong Kong’s regulatory framework, but applicants also need to obtain approval from mainland regulatory authorities. Regarding when the second batch of stablecoin issuer licenses would be issued, Chen Weimin said there is currently no related timeline, but he has been maintaining communication with applicants who are interested in applying for licenses. In addition, HSBC stablecoin will be integrated with both PayMe and the HSBC HK App, supporting real-time transfers between individuals and individuals’ use of services for merchants (P2M).

2026-04-10 09:29

HSBC plans to launch a Hong Kong dollar–denominated stablecoin in the second half of 2026

Gate News message, on April 10, HSBC said it welcomes the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s issuance of a stablecoin issuance license, and plans to launch a Hong Kong dollar–denominated stablecoin in the second half of 2026.

2026-04-03 07:01

Lista DAO launches the Dow Protocol e-commerce finance RWA Vault, with an APY of 10%

Gate News message: On April 3, Lista DAO launched today the Dow E-Commerce Financing RWA Vault of Dow Protocol (RWA refers to Real World Assets, i.e., real-world assets). This Vault is built on the capability development of Dowsure, an e-commerce finance company under HSBC, with a term of 90 days and an APY currently at 10%. The Vault is supported by merchants’ accounts receivable and repayment cash flows from mature, leading global e-commerce platforms, providing merchants with a working-capital advance service for cash flow. Merchant repayment discipline is jointly ensured by two core mechanisms: first, an automated repayment service routing mechanism in cooperation with the e-commerce platform, used to prioritize the collection of merchants’ incoming payments and to automatically deduct principal and interest upon the agreed schedule; second, a dual-locked account control mechanism, used to limit changes to the repayment route, verify control rights over the repayment accounts, and support the taking of corresponding protective measures in the event of overdue or default circumstances. What this Vault maps is not a revenue structure that merely sits in the incentive layer on-chain, but rather a cash-flow system that has been operating for a long time in the real commercial world and has been validated.

2026-04-01 03:16

Hong Kong stablecoin license issuance delayed, hitting obstacles for HKD stablecoin regulation rollout?

Gate News reports: the Hong Kong dollar stablecoin licensing rollout plan that was originally set to begin in March 2026 has been delayed, and as of now no organization has received approval. Previously, in February, Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan publicly said that the relevant licenses would take effect in March, with the goal of helping Hong Kong develop into a global, regulated stablecoin and asset tokenization hub. However, actual progress has not met expectations, and the market widely believes the timeline will be pushed back to April or later. Paul Chan emphasized that, during the approval process, the regulatory authorities focus on whether applicants have clear use cases, a sustainable business model, and a robust compliance framework—an indication that the bar for stablecoin issuance is relatively high. Industry insiders believe this cautious approach helps reduce systemic risk, but in the short term it may affect the pace at which the industry moves forward. According to earlier media disclosures, HSBC Bank, Standard Chartered Bank, and a joint venture related to Animoca are viewed as potential first-round licensable entities. Since HSBC and Standard Chartered themselves play the role of Hong Kong dollar banknote-issuing banks, their involvement in building a stablecoin system is seen as symbolically significant, further strengthening the link between stablecoins and the traditional financial system. From an institutional perspective, Hong Kong’s current monetary system already has a “stable-like mechanism.” The banknote-issuing banks are required to deposit U.S. dollar reserves with the Exchange Fund at a fixed exchange rate, a structure that shares similarities with the asset-peg logic behind stablecoins. The CEO of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), Eddie Yue, had also previously noted that stablecoins can be viewed as an evolutionary form of blockchain-based “private money.” Although the regulators have not disclosed the specific reasons for the delay, the official response says the licensing work is still under way and that progress will be announced at an appropriate time. For the market, the rollout of Hong Kong dollar stablecoins is not only tied to the competitive landscape for regional digital finance, but could also become an important bridge connecting on-chain assets with traditional capital systems.

Hot Posts About HSBC HOLDINGS PLC-SPONS ADR (HSBC)

User_any

User_any

18 minutes ago
✨ New Center for Global Crypto Regulation: Hong Kong #HKUnveilsNewCryptoRules Hong Kong is rapidly moving towards becoming a global standard-setter in crypto asset regulation by 2026. Newly announced and implemented regulations directly impact not only the local market but also the direction of the global Web3 ecosystem. ✨ This move makes Hong Kong one of the rare financial centers that can strike a balance between “regulation + innovation.” ✨ What Has Changed? ✨ Stablecoin Regulation Officially Goes Into Effect Following the Stablecoin Ordinance, which came into effect in 2025, the first licenses were issued in 2026. HSBC and Standard Chartered-linked entities were among the first licensed issuers. Stablecoin issuance is now a regulated activity requiring a license. ✨ Scope Expanding: Not Just Exchanges New regulations include: 🔹Crypto trading platforms 🔹Custody services 🔹Portfolio management and consulting Expanding to include these areas ✨ Mandatory Compliance and Audit Mechanism AML (anti-money laundering) and CFT (terrorist financing) rules have been tightened Licensed firms are now required to: protect customer assets, monitor transactions, and conduct risk-based audits ✨ Critical Data ✨ Digital assets held in banks: $14 billion+ ✨ Tokenized deposits: Reached $29 billion ✨ Stablecoin market size globally: $300 billion+ 👉 This data shows that regulations aim not only to control but also to drive growth. ✨ Strategic Moves ✨ Licensing = Building Trust Hong Kong aims to increase institutional investor confidence through its licensing mechanism. ✨ Tokenization Economy New regulations open up ample space for tokenized assets and digital finance products. ✨ Competitive Strategy Hong Kong competing with Singapore, Dubai, and the US: ➡️ Clearer regulations ➡️ Faster licensing processes ➡️ Offers a wider range of products ✨ Market Impact ✨ Lower barriers to entry for institutional players ✨ Reduced regulatory uncertainty → increased investment appetite ✨ Stablecoins become the primary tool in payments and commerce However: ⚠️ Excessive regulation → may slow down innovation ⚠️ Global non-compliance → may create a risk of market fragmentation ✨ My Opinion ✨ Short Term: Regulation clarity → increased capital flow ✨ Medium Term: Hong Kong → Asia's crypto finance center ✨ Long Term: Regulated stablecoins → an alternative to traditional finance ✨ In conclusion Hong Kong's new crypto regulations present a model that breaks the perception of "regulation = barrier." ✨ Clear Framework ✨ Corporate Trust ✨ Technological Integration 📌 This approach could accelerate the mainstreaming of crypto assets in the global financial system. 🤔 Do you think the Hong Kong model will be successful? 🤔 Will it become a global standard? 🤔 Or will excessive regulation stifle innovation? 👇 Share your opinions.
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LittleGodOfWealthPlutus

LittleGodOfWealthPlutus

5 hours ago
#香港证监会发布新监管框架 Hong Kong's tokenization scale surpasses HKD 10.7 billion: Can the opening of the secondary market ignite a new era for digital assets?‌‌‌‌‌‌ Hong Kong's tokenization scale exceeds HKD 10.7 billion. As of March 2026, the total assets managed by 13 tokenized products soared to approximately HKD 10.7 billion, a sevenfold increase in one year. On April 20, the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) relaxed the trading of tokenized investment products in the secondary market, making round-the-clock buying and selling a reality. From bonds and funds to precious metals, from primary subscriptions to secondary market opening, Hong Kong is exploring the answers to a new era of digital assets with the most comprehensive compliant framework in the world. Can the secondary market truly unleash liquidity? From primary subscriptions to 24/7 trading: A decentralization of financial power In response to the SFC's relaxation of secondary market trading for tokenized investment products, our view is: opening the secondary market transforms tokenization from an exclusive game for the wealthy into a battlefield for the general public. Under the old framework, tokenized products only had primary subscriptions, meaning you could buy but not sell. Want to sell? No way. Liquidity was locked. But the emergence of the new framework is decisive. The new guidelines clearly state that tokenized mutual funds approved by the SFC can be traded in the secondary market on licensed virtual asset trading platforms, with plans to provide round-the-clock liquidity through regulated stablecoins and tokenized deposits. The first batch of products mainly includes tokenized money market funds. If the experience is good, the scope will gradually expand to all approved authorized funds. This is like a bridge, one side is the trillion-dollar traditional assets, and the other is the 24/7 Web3 world. Hong Kong is laying the bricks. Three key signals: infrastructure, asset diversification, stablecoin licenses Hong Kong's SFC is advancing from three directions simultaneously as it opens up secondary market trading for tokenized investment products: Bond tokenization, becoming routine In November 2025, Hong Kong issued its third batch of tokenized green bonds, totaling HKD 10 billion, making it the largest digital bond in the world. The four currencies had a total subscription amount exceeding HKD 130 billion. In April 2026, Hong Kong Mortgage Corporation plans to issue its first digital bond, with a scale between HKD 10 billion and HKD 12 billion. If the upper limit is reached, it will set a new global record. Asset types, blooming across the board On April 17, 2026, OSL Group officially launched gold RWA tokens and silver tokens, becoming Hong Kong’s first compliant digital asset platform to offer both precious metal tokenization products simultaneously. Physical gold stored in vaults transitioned to on-chain wallets in just one week. Stablecoin licenses, 36 applications, 2 approvals On April 10, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) granted the first two stablecoin issuer licenses to GatePoint Financial Technology and HSBC. Out of 36 applications, only 2 were approved, illustrating the high threshold. HSBC plans to launch a HKD stablecoin in the second half of 2026, seamlessly integrating with PayMe and HSBC Hong Kong App. Hong Kong is defining the standards for Tokenization 2.0 In 2026, Hong Kong is doing something no other financial center dares to try: using the most conservative regulation to package the most aggressive technology. HKD 10.7 billion is the critical point where quantitative change becomes qualitative. Hong Kong is not copying any country's template; it is neither following the U.S. path of "wild growth first, then regulation" nor the conservative route of Singapore's "strict regulation suppressing innovation." It has chosen a middle path—prioritizing compliance, opening the secondary market simultaneously, strictly controlling the number of stablecoin licenses, and experimenting with three technological paths: central bank digital currencies, tokenized deposits, and compliant stablecoins. The opening of the secondary market will not instantly trigger a new era for digital assets, because liquidity needs time to accumulate, investor education needs time to permeate, and product supply needs time to expand. But it will definitely become that watershed moment. Before this, tokenization was an experiment among institutions; after this, it will be a new asset class accessible to everyone. Hong Kong’s goal is not to create a "crypto bull market," but to build a permanent bridge from traditional finance to digital finance. And that bridge is now closing.
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AirdropSweaterFan

AirdropSweaterFan

8 hours ago
Just spotted something that caught my eye in the financial disclosure filings. Kevin Warsh, Trump's pick for the next Fed chair, filed his portfolio details and it's honestly pretty wild for someone who's about to set US interest rate policy. The guy holds stakes in Solana, Polymarket, Blast, Optimism, and dydx through DCM Investments. All his crypto holdings sit comfortably under 500K each, which honestly feels like the move of someone who gets it but isn't going all-in. The kicker? He's publicly called Bitcoin the new gold but doesn't actually own any. He's playing the risk curve instead, which is kind of telling about how sophisticated money is thinking about this space right now. What's interesting is the timing. Warsh's confirmation hearing, the Senate Banking Committee markup on the Clarity Act, and the Fed meeting are all happening in the same two-week window. So we're potentially looking at a Fed chair who actually understands crypto nuances overseeing banking supervision and regulatory posture on stablecoins. That's not nothing. Meanwhile, the traditional finance crowd is making their own moves. Goldman Sachs just filed for a Bitcoin Premium Income ETF that sells covered calls on 40 to 100 percent of spot Bitcoin exposure to generate monthly income. It's the same playbook they run on the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, just applied to Bitcoin. They're already holding over 1.1 billion in Bitcoin ETF exposure on their balance sheet, so this feels like them doubling down on the infrastructure play. On the consumer side, Tether just launched its wallet product. We're talking 184 billion in USDT circulation and now they're going direct to users with a self-custodial app. You can hold and send USDT, their US-regulated stablecoin, gold-backed tokens, and Bitcoin across multiple chains. Paolo Ardoino's calling it the People's Wallet and positioning it as infrastructure for humans, machines, and AI agents transacting on the same rails. That's a pretty significant strategic shift for them. Circle's making noise too. Jeremy Allaire casually dropped that they're exploring a native token for Arc Network during their Seoul event. The stock jumped 7 percent on that single sentence. Governance, incentives, economic alignment as they move to proof-of-stake. Allaire called it potentially Circle's most significant platform-level move since USDC. When you've got BlackRock, HSBC, Visa, Goldman Sachs, and AWS already testing Arc, a native token starts looking like a serious institutional play. Markets are consolidating after the recent rally. Bitcoin holding around 76.75K, Ethereum at 2.33K, Solana at 86.07. Some interesting moves in the altspace though. SPX up over 10 percent, PENGU up nearly 7, while FARTCOIN is up 5 percent. The meme ecosystem is doing its thing while the infrastructure layer keeps building out. There's definitely a narrative shift happening here. You've got potential Fed leadership that actually gets crypto, major institutions building products, consumer wallets going live, and native tokens coming to institutional blockchain networks. The chair under 500K in crypto holdings might be the least surprising thing about this timeline.
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