HSBC is on course for £300 billion valuation, top executive says
HSBC's corporate and investment banking head anticipates the bank's market value could surpass £300 billion, projecting a significant share price advance. Following a year of restructuring, the bank is now focused on growth, integrating AI to boo...

Despite a backdrop of brewing geopolitical crises, Michael Roberts said in an interview that Europe’s largest bank would likely get even bigger and held out the prospect of a more than 50% advance in the company’s shares, which are currently trading around all-time highs.
“From 200 [billion pounds] to where we are today...to get to 300 is certainly within reach,” Roberts, chief executive officer of HSBC’s corporate and institutional banking told Bloomberg Television’s Francine Lacqua at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Monday. “In our opinion, given where we think we can generate the profit really deserves a much higher rate.”
HSBC’s share price — last traded at about 1,223 pence — has continued to edge higher, giving the lender a valuation today of roughly £210 billion, making it by far the biggest financial institution in Europe, ahead of the likes of Spain’s Banco Santander SA, Switzerland’s UBS Group AG and France’s BNP Paribas SA.
HSBC has spent the past year engaged in a wholesale restructuring of its global operations, shedding thousands of jobs, merging and closing some business lines, while selling others as part of Chief Executive Officer Georges Elhedery’s drive to simplify the bank and cut costs. Roberts said that the revamp phase was now largely done and that the bank was looking for ways to drive growth.
“We’re looking really to the future,” he said, as he warned that the latest geopolitical tumult sparked by US President Donald Trump’s demand to take control of Greenland presented serious challenges.
“This is yet more surprise, more chaos, more unpredictability,” said Roberts. “This one, however, is not just a ‘Liberation Day,’ this, obviously, is politically-driven, and that’s a little bit different.”
AI and Jobs
Like all businesses, HSBC is looking at how to integrate new technologies such as artificial intelligence and digital assets into its operations. Roberts said that he didn’t think AI would lead to mass layoffs at HSBC and instead said the technology would be an enabler, helping staff to be more productive.
“Banks are built on process and procedures,” said Roberts. “They’re the perfect user going forward, and I really hope we can just free up all that time.” Roberts said that bankers spent far too much time on administrative work rather than meeting clients and that AI would help redress the balance.
“Trading of all asset classes, I mean, none will be immune, is going to go through a fundamental change,” he said.
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