HSBC profits fall amid $400m fraud-related charge and Iran war
HSBC reported a 4% drop in first-quarter profits, falling to $9.4 billion, despite a 6% increase in revenue to $18.6 billion. The decline was primarily attributed to a $1.3 billion increase in potential losses on soured loans, including $300 million linked to the Middle East conflict and a $400 million fraud-related charge in its UK investment banking division.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedHSBC reported a 4% drop in first-quarter profits, falling to $9.4 billion, despite a 6% increase in revenue to $18.6 billion. The decline was primarily attributed to a $1.3 billion increase in potential losses on soured loans, including $300 million linked to the Middle East conflict and a $400 million fraud-related charge in its UK investment banking division. This fraud charge involved loans to an unnamed private equity group exposed to private credit. HSBC's chief financial officer stated the bank's total exposure to the private credit sector is $6 billion, which she described as small relative to the bank's balance sheet. The news led to a more than 5% drop in HSBC's shares.
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5 extractedThe bank's shares dropped more than 5%, making it the biggest faller on the FTSE 100 on Tuesday morning.
HSBC's total exposure to the private credit industry is worth $6bn, which is considered small compared to its $1tn balance sheet.
The profit decline was linked to a jump in potential losses on soured loans to $1.3bn, including $300m from the Middle East conflict.
HSBC reported a $400m fraud-related charge in the UK related to its investment banking division.
HSBC profits fell 4% in the first three months of the year, dropping $100m to $9.4bn compared to the same period in 2025.