The Hong Kong And Shanghai Banking Corporation
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The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited (), commonly known as HSBC (), was the parent entity of the multinational
HSBC HSBC Holdings plc is a British multinational universal bank and financial services holding company. It is the largest bank in Europe by total assets ahead of BNP Paribas, with US$2.953 trillion as of December 2021. In 2021, HSBC had $10.8 tri ...
banking group until 1991, and is now its Hong Kong-based
Asia-Pacific Asia-Pacific (APAC) is the part of the world near the western Pacific Ocean. The Asia-Pacific region varies in area depending on context, but it generally includes East Asia, Russian Far East, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Australia and Pacific Isla ...
subsidiary. The largest bank in Hong Kong, HSBC operates branches and offices throughout the
Indo-Pacific The Indo-Pacific is a vast biogeographic region of Earth. In a narrow sense, sometimes known as the Indo-West Pacific or Indo-Pacific Asia, it comprises the tropical waters of the Indian Ocean, the western and central Pacific Ocean, and the ...
region and in other countries around the world. It is also one of the three commercial banks licensed by the
Hong Kong Monetary Authority The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) is Hong Kong's central bank, central banking institution. It is a government authority founded on 1 April 1993 when the Office of the Exchange Fund and the Office of the Commissioner of Banking merged. Th ...
to issue banknotes for the Hong Kong dollar. The Hongkong and Shanghai Bank was established in
British Hong Kong Hong Kong was a colony and later a dependent territory of the British Empire from 1841 to 1997, apart from a period of occupation under the Japanese Empire from 1941 to 1945 during the Pacific War. The colonial period began with the Briti ...
in 1865 and was incorporated as The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation in 1866, and has been based in Hong Kong (although now as a subsidiary) ever since. It was "The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited" in 1989. It is the founding member of the
HSBC HSBC Holdings plc is a British multinational universal bank and financial services holding company. It is the largest bank in Europe by total assets ahead of BNP Paribas, with US$2.953 trillion as of December 2021. In 2021, HSBC had $10.8 tri ...
group of banks and companies, and, since 1990, is the namesake and one of the leading
subsidiaries A subsidiary, subsidiary company or daughter company is a company owned or controlled by another company, which is called the parent company or holding company. Two or more subsidiaries that either belong to the same parent company or having a sa ...
of the London-based HSBC Holdings PLC. The company's business ranges from the traditional High Street roles of
retail banking Retail banking, also known as consumer banking or personal banking, is the provision of services by a bank to the general public, rather than to companies, corporations or other banks, which are often described as wholesale banking. Banking servi ...
, commercial banking, corporate banking to
investment banking Investment banking pertains to certain activities of a financial services company or a corporate division that consist in advisory-based financial transactions on behalf of individuals, corporations, and governments. Traditionally associated wit ...
, private banking and global banking.


History


Foundation

After the British established Hong Kong as a
crown colony A Crown colony or royal colony was a colony administered by The Crown within the British Empire. There was usually a Governor, appointed by the British monarch on the advice of the UK Government, with or without the assistance of a local Counci ...
in the aftermath of the
First Opium War The First Opium War (), also known as the Opium War or the Anglo-Sino War was a series of military engagements fought between Britain and the Qing dynasty of China between 1839 and 1842. The immediate issue was the Chinese enforcement of the ...
, merchants from other parts of the British Empire, now in Hong Kong, felt the need for a bank to finance the growing trade, through Hong Kong and sometimes also through Shanghai, between China and India, the rest of the British Empire and Europe, of goods, produces and merchandises of all kinds, but especially
opium Opium (or poppy tears, scientific name: ''Lachryma papaveris'') is dried latex obtained from the seed capsules of the opium poppy ''Papaver somniferum''. Approximately 12 percent of opium is made up of the analgesic alkaloid morphine, which i ...
, cultivated in or transited (re-exported) through ''the Raj'', and to that end, they organised amongst themselves and formed The Hongkong and Shanghai Bank in Hong Kong (March 1865), and in Shanghai one month later. The founder, Thomas Sutherland of the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company, wanted a bank operating on "sound Scottish banking principles." Still, the original location of the bank was considered crucial and the founders chose
Wardley House Wardley may refer to: Organisations *Wardley (company), a fish food manufacturer *Wardley, a former merchant banking division of The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation People *John Wardley (born 1950), English concept designer and develope ...
in Hong Kong since the construction was based on some of the best feng shui in colonial Hong Kong.. The bank initially leased its premises for HK$500 a month in 1864. After raising a capital stock of HK$5 million, the bank commenced operations on 3 March 1865. It opened a branch in Shanghai International Settlement, Shanghai during April of that year, and started issuing locally denominated banknotes in both the Crown Colony and Shanghai soon afterwards. The bank was incorporated in Hong Kong as The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation by ''the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank Ordinance'' (Numbers 2 and 5 of 1866), and a branch in Japan was also established in Yokohama in 1866. Shares of the bank were one of 13 securities initially traded on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, and were traded on that exchange until Shanghai International Settlement#Japanese occupy the International Settlement (1941), the Japanese closed the exchange in 1941. The bank handled the first public loan in China in 1874, thereafter issuing most public loans.


Business development

Sir Thomas Jackson, 1st Baronet, Sir Thomas Jackson became chief manager in 1876. During his twenty-six-year tenure, the Bank became a leader in Asia. Notable events included being the first bank established in Thailand, in 1888, where it printed the country's first banknotes; acting as banker for the Hong Kong government from the 1880s; and participating in the management of British colonial government accounts in China, Japan, Penang and Singapore. A period of expansion followed, with new buildings constructed in Bangkok (1921), Manila (1922) and Shanghai (1923), and a new head office building in Hong Kong in 1935.


Second World War and Chinese Civil War

In anticipation of the Japanese invasion of Hong Kong in 1941, the Bank's head office moved to London. The chief manager Sir Vandeleur Grayburn, and his successor David C. Edmondston both died while interned by the Japanese during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong. Arthur Morse was appointed Chief Manager in 1943 and led the bank after the war. The head office moved back to Hong Kong in 1946. During the Japanese occupation the Bank's head office building was occupied as the headquarters of the Hong Kong Japanese military government. Although its assets were restored to HSBC at the end of the war, the Chinese Civil War affected HSBC's recovery. The Communist Party of China took over Shanghai in early 1949, towards the end of the civil war. By 1955, while HSBC was permitted to continue to operate the Shanghai branch, all its operations elsewhere in mainland China were closed. The operations of the Shanghai branch were limited to inward remittances and export bills, and so the bank moved out of its HSBC Building, the Bund, grand headquarters building on the Bund and moved into offices in the Lyceum Building on Yuenmingyuen Road (now Yuanmingyuan Road).


International expansion

Michael Turner (banker), Michael Turner became Chief Manager in 1953 and set about diversifying the business. His tenure came to an end in 1962 having established The Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation of California 1955 and having acquired HSBC Bank Middle East, The British Bank of the Middle East and the Mercantile Bank of India, London and China, Mercantile Bank (based in India) in Aug 1959. Turner was succeeded in 1962 by Jake Saunders. In 1964 the Chief Managership was superseded as the top executive role in the bank by an Executive Chairmanship. Saunders took this role until retirement in 1972 and was succeeded as Chief Manager in 1964 by H.J. Shen, the managing director of Maysun Trading Co. and the former head of the Central Trust of China, who became the first ethnic Chinese to be appointed to the position of Chief Manager of the bank. Under Saunders' tenure the bank continued to expand. 1965 saw the bank purchase a controlling interest in Hang Seng Bank of Hong Kong, and 1972 the formation of a merchant banking arm, Wardley Limited. In 1980, the Bank launched a hostile takeover bid for the Royal Bank of Scotland, although the bid was blocked by the British government.


Creation of the HSBC Group

In 1980, the Bank, now under the chairmanship of Michael Sandberg, acquired a 51% stake in Marine Midland Bank, of the United States of America, and continued its expansion with the establishment of HSBC Bank Canada, Hongkong Bank of Canada (now HSBC Bank Canada) in 1981 and HSBC Bank Australia, HongkongBank of Australia Limited (now HSBC Bank Australia Limited) in 1986. 1987, under the Chairmanship of William Purves (banker), William Purves, saw the bank's ownership of Marine Midland Bank increased to 100% and the acquisition of a 14.9% share in Midland Bank in the United Kingdom. The present building in Hong Kong was designed by Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank, Sir Norman Foster and was held as one of the most expensive and technologically advanced buildings in the world in 1986, costing HK$5.3 billion. On 6 October 1989, it was renamed by the Legco, Legislative Council, by an amendment to its governing ordinance originally made in 1929, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited, and became registered as a regulated bank with the then Hong Kong Monetary Authority#History, Banking Commissioner of the Government of Hong Kong. In 1991, HSBC reorganised as a holding company, HSBC Holdings plc; shares are traded on the London, Hong Kong, Paris, New York and Bermuda stock exchanges. HSBC Holdings acquired the rest of Midland Bank in June 1992.


Hong Kong banking

Under the HSBC brand, the bank maintains a network of around 220 branches throughout Hong Kong, from which it offers a wide range of financial products and services. For some time in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the bank was known by the name ''HongkongBank'' in its native city, although it now trades as HSBC. During that period, it also adopted the idiosyncratic practice of calling its automated teller machine, ATMs ''Electronic Teller Card (ETC)'' machines.


Headquarters

The HSBC Hong Kong headquarters building is located in No 1 Queen's Road Central in the Central, Hong Kong, Central district on Hong Kong Island. It was also home to HSBC Holdings plc's headquarters until the latter firm's move to London to meet the requirements of the UK regulatory authorities after the acquisition of the Midland Bank in 1992. It was designed by British architect Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank, Norman, Lord Foster, and was the most expensive building in the world based on usable floor area at the time it was built.


Hong Kong dollar bank notes

HSBC is one of the three commercial banks which are authorised to issue banknotes for Hong Kong - the other two being the Bank of China (Hong Kong) and Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong). Of the total notes in circulation measured by value, HSBC is the most prolific issuer, its notes representing 67.7% of those in issue. Hong Kong is unusual in that it is one of the few countries or territories where commercial banks are still permitted to issue their own banknotes.


Other Hong Kong operations


Hang Seng Bank

HSBC acquired a 62.14%, controlling interest in the local Hang Seng Bank in 1965 during a crisis of the latter. The Hang Seng Index for stock prices in Hong Kong is named after the Hang Seng Bank.


PayMe

In 2017, HSBC launched the PayMe brand and mobile app, which features as a social payment app in Hong Kong, available to all non-HSBC users.


HSBC Insurance

HSBC Insurance provides insurance products and services to international and local brokers, agents and direct customers in Hong Kong, mainland China, Macau, Singapore, India and Malaysia.


Asia Pacific operations

The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation maintains a network of around 600 offices in 20 countries in Asia Pacific, as well as owning of a number of HSBC banks operating in various countries and holding the group's stakes in further lenders, particularly in mainland China, China.Simplified structure chart - Group structure , HSBC Holdings plc
/ref> Operations of the group in the Asia Pacific are under this subsidiary, and it forms the regional headquarters for Asia Pacific. This means that it is responsible for entities such as HSBC Bank Australia Limited, Hang Seng Bank Limited, HSBC Bank (China) Company Limited, HSBC Bank Malaysia Berhad (since 2009), HSBC Bank (Vietnam), HSBC Bank (Taiwan) and HSBC Insurance (Asia-Pacific) Holdings Limited, and the management of stakes in Bank of Communications (19.9%), Barrowgate Limited (24.64%) and Industrial Bank Co., Industrial Bank. But excluding the majority of the HSBC’s Private Banking business in Asia Pacific.


Bangladesh

HSBC started operations in 1996. The bank primarily focuses on urban areas and has branches in most areas of the capital city of Dhaka, it also has branches in the city of Chittagong. The bank also has a good number of ATM booths in the cities present, it also has booths in most five star hotels. HSBC Bangladesh is rated 'AAA' in the Long-term and ST-1 rating in the Short-term, which are the highest level of ratings for any bank or financial institution in Bangladesh. HSBC Bangladesh offers a comprehensive range of financial services such as commercial banking, consumer banking, payments and cash management, trade services, treasury, and custody and clearing. The bank also offers offshore banking in the Export Processing Zones, this is only limited to investors in the EPZs. A special service called NRB Services is also available for non-resident Bangladeshis, this service allows consumers to maintain accounts in US Dollars, Pound Sterling and Euros. People using this service can freely remit money from Bangladesh to any part of the world and can access their money from any HSBC booth around the world. HSBC Bangladesh has a help centre which operates on a daily basis. It is one of the very few banks in the country to offer day night banking. It also has begun to support education initiatives for people with disabilities; the bank recently partnered with the Blind Education and Rehabilitation Development Organisation to give scholarships to people with blindness.


Brunei

On 6 April 2016, HSBC Brunei commenced winding down its operation in Brunei as a part of HSBC Group global review. The bank which comprise retail, commercial and global banking services will no longer take on any new accounts, facilities or business from that date. Employees of the bank have been offered fair redundancy packages. On 9 & 10 November 2017, all HSBC Brunei branches and ATMs had ceased its operations. The remaining accounts were all transferred to the local, Baiduri Bank on the same date.


China

HSBC established its Shanghai branch office on 3 March 1865 and has had a continuous presence in the city since then, except during the Japanese Occupation. Until the economic reforms of the late 1970s, its activities were mainly in inward remittances and export bills, however its activities now span a wider range. On 6 August 2004, HSBC announced that it would pay US$1.75 billion for a 19.9% stake in Shanghai-based Bank of Communications. At the time of the announcement, Bank of Communications was China's fifth-largest bank and the investment by HSBC was eight times bigger than any previous foreign investment in a Chinese bank. The industry considered this move, giving HSBC a lead in the race to grab pieces of mainland China's banking market. A year earlier, HSBC had joined with Hong Kong's Shanghai Commercial Bank to purchase an 11% stake in Bank of Shanghai (HSBC paid US$62.6 million for an 8% stake) and US$733 million for a 10% stake in Ping An Insurance. On 1 April 2007, the mainland China offices of The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation transferred to its subsidiary HSBC Bank (China), and it started operations on 2 April. In July 2022, HSBC became the first foreign lender to open a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) committee in its Chinese investment banking subsidiary. The subsidiary, HSBC Qianhai Securities, is a 90% HSBC-owned joint venture.


India

In 1959 HSBC acquired The Mercantile Bank of India, London and China, established in October 1853 in Bombay. HSBC is now one of the fastest growing foreign banks in India, both in domestic banking and support operations for worldwide operations (see HSBC#Group service centers, Group Service Centres).


Indonesia

The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation opened its first Indonesian office in Jakarta in 1884. Having been able to restart its operations after the World War II, Second World War, it was again forced to close in the mid-1960s, however the Bank was granted a new banking licence in 1968 its operations have grown to make it one of the largest foreign banks operating in Indonesia.


Japan

HSBC opened its first Japan operations in Yokohama in 1866, followed by branches in other trading ports such as Osaka, Kobe and Nagasaki, Nagasaki, Nagasaki. It was heavily involved in the early development of Japan's current monetary system, and consulted with the government regarding fiscal policy, currency printing and related matters. HSBC does not conduct ordinary retail banking in Japan, but conducts investment banking in Tokyo and Osaka. Since 2007 it has expanded its HSBC Premier private banking services for the "Mass affluent" market or high-net-worth individual clients. HSBC Premier has seven Premier branches in Japan including centers in the Hiroo, Shibuya, Hiroo, Akasaka, Tokyo, Akasaka, Marunouchi(flagship), Ginza, Yokohama, Ikebukuro, areas of Tokyo and one in Kobe. In December 2011, HSBC announced to selling its private bank in Japan to Swiss peer Credit Suisse for an undisclosed sum, but at the end of October 2011 the value of the gross assets included in the sale was about $2.7 billion. It was a strategy to cut $3.5 billion annual costs by quitting businesses or countries where it lacks scale which Credit Suisse has a larger business in Japan than HSBC and in line with a global business restructuring it announced that will see it cut 30,000 jobs as it pares back small or inefficient operations.


New Zealand

HSBC's operations in New Zealand are as a branch of The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, which first gained a licence from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand on 22 July 1987. Today HSBC offers a range of financial products from a network of 9 offices.


Philippines

HSBC's history in the Philippines dates back more than 110 years with the establishment of their first branch no. 90 Rosario Street (Now Quintin Paredes Street) in Binondo, Manila in 1875. In its early years of operation, HSBC serviced the booming Philippine sugar industry. At the turn of the century, it financed railways that connected provincial towns across Luzon to Manila. During the American regime, HSBC was called to advise on Philippine currency reform. Its current headquarters are in Fort Bonifacio. Today, HSBC Philippines operates in key Philippine cities such as Cebu and Davao City, Davao. It has ended Citibank and Standard Chartered's duopoly on international banking in the Philippines.


Singapore

In Singapore, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited operates as a full service bank with its headquarters in Collyer Quay. It opened its doors in December 1877. In 2016, HSBC has created a locally incorporated bank in Singapore and has moved its retail and wealth business from HSBC Singapore Branch to the locally incorporated bank. Today, HSBC's flagship office remains at the original Collyer Quay site where its first branch was opened. Its main office is located at Mapletree Business City in Pasir Panjang, HarbourFront. HSBC Singapore is a Qualifying Full Bank and offers a comprehensive range of financial services including commercial banking, investment and private banking, insurance, forfaiting and trustee services, and securities and capital markets services. The retail and wealth business operated through the locally incorporated bank has 12 branches incorporating 10 HSBC Premier Centres and 33 Automated Teller Machines in Singapore. In the 1960s, a group of Indonesian forces bombed the HSBC building in Singapore, just a few months after Singapore was granted its independence from Malaysia. A number of people were killed and the two military officers responsible for the bombing were tried and executed.


South Korea

HSBC is expanding in competitive South Korean market, operating from a network of 11 branches, the first having been opened in Jemulpo in 1897 .


Sri Lanka

HSBC has been present in Sri Lanka for 120 years. The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited established its first branch in Colombo Sri Lanka on 1 July 1892, just 27 years after it began operating in Hong Kong and Shanghai. It has established itself as one of the largest and most profitable banks operating in the country. It has achieved leadership in Corporate Banking, Capital Markets and Credit Card issuance.


Taiwan

HSBC's presence in Taiwan dates back to 1885 when The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation appointed an agent in Tamsui District, Tamsui. A full service branch was established in Taipei in 1984. The bank now has a network of 8 branches (Hyperlink to service channel) nationwide, including Taipei, Jianguo Road (Taipei), Jianguo, Banqiao District, Banqiao, Tianmu, Shilin District, Tianmu, Taoyuan District, Taoyuan, Taichung, Tainan, and Kaohsiung. In 2007, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation acquired The Chinese Bank in Taiwan. The acquisition made HSBC's nationwide branch network increase to 47.


Thailand

HSBC initially opened for business in Thailand in 1888, becoming the first commercial bank in the country. HSBC has made significant contributions to the establishment of solid foundations for Thailand's financial and banking sectors. For example, in 1889 HSBC issued the first banknotes in Thailand. HSBC also issued the first foreign loan to the Thai government for its railroad construction project. HSBC's main branch office in Thailand is situated in Bangkok on Rama IV Road opposite Lumpini Park. In 2011, Phase 2 of the new Financial Sector Master Plan allowed foreign banks to open up to two branches in the Kingdom of Thailand in preparation for full retail operations. Accordingly, a second branch was opened on Thonglor (Sukhumvit 55) in early 2011. In January 2012 HSBC announced the sale of its Thailand retail banking operations to the Krungsri Group (Bank of Ayudhya) and its intention to maintain only corporate banking business in Thailand. Its 2 retail branches will be closed in March and June 2012 respectively.


Vietnam

In Vietnam, HSBC first opened an office in Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) in 1870. In August 1995, HSBC opened a full-service branch in Ho Chi Minh City. In 2005, HSBC also opened its second branch in Hanoi and established a representative office in Can Tho. On 29 December 2005, HSBC acquired 10% share capital of Vietnam Technological and Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Techcombank), one of the largest joint stock commercial banks in Vietnam by equity. In July 2007, HSBC became the first foreign bank to increase its stake in Techcombank to 15%. In September 2008, HSBC completed the increase of its stake in Techcombank to 20%, became the first foreign bank in Vietnam to hold a 20% interest in a domestic bank. In September 2007, HSBC acquired 10% share capital of Bao Viet Holdings, becoming the sole foreign strategic partner of Vietnam's leading insurance company. In October 2009, HSBC signed an agreement to increase its shareholding in Bao Viet Holdings to 18% from 10% for VND1.88 trillion (approximately US$105.3 million). On 1 January 2009, HSBC started operating its locally incorporated entity and became the first foreign bank to incorporate in Vietnam, after gaining approval from the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) to set up a Wholly Foreign-Owned Bank (WFOB) in Vietnam in September 2008.


Leadership

* ''Current Chairman:'' Peter Wong (banker), Peter Wong (since June 2021); non-executive chairman * ''Current Chief Executive:'' David Liao and Surendra Rosha (since June 2021); co-chief executives


List of Former Chairmen

''In 1991, the super-ceding position of Group Chairman of
HSBC HSBC Holdings plc is a British multinational universal bank and financial services holding company. It is the largest bank in Europe by total assets ahead of BNP Paribas, with US$2.953 trillion as of December 2021. In 2021, HSBC had $10.8 tri ...
was formed; since then, the Chairman of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation has been held as an independent position, held concurrently by the Chief Executive of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, or held by the Group Chief Executive of HSBC ex-officio.'' # Francis Chomley (1865–1866) # John Dent (merchant), John Dent (1867) # Edward Cunningham (1867) # Agathon Nissen (1867) # George Hellend (1867–1868) # George Heard (1869) # Henry Lemann (1870) # Richard Rowett (1871–1872) # Thomas Pyke (1872–1873) # Solomon David Sassoon (1841–1894), Solomon Sassoon (1873–1874) # William Howell Forbes, William Forbes (1874–1875) # Adolph von Andre (1875–1876) # Emanuel Raphael Belilios, Emanuel Belilios (1876–1877) # Hans Hoppius (1877–1878) # Frederick David Sassoon, Frederick Sassoon (1878–1879) # William Howell Forbes, William Forbes (1879–1880); second term # William Keswick (1880–1881) # Alexander McIver (1881–1882) # Henry Liston-Dalrymple (1882–1883) # Wilhelm Reiners (1883) # Alexander Palmer MacEwen, Alexander MacEwen (1883–1885) # Frederick David Sassoon, Frederick Sassoon (1885–1886); second term # Alexander McIver (1886); second term # Max Grote (1886–1887) # Charles Bottomley (1887–1888) # John Bell-Irving (1888–1889) # William Howell Forbes, William Forbes (1889–1890); third term # Henry Liston-Dalrymple (1890–1891); second term # Jacob Moses (1891–1892) #Stephen Michaelsen (1892–1893) #Hans Hoppius (1893–1894); second term #Charles Holliday (1894–1895) #Jacob Moses (1895–1896); second term #Alexander McConachie (1896–1897) #Stephen Michaelsen (1897–1898) #James Jardine Bell-Irving (1898–1899) #Roderick Mackenzie Gray, Roderick Gray (1899–1900) #Nicolaus Siebs (1900–1901) #James Johnstone Keswick, James Keswick (1901–1902) #Robert Shewan (1902–1903) #Abraham Raymond (1903–1905); two consecutive terms #Herbert Tomkins (1905–1906) #Armin Haupt (1906–1907) #George Medhurst (1907–1908) #Henry Keswick (politician), Henry Keswick (1908–1909) #William Jardine Gresson, William Gresson (1909–1910) #Herbert Tomkins (1910–1911); second term #Edward Shellim (1911–1912) #Francis Armstrong (1913–1914) #David Landale (1914–1916) #Walter Pattenden (1916–1917) #Stanley Hudson Dodwell, Stanley Dodwell (1917–1918) #Percy Hobson Holyoak, Percy Holyoak (1918–1919) #John Plummer (1919–1920) #Edward Victor David Parr, Edward Parr (1920–1921) #George Edkins (1921–1922) #George Dodwell (1922–1923) #A. O. Lang, Archibald Lang (1923–1924) #D. G. M. Bernard, Dallas Bernard (1926–1928) #Albert Compton (1928–1929) #Neilage Brown (1929–1930) #John Plummer (1930–1931); second term #C. Gordon Mackie, Charles Mackie (1931–1932) #J. J. Paterson, John Paterson (1932–1933) #Thomas Ernest Pearce, Thomas Pearce (1933–1934) #C. Gordon Mackie, Charles Mackie (1934–1935); second term #Stanley Hudson Dodwell, Stanley Dodwell (1935–1936) #J. J. Paterson, John Paterson (1936–1937); second term #Geoffrey Miskin (1937–1938) #Thomas Ernest Pearce, Thomas Pearce (1938–1939); second term #Andrew Shields (1939–1940) #Harrie Wilkinson (1940–1941) #J. J. Paterson, John Paterson (1941–1942); third term #Arthur Morse (1941–1953) #Cedric Blaker (1954–1958) #Michael_Turner_(banker), Michael Turner (1959–1962) #Hugh Barton (1962–1963) #W. C. G. Knowles, William Knowles (1964) #Jake Saunders, John Saunders (1964–1972) #Guy Sayer (1972–1977) #Michael Sandberg, Baron Sandberg (1978–1986) #William Purves (banker), Sir William Purves (1986–1994); Group Chief Executive from 1990-1992; Group Chairman from 1990 to 1998; #John Gray (British banker), John Gray (1994–1996); concurrent Chief Executive #John Estmond Strickland, John Strickland (1997–1999) #David Eldon (1999–2005) #Vincent Cheng (2005–2010); first local Hong Kong Chinese Chairman #Michael Geoghegan (2010–2011); Group Chief Executive from 2006 to 2011 #Stuart Gulliver (2011–2017); concurrent Group Chief Executive #John Flint (businessman), John Flint (2017–2019); concurrent Group Chief Executive #Laura Cha (2019–2021); non-executive chairman


List of Former Chief Executives

''Known as Chief Managers prior to 1986; in 1991, the super-ceding position of Group Chief Executive of
HSBC HSBC Holdings plc is a British multinational universal bank and financial services holding company. It is the largest bank in Europe by total assets ahead of BNP Paribas, with US$2.953 trillion as of December 2021. In 2021, HSBC had $10.8 tri ...
was formed, with the Chief Executive of the Hongkong Shanghai Banking Corporation now being the Asia-Pacific regional head.'' # Victor Kresser (1868–1870) # James Greig (banker), James Greig (1871–1876) # Sir Thomas Jackson, 1st Baronet, Sir Thomas Jackson (1876–1886) # John Walter (1886–1887) #Sir Thomas Jackson, 1st Baronet, Sir Thomas Jackson (1887–1889); second term # George Noble (1889–1890) #Sir Thomas Jackson, 1st Baronet, Sir Thomas Jackson (1890–1891); third term # François de Bovis (1891–1893) #Sir Thomas Jackson, 1st Baronet, Sir Thomas Jackson (1893–1902); fourth term # James Smith (1902–1910) # Newton John Stabb, Newton Stabb (1910–1920) # A. G. Stephen, Alexander Stephen (1920–1924) # Arthur Barlow (1924–1927) # Arthur Cecil Hynes, Arthur Hynes (1927–1930) # Vandeleur Molyneux Grayburn, Sir Vandeleur Grayburn (1930–1941) # Arthur Morse, Sir Arthur Morse (1941–1953) # Michael_Turner_(banker), Michael Turner (1953–1962) # Jake Saunders, Sir Jake Saunders (1962–1964) # H.J. Shen, Hsi-Jui Shen (1964–1972) # Guy Sayer (1972–1977) # Michael Sandberg, Baron Sandberg (1978–1986) # William Purves (banker), Sir William Purves (1986–1992) # John Gray (British banker), John Gray (1993–1996) # David Eldon (1997–1999) # Aman Mehta (1999–2004) # Michael Smith (2004–2007) # Sandy Flockhart (2007–2009) # Peter Wong (banker), Peter Wong (2010–2021)


Cultural references

In Hong Kong, the local population sometimes refers to the bank as 獅子銀行, "the Lion Bank", after the pair of HSBC lions, lion sculptures outside the bank's headquarters, which also appear in some banknotes. Local films and television series set in Hong Kong, especially comedies, use this nickname when referring to the bank. Although the Hong Kong Government changed the official spelling of "Hongkong" to "Hong Kong", by the instructions of the Secretary of State for the Colonies, on 3 September 1926, HSBC uses the older ''Hongkong'', as the bank's name was conceived before the official declaration of the modern two-word name, and it was decided to retain the single word spelling in the Bank's name: ''Hongkong''. The famous English humorist P. G. Wodehouse was a junior employee at the Bank's London office in Lombard Street from 1900 to 1902, and used the bank as an inspiration for some of his early work, especially his 1910 novel ''Psmith in the City''..


See also

*HSBC Holdings plc *HSBC Bank (China) *HSBC Bank Australia *HSBC Bank Malaysia *Hang Seng Bank *Bank of Communications *HSBC Hong Kong headquarters building


References


Further reading

* King, A. H. ed. ''Eastern banking: essays in the history of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation'' (1983
online


External links


The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation LimitedHSBC History
- Daily Telegraph obituary {{DEFAULTSORT:Hongkong And Shanghai Banking Corporation Banks established in 1865 1865 establishments in Hong Kong Banks of Hong Kong HSBC subsidiaries Companies formerly listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange Companies formerly listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange Former companies in the Hang Seng Index Banknote issuers of Hong Kong History of companies of China Chinese companies established in 1865