HSBC to meet £1.1bn cost savings target early after cutting back senior roles

HSBC’s chief executive said the ‘deduplication’ of jobs had resulted in a net 15% reduction of managing director positions.

By contributor Anna Wise, Press Association Business Reporter
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Supporting image for story: HSBC to meet £1.1bn cost savings target early after cutting back senior roles
HSBC has revealed it stripped out 1.2 billion dollars (£890 million) worth of costs last year after cutting back its senior management team (Alamy/PA)

HSBC has revealed it stripped out 1.2 billion dollars (£890 million) worth of costs last year after cutting back its senior management team, as it hiked bonuses for staff by 10%.

The global banking giant has been embarking on a sprawling simplification programme that has involved big changes to its structure, in a bid to become more “agile”.

It previously set a target to make 1.5 billion dollars (£1.1 billion) in annual cost reductions by the end of 2026, under the leadership of chief executive Georges Elhedery.

HSBC financials
HSBC said it is striving to have a ‘high-performance culture’ at the bank (Mike Egerton/PA)

But on Wednesday, the bank revealed that it is expecting to achieve this by the end of June – six months ahead of schedule.

It follows some 1.2 billion dollars (£890 million) worth of cost savings being found during 2025 alone.

Mr Elhedery, who stepped into the top job in 2024, said that a large amount of the savings had come from the “deduplication” of jobs within the group, particularly among more senior positions.

He said this resulted in a net 15% reduction of managing director positions, which has not had any impact on the group’s revenues.

Meanwhile, HSBC revealed that it handed out bonuses worth 3.9 billion dollars (£2.9 billion) to its eligible staff during the year – a 10% increase compared with 2024.

The bank said it ensured its “highest performers had the strongest variable pay outcomes compared to the prior year”.

Mr Elhedery took home a pay packet of £6.6 million in 2025, made up of his salary and benefits, plus an annual bonus and long-term incentive award of about £4.8 million.

HSBC’s pay committee said it intends to grant the chief executive the maximum long-term incentive award worth 600% of his salary, which amounts to £9 million, for 2026-28.

The value will be subject to the bank’s performance over the next three years, and delivered in instalments.

HSBC said it was striving to create a “high-performance culture” where staff are better rewarded for work that boosts the performance of the bank.

Nevertheless, it reported lower earnings for 2025, with its pre-tax profit down about 7% year-on-year to 29.9 billion dollars (£22.1 billion).

This took into account the impact of losses related to its stake in the Chinese Bank of Communications, and restructuring costs from its simplification programme.

Shares in HSBC were up by about 6% in early trading on Wednesday.