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HSBC profit plunges 29% amid China business write-downs, missing market forecasts

The FTSE 100 listed global bank saw its pre-tax profit come in at $6.3bn (£4.72bn) in the three months to May 31, down from $8.8bn a year ago and below analyst expectations of $6.99bn.

HSBC headquarters in London's Canary Wharf(Image: William Barton via Getty Images)

HSBC, Europe's largest lender, experienced a 29% annual drop in profit in the second quarter of the year due to a significant impairment charge linked to its business in China.

The FTSE 100 titan reported a pre-tax profit of $6.3bn (£4.72bn), falling short of analyst predictions of $6.99bn, following a $2.1bn write-down for its stake in China's Bank of Communications, as reported by .

This figure exceeded previous forecasts of a $1.6bn loss, in light of the Bank of Communication's plans to raise up to ¥120bn (£12.5bn) by issuing new shares, which would decrease HSBC's ownership from 19% to 16%.

HSBC shares plummeted nearly five per cent as markets opened to 925.50. Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, commented: "Another quarter, another messy set of results for HSBC."

He added that "Headline numbers have, once again, been skewed by one-off items, and the 29% drop in second-quarter profit before tax is a poor measure of performance."

However, Britzman noted that the underlying performance was "far more encouraging" with "pre-tax profit coming in comfortably ahead of consensus driven by strong growth in wealth management."

Wealth performs in 'messy quarter'

Despite a challenging quarter, the firm's headline revenue took a nine per cent hit, attributed to the impact of notable items from disposals in Canada and Argentina. Excluding these items, revenue rose $1.9bn to $35.4bn, bolstered by a robust performance in wealth and equity markets.

The bank's international wealth and premier banking division surged 13.2 per cent to exceed $2bn as the institution maintains its central focus on private credit and wealth management.