HSBC cuts back on riskier private credit lending

HSBC cuts back on riskier private credit lending

FILE PHOTO: A Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC) logo is displayed outside a bank branch in Sydney, Australia, August 19, 2025. REUTERS/Hollie Adams/File Photo

HSBC is pulling back from riskier private credit lending, becoming the latest bank to rein in exposure to the sector after a string of high-profile bankruptcies raised concerns over underwriting standards, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday.

The bank has told some clients it will not renew their lending facilities after deciding to stop lending to private credit funds that did not offer sufficient returns to justify the risk, the report, citing three people familiar with the matter, said.

It will instead focus on lower-risk private credit funds, the report added.

“We have built an offering that covers every stage of the private credit market, offering a seamless process with robust central oversight. We focus on supporting deals globally for our most important clients, in regions where we see the most potential for growth and aligned to our strategy,” an HSBC spokesperson told Reuters in an emailed statement.

Exposure to private credit lending has troubled Europe’s biggest lender and added to the market jitters around the sector. HSBC in May took a $400 million hit linked to ⁠the collapse of British mortgage lender Market Financial Solutions.

Reports later that month said that HSBC had paused a planned $4 billion investment in its own private credit funds, and the bank affirmed at the time that it remains committed to its private credit investments.

The FT report underscores the growing scrutiny of private credit portfolios, with regulators worldwide becoming ​increasingly concerned about banks’ exposure to the $3.5 trillion private credit industry.

Wealthy investors have queued up to withdraw their money from private credit vehicles in recent months amid worries about weakening lending standards and fears of AI-driven disruption at software companies that have borrowed from direct lenders.

Reuters

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