March 18 (Reuters) - HSBC Holdings Plc is weighing a wave of deep job cuts over the coming years that could ultimately impact around 20,000 roles, or about 10% of its total workforce, Bloomberg News
HSBC weighs deep job cuts as AI overhaul unfolds, Bloomberg News reports
HSBC's Potential Workforce Reductions Amid AI Transformation
Scale and Scope of Potential Job Cuts
March 19 (Reuters) - HSBC Holdings is weighing a wave of deep job cuts over the coming years that could ultimately impact around 20,000 roles, or about 10% of its total workforce, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter.
Hong Kong-listed shares of HSBC fell 2.2% in the morning trade.
Roles Most Likely to be Affected
Non-client facing roles in global service centers are among those expected to be most impacted as the bank bets on AI, although the assessment is at an early stage, the report said, adding that the review is at an early stage and no final decisions have been made.
An HSBC spokesperson declined to comment on the report.
AI Adoption and Automation Trends
Accelerating AI adoption is enabling companies to reduce staff in divisions most exposed to automation.
HSBC's Workforce and Strategic Plans
HSBC employed 208,720 full-time equivalent staff at the end of December 2025, according to its annual report.
The potential reductions are a part of a medium-term plan spanning three to five years, and could include not replacing departing staff, as well as cuts tied to business exits or sales, the report said.
Operational Simplification and Business Exits
The speculation around job cuts comes as the London-based bank looks to simplify its operations, cut costs and exit businesses not seen as value-accretive.
In late February, Reuters reported that HSBC had begun a sale process to divest its Singapore life insurance manufacturing business.
Leadership and Organizational Changes
Since taking over about 18 months ago, CEO Georges Elhedery has overhauled HSBC by reorganising divisions along East-West lines, exiting sub-scale investment banking units in the U.S. and Europe, and cutting senior management roles.
Reporting Credits
(Reporting by Roshan Thomas in Bengaluru and Carlos Méndez in Mexico City; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)


