Finance

Investors urge UK audit watchdog to scrutinize HSBC's climate accounting

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on April 22, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 23, 2026

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Investors urge UK audit watchdog to scrutinize HSBC's climate accounting
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By Simon Jessop and Kirstin Ridley LONDON, April 22 (Reuters) - A group of institutional investors has asked Britain's accounting regulator to review HSBC's 2025 accounts and audit to gauge whether

Investors urge UK audit watchdog to scrutinize HSBC's climate accounting

Investor concerns over HSBC's climate risk accounting and regulatory scrutiny

By Simon Jessop and Kirstin Ridley

Investors request review of HSBC's climate risk assessment

LONDON, April 22 (Reuters) - A group of institutional investors has asked Britain's accounting regulator to review HSBC's 2025 accounts and audit to gauge whether the bank is properly assessing the material risks posed by climate change.

Lack of transparency in HSBC's audit process

Investors said they also lacked visibility on how HSBC's auditor PwC had verified the bank's accounting, a letter to the Financial Reporting Council, copied to the bank and the Prudential Regulation Authority and seen by Reuters showed.

"In light of the ongoing lack of disclosures by HSBC and PwC on matters we perceive to be material to investors' understanding of the bank's capital resilience, we are writing to ask the FRC to review HSBC's accounts and audit to determine whether they meet the required standard," the letter said.

Signatories included Sarasin & Partners, workplace pension investor NEST, Merseyside Pension Fund and asset managers Lombard Odier Investment Management and Edentree Investment Management.

Regulatory and corporate responses

An FRC spokesperson confirmed that the letter had been received but said the watchdog was unable to comment further. PwC declined to comment and HSBC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Broader context of climate risk disclosure in finance

Investors, accounting and finance experts have long argued that some companies are not disclosing the full risks associated with climate change. 

HSBC's financial statements and climate risk outlook

HSBC's last three financial statements concluded it faces no major hit in the short-to-medium term, despite acknowledging uncertainty about the impact of climate change.

But given the bank's exposure to physical risks such as floods and wildfires, and transition risks such as changing regulations, investors said they were concerned this might be "excessively optimistic".

Investor engagement and calls for greater transparency

The investors said they had engaged with the bank's audit committee chair, chief comptroller and auditor since 2023 but had seen "little evidence" of progress.

In talks with the bank during 2025, the group said it had asked the board to review how it assesses climate risks, reflect them in critical accounting assumptions and publish a sensitivity analysis based on more severe climate impacts.

"At a time of rising climate instability and accelerating decarbonisation in key industries, a failure to account for probable losses or liabilities could put investor capital at risk," the letter said. 

Concerns over audit committee leadership and industry practices

The group also said HSBC Chairman Brendan Nelson's dual position as chair of the audit committee posed a potential conflict of interest and said it would welcome a thematic review of how financial institutions account for climate change.

Reporting credits

(Reporting by Simon Jessop and Kirstin Ridley; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

Key Takeaways

  • A coalition of investors—including Sarasin & Partners, NEST, Merseyside Pension Fund, Lombard Odier and Edentree—called on the FRC to review HSBC’s climate accounting and the auditor’s verification process.
  • HSBC has delayed key emissions targets (moving net-zero from 2030 to 2050) and left the Net‑Zero Banking Alliance, raising investor doubts over its climate commitment(investing.com).
  • Investors point to HSBC’s limited disclosure of climate impacts on expected credit losses and capital, urging inclusion of sensitivity analyses and more rigorous assumptions in financial statements(hsbc.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are investors urging the UK audit watchdog to review HSBC's climate accounting?
Investors want the Financial Reporting Council to assess if HSBC is properly disclosing and accounting for material climate risks in its 2025 financial statements.
What concerns do investors have about HSBC's climate risk disclosures?
Investors feel HSBC's disclosures underestimate potential impacts from climate change and lack transparency, putting investor capital at risk.
Who signed the letter requesting scrutiny of HSBC's climate accounting?
Signatories include Sarasin & Partners, NEST, Merseyside Pension Fund, Lombard Odier Investment Managers, and Edentree Investment Management.
How has HSBC responded to these investor concerns?
HSBC has not immediately responded to requests for comment regarding the letter or concerns about climate risk accounting.
What potential conflict of interest did the investors highlight about HSBC’s board?
Investors noted a potential conflict with Chairman Brendan Nelson also serving as the chair of the audit committee.

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