The Jupiter Fixed Income team have engaged with HSBC on a range of topics, from their gender pay gap to carbon emissions. Find out what other points were raised and how HSBC responded in the full engagement study. 

 

HSBC cite their purpose on their website:

 

“Our purpose – Opening up a world of opportunity – explains why we exist. We’re here to use our unique expertise, capabilities, breadth and perspectives to open up new kinds of opportunity for our customers. We’re bringing together the people, ideas and capital that nurture progress and growth, helping to create a better world – for our customers, our people, our investors, our communities and the planet we all share.”

 

From the off, we found it striking that HSBC were keen for us to hear from their Global Head of Diversity, Carolanne Minashi, on what a priority diversity and inclusion was for them as a company. To that effect, they are open with the data they publish on this area:

 

“Our regional diversity data disclosures now extend across six markets, covering 70 per cent of our workforce. We have reported our gender pay gap since 2017 in the UK and have since extended our reporting to include gender and ethnicity for the UK and US, and gender for mainland China, Hong Kong, India and Mexico.”

 

This data can be sliced and diced across region, division, seniority, ethnicity and gender. We were keen to hear about their pay gap data in regions other than the UK, as so few organisations publish as much data as HSBC do. We noted that the gender pay gap of HSBC Bank Plc is an outlier, as one of the highest in the industry (second only to Goldman Sachs) with 50.4% mean and 51.3% median pay gap, and a 61.2% mean and 72.2% median bonus gap. Disappointingly, they explained that the key drivers were the fact that mostly women are employed in their call centre network, which is a low paid job, and that London is also the base of their global investment banking and capital market business, which is mostly male dominated and attracts high pay. However, we were encouraged by their senior female representation targets (see below) and also their ethnicity targets to address this inequity. We would note that at 35% target levels for senior women, this would still not fully represent the ‘all employees’ split of a 52% female workforce.1

Women in senior leadership

 

After achieving our ambition of 30% women in senior leadership positions in 2020, we set a new goal to reach 35% by 2025. At the end of 2021, we had 31.7% of women in senior leadership roles.

 

Appointments of external female candidates into senior positions was 37.6% up from 31.7% in 2020. Promotions of women into senior leadership roles were 43.2%. 

 

Talen programmes – including Accelerating Female Leadership and our Explore leadership course – have provided skills and coaching to help high-performing women progress their careers at an accelerated rate.   

Our ethnicity commitments 

 

In July 2020, we made a commitment to double the number of Black colleagues in senior leadership positions by 2025. WE have focused on the UK and US markets, where most of our Black colleagues are based. In 2021 we grew our number of Black senior leaders by 17.5%. 

 

Our global campaign to invite colleagues to provide us with data on how they identify has provided is with a more robust understanding of the ethnic profile of our workforce. Using this data, in 2022 we are refining our ethnic diversity goals to work towards a diverse senior leadership representation that better reflects the communities we serve. WE will maintain our focus on goals for Black senior leaders and will also establish goals for other underrepresented ethnically diverse groups.  

1Combined executive committee and direct reports includes HSBC Group Executives. General Managers, Managing Directors, Group Company Secretary and Chief Governance Officer and their direct reports (excluding administrative staff).

2Senior leadership is classified as those at band 3 and above in our global career band structure.

 

Source: HSBC 2021 Annual Report & Accounts, p74

Carbon footprint, financed emissions and sustainable finance

Environmental 

  • Since 2020, we have provided and facilitated $126.7bn of sustainable finance and investment towards our ambition of $750bn to $1tb by 2030.
  • In line with the climate change resolution, we published our thermal coal phase-out policy. For the oil and gas sector, we target a 34% Mt C02e reduction in oil and gas absolute on-balance sheet financed emissions by 2030, from a 2019 baseline. For the power and utilities sector, we target a 0.14 Mt C02e/TWh power and utilities on-balance sheet financed emissions intensity, representing a 75% reduction from 2019.  

Source: HSBC 2021 Annual Report & Accounts, p45   

 

HSBC are ahead of most banks in their commitment to sustainable finance. They have an ambitious target of $1tn by 2030, with $126bn already committed. Furthermore, they say that they are fully committed to becoming a net zero bank.

 

With regards to financed emissions, they state:

 

“We intend to set targets on a sector-by-sector basis that are consistent with net zero outcomes by 2050. In assessing financed emissions, we focus on those parts of the sector that are most material in terms of greenhouse gas emissions, and where we believe engagement and climate action have the greatest potential to effect change, taking into account industry and scientific guidance.”

 

Currently, however, the only financed emission data HSBC provide is on oil and gas, power and utilities sectors, as shown below: