HSBC Holdings

(Tùi HSBC choán--lâi)

HSBC Holdings plc sī chóng-pō͘ siat tī Liân-ha̍p Ông-kok ê khoà-kok-sèng kim-iông kong-si. Kun-kù Forbes tī 2011 nî ê pâi-miâ, HSBC sī thong sè-kài tē-2 toā ê chiūⁿ-chhī kong-si (public company).[1]

London chóng-pō͘.

Le̍k-sú

siu-kái

"HSBC" sī Eng-gí Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation ê lio̍k-siá, ì-sù sī "Hiong-káng Siōng-hái Gîn-hâng Kong-si", che sī in-ūi in goân-pún sī 19 sè-kí ùi Hiong-káng kap Siōng-hái khai-gia̍p. In lēng-goā mā ū chi̍t-ê Tiong-kok miâ, kiò "Hiong-káng Siōng-hái Hoē-hong Gîn-hâng" (香港上海匯豐銀行).

Āu-lâi, in tī 1990 nî sêng-li̍p "HSBC Holdings plc", kā goân-chho͘ ê HSBC siat chò HSBC Holdings plc ê chú kong-si; liáu-āu koh siu-bé Liân-ha̍p Ông-kok ê "Midland Bank", pēng-chiá kā kong-si kái-cho͘, kap goân-lâi tī Hiong-káng ê chóng-pō͘ soá kòe London.

Chiâⁿ chò chú kong-si ê Hiong-káng Siōng-hái Hoē-hong Gîn-hâng (HSBC) chóng-pō͘ î-chhî tī Hiong-káng, sī Káng-phiò ê hoat-hêng gîn-hâng chi it.

Chham-khó

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  1. "The World's Biggest Public Companies". Forbes. 2011-06-13 khòaⁿ--ê.