KEY POINTS
  • In a rare rebuke, Aviva Investors, a top 20 shareholder in both banks owning almost £800 million ($1.02 billion) of their shares, said on Wednesday it was "uneasy" with their public support for the proposed law.
  • Senior U.S. and U.K. officials have accused Beijing of seeking to clamp down on the freedoms and autonomy of Hong Kong and its people.
  • U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Tuesday accused HSBC of aiding China's "coercive bully tactics" against the U.K. and claimed Beijing is using the bank's Chinese business as "political leverage" against London.
Standard Chartered headquarters and a HSBC building are pictured on March 16, 2020 in Hong Kong.

A major shareholder in both HSBC and Standard Chartered has hit out at the banks over their support for China's controversial new national security law in Hong Kong.

In a rare rebuke, Aviva Investors, a top 20 shareholder in both banks owning almost £800 million ($1.02 billion) of their shares, said on Wednesday it was "uneasy" with their public support for the proposed law, given the lack of detail around how it will operate in practice.