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StanChart Targets Higher Return, to Reduce more than 7,000 Roles by 2030

  • Bank to raise return target to 18% in 2030
  • To eliminate more than 7,000 roles
  • Shares open up more than 2% in Hong Kong

HONG KONG, May 19 (Reuters) - Standard Chartered raised a key profit metric on Tuesday that the bank expects ‌to achieve through deep headcount cuts and an expansion of its key wealth business.

In a strategy update to investors, StanChart said it would deliver a more than 15% return on tangible equity (ROTE) in 2028, more than three percentage points higher than in ​2025, and building to about 18% in 2030.

The lender, which employed around 51,000 staff in support ​services - equivalent to back office positions - as of June 2025, said it would reduce more ⁠than 15% of its corporate function roles by 2030.

That is equivalent to a cut of more than ​7,000 roles out of the bank's 80,000 global staff.

The reduction will be driven by automation and adoption of artificial ​intelligence as some staff reskill, StanChart CEO Bill Winters told a press conference.

"It's not cost-cutting. It's replacing in some cases lower-value human capital with the financial capital and the investment capital we're putting in," Winters said.

The bank's Hong Kong-listed shares gained 2.3% ​at market open, against a flat benchmark Hang Seng.

With the latest measures, StanChart is seeking to build on ​a long turnaround and deliver stronger growth, even as geopolitical uncertainty clouds the outlook for some of its key markets.

Asia-Pacific ‌banks may ⁠need to raise loan-loss provisions further if the Iran conflict drags on, as higher energy costs and weaker growth strain borrowers, analysts said.

For London-headquartered StanChart, which focuses on Asia-Pacific, the region has so far been both a risk and a revenue driver. It set aside $190 million in precautionary provisions linked to the Middle East conflict in ​the first quarter.

The bank, which ​is also focused on ⁠Africa, hit earlier performance targets ahead of schedule, shifting attention to whether Winters can help it sustain momentum after years of restructuring.

"We achieved our 2026 medium-term financial ​targets a year earlier than planned," Winters said in a statement.

"We now have a ​more focused, ⁠streamlined and efficient organisation."

StanChart is underpinning its new target by keeping its focus on higher-margin businesses, including affluent retail clients and financial institutions within its corporate and investment banking division.

In the first quarter, the bank reported both its highest wealth ⁠revenue ​and new client money.

On Monday, the lender named Manus Costello, investor relations ​head and equity research veteran, as its permanent CFO, succeeding Diego De Giorgi, who resigned in February after nearly three years with the ​bank.

Reporting by Selena Li in Hong Kong and Rajasik Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar and Muralikumar Anantharaman

Source: Reuters


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