Standard Chartered (STAN) stock dropped on Tuesday after the bank unveiled a major restructuring plan that includes cutting more than 7,000 jobs over the next four years.
The London-listed stock fell around 1.17% in early trading. The bank’s STAN stock had gained 65% over the past 12 months before Tuesday’s move.
Standard Chartered PLC, SCBFY
CEO Bill Winters laid out the plans at the bank’s Capital Markets Day in Hong Kong. He framed the job cuts not as cost-cutting but as a technology-led transformation.
The cuts represent 15% of the bank’s corporate function workforce. StanChart employs more than 52,000 people in those roles out of a total global headcount of nearly 82,000.
Artificial intelligence is at the centre of the plan. Winters pointed to automation and AI adoption as the key tools driving the reduction, with some staff expected to retrain and shift into new roles.
The most affected locations will be back-office centres in Chennai, Bengaluru, Kuala Lumpur, and Warsaw.
StanChart is one of the biggest names in finance to explicitly link headcount reductions to AI deployment. Japanese lender Mizuho announced up to 5,000 cuts over a decade in March.
The bank set a return on tangible equity target of greater than 15% by 2028, up from 12% in 2025, building toward approximately 18% by 2030.
Income growth is guided at 5-7% annually from 2025 to 2028, with a cost-to-income ratio target of around 57% by 2028, down from 63% last year.
High-teens earnings per share growth annually is expected over the same period, alongside a 20% rise in income per employee by 2028.
UBS analyst Jason Napier, who holds a “buy” rating and a 2,130p price target, said the targets were broadly in line with pre-Q1 consensus. However, he flagged the 57% cost-to-income ratio as sitting around three percentage points above UBS’s own estimate.
UBS models an 18.2% compound annual growth rate in EPS for StanChart from 2025 to 2028 — faster than HSBC at 9.5% and the broader sector at 11.2%.
StanChart set aside $190 million in precautionary provisions linked to the Middle East conflict in Q1.
The bank also confirmed it would maintain a CET1 capital ratio of 13-14% and a dividend payout ratio of 30% or more.
On succession planning, Winters said he would remain in place for the next few years to see the strategy through. On Monday, the bank named Manus Costello as its permanent CFO, replacing Diego De Giorgi who resigned in February.
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