Shares of Standard Chartered (STAN) experienced a decline on Tuesday following the financial institution’s revelation of an extensive reorganization initiative that encompasses the elimination of more than 7,000 positions throughout the coming four years.
The London-traded equity decreased approximately 1.17% during morning sessions. Prior to Tuesday’s movement, STAN stock had appreciated 65% during the preceding twelve-month period.
Standard Chartered PLC, SCBFY
Chief Executive Bill Winters presented the strategy during the institution’s Capital Markets Day event in Hong Kong. He characterized the workforce reductions not as expense management but rather as a technology-focused evolution.
The reductions account for 15% of the institution’s corporate functions personnel. Standard Chartered currently employs over 52,000 individuals in such positions from a complete worldwide workforce approaching 82,000.
Artificial intelligence forms the foundation of this strategic initiative. Winters highlighted automation and AI adoption as the primary mechanisms enabling the workforce decrease, noting that certain employees are anticipated to undergo retraining and transition into different positions.
Back-office hubs in Chennai, Bengaluru, Kuala Lumpur, and Warsaw will experience the most significant impact.
Standard Chartered stands among the most prominent financial institutions to directly correlate workforce reductions with AI implementation. Japan’s Mizuho Financial Group revealed plans for up to 5,000 position eliminations across a ten-year timeframe in March.
The lender established a return on tangible equity goal surpassing 15% by 2028, advancing from 12% in 2025, progressing toward roughly 18% by 2030.
Revenue expansion is projected at 5-7% per annum from 2025 through 2028, accompanied by a cost-to-income ratio objective of approximately 57% by 2028, declining from 63% the previous year.
Earnings per share growth in the high-teens percentage range annually is anticipated throughout the identical timeframe, together with a 20% increase in revenue per employee by 2028.
Jason Napier, an analyst at UBS who maintains a “buy” recommendation and a 2,130p valuation target, indicated the objectives aligned broadly with pre-Q1 consensus expectations. Nevertheless, he noted the 57% cost-to-income ratio sits approximately three percentage points above UBS’s proprietary projection.
UBS projects an 18.2% compound annual growth rate in earnings per share for Standard Chartered from 2025 through 2028—outpacing HSBC at 9.5% and the wider sector at 11.2%.
StanChart allocated $190 million in preventative provisions connected to the Middle East conflict during Q1.
The institution additionally confirmed its intention to preserve a CET1 capital ratio between 13-14% and a dividend payout ratio of 30% or higher.
Regarding leadership continuity, Winters indicated he would continue in his position for several additional years to guide the strategy’s execution. On Monday, the bank appointed Manus Costello as its permanent CFO, succeeding Diego De Giorgi who departed in February.
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