Standard Chartered will eliminate more than 7,000 corporate roles by 2030 as the bank leans on automation and artificial intelligence to overhaul its operations.
Hong Kong Strategy Reset
The UK-headquartered lender unveiled the plan Tuesday at an investor event in Hong Kong, where chief executive Bill Winters outlined the targets alongside sharper profitability goals.
Standard Chartered will cut more than 15% of its corporate function roles by 2030, equal to over 7,000 jobs from a global workforce of about 80,000. The bank employed roughly 51,000 staff in support services as of June 2025, according to figures shared with investors.
Winters framed the move as a strategic reshape rather than pure cost-cutting, telling reporters the bank was "replacing in some cases lower-value human capital."
Some affected workers will be reskilled and redeployed.
The bank has major back-office hubs in India, China, Malaysia and Poland, though it did not specify where the reductions will land.
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Profit Targets Sharpen
The lender also lifted its return on tangible equity target to more than 15% by 2028 and around 18% by 2030, up from a previous goal of above 12% in 2026. Income per employee should rise about 20% by 2028, with a cost-to-income ratio of 57%.
Jefferies analyst Joseph Dickerson described the targets as "conservatively struck," suggesting room for mid-teens earnings growth and potential outperformance against guidance. Hong Kong-listed shares climbed 2.3% after the announcement.
The shift signals that AI has moved past pilot status at one of Asia's most active international banks.
Winters wants the bank "more focused, streamlined and efficient," with technology now central to that pitch. Investors appear to be buying it.
AI Banking Squeeze
Standard Chartered joins a widening list of financial firms trimming headcount as AI absorbs back-office work. Singapore's DBS said in February it expected to shed about 4,000 contract and temporary roles over three years. Meta announced plans in April to cut roughly 8,000 staff, or 10% of its workforce. Amazon moved to lay off more than 30,000 workers in January, while Oracle cut over 10,000.
Winters has run Standard Chartered since 2015 and spent recent years restructuring its Asia and Africa-focused footprint. The bank hit its 2026 medium-term targets a year early, posting record income of $19.7 billion in 2024 and a 37% dividend hike. Tuesday's plan stretches that turnaround into a deeper bet on automation.
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