Standard Chartered share price slides 5% as Middle East conflict rattles bank stocks

March 2, 2026
Standard Chartered share price slides 5% as Middle East conflict rattles bank stocks

London, March 2, 2026, 08:47 GMT — Regular session

  • Standard Chartered shares slid roughly 5% early in London, mirroring the wider risk-off sentiment.
  • The bank instructed employees to delay travel plans to the Middle East, citing security concerns that have put meetings and deal discussions on hold.
  • Attention shifts to oil price action and the bank’s next scheduled update on April 30.

Shares in Standard Chartered PLC dropped roughly 5% during early London hours Monday, pressured by renewed conflict in the Middle East. At 08:47 GMT, the stock had slipped to 1,740.5 pence—off about 5%—after touching an intraday low of 1,734 pence. 1

This hits Standard Chartered at a sensitive time. The bank’s reliance on cross-border business — everything from corporate banking to wealth management — means travel and client meetings are crucial. With visits on hold, new deal flow and fees can take a hit, even if activity doesn’t come to a standstill.

Standard Chartered advised staff to hold off on Middle East trips, with bankers citing potential setbacks for fundraisings and cross-border M&A amid the conflict, according to Reuters. Primavera Capital Group chairman Fred Hu called the disruptions unlikely to “sever, much less reverse” the strengthening China-Gulf investment relationship in the long term. 2

European stocks dropped, weighed down by banks as the sector’s index fell 3.6%. Oil prices climbed after supply concerns flared near the Strait of Hormuz. Energy and defence shares caught a bid, while banks felt the sting from a turn away from risk. 3

HSBC and Barclays lost ground in London trading, with interactive investor noting pressure across financials and travel stocks as funds moved out. Oil and defence names, by contrast, showed some resilience. 4

The extent of the shock remains unclear. “Middle East tail risks have increased,” said Rong Ren Goh, portfolio manager at Eastspring Investments, referencing trader lingo for unlikely events with major impact. Over at Barclays, analysts pointed out that “history argues strongly in favor of selling geopolitical risk premium when hostilities start” — that’s the additional yield investors seek for taking on political risk. 5

Standard Chartered faces the prospect that sustained higher energy prices could pressure its borrowers and squeeze funding across its network, despite offices largely avoiding direct disruption so far. On top of that, the bank’s Gulf-related capital markets deals may be delayed—not scrapped—as clients hold off until uncertainty lifts.

Speed cuts both ways. Should shipping routes clear and oil prices retreat, banks might bounce back fast—making Monday’s drop seem more like a quick hedge than any real shift in outlook.

Eyes are on updates from the Gulf, along with any new directions for staff travel or client meetings in the coming days. Standard Chartered’s next official update lands with first-quarter results on April 30. 6