LONDON, June 24, 2026, 11:14 BST
Standard Chartered shares slipped 0.5% Wednesday with its $1.5 billion buyback almost done and the bank now looking at a possible sale of its Bahrain wealth and retail unit. The stock is about to lose buyback support before any possible sale brings in new cash.
The bank had used $1.465 billion by Monday, covering 97.7% of the buyback. On Tuesday, it picked up another 727,000 shares for an average 2,083.6 pence per share, spending £15.15 million. With the dollar rate used in Monday’s filing, total buyback spending is now around $1.485 billion—about 99.0% of the full amount. That leaves close to $14.6 million. On Monday alone, the bank spent $20.3 million.
Shares were last down 11 pence at 2,060 pence in delayed trading at 1108 BST, moving between 2,052 and 2,078 pence. The stock is about 1.9% under its 52-week high of 2,099 pence. The median target from 12 analysts was 2,122.09 pence, so around 3% above Wednesday’s price.
Standard Chartered’s buyback had been due to finish by August 24, but at the rate seen this week, the unspent amount covered less than a regular session. The bank picked up 1.467 million shares on Monday and Tuesday. After this, it’s up to earnings or a new buyback to support the stock, which is trading close to the analyst median target.
Bahrain isn’t getting a quick handover. There’s no buyer identified yet, and the switch could take up to two years. Bongiwe Gangeni, Standard Chartered’s regional wealth and retail boss, said the lender would pump more money into its Middle East franchise “in response to strong client demand.” HSBC sold its Bahrain retail arm last year but held on to its corporate and private banking units. The National
Standard Chartered’s Bahrain corporate and investment banking business isn’t being reviewed. The bank has already exited wealth and retail operations in five places, with three more exits underway. Counting Bahrain, nine markets are now either exited, on the table, or being looked at. Standard Chartered is trimming smaller retail operations, not pulling out of regions.
Standard Chartered Bank shares have a new earnings base after the buyback, as first-quarter operating income rose 9% to $5.9 billion. Wealth solutions income jumped 32%. Profit before tax climbed 17% at constant currency, reaching $2.5 billion. Return on tangible equity was 17.4%. “We delivered a record first quarter performance in 2026,” Chief Executive Bill Winters said. Standard Chartered Bank
Standard Chartered Bank’s May plan sets a return on tangible equity goal of over 15% by 2028 and around 18% by 2030. The bank wants to bring its cost-to-income ratio down to roughly 57% from 63% in 2025. The targets take on more relevance now with the current buyback close to finishing.
But the handoff isn’t guaranteed. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst Ed Firth said “performance may prove more challenging further out.” He noted high interest rates and strong wealth inflows have helped lately. Standard Chartered took $190 million in precautionary provisions tied to the Middle East conflict last quarter. If wealth demand weakens or credit costs go up, buyback support could disappear as earnings slow. Reuters
Standard Chartered plans to post first-half numbers on July 29.