London, July 2, 2026, 18:01 BST
- Standard Chartered closed up 0.77% at 2,090p; volume was 33% of its 65-day average.
- The stock was still 8.25% below its 52-week high, the widest gap in a five-name UK bank check based on quoted market data.
- A completed $1.5 billion buyback shifts focus to fee income, digital assets and July 29 half-year results.
Standard Chartered PLC LON:STAN rose on Thursday, but the rally came on thin tape. The London shares closed 0.77% higher at 2,090p after trading 2.64 million shares, only 33% of their 65-day average. The price was still 8.25% below the 52-week high of 2,278p.
That is the useful cut for investors after the bank finished a $1.5 billion buyback last week. The final tranche was bought on June 24 at a volume-weighted average price of 2,058.3176p, close to Thursday’s close, and the programme retired 62.8 million shares.
MarketWatch quote pages showed Standard Chartered had the lightest volume against its normal pace and the largest gap to its 52-week high among five London-listed UK bank names checked. Gaps below are calculations from the same quoted 52-week ranges.
| Stock | July 2 close | Day move | Volume vs 65-day average | Gap to 52-week high | One-year move |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Chartered PLC LON:STAN | 2,090.00p | +0.77% | 33% | -8.25% | +71.95% |
| HSBC Holdings PLC (LON:HSBA) | 1,445.20p | +0.33% | 73% | -0.80% | +63.34% |
| Barclays PLC (LON:BARC) | 522.10p | +1.38% | 50% | -5.78% | +57.09% |
| Lloyds Banking Group PLC LON:LLOY | 114.35p | +1.96% | 64% | -0.57% | +50.70% |
| NatWest Group PLC (LON:NWG) | 678.60p | -0.15% | 51% | -3.80% | +38.77% |
The FTSE 100 (INDEXFTSE:UKX) rose 1.67% to 10,652.87 and ended just 0.39% below its own 52-week high. By that yardstick, StanChart’s share-price lag on Thursday was not about the UK market; it was about the stock’s own setup after a fast one-year gain.
The buyback also changed the count used by holders. Standard Chartered said it had 2,191,045,499 ordinary shares and voting rights as of June 30, down from 2,202,347,172 at May 29. That is a cut of 11.3 million shares, or 0.5%, in roughly a month.
The capital table uses the bank’s RNS statements and financial calendar. The May-to-June share-count change is a calculation from those filings.
| Capital marker | Latest detail | Investor read |
|---|---|---|
| Buyback | $1.5 billion completed; 62.8 million shares repurchased and cancelled | Passive support from the programme has ended |
| Voting rights | 2.191 billion as of June 30 | Share count fell 0.5% from May 29 |
| Next test | Half-year results due July 29 | Market will check income mix, capital and any fresh buyback signal |
The valuation question is now less about whether the bank can retire stock and more about whether revenue can carry the next leg. In the first quarter, Standard Chartered reported record income of $5.9 billion, profit before tax of $2.5 billion, return on tangible equity of 17.4% and a CET1 ratio of 13.4%; it kept 2026 guidance for income growth around the bottom of a 5%-7% range at constant currency.
Fresh announcements in the last two days point to where management wants fee-based growth to show. Standard Chartered and Circle Internet Group, Inc. (NYSE:CRCL) said on Thursday they launched G-SIB-led integrated access to USDC minting and redemption for eligible institutional clients, first through the bank’s DIFC operations. Roberto Hoornweg, chief executive of corporate and investment banking, said “digital assets are becoming an increasingly important component of global financial infrastructure.” Circle Chief Commercial Officer Kash Razzaghi said institutions want “trusted ways to access stablecoins.” Standard Chartered Bank
A day earlier, the bank and LMAX Group said they had executed live digital-asset prime-brokerage trades for spot Bitcoin and Ether, with T+1 settlement through Standard Chartered’s UK branch. Alison Higgins, head of prime services, called it part of a “comprehensive institutional-grade digital asset platform.” LMAX Chief Executive David Mercer said the bank balance sheet was the “critical missing mechanism.” Standard Chartered Bank
The payments side had another data point. Standard Chartered processed a cross-border remittance to India in 37 seconds under Swift’s new retail payments framework, The Economic Times reported on Thursday. The newspaper said Westpac sent the payment through Standard Chartered.
The market will get the fuller test on July 29, when Standard Chartered is due to release second-quarter and half-year results at 05:00 UKT, followed by a virtual presentation at 08:00 UKT. Investors will look for the income mix, capital ratio and any new buyback signal.