London, June 18, 2026, 11:09 BST
- Standard Chartered was near 2,030 pence, off 0.3%. The FTSE 100 shed around 0.9%.
- The stock is still trading around 2% under its 52-week high of 2,073 pence, after adding 2% on Wednesday.
- The bank gets a lift for its transaction strategy from access to China’s cross-border digital-yuan platform. But stricter offshore-account rules could put pressure on Hong Kong wealth flows.
Standard Chartered PLC slipped on Thursday, though the shares stayed near their 52-week high and outperformed the broader FTSE 100. The Asia-focused bank’s stock last traded around 2,030 pence, according to delayed market data, down from Wednesday’s close of 2,037 pence.
Shares closed up 2% Wednesday and are now only 1.7% off the 2,073-pence high from June 3, putting more heat on management to deliver more earnings growth instead of counting on investors to pay up for a higher multiple.
Interest rates stayed front and center for markets. Inflation in the UK came in steady at 2.8% for May. The Bank of England was expected to leave its policy rate at 3.75%. Nick Saunders, Webull UK’s chief executive, said it’s a “dilemma”—he said “good news for the economy’s resilience is bad news” if it means rates could stay higher. Reuters
Standard Chartered has become one of the first foreign banks in China to sign a direct-participant agreement on Cross-border e-CNY Transfer Services. The CBETS platform lets banks and overseas institutions handle 24/7 digital-yuan payments. Jerry Zhang, who leads global renminbi commercialisation at Standard Chartered, called digital infrastructure a “crucial pillar” for the currency’s push abroad. Rene Michau, digital-assets head, said the move cements Standard Chartered’s place as a “super connector across borders”. Standard Chartered Bank
Standard Chartered’s new agreement lines up with the plan Chief Executive Bill Winters outlined in May. The bank is aiming for a return on tangible equity above 15% in 2028, rising to roughly 18% by 2030. This key metric tracks profit on shareholders’ tangible capital. The lender also wants to cut over 7,000 corporate-function jobs with automation and AI. Winters called the group “more focused, streamlined and efficient”. Reuters
HSBC slipped about 0.35%, while Prudential lost about 1.7%. Standard Chartered’s closest rival in London, HSBC is also exposed to Asian markets. Prudential’s Hong Kong arm relies on mainland customers too. The declines point to wider nerves in the region, not just at Standard Chartered.
The downside is still a risk. On Thursday, Reuters Breakingviews columnist Ka Sing Chan said Beijing was tightening its grip on capital leaving mainland China, and that banks had stopped some Hong Kong account openings for mainlanders wanting to invest abroad. Standard Chartered could see slower new client money and fee growth if these controls stick and the digital-payments push doesn’t ramp up revenue soon. Stricter checks on client funds may drag on wealth inflows.
Market direction could shift soon depending on central bank signals. For Standard Chartered, the real question is if it can drive transaction income from its larger payments reach and still grow Hong Kong wealth under tighter Chinese controls. The stock is trading near its 52-week high, so there’s not much room for mistakes on execution.