Standard Chartered lifts 2030 earnings target to 18% with Hong Kong at core: CEO Winters


Standard Chartered has raised its 2030 earnings target to 18 per cent by expanding wealth, cross-border banking and digital businesses, with Hong Kong at the centre of its growth story, according to global CEO Bill Winters.

Investors welcomed the plan, lifting the lender’s shares 2.5 per cent to HK$201.60 in Tuesday’s morning session, outperforming the benchmark Hang Seng Index, which rose 0.4 per cent.

The London-headquartered lender, which focuses on emerging markets in Asia, the Middle East and Africa, is aiming for a 15 per cent return on tangible equity in 2028 and 18 per cent in 2030, up from 11.9 per cent in 2025. Growth will be driven by wealth and cross-border business, alongside a 15 per cent cut in back-office headcount through automation by 2030.

Winters unveiled the new targets at a media briefing on Tuesday morning ahead of an investor event in Hong Kong, describing the city as “extremely important” and a “key growth driver” in Standard Chartered’s strategy.

“Hong Kong is our home market. It is our biggest market and fastest-growing market,” he said. “Standard Chartered is a superconnector, connecting our clients of 55 markets to each other, and Hong Kong is at the centre of a lot of that network flow and wealth flows.”

Standard Chartered plans to adopt artificial intelligence and automation to reduce back-office staff worldwide by 15 per cent by 2030, according to its CEO. Photo: Eugene Lee
Standard Chartered plans to adopt artificial intelligence and automation to reduce back-office staff worldwide by 15 per cent by 2030, according to its CEO. Photo: Eugene Lee

Winters added that Hong Kong was no longer just a gateway to and from mainland China, but now played a bigger role in global trade and capital flows between Asia, Europe and Africa.

  • Related Posts

    Chinese firm Xpeng builds driverless cabs, likely to challenge Tesla’s FSD software in AI race

    Chinese electric vehicle (EV) maker Xpeng has begun mass production of autonomous cabs powered by its own chips, likely to mount yet another challenge on Tesla as both companies pursue…

    Continue reading
    China’s old ‘Motown’, Shanghai bets on robotaxis, better batteries for a GDP bump

    The financial and commercial hub of mainland China is pinning its economic hopes on emerging industries such as autonomous driving and solid-state electric vehicle (EV) batteries to sustain growth following…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *