Financial Results
Standard Chartered Sets Out "Ambitious" Net New Money, Income Growth Goals
The banking group, which earns the bulk of its revenues outside the UK in regions such as Asia, the Indian sub-continent and Africa, says it has big ambitions for net new money growth in its affluent client business. It has also updated observers about how its various wealth management operations are performing.
Standard
Chartered has set what it calls the ambitious target of
acquiring $200 billion in net new money over the next five years,
alongside double-digit growth in income for its wealth solutions
business.
While the mass-affluent sector – as this publication has noted
here and here
– can be a tough sector for firms to serve effectively, the
UK-listed bank clearly sees this as important for its major
markets in Asia, the Indian sub-continent, and Africa. Standard
Chartered earns the bulk of its revenues outside the UK.
The lender, which explained its approach in an Affluent Investor
Seminar in Singapore, said that over the past two years, AuM
growth outpaced that of the top 20 banks on average. In the first
nine months of 2024, Standard Chartered achieved a faster NNM
acquisition rate than its peers, it said in a statement
yesterday.
The firm also detailed inflows and the growth of a number of its
recent wealth offerings.
“As we continue to focus on our competitive strengths, a
significant portion of our investment will enhance those
capabilities that support our clients’ international banking
needs, including a 50 per cent expansion of our relationship
manager team by 2028,” Judy Hsu, CEO, wealth and retail banking,
said.
As reported at the end of October, the wealth and retail banking
arm of Standard Chartered reported a rise of profit in the third
quarter to $742 million, rising 11 per cent on a year earlier.
For the nine months to end-September, they rose 5 per cent to
$2.149 billion. At the group level, pre-tax profit surged by more
than a third.
In the presentation in Singapore, Standard Chartered said it is
using its network, anchored by wealth hubs in Hong Kong,
Singapore, the UAE and Jersey, to meet the evolving needs of
affluent clients.
Standard Chartered said it is particularly keen to serve global
Chinese and global Indian clients with its multilingual RMs and
specialists.
“Our extensive network and four wealth hubs give us a distinct
advantage, positioning us to seize the vast and rapidly growing
international client opportunities,” Raymond Ang, global head,
private bank and affluent clients, said.
Standard Chartered is aiming for double-digit wealth income
growth through continued product innovation and platform
enhancements.
Reflecting on its proprietary advisory platform myWealth Advisor,
the bank said that next year it intends to integrate advanced
capabilities such as structured products and risk analytics.
The bank's first Variable Capital Company was established in Singapore in 2024; it said that its first sub-fund under the first VCC umbrella – launched in June – generated $500 million. Signature CIO Funds, launched in 2022 and built on CIO insights and available to clients in 12 markets, have already contributed around $2 billion to the bank’s wealth AuM.