Standard Chartered chief executive Peter Sands moved aggressively on Thursday to reverse the Asia-focused lender's fortunes by closing the bulk of its global equities business and announcing 4,000 job losses in retail banking.
Layoffs
The bank said it is dismantling its stockbroking, equity research and equity listing desks worldwide, leading to 200 job cuts as it exits an unprofitable business in which it had failed to build scale. Almost all the job losses are in Asia.
In its retail banking division, Standard Chartered said it has cut or announced the cutting of 2,000 jobs in the last 3 months, and plans to axe a further 2,000 over the course of this year. The cuts would represent about 5 per cent of the bank's 86,000 employees.
CIO, Chief RIsk Officer retire
The bank separately announced the departure of its Chief Risk Officer Richard Goulding and Jan Verplancke, its chief information officer. It said both were retiring from the group and would stay until successors were appointed.
The move to exit cash equities forms part of a cost-cutting plan the bank announced last October that is targeting $400 million in savings this year, as it tries to bounce back after seeing its share price slump more than 40 per cent over the past two years.
Falling commodity prices and a slowdown in growth in many of its core emerging markets ate into Standard Chartered's earnings during 2014, with the bank hit by a surge in bad loans and rising regulatory costs. It also took a $175 million hit from a suspected commodities fraud in China's Qingdao port.
'Only job cuts not enough'
The bank said the retail job cuts should save $200 million in costs this year, while the closure of the equities business should result in $100 million of savings in 2016.
Standard Chartered's London shares were up 2.1 per cent at 0900 GMT and its share rose 2.9 per cent in Hong Kong, reflecting expectations the cost-cutting move would help to boost profit. Its London shares tumbled 29 per cent last year, one of the worst performing global bank stocks.
Some analysts said more action may be needed to get the bank back on track.
"It's a logical step. But laying off staff is not enough to address the situation, said James Antos, a banking analyst at Mizuho Securities Asia in Hong Kong.
S&P downgrade
The cuts come less than two months after rating agency Standard & Poor's hit the London-based bank with its first ever downgrade following three profit warnings in less than 12 months and rising losses from bad loans.
Standard Chartered said in October that operating profit for the July-September quarter fell 16 per cent to $1.5 billion in the same period a year ago.
Peter Sands under pressure
Sands, who turned 53 on Thursday, had achieved a decade of record profits up until 2013 with big bets on growing the bank's loan book in Asia and a push into commodities.
But after eight years at the helm, Sands is increasingly coming under pressure from shareholders to revamp the bank, with some investors urging the bank to plan his successor.
Its biggest shareholders include Singapore state investor Temasek and asset managers Aberdeen Asset Management and BlackRock.
Retail banking, where Standard Chartered has more than 10 million customers in 34 countries, is a major target in its cost-cutting plan with the lender planning to focus more on just its 1.6 million priority retail customers and 400,000 business clients.
Other global banks such as HSBC and Citigroup have been making cuts to their retail banking businesses in recent years, exiting inefficient markets and trying to focus more on online services rather than bricks-and- mortar branches.
Employees locked out
Standard Chartered launched its equities business in November 2008 when it acquired brokerage Cazenove from JPMorgan.
The division includes cash equities, research and underwriting, all of which the bank said are unprofitable.
It failed to rank among the top ten banks globally for research or trading at the end of 2013, according to a survey by Greenwich Associates, and ranked just 23rd last year in equity underwriting in Asia Pacific according to Thomson Reuters data.
Equity capital markets head A Rajagopal, previously a banker with UBS India, had been leading that business since 2012, trying to build presence in a division that was traditionally not Standard Chartered's strongest suit.
"Management is continuing with their rationalization process and no unprofitable sacred cows have been left untouched," said Christopher Wong, a senior investment manager at Aberdeen Asset Management Asia.
Bankers in Standard Chartered's equities division in Hong Kong arrived on Thursday to find they were locked out of the office, while some in Singapore were escorted from their workplaces.
"We came in this morning and were told the equity business was being shut down," a woman who identified herself as an ex-employee at the bank's offices in Singapore told Reuters, saying she had worked in research.
The decision to exit equities marks a reversal in strategy for the bank, which had been hiring staff in the division as recently as October last year.
Boom in equity underwritings
Standard Chartered would be one of the first global banks to completely exit the equity capital markets business, which involves underwriting stock offerings for companies.
The move comes despite a boom in equity underwritings in Asia that saw fees for the industry rise 74 per cent in 2014 after a three-year decline.
Standard Chartered said it would retain its equity derivatives business as well as its convertible bond and macro economic research units.