Standard Chartered (OTC:SCBFF) PLC (STAN.L) reported a significant uplift in its third-quarter performance for 2024, with a 12% increase in income and a 41% rise in profit before tax. Crediting the success to exceptional results in wealth solutions and solid growth in global markets, the bank has revised its income growth forecast for the year to around 10%. The bank's strategic focus on cross-border corporate and investment banking, along with expanding wealth management services for affluent clients, has led to the decision to double investments in these areas to $1.5 billion over the next five years.
Key Takeaways
- Net interest income increased by 9% to $2.6 billion, while non-net interest income grew by 15%.
- The Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio was reported at 14.2%, reflecting the impact of a $1.5 billion share buyback.
- Operating expenses rose modestly by 2%, and credit impairment trends remained favorable.
- The company's reshaping strategy includes a focus on affluent clients and exiting less strategic corporate and investment banking clients.
- Return on tangible equity (RoTE) target has been upgraded to nearly 13% by 2026, and shareholder distribution target increased to at least $8 billion through 2026.
Company Outlook
- The bank plans to invest $1.5 billion to enhance wealth management capabilities, expecting a return on investment within 18 to 24 months.
- Income from the affluent segment is projected to rise from two-thirds to about three-quarters of Wealth Management (WRB) in the medium term.
- The bank is not exiting the mass market but is strategically focusing on areas where it can have a significant impact.
Bearish Highlights
- Subdued credit demand growth is estimated to be in the single digits.
- Seasonal declines in wealth management are expected in Q4.
Bullish Highlights
- The bank has seen a 32% growth rate in Wealth, driven by strong underlying drivers.
- The bank's strategic investments and reallocations are expected to enhance growth and returns while simplifying the business model.
Misses
- There are potential costs related to the "Fit for Growth" initiative in 2025 that could affect capital returns.
Q&A Highlights
- Management acknowledged the influence of stimulus factors on wealth income growth but remained positive about the underlying drivers.
- The investment phase in wealth growth is set to begin in the latter part of 2023 and into 2024, with a focus on strong partnerships, such as with Prudential.
Standard Chartered remains confident in its strategic direction, emphasizing its commitment to the universal banking model in key markets and the pursuit of profitable segments. The company's strategic pivot towards affluent clientele and the divestment of non-core assets demonstrate its adaptability and focus on long-term growth. Despite potential challenges, the bank's leadership is optimistic about achieving steady income growth and capital gains from their ventures.
InvestingPro Insights
Standard Chartered's strong third-quarter performance is reflected in its recent market performance, as highlighted by InvestingPro data. The bank's stock has shown impressive momentum, with a 33.56% price total return over the past six months and a 54.02% return over the last year. This aligns with the company's reported 12% increase in income and 41% rise in profit before tax.
InvestingPro Tips reveal that Standard Chartered has raised its dividend for 4 consecutive years, which supports the bank's commitment to increasing shareholder value. This is particularly relevant given the company's upgraded shareholder distribution target of at least $8 billion through 2026.
The bank's P/E ratio of 10.41 and an adjusted P/E ratio of 8.79 for the last twelve months as of Q2 2024 suggest that the stock may be undervalued relative to its earnings potential. This is further supported by an InvestingPro Tip indicating that Standard Chartered is trading at a low P/E ratio relative to its near-term earnings growth.
While the company plans significant investments in wealth management and corporate banking, an InvestingPro Tip cautions that Standard Chartered is quickly burning through cash. This could be a point of concern for investors, especially in light of the $1.5 billion investment plan over the next five years.
For readers interested in a more comprehensive analysis, InvestingPro offers 11 additional tips for Standard Chartered, providing a deeper understanding of the company's financial health and market position.
Full transcript - Standard Chartered PLC (SCBFF) Q3 2024:
Bill Winters: Good morning and good afternoon, everyone. Today, I’m taking our Third Quarter 2024 Results Call from Saudi Arabia, attending the future investment initiative, and I’m joined by Diego from the London office. We delivered a strong performance in the third quarter with income up 12% and profit before tax up 41%, driven by a record quarter in wealth solutions and double-digit growth in global markets. As a result of this strong performance, we’re upgrading our guidance for income growth this year towards 10%. These results demonstrate that our strategy of offering cross-border corporate and investment banking capabilities and leading wealth management for affluent clients is working. We’re now taking action to double down on our strategy, concentrating capital and investment in our areas of greatest differentiation and competitive strength to deliver sustainably higher returns. In CIB, we will further sharpen the focus on serving the complex needs of our largest global clients and rely on our unique cross-border capabilities. In wealth and retail banking, we’re doubling our investment plans and our fast-growing and high-returning wealth management business for affluent clients. This incremental investment will be funded by reshaping our mass retail business to focus on building our strong pipeline for future affluent and international banking clients. These actions will further simplify our business, help us to generate high-quality growth and improve our return on tangible equity over the medium term. We’re now targeting an RoTE approaching 13% in 2026. We’re also increasing our shareholder distribution target from at least $5 billion to at least $8 billion over the three years to 2026. Diego will now take you through our Q3 performance, and I will then provide more detail on our strategy for CIB and WRB. We’ll then both come back for the usual Q&A session. So over to you, Diego.
Diego De Giorgi: Thanks, Bill. Good morning and good afternoon to everyone on the call. In my remarks, I will be comparing year-on-year on an underlying basis and speaking to constant currency unless stated otherwise. The group delivered top line growth of 12% with operating income of $4.9 billion as the positive momentum we saw in the first half continued into the third quarter. Net interest income was $2.6 billion, up 9%. Non net interest income was up 15%, driven by a record quarter in wealth solutions and a strong performance in global markets. Operating expenses were well controlled, up only 2%. Credit impairment continued to trend well with a net release in CIB this quarter. Other impairment included further charges related to the write-off of software assets with no impact on capital. Profit before tax was up 41% and RoTE was 10.8% in the quarter, up 4 percentage points. Taxes were 30.8% for the first nine months of the year, and we continue to expect the full year 2024 underlying effective tax rate to be around this level. It is also worth noting that the statutory tax rate is expected to be a few percentage points higher than the underlying for this year and should trend downwards in future years. Our CET1 ratio of 14.2% includes the full 62 basis points impact of the $1.5 billion share buyback announced earlier in July. The tangible net asset value per share is up $0.65 in the quarter and is up 18% year-on-year. As usual, we have provided a more detailed breakdown of the TNAV walk in the appendices. Turning now to the various components of income. NII of $2.6 billion was up 1% quarter-on-quarter from mix improvement and extra day count. We continue to expect NII of $10 billion to $10.25 billion for this year. Looking ahead, the current interest rate environment and outlook will make it more challenging to grow NII in 2025. There are a number of factors at play here, most notably how the rate cycle unfolds and the impact this will have on liability pricing and asset growth. There is also an additional headwind of around 1% to NII in 2025 from the further actions we are taking in WRB, which Bill will talk about in more detail later. Now turning to non-NII, which as a reminder, is around half of our total income. Wealth solutions had a record quarter with income up 32% driven by very strong growth in investment products, up 40% and bancassurance income up 16%. Global markets also delivered double-digit growth, and global banking was up 7%. Given the combination of a stronger-than-expected revenue outturn in 2024 and NII uncertainty, we anticipate overall income growth in 2025 will be slightly below our medium-term range of 5% to 7%. We remain confident that over the course of our 2023 to 2026 plan, income will grow at a 5% to 7% CAGR. Expenses were up 2% year-on-year and down 3% versus Q2. We expect expenses in Q4 to be up quarter-on-quarter due to phasing in Q3 and following our usual investment spend profile, which is weighted towards the end of the year. We are over six months into our three-year Fit for Growth program, and we are progressing well. As previously communicated, the majority of the $1.5 billion of savings are expected to ramp up from 2025 with a tale of efficiency effects continuing after 2026. And we expect to incur around 60% of the $1.5 billion cost to achieve by the end of 2025. We remain committed to delivering positive jaws each year and the absolute cost cap of $12 billion in 2026. Looking now at credit impairment, which was down $116 million year-on-year. Credit impairment in CIB continues to be benign with a $10 million net release in the quarter. This benefited from more recoveries, partly offset by a $34 million overlay for clients who have exposure to Hong Kong commercial real estate. The $177 million charge in WRB was up $31 million quarter-on-quarter, including a $21 million overlay in Korea relating to eCommerce platforms. Ventures credit impairment remained broadly stable and is in line with the recent run rate. Other impairment included a $68 million charge from software assets write-off. This is the latest installment of a proactive review of software accounting, which you would have seen come through over the last couple of quarters. It is due to be completed by year-end with another charge in Q4, which is likely to be higher than Q3. Just as a reminder, this has no impact on capital. Building on the underlying growth of loans and advances to customers in the first half of the year, we saw green shoots of growth in trade in Q3. However, total underlying customer loans and advances were down slightly in the quarter as we continued to be disciplined in originating WRB mortgages. In CIB, strong origination volumes are driving the growth in global banking income even though they are not always reflected in loan growth due to our originate to distribute model. Underlying customer deposits were up $3 billion in the quarter, driven by an increase in time deposits in WRB related to affluent clients. Turning now to capital, risk-weighted assets were up $7 billion in the third quarter due to two main drivers. First, $3 billion of market risk-weighted assets in CIB deployed to help clients capture market opportunities. Second, a $3 billion increase from FX, which is broadly neutral from a capital ratio perspective. Following the PRA’s clarification of the Basel 3.1 rules, we now expect the RWA day one impact will be less than previously thought and close to neutral. We continued to maintain a robust capital position with a CET1 ratio of 14.2% in Q3 including 62 basis points related to the $1.5 billion share buyback, which is more than 60% completed to date. As a result of our continued strong performance and more certainty on the impact of Basel 3.1, we are upgrading our shareholder distribution target from at least $5 billion to at least $8 billion between 2024 and 2026. However, we will remind you that we still expect to face some headwinds in capital generation in 2025, owing to the cost to achieve for the Fit for Growth program. Now let’s look at the performance of CIB, which delivered a record third quarter in income. As I mentioned earlier, global market income was up 16%, driven by a strong double-digit performance in both flow and episodic income. The increase in flow was driven by higher volumes in FX, particularly with financial institutional clients, including growth in renminbi-related income as well as higher credit trading income. And the growth in episodic was mainly driven by higher rates income. We have also seen positive momentum and sentiment across our network with, for example, encouraging growth in Africa, helped by Nigeria and South Africa. Global Banking was up 7%, driven by favorable market conditions in capital markets and higher origination volumes. The pipeline for the rest of the year is healthy and the focus remains on execution. Transaction Services income was down 5% due to margin compression from higher pass-through rates. However, we continued to see green shoots of asset growth with underlying trade assets up $2 billion in the quarter. We will be hosting a CIB investor seminar in March next year, and we will be providing more details on this event closer to the date. In Wealth and Retail Banking, income was up 11% to $2 billion. The record performance in Wealth Solutions was supported by continued strong quarterly momentum in new-to-bank clients with an additional 71,000 clients onboarded in Q3, continuing a trend that has now been sustained over seven quarters. There was $10 billion of affluent net new money inflows in the quarter and $34 billion so far this year, which is equivalent to a strong 16% annualized growth of affluent AUM coming from net new money. We are already a leading wealth manager for affluent clients across Asia, Africa and the Middle East, and we continue to innovate our leading product offerings. For example, in Singapore, we recently launched a BCC fund, which is a new fund structure that allows our affluent clients unique exposure to some leading global alternative asset managers. As a reminder, we are hosting an affluent and wealth investor seminar on the third of December. Lastly, turning to our ventures business. Mox now has the largest market share across all digital banks in Hong Kong for customer loans and CASA. In Singapore, Trust has recently launched an additional cashback card to appeal to a broader customer base. We now expect both Mox and Trust to be profitable in 2026. Reflecting the maturing nature of our portfolio, Losses for the Ventures segment are expected to be less than $200 million cumulatively across 2025 and 2026, with the majority of these losses incurred next year. I will now hand back to Bill to go through some details of the further actions we are taking to deliver sustainably higher returns.
Bill Winters: Great. Thanks, Diego. As I mentioned in my opening comments, we have been successfully executing our strategy of offering cross-border corporate and investment banking capabilities and leading wealth management for affluent clients, delivering around 100 basis points of growth in RoTE annually since 2015. We continue to manage our portfolio of products and markets dynamically, taking regular actions across our business to reallocate capital to the highest-returning areas. A couple of recent examples include our investments in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, where we committed total capital of $175 million and an example of a divestment has been the sale of our personal loan book in India, which we made a couple of weeks ago. Today, we are announcing a set of further actions to deliver sustainably higher returns, simplify our business, help us generate high quality growth and improve our return on tangible equity over the medium term. In WRB, we’re doubling down on our highly successful distinctive and profitable wealth management offering to affluent clients. Over the next five years, we’ll invest around $1.5 billion in relationship managers and investment advisers as well as enhanced international and digital capabilities. This is double our previous investment plan. We’ll grow the number of relationship managers by around 50% over the medium term, and we also target to increase the annual flow of up-tiered clients. This incremental investment will be funded by reshaping our mass retail business and sharpening its focus on building a strong pipeline of future affluent and international banking clients. The impact of this reshaping will vary across our network. We’ll continue to review single product lending relationships and portfolios in order to prioritize higher growth and higher returning segments. And we’re exploring the opportunity to sell all or part of a small number of businesses where the strategic rationale is not sufficiently compelling. These actions are expected to take effect over the next 18 to 24 months. We’re confident that our increased investment and focus will help us continue to outperform the market in terms of asset gathering and income growth, enabling us to deliver double-digit percentage growth in Wealth Solutions income. We, therefore, expect income from our affluent segment to increase from two-thirds to WRB to around three quarters in the medium term. Now turning to CIB. We will further sharpen our focus on serving the cross-border needs of our large global corporate and financial institutional clients. We’ll invest in relationship managers in the network corridors showing the highest growth potential, such as Asia to the Middle East. This will deepen our wallet share with these clients and deliver higher returns. We’re going to exit around 3,000 or a quarter of our total CIB clients whose needs do not play directly to our strengths. And we will continue to redeploy RWAs into higher returning businesses as part of our ongoing optimization activities. We aim to grow income from financial institutions to around 60% of CIB over the medium term and to increase the percentage of cross-border network income to around 70%. These actions will enable us to improve both our returns and potential for growth in CIB by delivering our unique capabilities our network can offer to clients who rely on them the most. Looking ahead, we’re substantially raising our shareholder distribution target from at least $5 billion to at least $8 billion between 2024 and 2026. And we’re upgrading our 2026 RoTE guidance from 12% to approaching 13% and to progress thereafter. Now to conclude, the group delivered a strong performance in the third quarter with income up 12% and profit before tax up 41%. The positive momentum from the first half of the year has continued into Q3 and we’re upgrading our 2024 income growth guidance towards 10%. We’re taking further action to deliver sustainably higher returns by doubling investment plans in our fast-growing and high returning wealth management business and further sharpening our focus on serving the needs of our larger global corporate and institutional clients who rely on our unique cross-border capabilities. With that, I’ll hand back to the operator, and Diego and I will be happy to take questions.
Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Now we’re going to take first question for today and it comes from the line of Grace Dargan from Barclays. Your line is open. Please ask your question.
Grace Dargan: Hi, good morning. Thank you very much for taking my questions. And if I could ask two, please. Firstly, on the income growth in 2025, I guess the upgrade – the updated guidance talking about below 5% to 7% and maybe you could just probe a little bit more on – at least on current rate expectations, how far below and 5% to 7% you might be thinking. I think consensus has been around about 3% year-on-year. Is that kind of in the realm you be thinking about? And then secondly, another really strong quarter in Wealth and highlighting the investment today, which I think you’ll be – that will be over kind of 18 to 24 months. So I guess on the income guidance of growing double-digit, how should we be thinking about the shape of that from here? Should we just be expecting that year-on-year? Is that phasing after the investment? Any help with that would be much appreciated. Thank you.
Bill Winters: Great. Thanks for the question, Grace. I’m going to send the income guidance question directed to Diego. But before doing that, I’ll just give a quick comment on the wealth phasing. We’ve obviously had – we’ve had good solid growth in Wealth. Now if we look at the leading indicators in terms of new clients, migrations from our mass segment, up the food chain, et cetera, for several years. And obviously, that’s been matched by good income growth over the past couple of years as market sentiment has changed as well. What we’re looking to do now is to ramp up the pace of investment that we’ve been making, obviously, both in RMs but also in digital channels just to provide an extra catalyst to what has been quite a good story, and I think structurally very strong already. But there’s still an element of market dependence. We know that. We’ve been in a pretty upbeat market environment, both in the U.S. certainly, but also more recently in China. And we’ve been in a relatively fixed income environment as well has been a great environment for bank – for us generally. So we see those trends continuing, but we’re not going to suggest that somehow insensitive to market movements and which if they shift a growth from here. But structurally, we think it’s a great growth story into which we’re very happy to continue to invest. But let me hand over to Diego. I’m sure he will have more comments on Wealth and the phasing and also income group.
Diego De Giorgi: So on Wealth, nothing much more, I mean, bear in mind that the kind of investment plan we are outlining today is a plan that takes place over five years. So clearly, we have a lot of confidence that this is a very structural team that we are going to be tapping in. In terms of the growth for 2025, so look, what we are doing is we are reshaping the growth path that we are seeing going forward. This is not a downgrade. The endpoint is the same. What we are flagging is that we are growing this year at very substantially faster than the 5% to 7% range that we had indicated and we are now indicating towards 10%. So 2 to 3 points above the top end of the 5% to 7%. That is the main impact. It’s the jumping off point. To that, I would add and I am sure that we will have the opportunity to further unpack it during the conversation today, there’s some additional uncertainty with the development on NII, but I’m sure we can tackle a little bit later.
Bill Winters: Great. Operator, can we take the next question, please?
Operator: Yes, of course, and now we’re going to take our next question. And the next question comes from the line of Joseph Dickerson from Jefferies. Your line is open. Please ask your question.
Joseph Dickerson: Hi, good morning, guys. Thank you for taking my questions. I just have two questions. When you look at the lower returning mass retail businesses and 3,000 reduction in CIB clients, I guess there separately or together, how much, if any, is there an RoTE drag from these if that could be quantified? That would be very helpful. And then secondly, I note that your new-to-bank customers accelerated in the third quarter. Is that something that, as you’ve seen over the month of October has continued? Do you see an acceleration in new-to-bank customers into year-end? Thank you.
Bill Winters: Good. Again, I’ll just give a bit of color upfront and then hand over to Diego. The exercises that we’re going through are slightly financially dilutive. But when we look at the value that we expect to generate through focus and focus on and retail side on this, this really very substantial fundamental pivot to wealth. Of course, we’ve been undertaking several years now, but we intend to accelerate that. We think it’s going to more than – much more the makeup for the very minor income and RoTE dilution in the short-term. The same thing on the CIB side. Although, I think I’d say on the CIB side, the effect is – it will be effective on this, but let me hand over to Diego. Maybe just on your second question of new-to-bank accelerating, we’ve seen a good steady flow of new-to-bank clients, in part because of the dynamics in the market. Obviously, in particular, in our big source markets in Asia, we’ve had an accumulation of wealth with a strong desire to diversify wealth portfolios. We’ve also significantly ramped up our own capabilities in International Banking. So our ability to take customer that’s an existing customer in India or China or Indonesia and have them take up an account in some place in Singapore, Hong Kong, Dubai, et cetera. We’ve invested quite heavily in that as well. So I wouldn’t say that we’ve seen a particular acceleration, but we’ve seen a steady increase, so you can say, steady acceleration over the past couple of years as we’ve made these investments. But again, let me hand back to Diego for more color.
Diego De Giorgi: So on the two, Joe – on the first one, I’m a simple man. I’m just the CFO, I’ll tell you a simple way that I think about it is if you think about our increased guidance in terms of RoTE, that increased guidance in RoTE comes from two things. One, the mechanical effect, of course, of higher distributions but the second is exactly what Bill said, i.e., we are focusing on businesses that are inherently higher return and that is where you see the effect of the strategic measures, the shifting focus – the sharpening of the focus that we are announcing today. On the new-to-bank, I’ll give you – Bill has given you the secular answer, I’ll give you the very short-term answer. If you think about the stimulus that we have been seeing coming from China and the fact that, of course, next week is going to be an important one because the Standing Committee of the NPC will be putting the final part of the Arsenal network which is the fiscal policy. But if you think about that stimulus, that stimulus started taking effect very much towards the end of Q3. And actually, if anything, the main results came immediately after Golden Week. So we’ve seen a very strong start in Wealth Management in October. That has then moderated to slightly more natural levels of growth. So I’m having the very short-term effect to the longer-term secular effects that Bill just spoke about.
Joseph Dickerson: Great. Can I just clarify – my question on the mass retail businesses with 3,000 reduction in the CIB clients, wasn’t that it was a necessarily a drag? But it is – I presume those are lower ROE businesses than the rest of the ones you want to grow. And so I was just trying to see what the difference might be in the ROE, but I’m happy to trying to figure it out myself, probably. Is that the broader point? Is that as a point to be correct?
Diego De Giorgi: So you’re right, directionally, it’s difficult to quantify it in that way. I would go back to my comment about if you’re thinking about it in terms of the impact on numbers, it’s in the higher RoTE guidance we are giving you. If you are thinking about it in terms of how we operate the bank, it’s very much in line with what Bill said and the freeing up of relationship manager capacity, the ability to focus on the higher returning clients and the higher returning client cohort. That’s the two ways that we think about it.
Joseph Dickerson: Many thanks.
Bill Winters: Joseph to your point – to your direct question, yes, these are lower returning client relationships, but still profitable, right? So we’re not – I mean it’s dilutive to our earnings which we were more than offset by reallocating that capital into higher returning things and generating the value from focus.
Joseph Dickerson: Great. Many thanks.
Operator: Thank you. Now we’re going to take our next questions today. And the next question comes from the line of Jason Napier from UBS. Your line is open. Please ask your question.
Jason Napier: Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. Two quite straightforward ones, actually. The first is thanks for the increased out target. Can I just check, is there any necessity to caveat any of those sorts of guides around exit costs from reshaping disposals and so on? And then secondly, Diego, I think you more or less invited the question of unpacking the sort of position on revenue momentum in NII. So I don’t want to you down the curve that you present as your weighted average hasn’t really changed all that much. Perhaps you could talk about what you’ve done in sort of hedge dynamic reinvestment yields and loan growth into next year, please?
Diego De Giorgi: Absolutely. I will definitely pick it up. So first of all, on the first one, very simple. On the increased targets, it’s all worked out in the guidance. Everything we are providing you includes everything, including whatever cost it might include, whatever benefits to the return on tangible equity, as we have discussed before with Joe’s question, et cetera. So no need to do anything from our point of view other than what is inside the guidance. On the NII, let’s do the unpacking. Let’s divide for second – let’s start from this year. So for this year, in our $10 billion – $10 billion to $10.25 billion range for NII for 2024, combination of slightly higher rates and also some FX impacts lead us to think that where we are going to end up Q4 is going to be closer to the middle of that range. So that will give you the jumping point into 2025. In 2025, it’s a complex interplay of several factors, all of which, by the way, you have already mentioned yourself, unsurprisingly. First of all, it’s the level and the pace of the rate cuts that we are going to be facing. I mean direction-wise, we are clear, but the volatility in terms of interest rates has been very, very substantial, both on the down and recently more on the up. The second thing, which is probably the only one that actually you didn’t mention is that while we expect the shape of the pass-through rates to be very similar to the way up, there will be some lagging effect on the way down in CIB. How much, TBD, but we will be experiencing some of that. The third is that we have some impact on NII from the reshaping of the activities in mass retail that we have quantified into 1% of NII in 2025, that comes into play in 2025. And all of these things together with the hedge where you have seen we have increased the hedge to around $55 billion. The hedge is going to trend towards $60 billion for the end of the year, and we continue to believe that we are going to continue to grow it from there. All of these things then interplay with the question of what happens with the credit demand growth. That is a big million dollar question or more than 100 million dollar question. Do we think we will see credit demand growth? Absolutely. We still think it will be relatively subdued toward – compared to the natural rate of credit demand growth, which in our region is in the region of 5%, and we believe it will be more in the single digits. We have seen some of it in the first half of the year. We are up $5 billion in terms of underlying customer loans and advances. But this quarter, for example, it is lower. And as a consequence, it seems when that comes into play that will tell us – will end up telling us where do we go on NII. Net-net, a lot of moving pieces, feels like the right thing to say that it is going to be more challenging. But what I would also flag to you is we’re going to be – continue to be disciplined on our PTRs, we will manage ourselves as well as we can and as soon as credit demand will pick up, whether directly through deploying RWAs or through our originate-to-distribute activities, we will pick up on it. So it’s not impossible that we see growth in NII next year. It’s just more challenging. That’s how I would frame it.
Jason Napier: Thanks very much. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. Now we’re going to take our next question. And the next question comes from the line of Robin Down from HSBC. Your line is open. Please ask your question.
Robin Down: Good morning, guys. I’ve got two questions, if I may. Can I come back to the issue of kind of wealth management? I think you kind of slightly alluded to this a little bit earlier, but just how you’re thinking about the seasonality in that business running into Q4? I mean, we normally expect to see a step down in kind of bancassurance and investment activity. But I’m just wondering whether you’re perhaps kind of feeling slightly more optimistic about that given the activity levels in October and the China stimulus? And then the second question is around – I know Diego hates me asking about the capital return targets. But you’ve obviously revised that up to kind of $8 billion plus. I’m conscious that consensus was already at kind of $8.4 billion. And you’re telling us that Basel 3.1 is no longer going to have an impact, which I think kind of saves you about $1.5 billion of CET1. So I’m just trying to make sure that is there anything we’re missing in terms of kind of capital dynamics as we run through kind of 2025? Does any of this kind of increased investment in wealth management, for instance, go into kind of intangibles, et cetera, that perhaps might have an impact on capital? Just how you’re thinking about that would be great. Thank you.
Bill Winters: Robin, I don’t want to disappoint. So I’ll just throw you straight to Diego and answer these questions.
Diego De Giorgi: And by the way, Robin, never say, I could never hate you asking about anything, let me very clear about that. Now first – on your first question on wealth management, we do expect seasonality into Q4. There is no doubt because of bancassurance, because of the natural – the natural tendency of money to be put to work earlier in the year, et cetera. No doubt, we had a particularly strong start to October but absolutely do expect seasonality because we do. The second thing on the capital return, it’s definitely not any – I use the word hidden, obviously not hidden, but not any implicit type of investment that is in the reshaping of our mass footprint or the doubling down and sharpened focus on the investment in the wealth management for affluent. If there is one thing that still gives us a little bit of pause is that we do have the CTA for Fit for Growth that needs to come into play in 2025, in particular, in terms of the bulk of the cost to achieve being put through. And as a consequence, 2025 at the margin is more of a pinch point on capital returns, that’s all there is to it. And look, I think we have – we are showing you with the $2.7 billion that we have returned this year with the fact that we will continue to tell you before Bill tells you that we are going to run ourselves between 13% and 14% and the fact that we are at 14.2% right now is because it’s this time of the year, and we will continue to generate capital, and we will continue to look at our distributions expansively. Bill, do you want to add anything to it?
Bill Winters: No, I think you captured it perfectly. I mean not that it needs reinforcing, but I’ll reinforce it anyway, we do intend to and want to operate dynamically within our 13% to 14% range.
Robin Down: Right. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. Now we’re going to take our next question. Just give us a moment. And the question comes from the line of Nick Lord from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Please ask your question.
Nick Lord: Thank you very much and hopefully you can hear me. It’s just a question really back – going back on to the retail restructuring. So a couple of questions there. First of all, in terms of that $1.5 billion that you’re investing over the next five years, how much of that would sort of be revenue investment? And how much of that would be capital investment? The second question I have is just trying to understand sort of how you’re thinking of phasing of RM hiring? And what is the period of time it takes your RMs to become profitable after you’ve hired them? And then the third question is, I’m just trying to understand a little bit better what this reshaping of the retail business means? Now I understand sort of selling a small loan book in India or whatever it might be. But obviously, you have quite large retail businesses in places like Singapore and Hong Kong and Malaysia. So what are you imagining that those businesses look like as you get to the end of this process?
Bill Winters: Great. Nick, thanks for those questions, I’ll be very pertinent. Maybe I’ll start with your third. Where we have a very strong presence in the market, you mentioned Hong Kong and Singapore. I would add a few other markets, including Taiwan, in some cases; in some ways, Korea; in other ways, India and then many smaller markets Bangladesh, Kenya, et cetera. But we have a universal bank model today that’s very profitable, very effective. We think we’re very well positioned, and we don’t want to do anything other than, than continue to expand that. In each of those cases, certainly, in Hong Kong and Singapore, we already have a very good feeder from our mass market business where our market share is relatively small, by no means insignificant. Good feeder into the affluent part of our business. And we want to continue to develop that quite strongly. So those universal like models where they work for us, they work very well, and we have no intention of changing that in any fundamental way. In the digital banks, in particular, Mox and Trust, are – it started in many ways as investments with a view to generating profitable kind of standalone operations, clearly competing with our own business to some degree, but targeted at a very different segment than our typical segment. Now as those businesses have evolved, our confidence that they can become structurally very profitable has increased. I know we bumped back the return or the achievement of strong profitability in Mox by a year or so. But our conviction that we can get to a very attractively returning and leveraged business model in that mass market segment is there. The part of the way we’re going to do that is also in its own way, pivoting those businesses to a more affluent population. So introducing wealth management products perhaps down the road introducing things like mortgage products, which are more typically suited to a middle or higher income [indiscernible]. So that’s all part of our universal bank approach in those markets where we have an edge. In other markets, and that would include important parts of markets in India, and also in some important parts of ASEAN or Africa, where our mass market business is either subscale or where – with whatever scale, we find that we’re unable to offer a really differentiated product, we’ll look at what we need to do to restructure that. It could be exiting a product line like credit card personal loans that we just did in India. It could be a more substantial exit of a mass market business, so call it a harder and more definitive pivot to affluent. In some very exceptional cases, it could mean exiting the country entirely as we did in a number of African countries over the past couple of years. In those cases, that would only be following the conclusion that there is somebody that’s a better and more profitable owner for those assets than we are and where we don’t see it contributing materially to our broader strategy of having a world-class affluent client, wealth management business and focusing our cross-border business in our CIB franchise. So that gives just a little bit more color. I mean in no way are we exiting the mass market, we’re just focusing on those things where we can make a real difference. On the first part of your question, the $1.5 billion investment, I think I understand the question. These are expense dollars that are going to be invested to generate returns. So it’s not – we’re not picking up loan capital in there. But I hope that’s clear. Now we may...
Nick Lord: On software, so like CapEx, CapEx as opposed to…
Bill Winters: Well, yes, okay. Maybe I’ll let Diego take a stab at how much of our investment might be capitalized, but it is primarily going to be – it’s all focused on generating revenue. And then third, on the phasing of RM hires and returns, we’ve hired hundreds into thousands of RMs over the past five years. We’ve had attrition, which is quite a bit lower than the market. We have paid on market, not above market. So we’ve never been the guide that attracted the RMs because we paid a little bit more. We’ve been the ones who attracted RMs because we have a very strong platform on which – or from which to deliver, including the fact that we’re open architecture, and we’re not encouraging RMs to sell any of our own sausages. And so we are very confident that we can ramp up our RM hiring exactly as we face it in terms of our intended investment. And the payback time obviously varies from market to market and will vary from cycle to cycle as well. But we expect to get a decent payback on these investments in 18 months to 24 months. Diego, feel free to elaborate, contradict, expand, go to – this is – we spent a lot of...
Diego De Giorgi: Two very quick things I would – to the point that Bill just made on RM hiring. Please, Nick, do not forget that it’s not like we are starting hiring RMs. I mean, we’ve been hiring RMs. So on this J curve, that Bill described, there’s a lot of RMs that are already on the J curve. So if your question – if I interpret your question in, do I need to build in a lag between the moment when you start investment and the moment it shows results? The answer is no because it’s a continuation of our strategy that we have been having. On the point on the $1.5 billion of investments in wealth, very largely expenses, current expenses, a small amount of – amount to be capitalized, but I mean small, very small.
Nick Lord: And I’m just trying to work out how we should think about that. So is that you build up to $1.5 billion over five years or that is.
Diego De Giorgi: Cumulative. Cumulative.
Nick Lord: It’s a cumulative. So we’re talking $300 million a year on average.
Diego De Giorgi: A few hundred [ph] a year.
Nick Lord: Yes. Probably pushed back into year, two and three or something like that. Is that the way we should be thinking about it?
Diego De Giorgi: Not sure that I would face it in any particular way other than thinking that this is a smooth progression on one of our – on a gem of a business that is producing great returns, you can think that we’re going to be investing at some times in certain geographical areas and sometimes in others, sometimes a little bit more towards the upper end, sometimes a bit more toward the middle end. But I mean, look, no great science there in terms of how to phase it.
Nick Lord: Okay, perfect. That’s great. Thank you very much.
Diego De Giorgi: Thank you, Nick.
Operator: Now we’re going to go next question. And the question comes from line of Kun Peng Ma from China Securities. Your line is open. Please ask your question.
Kun Peng Ma: Okay, thank you. Good morning, Bill, good morning Diego. It’s Kun Peng from China Securities. Thank you for taking my questions. I got one question for Bill. As you mentioned just now that one of CIB’s key strategy is to meet clients complex needs, right? So we’re going to – we have U.S. election going forward and maybe a lot of changes after that. So I guess a lot of much more complexity and much more volatility going forward. But I think sometimes volatility and complexity means business opportunities for that, right? So Bill, could you please give us some thoughts on how those complexities evolve going forward? And also what are the types of risks or opportunities for Standard Chartered going forward? Thank you.
Bill Winters: That’s great. Thanks very much for the question, Kun Peng. And you’re right, things are complex today and things could get more complex in the coming months or they could get more complex. I think the likelihood that things were going to get simpler is very low. So it’s just a question of how they get more complex. As things have gotten more complex in China, our business has performed better. And there’s just a very simple reason, which is that our clients, both in China and outside of China rely on intermediaries or connectors like us to help them navigate that complexity. Now if China is going backwards, if you have trade flows were reducing or if cross-border investment was reducing, that might have an impact on our business. But we’re seeing the opposite with the reconfiguration of supply chains. And we’re seeing ongoing very strong investment from Chinese corporations outside of China, and we’re continuing to see meaningful investments from international companies or offshore Chinese companies back into China, although that obviously has tapered off in the less ebullient Chinese economic environment. As for the outlook for China GDP growth, clearly the stimulus has had a short-term effect. I think the market is keen to see how they follow through with the broader structural fiscal and other reforms. Having spent a bit of time in China last week and just spending a bit more time before the end of the year, I sense a very strong result. Of course Kun Peng you could share with us how strong the results as you’re seeing it firsthand. But I sense a very strong result to get the economy back on the right track, including a range of structural steps that will pass through in due course. So on the one hand, things will certainly get more complex. I’m happy to say that we’re coping with that well. And I think there will be a little bit of an economic tailwind as we come through this current difficult time. I would note – I noticed that the second bank – the second international bank has been added to the China Interbank Payment System as both an onshore and offshore participant. We’ve been there for over two years. And it’s the kind of thing that puts Standard Chartered in a very, very strong position to satisfy our customers’ cross-border needs that we have positioned ourselves vis-a-vis the licensing agencies in China and then outside of China in such a way that we can provide solutions frequently in a unique way. And we will continue to try to maintain that lead as we build this business out in the years to come.
Kun Peng Ma: Okay. Thank you, Bill.
Bill Winters: [Indiscernible] Thanks again, Kun Peng. Maybe we move to the next question.
Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And now we’re going to take our next question and it comes from the line of Jeremy Hou from CICC. Your line is open. Please ask your question.
Jeremy Hou: Thank you. Hi, Bill. Hi, Diego. My first question is another question on the strategic update. I think Bill sort of answered. But just to confirm, you talked about the reshaping mass retail business and exploring opportunities to sell some of them. So will you continue to access some of the peripheral markets like what you have done over the years? Or will you evaluate on some of the big but relatively underperforming retail markets, namely Indonesia, Korea? And second question is just a follow-up on the revenue. I think you mentioned that given the current interest rate outlook, it’s more challenging to grow NII in 2025. But overall, do you think Standard Chartered’s top line will benefit from mildly lower interest rate environment? Thank you.
Bill Winters: Great, Jeremy. Thanks for both those questions. So the answer to your first question, are we just focusing on some smaller markets on the periphery? Or are we focused on the big markets as well? The answer is we’re focused on both. Absolutely. You should not expect to see us exiting big markets at this point. You should expect us and you should always expect us to focus extraordinarily on improving the performance in any market that isn’t covering its cost of capital and generating growth, leveraging some strategic strengths that we have as a bank. And we know that there’s – while we have substantially – very substantially improved our Korean business, there’s more to do on the retail side of that business. On the wholesale side of our Korean business, it’s been – it’s exceptionally profitable. There’s been good growth over a period of time, and we expect the growth to continue. And of course, we do look at that as a franchise – as an integrated franchise. You can completely separate the two things. In Indonesia, we have executed a some central pivot into the affluent part of our business already and we’ll continue that. And we should expect continued performance improvements in that regard. The peripheral markets, obviously, we exited a few of those in recent years. And to the extent that we identify a market that, as I mentioned earlier, that isn’t playing to our strengths, and that isn’t consistent or isn’t necessary for the broader part of our strategy, then there may be a better owner for all or some parts of those businesses. But those are decisions that we take after very, very, very careful consideration because sometimes the inter-linkages with other parts of our business are not so obvious on the surface, but nevertheless substantial below the surface. So I think we’re quite thoughtful about that. Diego, feel free to chime in that one, because we’ve obviously spent a lot of time thinking about it well.
Diego De Giorgi: No, no, no. I think nothing to add on that one. We only take the second, the top line benefits from the major rate environment.
Jeremy Hou: Yes, please.
Diego De Giorgi: So on that one, Jeremy. So I’ll borrow a term from the Fed. If you think about a world with a higher R star rate than what the world expected before, so lower but not too low. That is not a bad world in which to operate, right? That’s a world in which demand for credit comes back and counterbalances the effect on the margins in terms of NII. But more importantly, that is a world in which the engines of non-NII work particularly well. Our wealth management would see an increasing shift from deposits into Wealth Solutions business. Our market business will benefit from the fact that within that kind of environment, it will remain somewhat volatile because of geopolitical or other events and we’ll benefit from it and our banking business, again, whether we end up retaining those origination in the form of RWAs or whether we originate to distribute, our banking business line in non-NII will also benefit strongly from it. So it’s clear that, that is a very conducive environment for our business across NII and non-NII.
Jeremy Hou: Thank you very much.
Diego De Giorgi: Thank you, Jeremy. Operator?
Operator: Thank you. Yes of course. [Operator Instructions] The next question comes from the line of Kelly Mong [ph] from Bank of America. Your line is open. Please ask your question.
Unidentified Analyst: Hello. And thank you for taking my questions. Just one on NII and then one on Ventures; so on the NII, I guess this quarter, there’s quite a large benefit from mix and others. So just can you unpack that a little bit? And how much mix improvement, et cetera, from sort of treasury operations, and can we expect next year? And I guess the other sort of related question is structural hedge. I mean, forgive me if I missed anything, but I don’t think there’s any update on the structural hedge. So I think previously, you’ve talked about continued wanting to build and – but also denoting that one of your peers yesterday said that the days of materially building the hedge is sort of behind us. Is that the same for you? Or are you still begin to ramp-up and to what extent can rate sensitivity reduce as a result of that? And then just noting, I’m possibly over-reading this but just noting that the cost-income ratio Joe’s [ph] guidance is ex-notable items. So does that suggest that there is a risk of an all-in and number not being – not positive if the income environment proves to be a little bit more tricky. So that’s, sorry, it’s a little bit of a few moving bits in the NII question? And then for Ventures, thank you for guidance of breaking even broadly speaking, in 2026. So is that coming from income? Or is it more coming from cost, because it looks to me, certainly in the last couple of years, it’s about $200 million, $300 million income and maybe $400 million, $500 million of cost. So is it income going up? Or is it – are you done on the cost investment side of things?
Bill Winters: Thanks for the question, Kelly. Let me take your Ventures question, then I’ll hand back to Diego for sort of NII-related questions. The biggest components of the Venture segment are Mox and Trust. The story there is entirely income. The income growth is picking up as customer numbers have grown as the balance sheet has grown and as we layer on new products, including most recently wealth in Moxman [ph] we’ll introduce wealth later in Trust. So that’s part of the income story. And for the other ventures, which are smaller, it’s also largely an income story. But we’ve also reached, effectively moved from infancy to adolescents in this segment where many of our ventures are maturing. And we’re beginning to harvest ventures. So we’ve sold several smaller ventures at nice gains, and not noticeable to you on the bottom line, but nevertheless it could sort of proof of as a word that some of the things that we’re building are valuable to other people in addition to being valuable to us. And we will move some of our larger ventures to the more mature phase where we’ll be looking at increasing numbers of partial or complete exits which obviously reduces the – and these are businesses that have not yet reached operating profit, but which are very valuable to third-parties, as we know is often in that space. Obviously, when you exit a venture like that is reducing our operating profit drag reducing the expenses. So I wouldn’t say it’s an expense story, but as we shape the portfolio, we would expect that the income growth combined with the avoided cost of some things that we exit to be the drivers of improvement in profitability. The third thing to keep in mind is while we are always reporting on operating profit in this segment; the significant portion of the gain that we expect to generate is coming from capital gains. And as this portfolio matures, we will be generating capital gains, which will contribute to the return to steady profitability of the business. It’s a little bit lumpier as we know but we would expect to see a steady stream of gains coming out of the venture portfolio in the coming years, both from the minority stakes that we’ve taken. So I’d just point to a couple of things. High single-digit percent adjustments in Toss Bank in Korea, LINE Bank in Taiwan are very valuable franchises, neither of which has gone public yet, both of which are likely to over the coming years, one would expect since there are some of the predecessor entity had. And then many of the other minority stakes we have in our fintech portfolio are also sitting on reasonably nice embedded gains, which we’ll be able to monetize through time. And then, of course, those are the ventures that we built ourselves. So a little bit of all of the above in terms of getting to profitability and generating what we continue to expect to be a very good return on that portfolio overall. Diego, obviously, feel free to comment on that or go back to the first set of questions.
Diego De Giorgi: I’ll jump to NII. So on the NII, so this quarter benefit, think about it this way, I would say about half is really higher day count. There is a small tailwind of FX. And the rest is an asset mix benefit as we have reduced treasury assets to fund the customer balance sheet. So that is the contract for this quarter. Can you extrapolate from this going forward? Yes, you can in the sense that we continue to find opportunity – to look for opportunities to reduce our treasury balances in favor of customer balances; we continue to shift the quality of our liabilities by reducing the importance of customer – of corporate time deposits in favor of other sources of liquidity. And in this particular case, you will have seen, for example, this quarter, that our CASA TD ratio in WRB has gone down a bit. That’s not because CASA has decreased, actually CASA has increased, but time deposits have increased even more because our net new money strategy in Wealth Management has been very effective. So that’s on the broad question about mix. On the structural hedge, although we don’t have a slide. We have indicated that the hedges continued to grow in line with what we were guiding you to. We had about $55 billion of hedge and – of structural hedge, and we expect to finish the year, in the region of $60 billion. We intend to grow it in 2026 at very similar rates to the rate that we have grown it in 2025. Other than that, some very minor changes, but a slight uptick in the yield but nothing major there to report. On the cost/income guidance, the only thing I would say is that we guide to income on an ex-notable item basis. So the two things are very consistent, and that’s how we think of it. Nothing particular to see there.
Unidentified Analyst: Okay. Thank you.
Bill Winters: Thanks you, Kelly. Operator?
Operator: Thank you. Now I would like to hand over to management team for any written questions. Please go ahead.
Manus Costello: Thank you. We have one question online that comes from Guy Stebbings at Exane. Guy asks in Wealth, perhaps the 32% growth rate is a little flattering given some of the stimulus but the underlying drivers look favorable, and it sounds like the progress on wealth and investment is playing an important role in upgrading the 2026 RoTE guidance. So could you share in broad terms what are your expectations for wealth income growth that now help shape the 2026 guide?
Bill Winters: Yes, just a couple of quick thoughts on that in addition to what we’ve already said. I would see – we’ll see when everybody else comes out with their numbers and we assess the market, but it would appear that we’re picking up a little bit of share as we have over the past couple of years. I think it’s because we’ve been focused, of course, it’s not because we’ve been spending a lot more money, we haven’t. And the investment phase of our wealth growth is really beginning over the portion of this year and into next year. That’s because we’ve been pretty focused and because I think we have a somewhat proposition, at least on the margin. So I think the ability to continue to pick up some share in the space feels like a pretty good proposition to us. The things that differentiate us, which are to have balanced product offering across, I call it the more sophisticated online access points for self-directed investors versus one end of the spectrum bancassurance or the other, we’re well spread across the feet. We’ve got excellent partners in certainly in the form of Prudential, but also in the asset managers that we do it. And we’ve built some good technology that’s enduring. So I think for all those reasons, we’re structural, feel pretty good about the ongoing growth. Clearly, Guy it’s been a favorable market environment, as I pointed out right up front, and we don’t want to suggest, but the market environment also looks reasonably supportive at this point. Equity markets have been stable. We’ve absorbed a lot of what could have been body loads to market sentiment that the market has seen through. And investor confidence has returned. It’s not back to its peak by any means but is – has some further room to improve and it’s got a little bit of a mid. Yes, overall, I think the growth opportunities are structured. Should we have – Diego if you can...
Diego De Giorgi: No, nothing to add on this. Do we have any more questions?
Manus Costello: No more for the moment. We’ll hand back to the operator.
Operator: There are no further questions. I would now like to hand the conference over to Bill Winters for any closing remarks. Please go ahead.
Bill Winters: Well, thank you very much operator, and thank you all of you for a really good set of questions. Thanks as always for joining us and delving you to us and trying to understand us. And of course, we’re, as always, available to follow up with questions or comments after the fact. Please have a good rest of week.
Diego De Giorgi: Thank you all. Goodbye.
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