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Standard Chartered to double investment in wealth management as profits rise

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Standard Chartered to double investment in wealth management as profits rise

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Standard Chartered has said it will double investment in its wealth management business and shift its focus towards affluent individuals and global institutions after pre-tax profits rose in the third quarter.

The UK-based bank on Wednesday reported underlying profits before tax of $1.8bn, up from $1.3bn a year earlier and above analysts’ estimates of $1.6bn. A 32 per cent rise in revenue from the wealth business, which had a record quarter, boosted results.

The earnings came as the bank announced a shift in its operations to focus less on smaller domestic businesses and regular retail clients, and more on affluent individuals and larger international companies.

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The changes would “further simplify our business and help us to generate higher-quality growth”, said chief executive Bill Winters in a statement.

StanChart raised its revenue guidance and targets for return on tangible equity, a key measure of profitability, as well as distributions to shareholders. It said it now aimed to return $8bn to shareholders between 2024 and 2026, up from a previous goal of at least $5bn.

The bank said it would reshape its retail banking business to focus on “building a strong pipeline” of affluent and international clients, and would focus on bigger international clients within its corporate and investment bank.

“We will reduce the number of clients whose needs do not play directly to our strengths,” it said, adding that it was considering the sale of “a small number of” businesses that are not core to its aims.

The emerging markets-focused bank said it would invest about $1.5bn over five years in its wealth business, including hiring more relationship managers and investment advisers to work for affluent clients — twice what it had previously planned to invest in the business.

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“The first thing is that we are winning” in wealth management, chief financial officer Diego De Giorgi said on a call with reporters. “It’s very clear that we are gaining market share . . . we are gaining new clients and our existing clients are putting more money with us.”

Hong Kong, Singapore and Dubai “clearly will receive a lot of attention” in the investment push, he said, though there would be investment “across the network”.

The lender is under pressure to grow in areas less dependent on interest income, as rates start to fall after a series of rises boosted profitability in recent years.

Its reported pre-tax profits were $1.7bn, up from $633mn a year ago when the figure accounted for a near-$700mn impairment charge on its stake in China Bohai Bank.

StanChart said its underlying revenues of $4.9bn were its best of any third quarter since 2015, the year Winters took the helm.

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Income in the bank’s markets unit rose 16 per cent, partly because of higher foreign exchange and credit trading. 

Net interest income rose 9 per cent, which the bank said was partly due to hedging. Its closely watched net interest margin, the difference between the interest received on loans and the rate paid for deposits, rose to 2 per cent, up from 1.6 per cent a year ago.

The bank’s return on tangible equity was 10.8 per cent in the quarter, more than the 7 per cent a year earlier and beating analysts’ expectations of 10.3 per cent.

But the bank took a $16mn impairment charge in its ventures unit, which invests in start-ups, mostly because of its digital bank Mox, though it said delinquency rates at the start-up had improved.

It also reported a $34mn provision related to the risk of clients’ exposure to Hong Kong commercial real estate, where it said an oversupply of office space was an “area of concern”.

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The bank has more exposure to commercial property lending in Hong Kong than in any other market. Its rival HSBC has been hit by a sixfold surge in defaulted commercial property loans in the territory.

StanChart shares are now just below the level when Winters took charge in June 2015, having risen 36 per cent since the start of this year. Its Hong Kong-listed shares rose as much as 3 per cent on Wednesday.

The bank has been under pressure to boost its stock since it trades at a discount to book value. In February, Winters lamented the bank’s “crap” share price, saying it did not reflect its true value.

De Georgi said “no one should ever be satisfied about a stock price” but that he was pleased about the rise in 2024.

StanChart this year said it planned to save about $1.5bn over the next three years by simplifying systems under a plan called “Fit for Growth”.

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De Georgi said 80 per cent of the programmes under that plan — which include standardising the use of technology platforms and making use of large language models — would each lead to savings of $10mn or less.

“It derisks the programme because no single part of it can create trouble to the delivery of the programme and the achievement of our objectives,” he said.  

Costs rose 3 per cent year on year in the third quarter, which the bank said was due to inflation and business growth.

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Is ISIS making a comeback? : Sources & Methods

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Is ISIS making a comeback? : Sources & Methods
The terrorist group has been linked to the mass shooting in Australia and a deadly attack in Syria. What do these two attacks reveal about the group’s strength?Host Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Pentagon correspondent Tom Bowman and Middle East correspondent Jane Arraf about how the Islamic State has adapted in a post-caliphate world and what American forces are doing in Syria.Email the show at sourcesandmethods@npr.orgNPR+ supporters hear every episode without sponsor messages and unlock access to our complete archive. Sign up at plus.npr.org.
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BBC Verify Live: Fact-checking Trump’s unusual new White House presidential plaques

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BBC Verify Live: Fact-checking Trump’s unusual new White House presidential plaques

Videos show rebels on the move in eastern DRC city Uvirapublished at 12:49 GMT

Peter Mwai
BBC Verify senior journalist

We have verified video showing fighters belonging to the Rwandan-backed M23 rebel group on the move in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), after M23 announced a withdrawal from the city of Uvira in South Kivu province which it seized a week ago.

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The M23 had taken contorl of Uvira despite a ceasefire deal agreed between the governments of Rwanda and DRC and had come under increasing diplomatic pressure to withdraw its forces from the city.

The DRC government has reacted with scepticism, with a spokesperson asking on XL “Where are they going? How many were there? What are they leaving behind in the city? Mass graves? Soldiers disguised as civilians?”

We can’t tell where they are heading, but in the footage we have verified the fighters, together with vehicles, move north past the Uvira police headquarters.

We confirmed where the clips were filmed by matching the distinctively painted road kerbs, buildings and trees to satellite imagery.

The leader of the Alliance Fleuve Congo (AFC), a coalition of rebel groups which includes the M23 group, had announced on Monday that the group would withdraw from the city as a “trust-building measure”.

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It followed a request from the US which has been mediating between the governments of Rwanda and DRC.

The rebels remained present in the city after the announcement but on Wednesday M23 spokesperson Willy Ngoma announced the group had begun withdrawing troops. The group said it intends to complete the withdrawal today, but has warned against militarisation.

Image source, X
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FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino says he will step down in January

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FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino says he will step down in January

FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino speaks during a news conference on an arrest of a suspect in the January 6th pipe bomb case at the Department of Justice on Dec. 4, 2025.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images


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Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

FBI deputy director Dan Bongino said Wednesday he plans to step down from the bureau in January.

In a statement posted on X, Bongino thanked President Trump, Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel “for the opportunity to serve with purpose.”

Bongino was an unusual pick for the No. 2 post at the FBI, a critical job overseeing the bureau’s day-to-day affairs traditionally held by a career agent. Neither Bongino nor his boss, Patel, had any previous experience at the FBI.

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Bongino did have previous law enforcement experience, as a police officer and later as a Secret Service agent, as well as a long history of vocal support for Trump.

Bongino made his name over the past decade as a pro-Trump, far-right podcaster who pushed conspiracy theories, including some involving the FBI. He had been critical of the bureau, embracing the narrative that it had been “weaponized” against conservatives and even calling its agents “thugs.”

His tenure at the bureau was at times tumultuous, including a clash with Justice Department leadership over the administration’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files.

But it also involved the arrest earlier this month of the man authorities say is responsible for placing two pipe bombs near the Democratic and Republican committee headquarters, hours before the assault on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

In an unusual arrangement, Bongino has had a co-deputy director since this summer when the Trump administration tapped Andrew Bailey, a former attorney general of Missouri, to serve alongside Bongino in the No. 2 job.

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President Trump praised Bongino in brief remarks to reporters before he announced he was stepping down.”Dan did a great job,” Trump said. “I think he wants to go back to his show.”

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