London, Jan 6, 2026, 09:27 GMT — Regular session
- Standard Chartered shares were little changed after a fresh share buyback disclosure.
- The bank also announced new senior hires tied to its affluent and wealth push.
- Investors are looking ahead to the Feb. 24 full-year results for 2026 guidance and capital returns.
Standard Chartered (STAN.L) shares edged lower in early London trade on Tuesday after the bank disclosed another round of purchases under its share buyback programme. The stock was down 1.0 pence, or 0.05%, at 1,854.5 pence by 0927 GMT, near its 52-week high of 1,875.5 pence. Google
Why it matters now: buybacks have become a central pillar of the European bank trade, signalling management confidence in capital buffers and recycling cash to shareholders. A buyback is when a company repurchases its own shares, shrinking the share count and often lifting earnings per share.
Standard Chartered heads into the key reporting stretch with its stock still hovering close to recent peaks, leaving little room for missteps on guidance or returns. Investors are also watching how lenders handle a shift from “higher for longer” rates to a world where cuts are back on the agenda.
In a filing on Tuesday, Standard Chartered said it bought 535,931 shares on Jan. 5 at a volume-weighted average price of 1,858.69 pence, a measure that weights prices by the number of shares traded. The bank said it has applied about $1.087 billion to buybacks so far and intends to cancel the shares, which would leave 2,261,923,162 shares in issue. Investegate
The lender also flagged more investment in its affluent franchise. On Monday, Standard Chartered said it expanded its Global Chief Investment Office — which shapes investment views used by advisers — by hiring Sundeep Gantori as chief investment officer for equities and Jonathan Liang as CIO for fixed income and FX (foreign exchange). “The Chief Investment Office is core to our Wealth Solutions business,” Steve Brice, the bank’s global CIO, said. Standard Chartered Bank
The broader tone in London was constructive, with the FTSE 100 up around 0.5% at the open and banks among the early supports, while attention turns to Friday’s U.S. employment report. That kept Standard Chartered’s small move in perspective as investors weighed macro signals alongside company-specific news. IG
Across Europe, strategists also leaned more optimistic on the backdrop for financials. Goldman Sachs lifted its 12-month target for the STOXX 600 and upgraded financial services to “overweight,” citing solid growth and improving earnings momentum. Reuters
Technically, traders will watch whether the shares can retake the 1,875.5 pence area and print a fresh 52-week high, a level that often draws momentum buying. A sustained dip below the mid-1,850s would put the recent rally on a tighter leash.
The main risk is that rate expectations turn quickly and squeeze net interest income — the gap between what a bank earns on loans and pays on deposits — before fee growth fills the gap. Any tightening in regulatory capital demands would also limit how fast buybacks can run.