London, July 14, 2026, 10:06 BST
Standard Chartered PLC (LON:STAN) dropped 0.9% to 2,081 pence by 0933 BST Tuesday. The Asia-focused bank opened at 2,092 pence, compared to Monday’s close at 2,100 pence. This comes after the group announced another move in its wealth-management push.
Timing is key here. Standard Chartered has gained roughly 59% over the past year, but shares are down almost 6% in the last month. With Tuesday’s quoted price, the average analyst target stands at 2,181.53 pence, which suggests only a 4.8% upside left ahead of the half-year numbers.
| Market checkpoint | Level | Distance from 2,081p |
|---|---|---|
| 0933 BST price Tuesday | 2,081p | — |
| Last close | 2,100p | +0.9% |
| Year’s high | 2,278p | +9.5% |
| Street target average | 2,181.53p | +4.8% |
| Morgan Stanley NYSE:MS target, July 8 | 2,369p | +13.8% |
The £45.2 billion market cap and the 52-week high are both based on up-to-date broker numbers. Morgan Stanley’s new, higher target is still above consensus, pointing to a wide spread in analyst calls.
Standard Chartered plans to bring BlackRock Inc’s NYSE:BLK Aladdin Wealth tech onto its myWealth Advisor system. The tool offers advisers risk, return, and scenario analysis across stocks, bonds, funds, ETFs and alternative assets. The rollout starts in Singapore and Hong Kong. The bank didn’t share any details on cost, earnings impact or a broader launch. Samir Subberwal, global head of wealth solutions at Standard Chartered, said the goal was “personalised, insights-led advice at scale.” BlackRock’s Asia-Pacific boss Susan Chan said advisers could get “a whole portfolio view.” Standard Chartered Bank
That puts the focus back on execution. The tech deal can boost adviser output and make things more consistent, but the current valuation is built on the bank pulling in client assets about as fast as it did during the record first quarter. If growth slows, the consensus target could turn into a ceiling instead of a floor.
The base for the first quarter is tough. Wealth Solutions posted a 32% income rise to $1.04 billion. Affluent net new money hit $18 billion, up from $13 billion. Net new money here is new client deposits and investments after taking out withdrawals, but it doesn’t count shifts from markets or currencies.
| Wealth and Retail Banking | Q1 2025 | Q1 2026 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wealth Solutions pulled in $778 mln, rising to $1.043 bln a year later. | $778 mln | $1.043 bln | +32% |
| Affluent net new money totaled $13 bln for Q1 2025, and $18 bln for Q1 2026. | $13 bln | $18 bln | +38% |
| Operating income was $2.140 bln. That went up to $2.456 bln. | $2.140 bln | $2.456 bln | +13% |
| Pre-provision operating profit moved from $849 mln to $1.161 bln. | $849 mln | $1.161 bln | +36% |
| Profit before tax hit $650 mln in Q1 2025, up to $981 mln for Q1 2026. | $650 mln | $981 mln | +50% |
Standard Chartered’s $18 billion inflow for the quarter is equal to 9% of its four-year net new money target of $200 billion running from 2025 to 2028. The bank’s $200 billion goal includes money raised during 2025. Standard Chartered wants its affluent clients contributing 75% of Wealth and Retail Banking income by 2028. For the same year, it is aiming for a return on tangible equity above 15%. RoTE, which strips goodwill and other intangibles from shareholder capital, was at 14.7% in 2025.
DBS Group Holdings SGX:D05 is stepping up its push in Asian wealth, aiming to open 18 new wealth centres and revamp 36 locations by end-2027. That marks its biggest branch build-out yet for wealth. Assets under management at DBS stood at S$492 billion in Q1. Standard Chartered is putting more focus on adviser tech, but DBS says it’s blending digital tools with more in-person support.
The risk isn’t just tied to the BlackRock deal. Standard Chartered put aside $190 million in the first quarter as a buffer for possible losses from the Iran conflict, saying the Middle East makes up about 6% of its total exposure. Brent crude jumped 3.5% to $78.66 on Monday after strikes between the U.S. and Iran, bringing new focus to a region that matters for the bank’s corporate and cross-border business.
Standard Chartered is set to report Q2 and half-year numbers on July 29. Investors will focus on affluent inflows, Wealth Solutions revenue, credit charges and costs, rather than the next product update. The shares are trading less than 5% below the average price target, so a solid result might not move the needle.