London’s burning money: More banks switch focus to Asia as Standard Chartered plans 15,000 redundancies after gigantic $139 million quarterly loss

London has long remained the world’s largest financial center, and until this day accounts for almost half of global interbank FX order flow, handled by just six banks with vast, multi-billion pound enterprises in Canary Wharf and the Square Mile. Today, however, yet another indicator that large financial institutions are turning their attention away from […]

London has long remained the world’s largest financial center, and until this day accounts for almost half of global interbank FX order flow, handled by just six banks with vast, multi-billion pound enterprises in Canary Wharf and the Square Mile.

Today, however, yet another indicator that large financial institutions are turning their attention away from London and toward Asia has become evident as Standard Chartered PLC (LON:STAN) announces its plans to make an astonishing 15,000 redundancies as part of its plan to to raise $5.1 billion (£3.3 billion) with most of this figure coming from a rights issue, in order to create what the company hopes will be a “focused and well capitalized group.”

The company’s Asian focus has been in place for quite some time, however the firm’s quarterly report which was issued today did not make for comfortable reading for stakeholders, as the financial giant reported a massive $139 million pre-tax loss for the three months ending September 30 this year, resulting in collapsing share prices.

Today, the share prices fell by a maximum of 9.6% and were down 7% at 663.5p during the latter part of the trading session today, adding further demise to the 30% which the stock has fallen during the course of the year.

Revenues dropped by 18.4% to $3.68 billion and despite lessons learned during the credit crunch of 2008 and 2009 which affected all British banks, $1.23 billion worth of loans went bad at Standard Chartered in the quarter ending September 30.

Last year, Barclays offloaded part of its European operations and looked seriously at making a 19,000 reduction in headcount, even prior to having to pay over $330 million in regulatory fines and settling a civil class action law suit in relation to FX rate manipulation. Yesterday, the previously London-centric HSBC reported its quarterly revenues and, whilst they were quite the company’s fortunes were opposite of Standard Chartered for the quarter with a 32% increase in revenues, the firm still continues to concentrate on the booming Asia Pacific region.

With Hong Kong and Singapore both bastions of secure interbank trading, Singapore being the largest institutional trading base in Asia, the access to a vast array of nouveau riche investors is right on their doorstep.

Read this next

Retail FX

Lion launches multi-currency trading accounts powered by AI

The core advantages of multi-currency trading account services include enabling significant cost savings and higher efficiency for investors.

Inside View, Interviews

Interview: Stanislav Bunimovich on Finalto’s white label solution

To explore what makes Finalto’s white-label solutions stand out in such an incredibly competitive market, Finalto sat down with its Chief Operating Officer, Stanislav Bunimovich, for an interview. 

Digital Assets

Talos acquired Cloudwall for a better portfolio management system

Cloudwall’s additional expertise in portfolio risk systems further positions Talos at the forefront of portfolio management systems across spot, futures, perps, and options.

Digital Assets

Bybit’s Bitcoin market share explodes, up by 400%

“This milestone is a testament to our sharp trading products and the loyalty of our users. As the industry evolves, Bybit remains at the forefront, ready to set new standards in the crypto trading world.”

Crypto Insider

Why Self-Custody is the Key to Secure Crypto Trading

Crypto trading is fast gaining popularity; as of writing, the total market capitalization stands at $2.3 trillion, double what it was at the onset of the 2021 bull market.

Industry News

UK FCA sues Lee Steven Maggs for FX scam Kube Trading

‘Kube Trading’ allegedly received around £2.67 million for FX trading and concealed significant losses from investors.

Market News

AUD/USD Soars Following Inflation Report

Australia’s CPI surge hints at prolonged tight monetary policy. Watch the Aussie dollar as US economic data looms.

Institutional FX

GCEX reports drop in turnover in 2023 due to crypto winter

“The crypto winter had a huge impact across the industry, and GCEX was no exception. However, in response to the decline in revenue, we have been resilient and adaptive, navigating our costs effectively and diversifying revenue streams such as introducing staking services for institutional and professional clients.”

Institutional FX

FxGrow taps Integral’s SaaS brokerage workflow

“FxGrow’s decision to partner with us is indicative of the growing advantage for brokers to leverage tier-one institutional-grade technology while maintaining control over their own platform. Integral is well-positioned to provide the SaaS solutions that will enable these businesses to better compete in the market.”

<