Standard Chartered Eyes Potential Exit from Retail Banking in Botswana, Zambia, and Uganda

The bank is pivoting toward serving affluent customers and multinational corporations

1 Min Read

Standard Chartered is considering divesting its wealth management and retail banking units in Botswana, Zambia, and Uganda as part of a broader restructuring strategy.

The move aims to free up cash and sharpen its focus on high-growth areas.

Why it matters

The London-based bank, which earns much of its revenue in Asia, is pivoting toward serving affluent customers and multinational corporations.

Driving the news

  • The lender announced on Wednesday that if the divestiture occurs, it will prioritize meeting the cross-border needs of global corporate and financial institution clients in these countries.
  • Nigeria’s Access Bank also revealed it had completed the acquisition of Standard Chartered’s subsidiaries in Angola and Sierra Leone the same day.

Zoom out

  • Standard Chartered plans to double its investment in its wealth management business, committing $1.5 billion over five years to tap into what it calls “fast-growing and high-returning” opportunities.
  • This comes as the bank scales back retail operations worldwide, aligning its strategy with evolving market demands.

The bottom line

Standard Chartered’s restructuring signals a clear shift in priorities, potentially reshaping banking services across Africa while strengthening its global corporate focus.

Source: Semafor


Joseph-Albert Kuuire is the creator, editor, and journalist at Tech Labari. Email: joseph@techlabari.com Twitter: @jakuuire
AI Writer for Tech Labari