Standard Chartered shares rebound as CEO defends bank

Updated 08 August 2012
Follow

Standard Chartered shares rebound as CEO defends bank

LONDON: Standard Chartered shares rebounded yesterday, recouping some of the previous day's sharp losses in the wake of US regulators accusing the bank of hiding $250 billion in transactions with Iran.
Standard Chartered Chief Executive Peter Sands meanwhile hit back at claims that the London-headquartered lender housed a rogue institution that hid transactions worth the equivalent of 202 billion euros with Iranian banks.
"There are a lot of matters that we don't recognize, we don't understand and are factually inaccurate," Sands told a conference call, after the New York Department of Financial Services (DFS) on Monday made the allegations.
Sands said the bank's profit made from the transactions amounted to "tens of millions" of dollars, not hundreds of millions as the regulator had suggested.
He added that the episode was "clearly very damaging, it would be unrealistic to pretend otherwise."
The bank's share price rallied 7.08 percent to close up 1,315.5 pence on London's FTSE 100 index of top companies, which ended flat.
The stock had slumped 16.8 percent Tuesday — slashing the bank's value by almost 6.0 billion pounds ($9.4 billion, 7.6 billion euros) in just one day.
Standard, which earns 90 percent of its profits from Africa, Asia and the Middle East combined, denied earlier in the week that it had hid vast amounts of money with Iranian banks for almost a decade in violation of US sanctions.
The DFS accuses the bank of systematically disguising foreign exchange deals with Iran.
According to The New York Times yesterday, US federal regulators were surprised by the DFS move.
The newspaper said the allegations were not endorsed by the US Justice Department, the Federal Reserve or the US Treasury.
The Standard Chartered scandal comes at a torrid time for Britain's banking sector, just weeks after US lawmakers accused HSBC of failing to apply anti-laundering rules, thereby benefiting Iran.
In addition, the LIBOR rate-rigging affair has rocked Barclays bank and threatens to spread to other lenders around the world.
Barclays was fined 290 million pounds by British and US regulators in June, after admitting that it attempted to manipulate the LIBOR and Euribor interbank interest rates between 2005 and 2009.

Bank of England Gov. Mervyn King yesterday argued that the Standard Chartered and LIBOR affairs were not the same owing to the way in which regulators had gone about pursuing the matters.
"It is important for people to distinguish between those different episodes," the central bank boss said.
"In the LIBOR one, all the regulators involved — whether being in the US or the UK — have produced coordinated publications of reports, which came out after the investigation was completed and they have made their judgement.
"That's very different from what's happened in the Standard Chartered case, where one regulator (the New York State Department of Financial Services) but not the others has gone public while the investigation is still going on."
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE


Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes higher at 10,596 

Updated 23 December 2025
Follow

Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes higher at 10,596 

RIYADH: Saudi equities closed higher on Tuesday, with the Tadawul All Share Index rising 43.59 points, or 0.41 percent, to finish at 10,595.85, supported by broad-based buying and strength in select mid-cap stocks. 

Market breadth was firmly positive, with 170 stocks advancing against 90 decliners, while trading activity saw 161.96 million shares change hands, generating a total value of SR3.39 billion. 

Meanwhile, the MT30 Index closed higher, gaining 6.52 points, or 0.47 percent, to 1,399.11, while the Nomu Parallel Market Index edged marginally lower, slipping 3.33 points, or 0.01 percent, to 23,267.77. 

Among the session’s top gainers, Al Masar Al Shamil Education Co. surged 9.99 percent to close at SR26.20, while Saudi Cable Co. jumped 9.98 percent to SR147.70.  
Cherry Trading Co. rose 4.18 percent to SR25.44, and United Carton Industries Co. advanced 4.09 percent to SR26.46. 

Al Yamamah Steel Industries Co. also posted solid gains, climbing 4.07 percent to end at SR32.70.  

On the downside, Emaar The Economic City led losses, slipping 3.55 percent to SR10.32, followed by Derayah REIT Fund, which fell 2.92 percent to SR5.31. 

Derayah Financial Co. declined 2.13 percent to SR26.62, while United International Holding Co. retreated 1.96 percent to SR155.20, and Gulf Union Alahlia Cooperative Insurance Co. eased 1.92 percent to SR10.70.  

On the announcements front, Red Sea International Co. said it signed a SR202.8 million contract with Webuild S.P.A. to provide integrated facilities management services for the Trojena project at Neom. 

The agreement covers operations and maintenance for the project’s Main Camp and Spike Camp, including accommodation and housekeeping, catering, security, IT and communications, utilities, waste management, fire safety and emergency response, as well as other supporting services.  

The contract runs for two years, with the financial impact expected to begin in the first quarter of 2026. Shares of Red Sea International closed up 0.99 percent at SR34.74. 

Al Moammar Information Systems Co. disclosed that it received an award notification from Humain to design and build a data center dedicated to artificial intelligence technologies, with a total value exceeding 155 percent of the company’s 2024 revenue, inclusive of VAT. 

The contract is expected to be formally signed in February 2026, underscoring the scale of the project and its potential impact on the company’s future revenues.  

MIS shares ended the session 2.82 percent higher at SR156.70, reflecting positive investor sentiment following the announcement.