Standard Chartered to Cut 7,800 Back-Office Jobs by 2030
May 19, 2026 – 8:07 am
Bill Winters, chief executive of Standard Chartered, told investors in Hong Kong that the bank aims to shrink its HR, risk, and compliance functions by more than 15% over five years. This significant restructuring is part of a strategy to increase income per employee by approximately 20% by 2028.
Winters framed the announcement with a notable emphasis on technology: "We don’t have job losses, but we do have job role reductions in favour of the machines, and that will accelerate as we go forward into AI."
Bloomberg’s coverage highlights Winters’ view that AI will replace "lower-value human capital" within the bank. This language is significant as it has historically attracted regulator and union scrutiny. Standard Chartered plans to achieve this through a combination of natural attrition and internal redeployment.
The bank joins a growing trend among major financial institutions adopting AI to streamline operations. Commonwealth Bank of Australia, for instance, recently appointed its first Chief AI Scientist. Other banks like JPMorgan, Citi, HSBC, and Wells Fargo have also incorporated AI-driven headcount efficiencies into their multi-year operating leverage targets.
Standard Chartered’s specific commitment—a 15%+ reduction in back-office roles focused on rules-based decision support, document processing, and case management—sets a benchmark for peers who are expected to follow suit in revealing their AI-related workforce strategies.