Standard Chartered
Cost-cuts, steady income and fewer bad loans in its non-core portfolio helped the Asia-focused bank to report an underlying pretax profit of $994 million for January-June, following a $990 million loss in the second half of last year.
Its performance provided evidence that a sweeping restructuring under Chief Executive Bill Winters has begun to bear fruit.
In the year since he joined the bank, former JPMorgan
StanChart's shares had dropped by a third in the two years before Winters joined, hurt by problems including misconduct fines from US regulators, plunging commodity prices and losses from bad lending decisions.
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Its shares rose as much as 10.5 per cent on Wednesday before giving up some of those gains to trade at 6.7 per cent higher by 1110 GMT.
Winters said the bank was halfway through those job cuts and had no plans to row back on the total.
The first-half profits reflected a 13 per cent fall in operating costs to $4 billion and stable income of $6.8 billion, despite an uncertain economic outlook.
"We are seeing a management team being rewarded for taking difficult decisions in the short term for the best interests of the business in the long-run," said Ian Tabberer, investment manager at Henderson Global Investors, which owns StanChart shares.
Profit goal deferred
Echoing a similar statement by HSBC
"Most banks in the world are trading below net asset value ... it's a statement about lack of confidence but also a high level of uncertainty," Winters said on a conference call.
The bank has added more than 40,000 new retail banking clients and made more progress in shedding low-returning or non-core businesses.
StanChart has been courting retail banking clients in Africa, launching a new mobile and online banking platform there in May at a time when European rivals like Barclays
The bank said its core capital ratio - a key measure of financial strength — remained flat at 13.1 per cent.
Outlook subdued
Despite progress on its overhaul, which has included a drop in risk-weighted assets by a further $13 billion, Standard Chartered said it expected 2016 performance to remain subdued as global economic prospects wilted.
While StanChart has a lower exposure to the British economy than other major UK-based banks, it is suffering from slowing growth in Asia where it makes more than two thirds of its profits.
StanChart reported a 15 per cent increase in loan impairments in its corporate business, driven by provisions against commodities and Indian clients, and said it continued to be "watchful" for potential spikes in troubled loans as stresses among key corporate borrowers remained.
The bank last week named former deputy governor of the Bank of Spain Jose Vinals as its new chairman, ending a 16-month search.

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