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18 April 2013
South Africa
Reporter Georgina Lavers

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Standard Chartered pushes Africa growth

Standard Chartered is to buy the South African custody and trustee business of Absa Bank.

This acquisition builds on the “significant” investment Standard Chartered has already made in its African franchise, said the firm. As well as organic investment, the group acquired First Africa, an African M&A advisory business, in 2009 and Barclays’ Africa custody business in 2010.

Last week, the bank announced the opening of two new wholesale banking corporate offices in South Africa, in Cape Town and Durban.

Over the past two years Standard Chartered has sought to develop a profitable custody model across 21 sub-Saharan African countries, launching custody operations in South Africa earlier this year.

Diana Layfield, CEO of the Africa region said: “Africa is an important strategic opportunity for the bank and for our clients, offering excellent economic growth and increasingly strong trade links with markets in Asia and the Middle East. This deal will improve the range of services we offer to clients in the region. It builds our capabilities and is in line with our strategy to support our organic growth with selective acquisitions.”

Karen Fawcett, group head of transaction banking at Standard Chartered, said: “The successful acquisition of Absa Bank’s South African custody and trustee business will enable Standard Chartered to rapidly build on its custody capabilities across Africa. I am confident that today's announcement will strengthen our proposition, and establish us as a core bank to our clients in and investing into Africa.”

Standard Chartered’s Africa business has delivered average annual growth of 15 percent for the past 5 years. In 2012, the region generated income of US$1.6 billion, up 15 percent, with the Wholesale Bank generating US$1.1 billion, up 16 percent. Eight markets delivered over US$100 million of income for the year, with Kenya and Ghana joining Nigeria in delivering over US$200 million.

“[We] intend to maintain this overall rate of growth for the region, aiming to double revenues from Africa over the next four to five years on a constant currency basis,” said the firm. “To achieve this, the group will invest more than US$100 million in new branches over the next three years, accelerate its investment in mobile payments technology, and hire new staff. It will also invest in new areas such as Islamic banking and mortgages, to improve the service we can offer to our clients.”

The announcement follows Standard Chartered’s launch of an integrated direct and regional custody platform for its investor and intermediaries clients, testifying to the bank’s commitment to continue building out capabilities to meet clients’ needs.



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