By Joe Wallace
Standard Chartered Chief Executive Bill Winters touched a nerve when he said his bank would slash thousands of jobs and replace "lower-value human capital" with artificial intelligence.
He walked back the comments on Wednesday in a memo to bank employees, who turned out to be valuable enough that he needed to assuage their feelings.
"Many of you will have seen media coverage following the investor event in Hong Kong, particularly the reporting around automation, AI, and workforce changes," Winters said in the memo. "I know this may be unsettling when reduced to simple headlines or a quote out of context."
He added: "Where roles do fall away, it reflects changes in the work, not the value of our people."
Winters, a JPMorgan Chase veteran who has run London-listed StanChart since 2015, has a reputation for speaking bluntly. His latest headline-grabbing comments came in Hong Kong, where he was presenting new financial targets to investors including a plan to reduce the bank's support staff by more than 15% by 2030, equating to 7,800 jobs or more.
Speaking to journalists before the presentation on Tuesday, Winters said: "It's not cost cutting. It's replacing in some cases lower-value human capital with the financial capital and the investment capital we're putting in."
The comments drew criticism on social media and by former Singaporean president Halimah Yacob. "It's disturbing to read workers described as 'lower-value human capital'," she wrote on her Facebook page.
The reaction speaks to growing backlash against AI. White-collar workers worry about their job prospects as the technology's capabilities rapidly improve, and in the U.S., public opinion about AI is quickly souring.
StanChart had roughly 81,000 employees at the end of 2025 and a further 17,000 contract workers. On the firing line are roles in functions including human resources and risk and compliance.
Under Winters, StanChart has focused on handling cross-border transactions and banking affluent customers in Asia and the Middle East. For years, the bank's shares lagged behind those of larger rival HSBC. In early 2024, Winters lamented StanChart's "crap" stock price at a press conference.
Since then, the stock has almost tripled, boosted by cost cuts and rising profit as well as a broad rise in shares of banks around the world.
Now, AI companies are pitching their products to the finance industry, where dozens of tasks stand to be automated -- and Winters says this will help the bank become even more profitable.
His presentation to investors gave some details about how StanChart plans to use AI. For example, it said the technology slashes the proportion of false positives when scouring transactions for evidence of financial crime. It also said AI can reduce the manual work involved in making sure the bank abides by changing regulations -- a mammoth task for financial institutions since the 2008-9 crisis.
Before speaking to investors on Tuesday, Winters tried to get ahead of any concern inside StanChart about his plans to embrace AI. "Some roles will reduce, others will grow, and new ones will emerge," he said in an earlier memo to staff. He said the bank would try to redeploy and retrain workers, and handle job losses "with respect and care."
Those efforts were quickly undone by his comments to the press that same day.
Write to Joe Wallace at joe.wallace@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 20, 2026 08:25 ET (12:25 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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