Updated
Updated · Reuters · May 20
StanChart CEO Reassures Staff After 8,000 Job-Cut Plan and AI Comment Backlash
Updated
Updated · Reuters · May 20

StanChart CEO Reassures Staff After 8,000 Job-Cut Plan and AI Comment Backlash

12 articles · Updated · Reuters · May 20
  • Bill Winters told Standard Chartered staff his “lower-value human capital” remark had been taken out of context, after media coverage of AI-driven workforce changes unsettled employees.
  • 15% of corporate-function roles are set to go by 2030—about 8,000 jobs by Reuters’ calculation—as the bank uses technology and automation to slim operations and lift profitability.
  • In the memo, Winters said some roles would shrink, others would change and new jobs would emerge, adding the bank would prioritize reskilling, redeployment and careful handling of cuts.
  • The move fits a wider banking push to use AI to improve efficiency: Mizuho has outlined up to 5,000 cuts over a decade, while HSBC said AI will both destroy and create jobs.
With plans for both job cuts and reskilling, is AI a threat or an opportunity for Standard Chartered's workforce?
As banks automate thousands of jobs with AI, what is the ripple effect on the broader economy and middle-class employment?