Standard Chartered's likely 20% profit dip

Standard Chartered bank has warned its profits for the first half of 2014 will be 20 per cent less than for the same periood last year.

Standard Chartered bank has warned that operating profit for the first half of 2014 will be 20 per cent lower compared to the same period in the previous year, citing "difficult trading conditions".

The London-based lender said on Thursday stronger income from regions such as China and Africa was offset by weaker performance in India, South Korea and Singapore.

"This has been a disappointing first half, with difficult trading conditions, particularly in financial markets," Standard Chartered Group Chief Executive Peter Sands said in a filing sent to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange Thursday.

The bank said income from its financial markets operations was the "main challenge" for the group, with regulatory changes impacting foreign exchange rates.

"We are making good progress against our refreshed strategy and are taking the right actions in response to a challenging environment," Sands said.

The group said it expects loan impairment to be "up by a high-teens percentage" in the first half of the year with group income expected to be down by a "mid-single digit" percentage compared to 2013 for the same period.

Shares in the bank closed down 0.36 per cent at $HK166 ($A23.16) on the Hong Kong stock exchange, and fell almost five per cent in morning trade on the London stock exchange at 1,196.5 pence.

In March, the bank, which makes 90 per cent of its profits in Asia, the Middle East and Africa, said net profit fell more than 16 per cent last year to $US3.99 billion ($A4.32 billion) and warned of a difficult first half for 2014.

It said then that its South Korean retail bank had suffered a $US1.0 billion write-down in its value and produced lower revenue with higher bad loans during the year.

In November last year the bank lowered its annual revenue growth target to a range of seven to nine per cent for the next couple of years, from an initial forecast of at least 10 per cent.


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