Standard Chartered Agrees to Sell Business in Jordan

A branch of Standard Chartered Bank in London. (Reuters)
A branch of Standard Chartered Bank in London. (Reuters)
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Standard Chartered Agrees to Sell Business in Jordan

A branch of Standard Chartered Bank in London. (Reuters)
A branch of Standard Chartered Bank in London. (Reuters)

Standard Chartered plans to sell its Jordanian business to Arab Jordan Investment Bank (AJIB), the two parties said on Sunday, as Standard Chartered presses ahead with plans to exit seven markets in Africa and the Middle East.

The bank entered into an agreement with AJIB, subject to central bank approval, which will see Standard Chartered's corporate, commercial, and institutional banking, consumer lending, and private banking businesses migrated to AJIB.

Standard Chartered is a British bank operating in more than 50 countries and headquartered in London.

All Standard Chartered Bank employees in Jordan will be transferred to AJIB, it said in a statement.

Standard Chartered's Africa and Middle East CEO Sunil Kaushal said the agreement is aligned with the bank's global strategy "to deliver efficiencies, reduce complexity, as well as redirect resources within the Africa Middle East region to areas with the greatest potential to drive scale, grow and better support clients."

AJIB said the purchase falls within the Jordanian lender's strategy to grow its market share in the country, which continues to grow after it acquired HSBC's banking business in Jordan in 2014 and the National Bank of Kuwait's banking business in Jordan in 2022.

Standard Chartered in April 2022 said it plans to leave seven markets: Angola, Cameroon, Gambia, Jordan, Lebanon, Sierra Leone, and Zimbabwe.

The bank said at the time it was seeking to exit markets where it is sub-scale and narrow its focus to faster-growing markets in the region, such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

Meanwhile, the Amman Stock Exchange bourse closed Sunday’s session at 2577.59 points, a drop of 0.14 percent. Total traded shares reached 3.3 million worth 4.4 million Jordanian dinars due to completing 2,119 deals.



ECB's Lagarde Says 2% Inflation Target in Reach

FILE PHOTO: European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde addresses the media after the ECB's Governing Council meeting, at the ECB headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, June 5, 2025. REUTERS/Heiko Becker/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde addresses the media after the ECB's Governing Council meeting, at the ECB headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, June 5, 2025. REUTERS/Heiko Becker/File Photo
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ECB's Lagarde Says 2% Inflation Target in Reach

FILE PHOTO: European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde addresses the media after the ECB's Governing Council meeting, at the ECB headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, June 5, 2025. REUTERS/Heiko Becker/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde addresses the media after the ECB's Governing Council meeting, at the ECB headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, June 5, 2025. REUTERS/Heiko Becker/File Photo

The European Central Bank's inflation target of 2% is in reach, ECB President Christine Lagarde was quoted as saying in an interview published on Saturday.

In the interview with China's Xinhua news agency earlier this week which was released on the ECB website, Lagarde said financial stability was a prerequisite for price stability.

"We are within reach of the 2% medium-term inflation target that we have defined as price stability," she said, according to Reuters.

Earlier this month, the ECB lowered its inflation forecasts for this year and next in the 20-nation euro zone, projecting inflation of 2.0% in 2025 and 1.6% in the coming year.

Lagarde also that the ECB's efforts to create a digital currency were getting to the point where, if lawmakers support the proposal, it should be ready to move forward.