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StanChart hurt by S. Korean weakness

Bank says it missed targets in first half of year as loan impairments rose in South Korea and British bank levy jumped by 75 per cent

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Standard Chartered said income for the first half was expected to grow in the mid-single digits year-on-year. Photo: AP

A deterioration in asset quality, especially in South Korea, and a 75 per cent jump in the bank levy in Britain helped drag Standard Chartered's performance in the first half of the year below its targets for revenue and income growth.

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Standard Chartered did better in the second quarter than in the first and last year, finance director Richard Meddings told a teleconference yesterday, but he expected income growth to be in single digits this year.

Income for the first half was expected to grow in the mid-single digits.

Standard Chartered's shares in London rose 3.93 per cent to 1,465.5 pence (HK$174.68) after the bank released its trading update but fell back to close at 1,430.5 pence, up 1.45 per cent on the day.

The bank expected overall loan impairments to rise 15 per cent in the first half from the same period last year.

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The consumer bank division remained in good shape in Hong Kong and Africa, with income growth in double digits, but Korea and Singapore were weak.

Credit quality deteriorated as loan impairments from consumer banking would rise US$120 million from the previous six months, it said.

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