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Corporate & Institutional Banking BAML Financials CEO Conference-September 2016 Simon Cooper CEO, Corporate & Institutional Banking

Forward looking statements This document contains or incorporates by reference forward-looking statements regarding the belief or current expectations of Standard Chartered PLC (the Company ), the board of the Company (the Directors ) and other members of its senior management about the strategy, businesses, performance of the Company and its subsidiaries (the Group ) and the other matters described in this document. Generally, words such as may, could, will, expect, intend, estimate, anticipate, believe, plan, seek, continue or similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties. They are not guarantees of future performance and actual results could differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on current views, estimates and assumptions and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, many of which are outside the control of the Group and are difficult to predict. Such risks, factors and uncertainties may cause actual results to differ materially from any future results or developments expressed or implied from the forward-looking statements. Such risks, factors and uncertainties include but are not limited to: changes in the credit quality and the recoverability of loans and amounts due from counterparties; changes in the Group s financial models incorporating assumptions, judgments and estimates which may change over time; risks relating to capital, capital management and liquidity; risks associated with implementation of Basel III and uncertainty over the timing and scope of regulatory changes in various jurisdictions in which the Group operates; risks arising out of legal and regulatory matters, investigations and proceedings; operational risks inherent in the Group s business; risks arising out of the Group s holding company structure; risks associated with the recruitment, retention and development of senior management and other skilled personnel; risks associated with business expansion and engaging in acquisitions; reputational risk; pension risk; global macroeconomic risks; risks arising out of the dispersion of the Group s operations, the locations of its businesses and the legal, political and economic environment in such jurisdictions; competition; risks associated with the UK Banking Act 2009 and other similar legislation or regulations; changes in the credit ratings or outlook for the Group; market, interest rate, commodity prices, equity price and other market risk; foreign exchange risk; financial market volatility; systemic risk in the banking industry and among other financial institutions or corporate borrowers; cross-border country risk; risks arising from operating in markets with less developed judicial and dispute resolution systems; risks arising out of regional hostilities, terrorist attacks, social unrest or natural disasters and failure to generate sufficient level of profits and cash flows to pay future dividends. Any forward-looking statement contained in this document is based on past or current trends and/or activities of the Company and should not be taken as a representation that such trends or activities will continue in the future. No statement in this document is intended to be a profit forecast or to imply that the earnings of the Company and/or the Group for the current year or future years will necessarily match or exceed the historical or published earnings of the Company and/or the Group. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date of the particular statement. Except as required by any applicable law or regulations, the Company expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statement contained herein to reflect any change in the Company s expectations with regard thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based. Important Notice This document does not constitute, in any jurisdiction, an offer or solicitation to sell or purchase any securities, nor does it constitute a recommendation or advice in respect of any securities or any other matter. 1

Standard Chartered Bank the Group c.90% of income from Asia, Africa and Middle East Presence in approximately 70 markets Around 1,100 branches Approximately 84,000 employees Over 150 years in the world s most dynamic markets Listings in London, Hong Kong and Mumbai Credit ratings A / Aa3 / A+ (S&P / Moody s / Fitch respectively) 1 Lead regulated by UK Prudential Regulation Authority Market cap: US$27bn (September 2016) 1) Standard Chartered Bank ratings as at 22 September 2016 2

Group context We have a valuable, differentiated franchise with strong client relationships Strategy remains appropriate and we have made good initial progress Economies have slowed during 2016 and the outlook is more uncertain therefore likely to take us longer to deliver the returns set out last November Opportunities are compelling and we are creating the platform to generate value for clients and shareholders All decisions are made with a view to build returns above our cost of capital 3

Near term pressures but opportunities remain Headwinds Opportunities Economic uncertainty Internationalisation of EM corporates Geopolitical risks Opening up of China Weak trade demand Low commodity prices Increasing competition RMB internationalisation Relative growth outperformance in our footprint Financial deepening Regulatory costs Digitisation 4

Broad stabilisation of balance sheet and focus on diversification CIB customer loans and advances ($bn) 144 133 128 122 127 119 Q1 15 Q2 15 Q3 15 Q4 15 Q1 16 Q2 16 CIB customer deposits ($bn) 216 209 194 199 193 187 Q1 15 Q2 15 Q3 15 Q4 15 Q1 16 Q2 16 Customer loans and advances by industry 1 ($bn) CIB customer loans and advances and customer deposits up since year end: Trade balances back up to year end levels Focused on improving mix of deposits Reduced targeted exposures by industry Energy now 13% of corporate exposures (FY13: 17%) 3% 2% 7% 7% 5% 8% 8% 11% 13% 25% 13% Energy Manufacturing Financing, insurance & non-banking Transport, telecom & utilities Food & household products Commercial real estate Mining & quarrying Consumer durables Construction Trading companies & distributors Other Expanding into capital efficient industries that support real economies 1) For CIB, Commercial Banking and Central and other 5

Focus is now on driving sustainable improvements in returns Costs On track to deliver CIB s cost savings in 2016 Working on further efficiencies for 2017 Identifying more efficient ways of serving clients Costs Loan Impairments Remain elevated in H1 16, but significantly improved since 2015 Liquidation Portfolio being worked through Risk tolerances tightened Loan Impairment RWA Revenue Revenue Poor performance in recent years Key focus of CIB Management Team aligned to increase revenues with sustainably attractive returns 6

Early progress on CIB strategic plan but more to do 1 Secure the foundations Reduce / exit exposures to within the refreshed Group risk tolerance by 2017 Businesses and assets comprising approximately one third of Group RWA to be restructured Deliver our conduct and financial crime risk programmes Re-focus relentlessly on client satisfaction Re-establish a culture of excellence in everything we do 2 Get lean and focused Cost discipline: Group to execute $2.9bn gross cost reduction programme over 4 years from 2015 to 2018; 2018 total costs below 2015 Restructure CIB for higher returns 3 Invest and innovate Build on a strong foundation and invest to grow safely in Africa Leverage opening of China; capture opportunities from renminbi internationalisation 7

First Impressions - Strengths External Deep client relationships Internal Progress on existing initiatives Extensive footprint and network Tangible enthusiasm to fix issues Strengths Competitive product suite Costs well controlled Market leaders in RMB, trade and $ clearing Motivated and talented staff 8

First Impressions - Areas we need to improve Diversify client income Leverage network better Enhance deposit base Distribute better Areas we need to improve Expand product capabilities Improve processes Invest in infrastructure Improve gender diversity 9

Priorities - To drive sustainable improvement in CIB returns Refine coverage model so RMs become more client-centric and are aligned to industry sectors Identify under-served clients and improve share of business with them Optimised $15bn of low returning client RWAs to date deliver to target Established new Credit Portfolio Management function Banking the ecosystem connecting CIB with CB, RB and PB clients Grow Domestic Capital Markets (LCY) and credit trading capabilities Sustain leadership in RMB capabilities Improve the quality of the deposit base On track to deliver 2016 efficiency targets Improve client execution with specialised teams Critical systems and infrastructure enhancements Digitise and automate operations 1) RMs: Relationship managers 2) CB: Commercial Banking; PB: Private Banking; RB: Retail Banking3) LCY: Local Currency 10

Network case study Banking the ecosystem Greater China & North Asia Case study highlights Large tech client Europe & Americas TB CF Regional Treasury Hub FM LPM Africa & Middle East TB FM ASEAN & South Asia TB CF FM LPM TB CF FM LPM Regional Treasury Hub Single client ecosystem: Long standing relationship served in >25 countries with a full suite of products Operating accounts: In >20 countries Multi market: Major relationships in HK, SG, UK, Nigeria, Ghana and China CF LPM SCB Country Presence Transaction Banking (TB) Financial Markets (FM) Corporate Finance (CF) Lending & Portfolio Mgt (LPM) Trade Finance Cash Management Securities Services Foreign Exchange Rates Commodities Credit and Capital Markets Leverage Finance Mergers & Acquisitions Advisory Structured Trade Finance Project & Export Finance Revolver Facilities Working Capital CLOs 1 and Loan Sales 1) CLOs: Collateralised loan obligations 11

Summary Valuable, differentiated franchise serving clients for over 150 years Key Group income and profit contributor Strong network proposition and focused on leveraging further Attractive long-term prospects despite short-term headwinds Proactive action taken on costs and asset quality, now focus is on revenue generation at attractive returns Focused on execution to remove blockages and sustainably improve returns 12

Q&A 13

Appendix 14

Financial overview Reshaping for higher returns despite tough conditions $m H1 15 H2 15 H1 16 H1 16 v H1 16 v H1 15% H2 15% Income 3,943 3,238 3,147 (20) (3) Expenses (2,272) (2,184) (2,090) 8 4 H1 16 Income by product ($m) 4500 3,943 3,238 3500 2500 3,147 Working profit 1,671 1,054 1,057 (37) 0 Loan impairment (824) (1,252) (606) 26 52 Other impairment (63) (181) (212) (17) - Underlying profit / (loss) before tax 784 (379) 239 (70) 163 1500 500-500 H115 H215 H116 Transaction Banking Financial Markets Corporate Finance Lending & Portfolio Management Principal Finance RWA ($bn) 184 168 161 (13) (4) Customer L&A 133 122 127 (5) 4 Customer deposits 209 187 199 (5) 6 RoRWA (%) 0.8% (0.4%) 0.3% Key facts Total Markets 70 Staff ~6,000 International Corporate Clients ~1,500 Financial Institutional Clients ~1,300 15

No significant deterioration in the credit quality of the portfolio but market conditions remain challenging CIB loan impairment ($m) 626 198 824 968 727 200 525 606 H1 15 H2 15 H1 16 Impairment (Ongoing business) Impairment (Liquidation Portfolio) Restructuring impairment charge 1,252 1 Loan impairment remains elevated but at significantly reduced levels compared to 2015 Ring fenced exposures beyond tightened risk tolerance in a liquidation portfolio We have reduced targeted exposures to diversify the portfolio Managing targeted exposures 2 ($bn) 54.9 Expect challenging conditions to persist through 2016 32.5 26.2 25.9 39.6 37.1 Continue to actively manage our portfolios Top 20 corporate clients Commodities producers and traders 2014 2015 H1 16 1) Impairments on exposures during 2015, but before they were placed into the liquidation portfolio 2) CIB and CB exposures are presented on a Country of Credit Responsibility ( CCR ) and on a net exposure basis. Net exposures comprise of loans and advances to banks and customers, investment securities, derivative exposures after master netting agreements, other assets, contingent liabilities, documentary credits and cash and balances at central banks 16