Standard Chartered’s Chief Executive Officer for Africa, Diana Layfield, declined to specify where the extra staff would go, but picked out Nigeria, Kenya and Ghana as three of the most-attractive markets.
“Nigeria has to be close to the top of everybody’s list (for expansion) … it has scale, growth and real dynamism,” Layfield said on Tuesday according to Reuters.
Nigeria overtook South Africa as the continent’s biggest economy this year after a rebasing of its Gross Domestic Product.
“Our opportunity in Africa is constrained by the ability to invest at pace, and that’s not just a financial constraint but also a management capacity. So the real challenge is prioritisation,” Layfield said at a briefing on Africa by the bank.
It has about 8,100 staff in Africa and has a significant presence in 15 countries there.
Standard Chartered, Barclays and Citigroup are the biggest international banks in Africa, but they are facing increasing competition from Asian banks, including Chinese ones.
London-based Standard Chartered makes almost all its profits in Asia, the Middle East and Africa. It made a profit of $317m in Africa in the first six months of this year on income of $878m, each about 10 per cent of the group. Loans to Africa only account for three per cent of its global total, however.
It opened a subsidiary in commodities-rich Angola in January and has said it would like to expand into Mozambique.
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