Standard Chartered has appointed Manus Costello as its permanent Group Chief Financial Officer, marking a significant leadership development for the London headquartered lender as it advances a new phase of strategic growth across Africa, Asia and the Middle East.
The appointment follows the departure of former finance chief Diego De Giorgi, who exited the bank earlier this year to join Apollo Global Management as Head of Europe, Middle East and Africa. Costello assumes the position with immediate effect in an interim capacity pending regulatory approvals and will also join the bank’s board as an executive director.
The banking group confirmed that Costello will be based in London and report directly to Chief Executive Bill Winters, who has led the institution since 2015 and remains one of the longest serving chief executives among major British banks.
Costello joined Standard Chartered in 2024 as Global Head of Investor Relations. Before entering banking leadership, he built a career spanning more than two decades in equity research and financial analysis. His experience includes serving as a founding partner and Global Head of Research at Autonomous Research, alongside a decade at Merrill Lynch in London and New York.
In a statement released by the bank, Winters described Costello as having contributed substantially to the institution’s strategic positioning and stakeholder engagement, while bringing analytical discipline and an entrepreneurial approach to leadership.
The leadership announcement comes ahead of Standard Chartered’s latest group strategy update, where investors are expected to receive further details on the bank’s medium term growth ambitions. The lender has spent recent years restructuring parts of its business through cost management initiatives and selective divestitures, while seeking to deepen its presence in growth markets across Africa and Asia.
For many African economies, Standard Chartered remains a significant financial institution due to its long standing presence across the continent and its role in trade finance, infrastructure funding and cross border investment facilitation. The bank operates in several African markets including Kenya, Ghana, Nigeria, Botswana, Zambia and South Africa, where it continues to position itself within evolving regional financial systems and expanding intra African trade frameworks linked to the African Continental Free Trade Area.
The appointment of a finance chief with extensive investor relations and market research experience may signal an increased focus on capital efficiency, investor confidence and long term institutional resilience at a time when global financial markets remain affected by geopolitical volatility and shifting monetary conditions.
Standard Chartered recently reported a stronger than anticipated first quarter performance, posting a 17 per cent rise in profit. The results were partly supported by increased bond issuance activity from Gulf states, although the bank also disclosed a charge of approximately 190 million US dollars linked to expected losses associated with the conflict involving Iran.
Analysts have previously viewed De Giorgi as a potential successor to Winters, making his departure notable within banking circles. However, the latest appointment suggests continuity in the bank’s broader strategic direction as it seeks to consolidate growth in regions increasingly shaping the future of global finance.
As African financial centres continue to expand their influence within international banking networks, leadership decisions at institutions such as Standard Chartered are likely to be closely monitored for their implications on investment flows, sovereign financing and commercial banking partnerships across the continent.







