Finance

StanChart shares rise after favourable ruling in U.S. litigation

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on August 22, 2025

1 min read

· Last updated: January 22, 2026

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StanChart shares rise after favourable ruling in U.S. litigation
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LONDON (Reuters) -Standard Chartered shares rose 3% on Friday after what the bank said was a favourable ruling by the U.S. Department of Justice in a long running civil case. Shares in the London-

Standard Chartered Shares Surge Following Positive U.S. Court Ruling

LONDON (Reuters) -Standard Chartered shares rose 3% on Friday after what the bank said was a favourable ruling by the U.S. Department of Justice in a long running civil case.

Shares in the London-headquartered, Asian-focussed bank tumbled last week after a U.S. Republican lawmaker, Elise Stefanik, wrote to the Attorney General, Pam Bondi, asking for a probe to be launched into the bank, claiming it was involved in sanctions evasion.

Stefanik said an unspecified case against Stan Chart was due to expire next week and urged action before that date.

Stan Chart said in a statement late on Thursday it was: "pleased and unsurprised by the Department of Justice’s filing in the legacy Brutus qui tam case, which continues to demonstrate what we’ve always known: the claims underlying this case are false."

(Reporting by Alun John and Samuel Indyk, editing by Dhara Ranasinghe)

Key Takeaways

  • StanChart shares rose 3% after a favorable U.S. court ruling.
  • The case involved allegations of sanctions evasion.
  • A U.S. lawmaker requested a probe into the bank.
  • StanChart maintained the claims were false.
  • The ruling was related to the Brutus qui tam case.

Frequently Asked Questions

What caused Standard Chartered shares to rise?
Standard Chartered shares rose 3% after a favourable ruling by the U.S. Department of Justice in a long-running civil case.
Who requested a probe into Standard Chartered?
U.S. Republican lawmaker Elise Stefanik wrote to the Attorney General asking for a probe into an unspecified case against Standard Chartered.
What was Standard Chartered's response to the ruling?
Standard Chartered expressed that it was 'pleased and unsurprised' by the Department of Justice’s filing in the legacy Brutus qui tam case.

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