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UK bank announces sale of Botswana subsidiary as top African banks bid for takeover

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
February 20, 2026
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UK bank announces sale of Botswana subsidiary as top African banks bid for takeover
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People familiar with the matter said the London-headquartered Standard Chartered Plc has begun sounding out buyers and expects to receive first-round bids by mid-year. The proposed sale covers the bank’s corporate and investment banking arm in Botswana, alongside its retail and wealth units.

Other potential bidders are understood to be assessing the opportunity. These include Standard Bank Group Ltd. and FirstRand Ltd. through its First National Bank unit.

All parties declined to comment publicly on the reported process, underscoring the early stage of the potential transaction. Sources cautioned that no agreement is guaranteed and the sale could still change direction.

The planned divestment forms part of Standard Chartered’s broader reshaping of its African footprint. The bank has already exited five countries on the continent and partially sold businesses in Zambia and Uganda, with most of those transactions completed between 2024 and 2025.

A man walks past the Standard Chartered sign on October 31, 2025. [Photo by Sawayasu Tsuji/Getty Images]

That pivot appears to be paying off in wealth management. Sources said Standard Chartered has doubled its African wealth business to about $4 billion over the past three years, driven largely by performance in Nigeria and Kenya. The figure, already denominated in US dollars, reflects the current equivalent value.

The Botswana move also highlights a wider shift in Africa’s banking landscape. Several international lenders have been trimming their continental exposure, creating openings for regional players to expand. Among those that have scaled back are HSBC Holdings Plc and BNP Paribas SA, both of which have streamlined African operations in recent years.

By contrast, South Africa’s major banks have been steadily pushing beyond their home market, seeking growth in corporate lending, trade finance, and wealth management across the continent. Botswana, widely regarded as one of Africa’s more stable financial markets, represents an attractive foothold for institutions pursuing regional scale.

If completed, the sale could further consolidate African lenders’ position at a time when global banks are becoming more selective about where they deploy capital on the continent.

For now, the prospective buyers appear to be watching closely, with Botswana potentially becoming the latest battleground in Africa’s evolving banking hierarchy.

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