LONDON (Reuters) - Standard Chartered
London-listed Standard Chartered <2888.HK> on Tuesday reported a pretax profit of $6.9 billion for 2012, up from $6.8 billion in 2011 but short of the average analyst forecast of $7 billion.
The bank, which has ridden Asia's rise through the last decade, said it hired just over 2,000 staff last year. It has said it could expand by a similar amount this year.
"Standard Chartered remains a growth story and we are sticking to our strategy, focusing on the basics of good banking, in markets we know well, with clients and customers with whom we have deep relationships," Chairman John Peace said.
The group's operations in China and wholesale banking business in Africa achieved $1 billion of income for the first time, it said.
The bank said it had started the new year with strong momentum in both its businesses and was confident for the year ahead. It said consumer banking income was well ahead of the same period last year and wholesale banking client income is also ahead, with good levels of client activity.
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Standard Chartered said it cut its bonus pool by 7 percent after its $667 million fine from U.S. regulators for breaching its sanctions on Iran and three other countries.
Shares in Standard Chartered were up 3.8 percent at 0830GMT, outperforming a 1.6 percent rise in the European bank index.
The bank is paying a dividend of 84 cents per share, up 10.5 percent on the previous year.
(Reporting by Steve Slater and Matt Scuffham. Editing by Jane Merriman)