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Standard Chartered shares rally after US government rejects whistleblower claims

The US government has rejected whistleblower claims against Standard Chartered that had drawn the attention of president Donald Trump

Standard Chartered shares rallied after the US rejected claims it breached sanctions rules(Image: Standard Chartered plc)

Shares in Standard Chartered surged on Friday following news that the US government has dismissed whistleblower allegations regarding potential sanctions violations.

Claims concerning the banking giant's conduct had attracted scrutiny from US president Donald Trump, who posted a link to an article about the accusations from a far-right publication on Truth Social last week, as reported by .

This prompted Republican congresswoman Elise Stefanik to demand an investigation into the FTSE 100 firm, causing its stock price to plummet.

Standard Chartered previously paid a total of $1.8bn in settlements to US and º£½ÇÊÓÆµ regulators in 2012 and 2019 following findings that it had violated sanctions against Iran and other nations.

However, currency dealer Robert Marcellus and the bank's former global head of foreign exchange transaction banking, Julian Knight, claimed last year to have discovered evidence in documents submitted to the US government, which they alleged showed billions of dollars in undisclosed dealings with Iranian entities.

Knight and Marcellus contended that the government had misled a US court regarding its probe into the allegations.

They subsequently lodged an appeal after their claims were dismissed.

On Thursday, the US Department of Justice stated that the earlier ruling should be upheld by the appeals court, describing the fraud allegation as "entirely unfounded."