CNBC Transcript: Bill Winters, Group Chief Executive Officer, Standard Chartered Bank

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Below is the transcript of a CNBC Exclusive interview with Bill Winters, Group Chief Executive Officer, Standard Chartered Bank. The interview was first broadcast on CNBC's Squawk Box Asia on 17 September 2018.

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Interviewed by CNBC's Nancy Hungerford

Nancy Hungerford (Nancy): Here we are 10 years from collapse if you can believe it. I'm sure it's that time you remember very well as you were with JP Morgan at that time. Can you just walk us through what that was like? Did you get a call from Jamie Dimon saying get in here, this thing is getting serious?

Bill Winters (Bill): Well it felt like we had a bit of a dress rehearsal for the big one which was six months earlier when we got that call about Bear Stearns. And we spent a feverish weekend figuring out what we could do and how we could do it and ultimately ended up buying Bear Stearns. So when saw the snowball rolling as it were leading up to the Lehman collapse, it did feel like a repeat. Of course it didn't end up exactly the same way with nobody actually buying them. But the exercise was very similar.

Nancy: Do you regret the fact that the bank did buy Bear Stearns?

Bill: Well I'm not there anymore so any regrets I might have, had passed. I think it was a strategically important acquisition for JP Morgan and it went well. Of course there were subsequent extraordinary fines that were levied on JP Morgan chase by virtue of the fact that it had acquired Bear Stearns which had some legacy issues related to mortgage backed securities. So the economics may not have worked out anywhere near as well as we thought, but strategically it was a good acquisition.

Nancy: Since you had the front seat on what was taking place, you must have seen some warning signs earlier on, and the reason I'm curious about what you did see, are there any lessons you can extract from what happened then to things you might be looking at now in terms of the environment?

Bill: I think there are all sorts of lessons that we all learned. I would hasten to add I think those lessons aren't going to be the lessons that we really need for whatever the next problem as it comes around, because I think those lessons, at least for now have been pretty well digested. But clearly we allowed some combination of hubris and over reliance on historical methods of assessing risk, to blind us to the fact that there were some structural problems building up in financial markets. And I think subsequent regulation and subsequent training of risk managers and in banking and outside of banking have pretty thoroughly addressed that set of issues. Of course the next time around it'll be different and we'll see whether those lessons are extendable.