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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

51.80
0.46 (0.90%)
Last Updated: 15:36:07
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Lloyds Banking Group Plc LSE:LLOY London Ordinary Share GB0008706128 ORD 10P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.46 0.90% 51.80 51.78 51.80 53.20 49.62 50.26 174,224,635 15:36:07
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.07 33.16B
Lloyds Banking Group Plc is listed in the Commercial Banks sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker LLOY. The last closing price for Lloyds Banking was 51.34p. Over the last year, Lloyds Banking shares have traded in a share price range of 39.55p to 54.06p.

Lloyds Banking currently has 63,569,225,662 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Lloyds Banking is £33.16 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.07.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 250251 to 250271 of 426625 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
25/2/2019
10:25
Minerve voted remain and he lost......He doesn't like it.
excell1
25/2/2019
10:25
Poikka 25 Feb '19 - 10:02 - 247584 of 247591
0 0 0
I'm only remaining signed up to the Tory party to have a say in who the next leader might be.

Same here.

As soon as there's a leadership contest put to the members Boris will walk it.

grahamite2
25/2/2019
10:24
Bit early for language like that. Normally arrives from all quarters as the drink kicks in ............
keyno
25/2/2019
10:23
Losing the war and being dictated to by Germany would have been a positive thing in my opinion, far better than "winning" the war and being dictated to by those odious yanks.....
ladeside
25/2/2019
10:20
FYI

Chesterfield Resources 'Mugs' Being Played. It's Either Suspension or Placing or Both!

Dan
x

daniel levi bmd
25/2/2019
10:18
How can a 2 month delay possibly achieve anything?
Over and over again, all the eu leaders have said what has been agreed will not be changed under any circumstances. Take it or leave it. What would 2 more months of that achieve? The only possibility is that they want us to accept their conditions, with a ramp up of hysteria from some of our traitor MPs.

May should stick to her guns - as I think she will - and force chances to the eu position. Whatever, we should be out on 29 Mar (my wedding anniversary as it happens, a double celebration). On 1st April, we'll see some real negotiating - I fail to see why many seem to think negotiations have to stop when we leave.

shy tott
25/2/2019
10:02
582..Time to act on the result and get out..how forward looking do you want.
goldfinger16
25/2/2019
10:02
I'm only remaining signed up to the Tory party to have a say in who the next leader might be.

If May falls for delaying for another 2 months so that "negotiations with the EU can be concluded" (are they totally deranged!), then she's even dafter than I thought.

poikka
25/2/2019
09:54
Well older wiser heads fought and won a war or two so we could have a nice cushy life not dictated by Germany.

Oopse.

Anyone who doesn't appreciate what the older and wiser generation did for us is fully brainwashed.

shy tott
25/2/2019
09:53
#581. Condensed in a nutshell - blame someone else.

Nothing in your post is forward looking.

alphorn
25/2/2019
09:43
25th jan Deutsch 'buy' tp 72p up from 68p
philanderer
25/2/2019
09:33
Don't forget PPI costs end this year!
ianood
25/2/2019
09:18
I would have said this year was a staggering performance but only worth about 4% increase in divi.God help us when profits flatten out!!
renewed1
25/2/2019
08:55
32 days to Freedom and Independence.

Wonderful

xxxxxy
25/2/2019
08:50
No Brexit

Then

No Conservative Party

End of

xxxxxy
25/2/2019
08:14
LEAVE and WTO
xxxxxy
25/2/2019
08:11
Why the Withdrawal Agreement is bad for the UK

By JOHNREDWOOD | Published: FEBRUARY 25, 2019

I have been asked to spell out more details on the features of the WA other than the Irish backstop which make it a bad deal.

The first point is it contradicts the Conservative Manifesto and 2017 government policy of negotiating the Withdrawal issues and the future partnership together. You must stick to this to get leverage from concessions made on Withdrawal to benefits in the future partnership. Nothing should be agreed until everything is agreed. It is why we have got a bad Withdrawal Agreement, and are being set up to get a bad future partnership as well.

The second is the provision to pay them very large sums of money, stretching for many years into the future. No sensible person would sign an agreement which allows one side to send bill after bill for years after we have left, claiming we owe them money under many general heads set out in the Withdrawal Agreement. The Treasury estimate of £39bn is likely to be far too low. Some of the future liabilities stretch forward a hundred years, relating to payments to people not yet born who might come here before the end of the transition period. Paying to belong until 2020 opens up more future commitments under the 2019-20 budget, with liabilities until 2028. The settlement on the European Investment Bank is mean to the UK. Every conceivable future liability for the EU is recorded with as much liability as possible attaching to the UK under various clauses.

The third is the institutional architecture for the Agreement. Until we do leave the UK faces the full panoply of existing and additional EU law enforced by the EU’s own court. The UK in transition will have no veto over big new advances in EU controls, and no ability to form qualified minority blocking groups to stop an unfavourable law passing under qualified majority provisions. The EU would be at liberty to legislate in ways that harmed our economic interests and helped theirs and we would have to comply. We would even not be able to prevent the imposition of new taxes on us.

Disputes over the money or over the laws fall to be resolved by a joint committee. In the event of there being no resolution, an independent Arbitration panel decides the matter. However, if at issue is the interpretation of EU law – which is likely in most cases – that is settled by the European Court of Justice who instruct the Arbitration Panel what to say! Who ever thought the UK should accept such a one sided arrangement?

The fourth is the State Aids provisions and applicability of Competition law. This will give the EU the right to authorise state aids to attract business away from the UK, with the right to block us doing the same back.

The fifth is the continuing influence the EU will have over our welfare and benefits system.

There are many other features of this Agreement which are one sided, as it is a thorough piece of work by the EU determined to take as much of our money as possible for as long as possible, and keen to keep as much legal control over us as possible.

The Agreement does not even live up to its name and billing. It is meant to just be about the past and so called withdrawal costs and issues, yet a big chunk of it including the Irish backstop, protected trade names and other issues is about the future trading arrangements and partnership. The UK negotiators should have pointed this out and insisted on dealing with all the future issues at the same time, as the government promised to do in 2016-17.

xxxxxy
25/2/2019
07:39
It was always a stick on, a cert, a sure thing, you could have bet the wean’s inheritance and yer Granda’s top set on it. We’ve all predicted it, most of us for a considerable time now, and as sure as day follows night it has happened. After the EU getting the blame for Britain’s staggering incompetence as they squirm and agonize as they untangle themselves from the largest free trading market on the planet, we were always going to be next, us vile separatists who want to be outward looking and European.

No prizes for guessing who the deliverer of this profound nonsense was to be, yes you’ve got it, the Viceroy of Joy himself, the coveter of a stoat’s winter jaiket dyed riid for riid neck, the government of Scotland from another county’s man in Scotland, the chep with the spine of the lesser spotted siphunculus, which I see defined on “wiki change it to whatever ye like” as meaning ‘a small tube’ ( well if the shoe fits) David Mundell (which used tae be pronounced like bundle but ye cannae be called bundle in the House of Lords, Bungle mibbees, but no’ bundle).

Aye, according to the shifty wee man whose pronouncements about how he views politics as they currently exist in the circus which is pre-Brexit Britain, mirror almost exactly what Theresa May said five minutes previously, and are equally therefore as flip floppy in content as the disco dancing diva of Downing Street’s robotic drivel, the party of devolved limited powers, and soon to be more limited, in Scotland, the one with the majority of MP’s democratically elected to Westminster to represent Scottish constituencies, is going to cause a disastrous no –deal exit from the EU. It’s nothing to do with the Tories being infested with useless right –wing and far right-wing brainless and entitled third and fourth generation inheritors of daddy’s money morons whose idea of negotiating with somebody is to tell them what to do in a loud voice in case they don’t understand English. Naw, it’s not their fault. It’s ours.

We’ve tae swing wholly and firmly behind Theresa May’s rank rotten Withdrawal Agreement, and he’s written tae SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford, who is still laughing, to tell him so. This after his stoic leader once again pulled a ‘meaningful vote’ on Brexit, whatever that actually is. Yet further delay to allow her supposedly to continue to negotiate with EU commissioners who are openly saying that Britain is pretending to negotiate something that is already agreed and will not be changed. She’s kicked the can further up the road to around March 12. At this rate Westminster parliamentarians may find themselves voting on arrangements for leaving the EU after they’ve actually left the EU.

If I was the owner of a business in the UK right now which does a fair bit of trade with the countries of Europe I think the squeeky bum element to my planning for the future would be audible. Imagine self-harming your own economy to the extent where a withering recession is almost inevitable, all in the name of keeping rebelling factions of your political party happy. These nutters are playing with people’s live, and the tragedy is they are good at nothing.

History will not be kind to you Davie. I hope the seat on the red benches that you ae holding out for is worth it. It remains to be seen if they’ll let you keep it once Scotland is self-governing. You’ll have outstayed yer welcome.

bargainbob
25/2/2019
00:03
U.S. stock futures rose in early trading as President Donald Trump said he would delay a planned increase in tariffs on Chinese goods after a “very good weekend” of talks.

Futures contracts on the S&P 500 Index expiring March rose 0.3 percent as of 8:08 a.m. in Tokyo after the underlying gauge rose to its highest since Nov. 8 on Friday. Futures contracts on the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq 100 rose 0.4 percent each.

philanderer
24/2/2019
23:13
Two weeks and the ERG are going to have to sign the deal or Article 50 will be extended.

Your choice fools.

minerve
24/2/2019
23:09
Relax Min, no one is going to accuse you of being older and wiser.
maxk
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