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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

55.80
0.26 (0.47%)
26 Jun 2024 - Closed
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
  0.26 0.47% 55.80 55.80 55.84 55.92 55.38 55.58 317,866,587 16:35:23
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.50 35.48B
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 55.54p. Over the last year, Lloyds Banking shares have traded in a share price range of 39.55p to 57.22p.

Lloyds Banking currently has 63,569,225,662 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Lloyds Banking is £35.48 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.50.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 255876 to 255896 of 429350 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
30/3/2019
09:48
Leave = Vote for Freedom and Democracy and Self Determination.
xxxxxy
30/3/2019
09:47
Remain = Vote for Vassalage
xxxxxy
30/3/2019
09:46
I sometime watch the recorded version of the Richie Allen show on youtube - he has some interesting guests at times. He has said from the off, we will never be allowed to leave the EU, the likes of Junker are just puppets, their masters pull the strings and they will not allow it. I've always dismissed this as a little theatrical, after all, he needs listeners and he needs to be a little controversial to entertain his audience.
I now believe he is dead right and we will never leave the EU. The hidden hand will have its way. I'm so disappointed today, it really pains me.

jordaggy
30/3/2019
09:45
maxk

As wise men should do, Grieve is making decisions he believes are right for the whole of the UK. He is NOT a servant to his constituency and idiots like you need to start waking-up to that fact.

Very poor level of intelligence on this thread. No wonder you don't get anywhere.

minerve 2
30/3/2019
09:45
xxxxxy,
Boris and JRM are two of the biggest turncoats on the Conservative side.
Why would anyone want such persons as a party leader?

cm44
30/3/2019
09:44
Parliament of Shame

Parliament of Quislings

Parliament of The Elite

The Parliament which FORGOT The People

The People Rule OK

xxxxxy
30/3/2019
09:41
Brexiteers were right to vote down May’s awful deal

'Many claim a long extension would be worse and lose the momentum of the referendum. But the deal guarantees it. Under the transition, we shall explicitly be non-voting members for two years and, as Brussels has spelt out, the only change will be that Britain loses its Commissioner, its MEPs and its vote in the Council of Ministers. Then, under the backstop, which we can never leave without permission, we will be stuck with a trade-barrier between the UK and Northern Ireland. The direction of travel under the treaty is clear. On defence, the agreement calls for UK participation ‘to the extent possible under EU law’, a law which can be changed by the EU27 without the UK being in the room. We will bind ourselves into the defence purchasing budget, and the permanent integration of our defence capabilities and control. Under it we will continue to apply the Common Fisheries policy which has been used to deliberately shrink the number of fishermen by over a third from 1995 to 2005, a neurotic regime that forces boats to return to port when they have caught too much of what they don’t want whilst allowing EU boats take £4 billion worth of our fish. And with the deal, EU State aid powers means the Commission can control any VAT changes and could block the UK from reducing its rate in a particular industry to incentivise a business to locate or invest in the UK. The dream of Free Ports will be snuffed out: Any infrastructure investment that is likely to generate money like toll roads, ports, airports or industrial parks can be vetoed by arbitrary EU commissioners.'

Full article:

xxxxxy
30/3/2019
09:41
I have been a trader/investor for many years and from 2003-8 I really disliked Lloy, the main reason back in those days was the fact they awarded employees with shares and re-issued shares to do it, of which caused slow dilution to the price and expected the price to hold from their shear strength. We all know the story after and they made a massive mistake. I personally only purchase stocks that I feel will benefit my pension, I look at balance sheets and study them in great detail, the yield is in its early stages along with the EPS, the PEG ratio is geared up nicely and what I consider strong is the fact the price to book value is below 1 of which indicates this stock is undervalued just on net assets to current liabilities.
I have to my surprise started to accumulate Lloy shares for my pension and will continue to do so until the balance sheets say otherwise.
Another good indicator from a technical analysis point of view of which I pay attention too but is not set in stone, is the fact the 50 and 200 day moving average have just set up a golden cross, I’m more of a fundamentalist myself and tend to consider technical analysis just noise, but when it happens on the 1-2 year chart then even fundamentalists should pay attention.

turvart
30/3/2019
09:37
Dominic Grieve stood on a leave platform at the last election, as did the rest of the tory's. Then promptly changed sides to try and thwart the referendum's outcome.

Why shouldn't his local voters deselect him?

maxk
30/3/2019
09:36
JRM or Boris for PM


Or Farage - maybe

xxxxxy
30/3/2019
09:33
Democracy?

Where about 5000 people attempt to create the impression they hold all of the Leave mandate and a puppet PM who plays puppy to about 50 muppets with far-right plutocratic friends attempts to dictate to the rest of the country?

Laughable.


Also, we all have vested interests. Dominic Grieve is a good guy. Too bad you don't like him! LOL

minerve 2
30/3/2019
09:32
17+ MILLION VOTED TO LEAVE

17 million is a big political movement and has significant purchasing power. Time to start to think about using this.

And there are Dutch bulbs to think about. Dutch Tulips
REALLY THINK HARD BEFORE BUYING ANYTHING from EUSSR
Spanish holiday. Irish holiday. French wine. Belgian chocolate. Think. Etc

The People, at least 17 million can act as well as Parliament.

People. Gloves off. Time to BOYCOTT the EU. The Elite have crushed and twisted and swindled our Democracy. But the People have teeth too and it is time to bare them,

This 'Withdrawal Agreement' cobbled together by May and a two-faced Conservative Party is trying to fob off the The Referendum Result and sell this 'agreement' with Fear.

But in effect it is REMAIN all dressed up in new clothing and method. This will never be harmonious, and now may be the time to consider various campaigns such as whether to buy German cars for example. 17 million voted against staying in the EU. That is a lot of buying power. Think before buy now.

Campaign. The politicians have not listened. The Economic War. THE PEOPLE RULE OK!

German cars and apes


German cars unfinished business


And there is the consideration of Continental European wine. Many fine and exciting wines found outside Europe.

The EUSSR has stated publicly it wants to HURT the UK. We too can HURT the EUSSR too, particularly Germany and Vichy France. Spanish holiday. Irish holiday. French wine. Belgian chocolate. Think.


The People can vote and not be listened to. BUT THE PEOPLE CAN ACT . Think before buying from the EUSSR

Pass it on. BOYCOTT the EUSSR. Tusck wants us to go to Hell – the very Gestapo and Mafia thinking that still lies at the heart of the EUSSR

Pass it on.

xxxxxy
30/3/2019
09:30
eeyore
Posted March 30, 2019 at 6:37 am | Permalink

According to the papers Mrs May is now touting an election. What’s she thinking of – that MPs who keep faith with the people should fear facing them, but MPs who betray them need not?

Threatening your own supporters and giving hope to your opponents is on a par with her other masterstroke, promising to resign if her policy wins and to stay if it loses.

...
oldtimer
Posted March 30, 2019 at 7:20 am | Permalink

And thank you, too, to the other MPs who helped defeat the latest WA motion. Last night I was able to watch Sir William Cash’s speech forewarning about May’s intention to bring forward a bill next week, including repeal of the repeal of the 1972 Act. This would be the ultimate act of betrayal of the referendum vote. He pointed out that time and time again the PM, the AG and other ministers have remained silent in response to his questions on this and other pertinent issues.

The March to Leave rally in Parliament Square yesterday was fully apprised of May’s machinations by Mark Francois. He delivered an excellent speech, as did all the others speaking from across the political spectrum. The message was clear. Whatever MPs think they can decide to frustrate Brexit, the Leave campaign will not go away. Its supporters, judging from the mood, would like nothing more than a general election to express their disgust via the ballot box at the betrayal being planned by the majority of MPs. The late switchers to support the May WA have done themselves no favours in the eyes of these voters. They support leaving without a deal.

...

Peter Wood
Posted March 30, 2019 at 5:34 am | Permalink

ir John,
In normal times and with a normal PM your logic is sound. We do not have a normal PM so the decision she will make is to take the course that keeps her in No. 10; what’s best for the country is not relevant. Mrs. May IS the problem, when will you Tory MP’s rid us of her?

The correct course for Parliament on Brexit is to proceed with the last decision that it made that passed both Houses and became law. Time is up.

We are starting to see the voter backlash; Mr. Grieve is finding out the cost of his hubris. Remainer MP’s in Leave constituencies should take note.

xxxxxy
30/3/2019
09:25
Grieve has vested interests. Just like the rest.
patientcapital
30/3/2019
09:24
PS - he should now quit - but he's a man of little integrity - despite the picture you remoaners like to paint
joe say
30/3/2019
09:23
I don't believe in Grieve - but I can assure you I believe in democracy

Shame some of these remoaners can only speak with forked tongue - guess its a genetic fault

joe say
30/3/2019
09:19
Poikka

If thousands of experts and most of business tell us it would be a disaster and many will lose jobs I think it is only fair to allow people to vote again. To sit there in your little bubble just thinking about you is selfish and self-serving. Time to mature up a little me thinks and stop acting like spoilt kids.

minerve 2
30/3/2019
09:17
So now we really should be getting on with no-deal.

It would not be a disaster IMO, unless someone here could persuade me differently, we would continue to trade with other nations on existing tariffs until we negotiated further trade deals.

WTO tariffs would apply to EU goods and they would apply same to ours. The EU could cause some disruption, but then so could we.

Tariffs would hit the EU more than us. An agreement with the EU would soon come into practice once reality started to bite.

The attention would then turn to the major flaws in this deeply flawed organisation (EU). This is why Brussels and the establishment have been fighting against Brexit. All they have been doing, however, is putting off the day of reckoning until after they have retired and are collecting their pensions.

The big problem remains - how to Leave.....

poikka
30/3/2019
09:12
What type of people do you want in parliament? Suck ups? Push overs? Weak servants?

I don't know about you but I prefer people who aren't bought, can think freely and speak their own mind in attempt to influence others. Dominic Grieve is one of them. Anybody who doesn't want Grieve in parliament is a chimp who doesn't actually believe in democracy.

minerve 2
30/3/2019
09:05
I don't think that Grieve should be deselected. I disagree with his views, but he is wholly entitled to them. The big issue is that the PM has failed to lead and negotiate with a strong hand, as we all know - apologies for repetition.
poikka
30/3/2019
08:56
Hello everybody, well thank goodness Brexit is now over...did I miss anything?
jordaggy
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