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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

54.50
-0.04 (-0.07%)
15 May 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
  -0.04 -0.07% 54.50 54.48 54.50 54.80 54.26 54.76 267,072,416 16:35:03
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.34 34.63B
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 54.54p. Over the last year, Lloyds Banking shares have traded in a share price range of 39.55p to 54.80p.

Lloyds Banking currently has 63,569,225,662 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Lloyds Banking is £34.63 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.34.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 309801 to 309816 of 427125 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
18/4/2020
10:49
Reply?DOMINICPosted April 18, 2020 at 6:24 am | PermalinkThese shortages of PPE are deliberate and designed to harm this government.When will the Tory party understand that the Labour-unionised controlled public sector in all its forms despise you, will conspire against you to do you harm and have no qualms in hurting others in their attempts to do soThe public sector exists to protect itself from harm. That is its primary function. Why can't the Tory party managers see that?The BBC, a defiant member of Labour's alliance of leftist coalition, interviewed two NHS staff members yesterday and directed their ire and anger of a Tory PM and a Tory Minister. Both NHS staff members where Labour members. The BBC and the NHS are coordinating their attacks on a Tory PMAnd the NHS is using this issue for political ends, to expand its influence and to place itself beyond reformAnd the Tory government is assisting the NHS in that processThe NHS is run by managers who act politically. I have no doubt that what we are seeing is a carefully constructed political game designed to inculcate uncritical loyalty to a bankrupt, monolithic behemoth that is badly in need of reform. The taxpayer is told to finance this deliberately wasteful organisationThe government should introduce charges for NHS use in the way the BBC is funded. Each month each adult pays an amount of cash from their bank as they would do for the ethically bankrupt BBC. Labour's plan to create a free-lunch culture has been highly successful. If the British people adored the NHS they will surely pay for it and would have no qualms in doing so.Will we hear clapping in the streets when each adult will have to pay a NHS charge of £25 PCM? Erm, no.Give it to me for free, and hand the bill to someone else.I don't clap because I refuse to be conditioned and controlled for political ends. That way lies North Korea, China and every other authoritarian state that's taken people and crushed their freedoms and their bodiesReply?Sea WarriorPosted April 18, 2020 at 7:42 am | PermalinkI too find this public clapping a bit North Korean for my liking.
xxxxxy
18/4/2020
10:38
Jl5006 17 Apr '20 - 18:21
Why should the taxpayer pick up the tab 100%. 80% seems unjustly unfair - 100% criminal.
You run a business and have no reserves or contingency.
-----------

The banks shouldn't be arm twisted to be on the hook for the other 20% either.

Seems the argument us between HMG and the banks as to who should assume the loss risk - when the actual answer is "the business owners".

Then there is the question of practicality of physically making the loans happen (admin capacity) regardless of who is standing the risk.

Oh, and the fact that banks don't have the capability any more to assess risk in non- standard situations. How many people working in banks these days are ACIB qualified ????

Maybe they need to temporarily bring back some of the retired/left banking properly qualified people ? Like they did with the NHS. Clue - I personally know of at least 3 such people who could be working by 9am on Monday.

dexdringle
18/4/2020
10:38
Who wants to steal Chinese IP?
poikka
18/4/2020
10:30
"spewing out pollution from their factories."

But now one of the few countries left in the world capable of delivering nuclear power.

minerve 2
18/4/2020
10:12
Exactly Alphorn, why develop eco friendly ballistic weapons when they're spewing out pollution from their factories. They're not a full shilling!
utrickytrees
18/4/2020
10:00
Ut - IP espionage is everywhere. A risk of the game unfortunately - probably not new though in many sectors.

The Chinese seem very advanced from software design to weaponry. In the latter area they are the only country to have built a 'rail gun'.

One answer to IP theft is speed - get out onto the market place before anyone steals your ideas.

Liked your reply btw. ;))

alphorn
18/4/2020
09:21
Is this proof 'life-saving' ventilators are actually deathtraps? Their success rate is appalling and medics are increasingly worried they may do more harm than good, disturbing report reveals


• Serious doubts have been raised about the effectiveness of ventilators

• Ventilators are a standard treatment for the deadly lung infection pneumonia

• In New York, 80 per cent of ventilated patients failed to recover

•Learn more about how to help people impacted by COVID



New York casualty doctor Cameron Kyle-Sidell has broken ranks with the medical establishment to warn ventilators are not being used in the right way



New York casualty doctor Cameron Kyle-Sidell has broken ranks with the medical establishment to warn ventilators are not being used in the right way

The death rate for those treated on ventilators is devastating. In one British study of 98 Covid-19 patients who were put on them or on similarly invasive breathing-support equipment, two-thirds died, according to a new report by our Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre.

In New York, which has been hit particularly hard by the virus, 80 per cent of ventilated patients failed to recover. The loss of life in other countries for those on the machines is equally terrifying.

Dr David Farcy, the president of the American Academy of Emergency Medicine, warns against using them indiscriminately. His patients have been treated successfully with fastflow oxygen delivered through a simple nasal tube or mask.

He also places patients on their left or right side, a process called proning that is simpler to perform on patients in masks than those on ventilators, which instantly raises oxygen levels in their blood.

'This has challenged everything we thought', he said. 'Six weeks ago everybody (in a hospital) would be running around getting ready to intubate you, put you on a machine'. But not any more.

So why the change of tune? The answer is that some doctors have a remarkable new thesis: that the virus's symptoms are more akin to highaltitude breathing difficulties (caused by a lack of oxygen at extreme heights) or even carbon monoxide poisoning (which snuffs out oxygen in the body's red blood cells).

In both instances, victims struggle for oxygen. But they do not have the ravaged lungs of pneumonia sufferers who are routinely put on ventilators. Dr Kyle-Sidell says of Covid-19 in his video: 'It appears to be some kind of viral-induced disease most resembling high-altitude sickness


'It is as if tens of thousands of my fellow New Yorkers are flying on a plane at 30,000 ft and the cabin pressure is slowly being let out. These patients are slowly being starved of oxygen.

'The patients I am seeing are most like a person dropped off at the top of mount Everest without time to acclimatise. They look like patients on the brink of death (through lack of oxygen). They do not look like patients dying of pneumonia.'


For pneumonia cases, he explains, the ventilator 'does the work that patient's muscles can no longer do because they are too tired to do it'. But the muscles of Covid-19 patients are fine.

'They are suffering from oxygen failure, not respiratory failure.'

His supporters include distinguished medics such as Dr Luciano Gattinoni of Germany's Medical University of Gottingen. In a letter to the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Dr Gattinoni warns that the conventional use of ventilators may injure the lungs of Covid-19 victims.

At one European hospital where virus patients were ventilated in this way, 60 per cent of them died. Into the fray, too, has stepped Professor Sherif Sultan, the Ireland-based President of the International Society of Vascular Surgery.

He believes that invasive ventilation is not a solution for Covid-19 as it does not resemble pneumonia or a similar respiratory ailment. We need to stop treating patients for the wrong disease, he surmises in an analysis of medical research into the virus.

Professor Sultan believes the vital clue that the coronavirus is different from pneumonia is in how it attacks the human body. It affects both lungs at the same time, which pneumonia rarely ever does.

stonedyou
18/4/2020
08:24
Is this proof 'life-saving' ventilators are actually deathtraps? Their success rate is appalling and medics are increasingly worried they may do more harm than good, disturbing report reveals


• Serious doubts have been raised about the effectiveness of ventilators

• Ventilators are a standard treatment for the deadly lung infection pneumonia

• In New York, 80 per cent of ventilated patients failed to recover

•Learn more about how to help people impacted by COVID



New York casualty doctor Cameron Kyle-Sidell has broken ranks with the medical establishment to warn ventilators are not being used in the right way



New York casualty doctor Cameron Kyle-Sidell has broken ranks with the medical establishment to warn ventilators are not being used in the right way

The death rate for those treated on ventilators is devastating. In one British study of 98 Covid-19 patients who were put on them or on similarly invasive breathing-support equipment, two-thirds died, according to a new report by our Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre.

In New York, which has been hit particularly hard by the virus, 80 per cent of ventilated patients failed to recover. The loss of life in other countries for those on the machines is equally terrifying.

Dr David Farcy, the president of the American Academy of Emergency Medicine, warns against using them indiscriminately. His patients have been treated successfully with fastflow oxygen delivered through a simple nasal tube or mask.

He also places patients on their left or right side, a process called proning that is simpler to perform on patients in masks than those on ventilators, which instantly raises oxygen levels in their blood.

'This has challenged everything we thought', he said. 'Six weeks ago everybody (in a hospital) would be running around getting ready to intubate you, put you on a machine'. But not any more.

So why the change of tune? The answer is that some doctors have a remarkable new thesis: that the virus's symptoms are more akin to highaltitude breathing difficulties (caused by a lack of oxygen at extreme heights) or even carbon monoxide poisoning (which snuffs out oxygen in the body's red blood cells).

In both instances, victims struggle for oxygen. But they do not have the ravaged lungs of pneumonia sufferers who are routinely put on ventilators. Dr Kyle-Sidell says of Covid-19 in his video: 'It appears to be some kind of viral-induced disease most resembling high-altitude sickness


'It is as if tens of thousands of my fellow New Yorkers are flying on a plane at 30,000 ft and the cabin pressure is slowly being let out. These patients are slowly being starved of oxygen.

'The patients I am seeing are most like a person dropped off at the top of mount Everest without time to acclimatise. They look like patients on the brink of death (through lack of oxygen). They do not look like patients dying of pneumonia.'


For pneumonia cases, he explains, the ventilator 'does the work that patient's muscles can no longer do because they are too tired to do it'. But the muscles of Covid-19 patients are fine.

'They are suffering from oxygen failure, not respiratory failure.'

His supporters include distinguished medics such as Dr Luciano Gattinoni of Germany's Medical University of Gottingen. In a letter to the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Dr Gattinoni warns that the conventional use of ventilators may injure the lungs of Covid-19 victims.

At one European hospital where virus patients were ventilated in this way, 60 per cent of them died. Into the fray, too, has stepped Professor Sherif Sultan, the Ireland-based President of the International Society of Vascular Surgery.

He believes that invasive ventilation is not a solution for Covid-19 as it does not resemble pneumonia or a similar respiratory ailment. We need to stop treating patients for the wrong disease, he surmises in an analysis of medical research into the virus.

Professor Sultan believes the vital clue that the coronavirus is different from pneumonia is in how it attacks the human body. It affects both lungs at the same time, which pneumonia rarely ever does.

stonedyou
18/4/2020
08:15
BBC News - Coronavirus vaccine: Target of a million doses by September, scientists sayhttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-52329659
coxsmn
18/4/2020
07:30
Finding PPE

By JOHNREDWOOD | Published: APRIL 18, 2020

We have all got used to the initials PPE, meaning  protective clothing for people working in the NHS and social care. The government has told us it wants there to be a plentiful supply, and Ministers have authorised spending to provide one. Despite this there is a persistent issue over whether supplies and stocks are adequate in a range of Health and Social care establishments.

I have spent time each day on this problem for the local organisations that report insufficient supplies and stocks. I have  badgered the government through Ministers and the Cabinet Office. I have asked the Local resilience Forum for help, as we were told they had an important role locally. I have worked with Wokingham Borough who want to source more clothing for their social service responsibilities.

As a result of the strong MP and media interest and the demands from various hospitals and care homes the centre and the regions have set up organisations to try to ease the shortage. As an alert reader will have noticed, so far I have only mentioned organisations that are trying to buy or obtain PPE. The problem of course lies mainly  with the supply. The world is short of PPE because there has been a big surge in world demand.

I have been able to pass on some leads to public sector bodies who need to buy more PPE. There are various manufacturers and stockists out there who can provide more PPE, and who want the extra orders. Some potential manufacturers say they are experiencing delays in getting their product approved and registered as suitable for purchase and use. Clearly the public sector needs to make rapid decisions, though it should see and test a sample of  the goods first.

It should not be a logistics problem. The army is doing great work strengthening public sector delivery systems. There are plenty of laid up trucks and  vans in the private sector needing work, and plenty of us would volunteer to drive a load in the backs of our own vehicles to an individual local care home if needed.

Given the will to provide more, the money to pay for it and the flexibility of manufacturers in need of work, it should  be possible to crack this problem. Companies wanting to supply need to send in urgent samples, and the buyers in the public sector need to respond quickly with orders.

xxxxxy
18/4/2020
07:17
Human trials for a coronavirus vaccine are set to begin next week, as the government launches a taskforce to ramp up efforts to tackle the pandemic.Scientists at the University of Oxford have been working on a vaccine to prevent people from catching Covid-19, which they plan to test on the first UK volunteers within the next seven days.Sarah Gilbert, a professor of vaccinology who is leading the team, said it could be ready to use on the general public by the autumn, with at least a million doses on standby to be rolled out in September.It comes as Sir Patrick Vallance, the chief scientific adviser, revealed that more than 5,500 people have been enrolled in UK clinical trials to establish whether existing medicines can help treat Covid-19 patients.He said that developing a vaccine was a "difficult, complicated process" which would take many months, Daily Telegraph
xxxxxy
18/4/2020
04:57
That's a population explosion of 19.5% overnight that we hadn't planned for for Stoned....the numbers of southern Mediterranean citizens will only continue to rise as their relationship with the harsh EU continues to deteriorate, the UK will be the likely destination for hundreds of thousands of EU citizens wanting a better life.There will be no reason for EU citizens to make any special arrangements to travel to the UK after Brexit, they will just turn up.
utrickytrees
18/4/2020
00:20
https://youtu.be/pRpOtx00tBY
k38
17/4/2020
23:50
“On much”....315;🤣㊃5;
dr biotech
17/4/2020
22:13
Goodnight mm2!

LOL

minerve 2
17/4/2020
22:11
What are the signs of turning into a vampire?
There is something called blood-rage, which is a sanguine vampiric response to an unmet need for blood. The symptoms can include unprovoked anger, extreme agitation, unpredictability, physical pain, mental agitation, and if left unchecked, severe depression, apathy, even suicidal tendencies.

The night shift has clocked on.

az209
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