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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

55.42
0.20 (0.36%)
Last Updated: 08:42:37
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
  0.20 0.36% 55.42 55.40 55.44 55.52 55.08 55.18 4,702,378 08:42:37
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.43 35.1B
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 55.22p. 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 £35.10 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.43.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
12/6/2020
12:31
Fine, you are the ones desperate to hang yourselves.

Go ahead, be my guest!

LOL!

minerve 2
12/6/2020
12:30
Extending extension is over and done... lolNo more "extension talks"
k38
12/6/2020
12:21
I think the BBC stopped Faulty because the Major said the word wogs.... which was meant to mean 'western oriental gentlemen' or so I was led to believe as a youngster.
maxidi
12/6/2020
12:15
M2, considering you know absolutely fkall about brexit u haven't half got some rattle on the topic.
utrickytrees
12/6/2020
11:55
GtG - one of the best!
alphorn
12/6/2020
11:54
Another suckers rally going on
milliecusto
12/6/2020
11:52
Now there also rewriting history

“ However since Boris went down with the virus he has been very ineffectual.“

bargainbob
12/6/2020
11:50
You are most definitely wrong Min. Ask your mate John Bercow about being unbiased.
excell1
12/6/2020
11:26
Civil unrest has been inevitable for a few years now.

The attempts by the establishment to overturn a democratic vote to Leave the EU.

The economic hardship due to cratering economy arising from Covid-19...

But when the real hardship comes, there will be civil disorder across Europe, the World....

The govt needs to get the Army on the streets, live rounds. One warning shot over head to cease or desist.

Desecration of cenotaph and war memorials to be a Capital crime.

geckotheglorious
12/6/2020
11:22
Alphorn,

One of the best - yes.

" A rat with your biscuit sir?"

geckotheglorious
12/6/2020
11:11
Indeed Alp,we certainly have the same opinion on this subject.The government are
far to relaxed on this civil disobedience and I am naturally a Conservative voter and Boris fan. However since Boris went down with the virus he has been very ineffectual. The Home Secretary seems to be out on her own with some sort of common sense.

excell1
12/6/2020
11:10
Can trade Yuan on IG if you feel its worthwhile. Not into currencies myself.
dr biotech
12/6/2020
11:01
excell - a snap.

Another serious side to the lack of government action and the poor management of the pandemic is how these guys are suddenly going to get smart and focussed to negotiate with Barnier or anybody else? The US will eat them for breakfast. A very sorry state which does not bode well at all; even for the Express readers.

alphorn
12/6/2020
10:48
There were some extreme posts last year about the likelihood (to that poster) of civil unrest because of Brexit. That has all but been forgotten and for many is the distant past in spite of no exit yet. What is happening today with civil unrest is IMO more worrying as there is the added ingredient of high unemployment and economic recession/depression as we have seen in today's numbers.
The government needs to be proactive and get on top of this before it gets out of hand. Removing all humour, boarding up statues and erasing history is not the way to do it. This is an incompetent government.

alphorn
12/6/2020
10:27
Thank goodness Freddie that we have the Guardian to keep us fully informed of how bad things are. Will enjoy my toast all the more.

Always best to try and post things for our friends on the dark side in the interest of balance. :)

freddie01
12/6/2020
10:18
for once I agree with miniman (omg)

BLM so do white lives, and white lives matter more!

financeguru
12/6/2020
10:15
More...?

The only workable way to control our food imports post-Brexit will be to NOT control them!


The move represents a sharp U-turn from February when Mr Gove announced that goods coming from the EU would face the full range of checks.

The shift comes after the pharmaceutical industry warned the government that the Covid-19 pandemic would prevent them from rebuilding the six-week medicine stockpile of 2019, raising fears in Whitehall of medicine shortages in the event of no-deal.

Under the expected plans, agricultural goods will not be required to enter Border Inspection Posts (BIPs) in or near the port — as they do in Europe — and animal products may not immediately require health certificates.
Only controlled goods will face immediate checks.

Industrial goods are also expected to be able to take advantage of transitional measures to delay the need for customs declarations and postpone customs duty payments.

The Treasury has already agreed that VAT payments can be deferred until the quarter after goods are landed. Checks on safety and security declarations will also be temporarily waived.

The UK in turn hopes that the EU side will reciprocate by reintroducing the no-deal measures the European Commission had previously tabled on areas from aviation to trucking permits, but which have since lapsed.

However trade experts have warned that it was unlikely that the EU — which has already invested heavily in new port infrastructure and personnel in Calais and Rotterdam — would reciprocate fully.

The most we can hope for the EU is what they agreed last time, in terms of no-deal mitigations, but I wouldn’t expect them to waive animal health and plant product checks, for example.

The lighter-touch border controls at ports like Dover will apply whether or not Britain secures a free trade agreement with the EU, but will not eliminate the possibility of disruption on the other side of the English Channel.

The change of tack will be welcomed by logistics and trade groups who have complained vociferously in recent months about the lack of information to enable them to prepare for new border controls.

It has been clear for months now that the only way to avoid traffic chaos is for the UK NOT to impose import controls on food goods entering the UK from the EU.

But it is a damning indictment of the UK’s strategic planning that the only workable way to control our food imports post-Brexit will be to not control them.

The UK taking a more relaxed approach to checks only works one way.

All the issues surrounding customs agents and preparing British business for export still stand.

Despite Mr Gove’s February promise to impose full checks, there were no visible preparations, such as the recruitment of vets and customs officers or the building of any new inspection facilities to handle the 10,000 trucks a day that cross the English Channel.

It has been estimated that British businesses will be required to make some 200m more customs declarations after Brexit, requiring as many as 50,000 new customs agents to handle the extra paperwork.

However, despite £34m in government grants to subsidise training, less than 4,000 people have been trained in the past 18 months by the UK’s three main providers.

smartypants
12/6/2020
10:13
Politics latest news: Minister warns over 'airbrushing history' as UKTV removes Fawlty Towers episode





A Government minister has warned against "airbrushing" history after an episode of Fawlty Towers was removed from UKTV archives in the wake of ongoing Black Lives Matter protests.

Edward Argar, the Health Minister, told Sky News that it was "absolutely right" to have an open debate about the past "warts and all", but stressed we had to be "very careful about airbrushing that history".

"If you as a country you forget your past and history, and aren't willing to examine it, you suffer the consequences and you forget," he said.

UKTV, which is BBC-owned, said last night that it had temporarily made Fawlty Towers episode The Germans unavailable while it carries out a review.

The episode, first aired in 1975, showed hotel owner Basil Fawlty, played by John Cleese, goose-stepping while shouting "don't mention the war" in front of...

maxk
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