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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

51.98
0.10 (0.19%)
Last Updated: 09:35:11
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
  0.10 0.19% 51.98 51.96 52.00 52.34 51.88 51.88 16,116,747 09:35:11
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.07 33.17B
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 51.88p. 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 £33.17 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.07.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 318651 to 318667 of 426775 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
24/6/2020
16:35
Let's get a Deal.With the USA.
xxxxxy
24/6/2020
16:29
So spake the Capo del tutti Cappi withe the handle 'stonedyou'
bbalanjones
24/6/2020
16:25
stondyou : You hardly set the 'Gold Standard' as a wordsmith yourself dear!!
bbalanjones
24/6/2020
16:22
maxk: oh you mean the day that Russia won the contest by fooling the gullible-but-oh-so-confused British Hobbitry?
bbalanjones
24/6/2020
15:47
Brexit Facts4EU.Org
@Facts4euOrg
· 9h

At 4.39am, 4 years ago today, the shocked Remainer BBC had to declare that Leave had won.

Do you remember that wonderful moment of Brexit euphoria? We do! Re-live it all here:

maxk
24/6/2020
15:43
BBJ
Excellentnews about reading -? UNI
Get rid of the lefties and start teaching again
This will be the precedent - UNIS will slim down
if wokes have their way.
Nothing to learn should the past history be taken away.

jl5006
24/6/2020
15:37
What’s the rush...

UK not rushing into trade deal with US



On Wednesday Liz Truss the United Kingdom Secretary of State for International Trade and President of the Board of Trade said, London will not rush into a trade deal with the United States, adding "there is no deadline" for it to be finalized.

Speaking before the House of Commons' International Trade Committee, she claimed that "the reality is that many UK products have been kept unfairly out of their market."

In May she asserted that both sides are "hopeful" about resuming trade talks at an "accelerated pace" seemingly contradicting todays statement.

smartypants
24/6/2020
15:35
To Boots the Chemist - not Boots but some foreign firm _ Applegreen?
I give you notice that you will need to leave the premises because you have not paid ur Qs rent.
LL

jl5006
24/6/2020
15:33
5xy: Please only publish such lightweight drivel but once! Or is it the 'shakes'?
bbalanjones
24/6/2020
15:02
We are sleepwalking from one denial of our liberties into an even more insidious phaseThe ramifications of this seizure of our freedoms are profoundly disturbingJANET DALEY30 May 2020 • 1:00pm?When you think about it, there is something very odd about the farrago of the last week. Endless numbers of MPs, many of them Conservative, and a similarly vast array of media outlets received outraged demands for the sacking of the prime minister's adviser because he allegedly transgressed the rules which have damaged the quality of life of ordinary people. Those who complained said that the deprivations and sacrifices which they have endured at such cost to their personal happiness and welfare were mocked by Dominic Cummings' actions.But wait a minute - I thought that the great majority of people were not bothered much at all by the lockdown restrictions? According to almost every opinion poll that has been published over this extraordinary period, a clear message has gone out from the country: No, we're really not fussed about having to stay under house arrest, locked away from our beloved families and closest friends. It's pretty nice, actually - an extended break from the pressures of work and social demands.ADVERTISINGPromote health. Save lives. Serve the vulnerable. Visit who.intSo we are quite content to sign away our rights as freeborn Englishmen and women to move about and associate with whomever we wish (even the right to a family life which we grant unreservedly to asylum seekers) for the indefinite future. We're not even particularly worried about how much education our children are losing - certainly not missing the early morning school run, ha ha. Give us a shout when it's over but we personally will be sad to see it end.That's been, overall, the resounding sentiment, hasn't it? So which is it? Are most people quite unbothered about the unprecedented restrictions to which they have been subjected (in which case, the possible infringement of those restrictions would be of little interest) or not? Of course, the obvious answer is that these are not the same groups of people: the ones who tell the opinion pollsters that, as far as they are concerned, this can go on forever are living quite different sorts of lives from those who are aggrieved by how much they have had to give up.But is this necessarily true? Many of the former lot could be public sector employees who are currently enjoying a holiday on full pay but whose political orientation is likely to incline them to attack the Tory government at every opportunity. So they could easily have it both ways: saying, quite honestly, that they are having a lovely time under the present dispensation, but still joining in the media chorus of condemnation of the government when it suits them.Full articlehtTps://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/05/30/sleepwalking-one-denial-liberties-even-insidious-phase/
xxxxxy
24/6/2020
15:01
We are sleepwalking from one denial of our liberties into an even more insidious phaseThe ramifications of this seizure of our freedoms are profoundly disturbingJANET DALEY30 May 2020 • 1:00pm?When you think about it, there is something very odd about the farrago of the last week. Endless numbers of MPs, many of them Conservative, and a similarly vast array of media outlets received outraged demands for the sacking of the prime minister's adviser because he allegedly transgressed the rules which have damaged the quality of life of ordinary people. Those who complained said that the deprivations and sacrifices which they have endured at such cost to their personal happiness and welfare were mocked by Dominic Cummings' actions.But wait a minute - I thought that the great majority of people were not bothered much at all by the lockdown restrictions? According to almost every opinion poll that has been published over this extraordinary period, a clear message has gone out from the country: No, we're really not fussed about having to stay under house arrest, locked away from our beloved families and closest friends. It's pretty nice, actually - an extended break from the pressures of work and social demands.ADVERTISINGPromote health. Save lives. Serve the vulnerable. Visit who.intSo we are quite content to sign away our rights as freeborn Englishmen and women to move about and associate with whomever we wish (even the right to a family life which we grant unreservedly to asylum seekers) for the indefinite future. We're not even particularly worried about how much education our children are losing - certainly not missing the early morning school run, ha ha. Give us a shout when it's over but we personally will be sad to see it end.That's been, overall, the resounding sentiment, hasn't it? So which is it? Are most people quite unbothered about the unprecedented restrictions to which they have been subjected (in which case, the possible infringement of those restrictions would be of little interest) or not? Of course, the obvious answer is that these are not the same groups of people: the ones who tell the opinion pollsters that, as far as they are concerned, this can go on forever are living quite different sorts of lives from those who are aggrieved by how much they have had to give up.But is this necessarily true? Many of the former lot could be public sector employees who are currently enjoying a holiday on full pay but whose political orientation is likely to incline them to attack the Tory government at every opportunity. So they could easily have it both ways: saying, quite honestly, that they are having a lovely time under the present dispensation, but still joining in the media chorus of condemnation of the government when it suits them.Full articlehtTps://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/05/30/sleepwalking-one-denial-liberties-even-insidious-phase/
xxxxxy
24/6/2020
15:00
End Lockdown now.
xxxxxy
24/6/2020
13:25
For a proper Republican, look no further than Rick Perry. Also of Texas - can that be a coincidence?
grahamite2
24/6/2020
13:07
Alphorn24
Post 308224
"I am not a Trump supporter. However, IMO he is the only person around who can really shake up things - like the international organisations. They are otherwise untouchable"

Absolutely..which is why I support him. For that sole reason. I'd have preferred a proper Republican such as Ted Cruz. Even better a no nonsense Trey Gowry.

geckotheglorious
24/6/2020
12:47
LB - "what a wonderful organisation is the WHO denying HCQ to 135 countries and causing a worldwide panic"

I'm no fan of Tedros, but the WHO, minus him, is a useful, if wasteful, organisation that needs a clear-out.

BUT I worry that folk like Elbee walk the streets and vote.

poikka
24/6/2020
12:13
There have been several snippets about this lockdown etc increasing the gap between have/have nots. These staff changes will add to that.
Bad news - the middle classes continue to shrink.

alphorn
24/6/2020
11:49
maxk : Not a chance!!
bbalanjones
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