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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

56.08
0.28 (0.50%)
27 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
  0.28 0.50% 56.08 56.12 56.14 56.24 55.78 55.96 121,803,443 16:35:18
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.53 35.68B
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 55.80p. 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 £35.68 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.53.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 326501 to 326519 of 429375 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
14/9/2020
12:51
Cheshire

Regardless of what you think of the WA Boris signed it.

He signed it! Regardless of whether it was a mistake that is all there is to it.

Are you men of your word or aren't you?

Very simple question.

minerve 2
14/9/2020
12:45
The speed with which the BBC moved to point out that the new trade deal with Japan is small numbers was striking. They failed to mention that such deals start off small and trade grows substantially over time but then the BBC seems incapable of balanced reporting, especially on matters relating to Brexit.
cheshire pete
14/9/2020
12:39
Mark BPosted September 14, 2020 at 5:46 am | PermalinkGood morning.I read elsewhere recently how the then EEC illegally conspired to steal British, Irish and Norwegian fish stocks with the use of the CFP. The Norwegians rightly saw this as an illegal move and chose to have none of it, but the UK government under Edward Heath signed up us to it knowing full well that the EEC had no right to demand such things. Ever since UK governments of all stripes maintained this lie and it was not until Maastricht that the EU was created and that it was no longer and illegal act.The European Project has always been about theft of other countrie resources. Germany and France realised that to have peace between them they had to divide Europe between themselves and the EEC / EU was a good way of doing it. Now they have come for UK territorial waters and soil, and believe me, it will not end there.This is war by other means !Reply?NiglPosted September 14, 2020 at 6:05 am | PermalinkNot forgetting the E45 billion ish subsidies for the CAP predominantly to buy farmers (French) votes.No wonder they hate the threat to their protectionism posed by Brexit.
xxxxxy
14/9/2020
12:38
Not Boris's fault that the WA is rubbish. It was written under May's watch by remainers and then taken it seems on trust when gremlin weasel words to keep us shackled to the EU were left in to be discovered later.

If people can't stomach changing the WA Boris then tear it up. No more talks and no deal.

cheshire pete
14/9/2020
12:30
Japan trade deal commits UK to stricter state aid curbs than in EU talks

Contrasting positions could undermine negotiating stance with Brussels

- FT

Ha ha ha ha ha ha!

Idiots!

minerve 2
14/9/2020
12:24
You are not an intellect Utricky, and boy doesn't it show. ;)

Stick to the day job.

minerve 2
14/9/2020
12:11
Then, thinking again, don't. We don't want your gene pool continuing!

LOL!

minerve 2
14/9/2020
12:08
Boris voted against, for, then against May's Deal.
Called an election, claimed his deal was oven ready, placed a deadline to leave, closed parliament so there wasn't time to scrutinise, then forced it through parliament.

Now it turns out it has big holes in it that need us to break an international treaty that he signed.

Now I'll ask the question, why is anybody blaming the EU for this?



Top comment on the BBC.

minerve 2
14/9/2020
12:07
Cox is naught but an attention seeking xxxx with an axe to grind. Fat mincer.
utrickytrees
14/9/2020
12:06
BR€XSHI㈐9;💩€R BOYS hunt in packs yet they don't realise they are the prey!

LOL

minerve 2
14/9/2020
12:00
So every single one of the former living UK prime ministers, the leader of the US congress, even the previous Brexiter attorney-general Geoffrey Cox condemn this banana republic move.

But a group of ageing, low-achieving Brexitloon cultists, a proven liar and serial wife cheat, and an un-elected COVIDIOT who makes up tall stories are suggesting this is perfectly reasonable.

Mmmmm, who to believe? A difficult one.

LOL!

minerve 2
14/9/2020
12:00
When it rains,it pours..

LMAO.

Orkney to follow Shetland in demanding independence from Scotland


Have to be consistent now Sturgeon...

geckotheglorious
14/9/2020
11:57
You cant negotiate with a block like the EU because every member has different interests. They are an immovable object. Unlike other member states previous UK governments have put the interests of the EU ahead of the national interest. Cameron tried to redress with tge EU & was treated with contempt, previous administration have been weak. Our current predicament is entirely of the EU's making there is no point in negotiating with the EU its 27 vs 1. Let's just do one....fkem.
utrickytrees
14/9/2020
11:57
Can't stop laughing.

Shetland Islands could expose SNP for the one-trick con artists they are says PAUL BALDWIN

WELL no-one saw that one coming. Little Shetland, beautiful, windswept, glorious little Shetland, has just launched a political broadside against Nicola Sturgeon which could genuinely sound the death knell of the Scottish Nationalist Party.

The SNP loves to play the bullied, wounded, underdog card but, at a stroke, if they deny the Shetland Islanders' right to self determination they become the big bad bully we always knew they were.

But there's worse for Ms Sturgeon. Much worse actually.

Because Shetland is right next to the bulk of the North Sea oil fields – and oil is the pot of liquid gold at the end of Scotland's rainbow, it props-up the entire Hibernian economy.




Scotland independent is most definitely unviable absent Shetlands Islands.

geckotheglorious
14/9/2020
11:27
diku>> Is it the chinese market where it all started that they are debating. Lol
twirl
14/9/2020
11:13
Who is breaking International law, UK or EU.

The Withdrawal Act’s validity and applicability to the future relationship between the EU and the U.K. is predicated on two things.

1. Both sides negotiating a Free Trade Agreement in good faith.
2. A free trade agreement is actually signed by the two parties.

If either of these things do not come to pass Section 38 of the Withdrawal Act upgrades the power of the U.K. government since it asserts the sovereignty of the U.K. parliament as a law-making body for the whole of the United Kingdom.

Since, again, Section 38 of the Withdrawal Act asserts the sovereignty of the U.K. parliament over the whole of the U.K. and the EU threatening to revoke a food export licence to Northern Ireland from the rest of the U.K. is an application of EU law over a part of the U.K. Itself.

And that’s in clear violation of Section 38 of the Withdrawal Act which, if I remember correctly, the EU signed.

Moreover, as I said above, both sides have to be seen as negotiating in good faith. The U.K. is only asking for a free trade deal similar in scope to that of the one the EU has with Canada. The EU, however, is threatening to assert sovereignty over Northern Ireland despite having agreed to parliament’s sovereignty over the whole of the U.K. in the Withdrawal Act.

geckotheglorious
14/9/2020
10:45
When's the divi's coming back to Lloyds Banking Group eh
tommygriff
14/9/2020
10:27
In the meantime we have to listen to lectures from blair/brown/Major....self serving hypocrites one bought up loads of houses and started an illegal war....the other gave gold away and destroyed everyone (elses) pensions and the third...a toadying hypocrite with a third rate record when he was in power too.
nemesis6
14/9/2020
10:17
Inconvienint, but boris has acted right on the rule of 6. The Gammons cant manage themselves,so simple rules needed. Look at French covid cases soaring above the first spike.If Boris can prevent that we will be in a good position. It will be interesting to see if the covid death rate increases in France, if its anything like the first wave... they are screwed. Not often is it advantageous to be behind the curve, but this time it might just well be. If this kicks of again in Euroupe, Brexit will be the least of their worries.
1carus
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