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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

55.52
0.50 (0.91%)
17 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
  0.50 0.91% 55.52 55.48 55.50 55.56 54.96 55.00 208,227,475 16:35:17
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.46 35.28B
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 55.02p. Over the last year, Lloyds Banking shares have traded in a share price range of 39.55p to 55.56p.

Lloyds Banking currently has 63,569,225,662 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Lloyds Banking is £35.28 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.46.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 346251 to 346268 of 427225 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
02/2/2021
16:41
Poikka, the EUSSR are using the UK as a lesson to any other vassal states as to what will be done to them if they try to throw off their master.

Maxk, the rest of the class always hate the clever kid. Boris got a long way by playing the clown, but it seems in the hot seat that he lacks wits and substance. I suppose you know he's run his course if the Torygraph starts knocking him.

lefrene
02/2/2021
16:41
Minerva you are a thankless piece of ordure
romney1
02/2/2021
16:18
Sadly, Captain Tom has passed away, after testing positive.

BBC leading with it, of course.

polar fox
02/2/2021
16:14
Mortgage debt will be sold on...banks never lose out!
jordaggy
02/2/2021
16:13
Psycho

There is more to the EU than UVdL. Stop being Silly Billy.

minerve 2
02/2/2021
16:12
How many mortgage defaults are there to be announced How much money have they had to put aside for defaults
portside1
02/2/2021
16:08
Reddit attack Short Funds so not Lloyds... They should attack the like of Tullow Oil and put Odey Asset Management out of Business once and for all! :-)
crazi
02/2/2021
16:07
There is absolutely nothing that woman (UVdL) would not say to shine a plausible reasonableness light on her previous decisions and actions. Does she care a jot that of those vaccinated in the U.K., likely around 40% would have had EU sympathies? (40% based upon the age cohort and its Brexit vote). I am allowing her to be angry with the other 60%!!

I am not sure how much they will be concerned since the veneer of truthfulness in her position is gold-leaf thin. Those 40% may have different opinions on Europe than myself and others here, but I am sure they are generally far from stupid. Nevertheless, some will once again be worried that people in high positions are calling into question their medical safety and whether or not their government cares for them.

These are the actions of an adversarial and hostile body. It’s so tempting to react, but time may prove to be the better weapon, especially if the U.K. makes a move to renegotiate the WA on the basis that it was not entered into in good faith. We are 32 days in, and the lack of good faith is apparent no matter which direction you care to look. This cannot be accidental and ultimately, it needs calling out. As I previously said, no one or nothing gets the benefit of a free option.

Ultimately, it will be for the benefit of all Europe that the current EU structure is not just modified, but entirely dismantled. I fear very much for its future and their peace if this does not come to pass.

psychochopper
02/2/2021
16:02
WE need the Reddit brigade on board!
jordaggy
02/2/2021
15:55
The share price got to 41p Intraday before. With a positive outlook you wonder WTH the share price is doing lingering around 34p...
crazi
02/2/2021
15:51
lefrene


Gove is a lot brighter than Doris by all accounts. Yet is hated by a fair number of tory mp's. Cant think why? Perhaps being a bit sneaky is the fault.

maxk
02/2/2021
15:47
I think Boris used to give Govey wedgies at oxford & kneel behind him when he wasnt looking so Cameron could push him over & give him nipple cripples.
utrickytrees
02/2/2021
15:46
hahahahahaha fk me

a comedian as well as a clown




Minerve 2
2 Feb '21 - 14:13 - 331076 of 331087
0 0 1
Now move along, you will not match Minerve as a private investor. :)

jkitwm
02/2/2021
15:37
It is really, really difficult to have sympathy for the fishermen.

Still, that's what happens when every challenge to Brexit was met with 'Project Fear' with no sensible or meaningful discussion.

They've been played I'm afraid.

minerve 2
02/2/2021
15:26
maxk, I suppose one has to look at who is hiding behind Doris' back, and when will they decide the moment is right to make a move. So there has to be an 'event' of some sort. The 'Deal' we were sold is plainly as bad or worse as going WTO. We were led to believe that we were getting a free trade deal, but the reality is that it's nothing of the sort, and who told HMRC to force those trading with us in Europe, to have to register for UK vat? My guess it'll be Gove perhaps with Liz Truss who who wields the knife, Gove seems rather brighter and more able than Boris.
lefrene
02/2/2021
14:55
How to get rid of Doris .. that is the question?
maxk
02/2/2021
14:46
The Lloyds share price experienced a rocky ride in the last 12 months, falling from pre-pandemic highs of 58p to lows of 23.98p. A rally at the end of 2020 has prompted analysts to consider the upside potential in Lloyds for 2021.


Daniel Smyth | Financial Writer, London | Publication date: Monday 01 February 2021 14:52

Dividend payments could return in 2021
Risk rating attached to Lloyds is reducing
What are the signs Lloyds has the funds to absorb losses?
The value of the Lloyds (LLOY.L) share price has pared some of the gains from the back end of 2020, falling from highs of 39.50p in November to 33p at the end of January. Nevertheless, there is renewed optimism for a more sustained rally in Lloyds shares for 2021, just a few weeks ahead of the bank’s full-year results for 2020.

With Lloyds set to publish the full picture of the effects of Covid-19 on its 2020 operations on 24 February, attention is already turning to what the outlook is for the UK’s largest retail bank.

Could Lloyds dividend return for shareholders in 2021?

Lloyds' last dividend – pre-pandemic – was 3.2p per share. Anything similar this year would therefore represent a much greater dividend yield, given that the Lloyds share price has almost halved.

In December 2020, the Bank of England’s (BoE’s) Prudential Regulation Authority enforced a temporary ban on dividend payments to the shareholders of the UK’s ‘big five’ banks, including Lloyds. That ban has since been lifted, prompting excitement among Lloyds shareholders.

Do risk factors appear to be diminishing for the Lloyds Banking Group?
Understandably, investors marked down the potential value of Lloyds assets based on the increasing default risks posed by the Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdowns. The threat of a no-deal Brexit was also looming large on the horizon. Fortunately, a Brexit trade deal was agreed upon, and the UK is forging ahead with its bold nationwide vaccination programme; which analysts believe to be positive signs for the Lloyds share price.

As evidence of this, both Barclays and Deutsche Bank have lifted their price targets for Lloyds in recent weeks. After their own shares rallied off the back of Covid-19 vaccine news early in December, Barclays analysts reported that Lloyds’ recovery promises to be ‘bumpy’ and that the ‘situation remains fluid’. Meanwhile, Deutsche Bank analysts anticipate that there are ‘brighter days ahead’ for the UK retail banking sector as a whole.

Lloyds also appears to have an encouraging risk profile for the year ahead. Its capital ratio, last recorded at the end of quarter three (Q3) of 2020, was 15.2%. As this represents the amount of capital the bank has access to absorb losses and continue to lend to customers, this illustrates quite a positive surge. The ratio is, surprisingly, up from 13.8% at the beginning of 2020.



From Bloomberg via IG.com

cobourg1
02/2/2021
14:30
5xy, I believe we have a 12 month 'get out' clause of the deal. Perhaps Boris (or his replacement) will grow a pair and enact it and just go WTO which is what most of us leavers wanted. The EUSSR reveals itself to be a fascist state, ie their way, and only their way, and we'll beat up anyone who differs.
lefrene
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