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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

52.18
0.12 (0.23%)
03 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
  0.12 0.23% 52.18 52.24 52.28 52.90 52.20 52.38 86,283,449 16:35:06
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.08 33.22B
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 52.06p. 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 £33.22 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.08.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
12/1/2019
14:56
fatnacker

I never made demands for another referendum. I actually don't want one. Quote me if I demanded another referendum.

Seems another person here can't read properly.

Brexit voters really are stupid, generally. Of course there are exceptions! ;)

minerve
12/1/2019
14:54
Minerve, stamping your feet and making demands for a second referendum on a financial bulletin board is quite frankly a childish notion at best, you'll note I put the words "hard brexit" in quotation marks, I didn't coin the phrase, brexit is brexit, brexit means we leave the Eu, why is that so hard for you to accept and understand? amusing though that you say I'm throwing my toys out of the pram and then threaten me with your none compliance in a fantasy second referendum, pmsl that is the funniest thing I've today, so far.
fatnacker
12/1/2019
14:33
I saw the debate last night on Channel 4 with John Snow and young Leeds students.
Their knowledge and grasp of the issues was impressive.
They seemed equally split between leave/remain.

careful
12/1/2019
14:28
Jacko07

I am prepared to accept a Soft-Brexit. I am a mature adult and realise a compromise is needed.

You want a Hard-Brexit. You are a child whose life hasn't gone the way you wanted. You throw your toys out of the pram and blame your life failings on others.

Spot the difference?

minerve
12/1/2019
14:26
I would hazard a guess that I am one of the highest achievers on this thread.

Who else has:

B Eng (Honours).
Previous employment within the R&D labs at two world leading companies.
3 executive directorships with one at a listed company.
Company secretary
Founded and run a charity
Founded a company that listed on the LSE.

I bet robwt doesn't come anywhere near that, idiot that he is.

minerve
12/1/2019
14:15
robwt

Obviously, you are not a high achiever! You can't even read a sentence or two properly! LOL

"Noticed how generally Brexit voters are not high achievers. Of course there are exceptions, but generally."

What does "of course there are exceptions" read to you?

minerve
12/1/2019
14:13
Newbank, thanks for the breakdown!
smurfy2001
12/1/2019
14:10
2/3 of Remainers are from poor backgrounds and education whom never mix with European people when the travel abroad and ofcorce have no idea how Brussels works. These people are brainwashed by the media lies and party politics.European people have nothing in common with Brussels bureaucrats. Brussels doom to fall but not before destroy euro_economies.
k38
12/1/2019
14:09
EUSSR is FAECES

LEAVE and WTO

xxxxxy
12/1/2019
13:55
Sociologists do try to categorise election groups.
White collar workers, C2's, Blue collar workers, graduates professional etc.

Socio economic groups, from upper class, upper middle, middle, etc etc.
It is a science. Income and occupations are important factors.

What we do know is that older voters were massively in favour of leaving, and younger voters were massively in favour of staying.

careful
12/1/2019
13:47
Noticed how generally Brexit voters are not high achievers.

Minerve...yesterday I could hardly believe it..just when you actually made a post that contained rationality, you confirm that it must have have happened when against all odds one of your active brain cells sparked into life momentariy.

You now say that 17.4 million Brexit voters low achievers. Although you are a light year away from being a high achiever, your warped little brain marks anyone who doesn't agree with you as a low achiever. You really are a moron.

LOL..Shame on the following low achievers, Sir James Dyson, Antony Bamford, Tim Martin, Digby Jones, Sir Jim Ratcliffe, Dame Helen Morrisey, Simon Wolfson, Peter Hargreaves, Peter Cruddas, Terence Adams, Patrick Barbour, Rees Mogg and I could go on and on and name thousands, millions who own fireside chairs with more personality than you.

You really are a piece of work.

robwt
12/1/2019
13:45
Tuesday's vote is just the starting gun.
Unless it goes through, that would be perfect.
The £ and the stock market would rocket.
Money is honest, no sentiment, it says it all.

If the vote goes down, as it probably will, then things get interesting.
The problem is too many groups will vote it down for opposite reasons.

The SNP vote it down hoping for a second referendum they hope to win.
Labour vote it down to create chaos that will lead to an election.
Hard line leavers vote it down to force a no deal Brexit.

May is right about one thing, if the hard line Brexiteers vote it down it could lead to a second referendum which could leave us in the EU.

careful
12/1/2019
13:28
Noticed how generally Brexit voters are not high achievers. Of course there are exceptions, but generally. I wonder if it is the engrained characteristic of blaming others for their failures that drove the Brexit vote? It would make an interesting dissertation for a university student - maybe for a foreign student over here in the UK on the wonderful Erasmus scheme.
minerve
12/1/2019
13:27
Well my opinion generally agrees with most business managers, other professionals in most professions, and at least 3/4 of parliament and the ROW, so if you believe it is an empty opinion it reflects more on you than I! ;)
minerve
12/1/2019
13:24
Minerve, take you medication and down with a few cans of Special Brew, yuor opinion is about as empty as the bottles and cans in your wheelie.
jacko07
12/1/2019
13:23
Noticed how generally Brexit voters are not high achievers. Of course there are exceptions, but generally. I wonder if it is the engrained characteristic of blaming others for their failures that drove the Brexit vote? It would make an interesting dissertation for a university student - maybe for a foreign student over here in the UK on the wonderful Erasmus scheme.
minerve
12/1/2019
13:21
You fail to understand that Cameron was unlikely to be able to change agreements made between 28 different countries.

Careful. The British people were never given te chance to vote for those agreements, they were given in to by Messrs Major, Blair and Brown. Eurosceptics shouted but no one listened, hence the state of our current situation. Where was the Democracy..it has never existed in Brussels.

Also, strange that you say that Cameron was unlikely to change agreements drawn up by Brussels, yet you as a Remainer are crying foul that although we knew excatly what was what was in the Referendum, 'Leave or Remain' you are all for a second one in an attempt to change the result.

Europe is a mess..wise up while you can.

jacko07
12/1/2019
13:20
"Which was a mistake" in your opinion and that of morons.
minerve
12/1/2019
13:19
Which was a mistake and why the referendum resulted in a rejection of freedom of movement amongst other things.
patientcapital
12/1/2019
13:10
Jacko
We, the UK government agreed to free movement, and many businessmen in this country still do.
We helped negotiate it and signed it into law.

You fail to understand that Cameron was unlikely to be able to change agreements made between 28 different countries.
Just think it through, do you think that every politician in 28 different countries who had an election to fight could go to the EU. and change laws that had been agreed after months of negotiation?

careful
12/1/2019
13:09
I'll read that later Jacko. It will cure my insomnia. :)
minerve
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