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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 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.80 | 1.37% | 59.08 | 59.06 | 59.10 | 59.08 | 58.10 | 58.12 | 35,940,818 | 10:43:44 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Commercial Banks, Nec | 23.74B | 5.46B | 0.0859 | 6.85 | 37.05B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
04/7/2019 09:42 | Comrade Corbyn is doing a great job.. Poll puts Labour support at historic low amid Brexit flip-flopping and anti-Semitism row Telegraph Reporters 4 JULY 2019 • 8:31AM Support for the Labour Party has fallen to a historic low, with just one in five voters prepared to back the party in a general election, a poll reveals. Jeremy Corbyn's party has polled fourth in a YouGov survey published yesterday, with just 18 per cent of voters indicating they would vote Labour if an election were held today. The party generated 18 per cent support only once previously in 2009 under Gordon Brown's leadership, its lowest level since polling began. The poll published in The Times today shows a two-point drop in support for Labour since last week, indicating an aversion by voters to the party’s unclear Brexit stance and its handling of anti-Semitism claims. More: | maxk | |
04/7/2019 09:40 | Smells of a Northern Rock repeat to me.. | crossing_the_rubicon | |
04/7/2019 09:34 | Could Corbyn put spanner in the works by stepping down in September...seeking delay 31 Oct deadline...time to elect new labour leader... | diku | |
04/7/2019 09:26 | Good rant Min, keep it up :-) | maxk | |
04/7/2019 09:23 | Youth have no respect for Tory party members. Scum. | minerve 2 | |
04/7/2019 09:01 | The north of England faces “massive” Henri Murison, director of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership, chaired by former chancellor George Osborne, said he believed that some money spent by the EU in deprived areas would be reallocated to other parts of the country by Westminster. FT | minerve 2 | |
04/7/2019 09:00 | It's a good read tho. But of course there is nothing about what it would do to the other side. Small snippet: The mitigation payments to farmers proposed by Hunt are illegal. Sorting out new arrangements, which will be on EU terms, could take years. Illegal by who's laws? Sovereign countries can do what they like. | maxk | |
04/7/2019 08:53 | Project fear on steroids. | willoicc | |
04/7/2019 08:53 | maxk 4 Jul '19 - 08:41 - 263558 of 263558 LOL Excellent thats going to upset some, even though its only might happen fiction will it happen, could it happen, nah what are the ODDS | adrian j boris | |
04/7/2019 08:28 | This is the question I asked here few weeks ago...does the PM have the sole authority to go for a no Deal? if all other deals are exhausted...or the same old story of vote of the vote of the vote...mathematical tactical voting...all markets are inter linked so if UK goes down then rest of western/EU markets go down as well...as usual the 11th hour deal will be done... careful3 Jul '19 - 22:25 - 263552 of 263555 0 0 0 When I said no deal would cause chaos, I meant political chaos. Will parliament allow it to happen without some sort of vote? | diku | |
04/7/2019 08:26 | Labour Party falls into fourth place in new opinion poll The Conservatives have climbed two points to 24% while the Brexit Party is on 23% and the Liberal Democrats have 20%. | freddie01 | |
03/7/2019 23:44 | Careful, when you decide to leave your Bingo club, are you going to pay for all the projects the bingo hall has planned for the next 20 years? If you decide to cancel your meals on wheels service, in 20 years time do you expect to still be paying for the meat and potatoes they order from their suppliers? | shy tott | |
03/7/2019 23:39 | Careful, for months you have been saying that no deal was not possible because 'the gov won't allow it'. Now you appear to say no deal is possible if there's some sort of vote. As many have tried to tell you over the months - totally unsuccessfully - atm Brexit will happen by default. If nothing else happens, Brexit will happen. At least you appear to half accept that after months of people correcting you. What suddenly made you open one eye? Things are as they are, not as you would obviously like them to be. And you go on about 'duffer brexiteers' or similar. You really are typical of most remoaners on here - no idea at all, yet accuse others of being ill informed/stupid. It really beggars belief. | shy tott | |
03/7/2019 22:25 | When I said no deal would cause chaos, I meant political chaos. Will parliament allow it to happen without some sort of vote? We have been here before, and I know some cling to the belief that leaving is the simple default position that will happen automatically, as the date passes.(as March 29th did) As for the long term effects of no deal none of us really knows. Most remainers think that the UK has benefited from being in the EU. so why change? How we get on after a no deal Brexit, after we refuse to pay our contribution to previously signed off EU. budgets it could cause a sort of trade war with our closest and most important trading partner. Both sides could suffer and things could get out of hand. Farage and his hate parties, UKIP/BREXIT national front types will love the disruption. | careful | |
03/7/2019 22:24 | bob...Bob found himself caught between a rock and a hard plaice photo... | diku | |
03/7/2019 21:55 | We need a real no deal plan urgently | xxxxxy | |
03/7/2019 21:55 | Waldron - "weakens UK AND EU to the advantage of USA and RUSSIA" But you don't back it up. It's the EU, or rather the latest version of it, that is the problem. If the EU was so brilliant, we wouldn't be wanting out. You and your sycophantic followers still don't get that most simple of facts. It's entirely up to the EU whether they're weakened or not by our departure. If they do the sensible thing and come to a mutually acceptable agreement with us, then no-one loses. As for the loss of our contributions, this should be an opportunity to put their house on a better financial footing - loss of income, trim your sails. | poikka | |
03/7/2019 21:54 | Diku what you on about ? | bargainbob |
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