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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
28/2/2020
15:54
Shorts closing before the weekend giving us a little bounce. Hopefully it continues next week.
meek
28/2/2020
15:53
or Boris ?
bargainbob
28/2/2020
15:53
60p Soon !
chinese investor
28/2/2020
15:52
Had a few companies on my alert list if price hit a certain target. Had a few triggered today. One was triggered at £6 about a month ago when I was on holiday. I wasnt able to buy from abroad. It went to almost £8 at the start of this week. Now back to just below £6. Now I have the opportunity I don't have the bottle. There will be a turning point somewhere sometime. Anyone know the answers please !!
scruff1
28/2/2020
15:52
Anyone seen Pete ?
bargainbob
28/2/2020
15:46
Even the gods are against Brexit.. lol
k38
28/2/2020
15:45
World health organisation director-general on the risk of covin-19 spreading. "Very high at global level ""We should prepare for a economic growth downgrade"
k38
28/2/2020
15:29
for what some call a mealy flu virus.

Yes, some do (think it's less severe than the flu)

Mainly all the world's virology experts without exception.

pierre oreilly
28/2/2020
15:29
mm2They will not buy her books over there neither have money to donate.
k38
28/2/2020
15:17
Certainly do!
crossing_the_rubicon
28/2/2020
15:15
Thank you...but you get my drift...
diku
28/2/2020
15:14
Diku

"If it rains it is climate change...if it doesn't rain it is GLOBAL WARMING"


Corrected that for you! :)

crossing_the_rubicon
28/2/2020
15:12
Recently In India 7M people gathered to see Trump's beast .. not one infection I think they have other issues tho ..
pal44
28/2/2020
15:12
If it rains it is climate change...if it doesn't rain it is climate change...




k38
28 Feb '20 - 15:02 - 6775 of 6778
0   2  0



Clever... not!
Greta say what she has been told to say.. a lots of money to be made. She's been used.

diku
28/2/2020
15:09
Going to be an outcry if her gathering produces a clutch of COV19 in Bristol.
gbh2
28/2/2020
15:09
@Cel,

"As for covid 19, many have next to no symptoms at all but I expect the panic to continue, especially in this country as more without a doubt will be infected"

It spreads asymptomatically so plenty to be afraid of.

crossing_the_rubicon
28/2/2020
15:07
"diku28 Feb '20 - 15:02 - 294537 of 294541
CtR...maybe a blessing in disguise if absence of testing..."

No, definitely not.

Makes people complacent. And there is enough of that already.

700 million in lockdown China side for what some call a measly flu virus.
Totally disproportionate.

Look at what people do,not what they say.

crossing_the_rubicon
28/2/2020
15:05
"mikemichael228 Feb '20 - 14:59 - 294535 of 29"4537
Apparently a strong vindaloo kills it off!!!!"


Ah the Tumeric ploy

crossing_the_rubicon
28/2/2020
15:05
News today is dominated by preparedness fears surrounding the global corona virus threat. Meanwhile, reactions to the release of both EU and UK negotiating mandates are continuing to surface.UK rejects European Arrest Warrant: The UK government's negotiation mandate for upcoming talks with the European Union has made it clear that it no longer wants to be part of the European Arrest Warrant. The EAW makes it possible for European criminals to be arrested in the EU and sent back to their home country. The government will instead seek fast-track extradition arrangements in accordance with the precedent set by Norway and Iceland that they argue will have "extra safeguards as compared to what's currently in the EAW." 'Global Britain' takes hit on Heathrow expansion: The Court of Appeal has ruled that the £14 billion Heathrow expansion project was illegal, due to the government's inability to take into account its legal duty to tackle climate change. This groundbreaking decision impacts the UK's ability post-Brexit to carry out its vision of a 'Global Britain'. Former transport secretary Andrew Adonis said "The only winners from a refusal to expand Heathrow as agreed by Parliament two years ago will be other international hubs that will take the extra traffic, especially Amsterdam, Paris and Dubai." Former chancellor George Osborne also tweeted his frustration with the decision calling it "overreaching undemocratic judicial activism"Workers' rights Post-Brexit: Frances O'Grady, the TUC general secretary has said she would like to be kept in the loop on Brexit trade deals. O'Grady said she is kept plugged in by unions in Europe who pass information onto her that comes from European leaders. She has asked for a meeting with the Prime Minister but has heard nothing back. Boris Johnson has previously promised not to water down workers' rights after the UK leaves the EU, with 'enhanced standards' set to be enshrined in the new employment bill.Coronavirus impacts global economy: Coronavirus fears have seen global markets in free-fall, with the FTSE 100 opening 3.2 percent down today due to the uncertainty. This comes after the Bank of England governor Mark Carney said the UK should prepare for an economic downgrade as there is disruption to supply chains as a result of the virus.Regulatory innovation in tech for Britain: Brexit provides Britain with the perfect opportunity for UK tech companies to influence the next decade of policy-making in their industry. The UK could become the home of regulatory innovation in sectors such as artificial intelligence and blockchain. Dominic Cummings is no stranger to doing things differently as as a technology and innovation obsessive, this government could prove to be the one to take the UK tech industry into the future.On our site today: Our chairman, Shanker Singham, takes a look at the UK and EU negotiating mandates and compares the two. He analyses the key areas of contention and where there is potential for progress. Our second article comes from Pieter Cleppe, who represented Open Europe in Brussels from 2008 until 2020. He looks back on 15 years of the think tank in Europe.For the latest news and developments throughout the day, please do follow @GlobalVision_UK on Twitter.Thanks for reading, and enjoy the rest of your day.
xxxxxy
28/2/2020
15:05
I think some form of western governments or Central Banks action will come either this evening after Europe closes or Sunday evening before the far East markets open Monday morning...virus is doing some of Dow froth unwinding for them...
diku
28/2/2020
15:05
Oh FFS!

You cannot say that the death rate in Italy is 2.6% of those infected. It is such a mess in Northern Italy, as it is in Iran, that the number of infections is UNKNOWN.

To take the 2.6% and equate that to the UK population figures is a moron's game.

To make an accurate prediction of death rate you would need an accurate picture of the model you are referencing demographic - age range, general health, movement, health service availability/quality and its spread over time and then transfer that onto a similar model for the UK. You would also need to calculate latency between onset and death and include projections for vaccines and behavioural changes based on government policy and those within the home. This is not a very easy task and certainly is nothing like the BS posted above.

minerve 2
28/2/2020
15:04
The depression will see unemployment jump to near 28% around the globe.

The world has changed.

Mankind has no idea of what’s hitting them on a daily basis.

It’s here and now.

1 nhs
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