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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

55.36
0.42 (0.76%)
Last Updated: 11:46:01
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
  0.42 0.76% 55.36 55.36 55.40 55.68 55.22 55.52 25,846,279 11:46:01
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.44 35.15B
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 54.94p. 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 £35.15 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.44.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 309251 to 309275 of 429650 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
14/4/2020
19:07
It's all non cash. Invented money has not been generated but merely created. It seems to be fooling the markets.At some point, a string of huge bills will become due, at which point those without chairs will be left standing. Fortunately, post the financial crash the UK made unpopular fiscal choices which should mean that she will at least have a seat when the music stops.Elsewhere the situation will be far less harmoniously resolved.
patientcapital
14/4/2020
18:44
xy
Of course UK produce is what we want - but could not entertain that under EU regs.
Who made farmers turn their land to farrow - who stopped the MMB Milk marketing board- EU
Who destroyed anything that did not come from their dictum.
Sad - but some ppl still think the stink of the EU is their preference - Tony B Liar the front runner -

jl5006
14/4/2020
18:38
Perhaps when they see a 5G mast, they imagine it to be an image of you. Could drive even a decent person insane.
psychochopper
14/4/2020
18:30
So the gammons are attacking 5G masts, probably all Brexiters.

This country is full of idiots.

minerve 2
14/4/2020
18:09
CtR , in a way it might be a blessing, the temperature shouldnt affect it, so it might reduce the risk of an Autumn increase, will have to wait and see.
aljm
14/4/2020
18:03
Take the warning. From China and it's aftermath. Home product and produce First.No Deal
xxxxxy
14/4/2020
18:01
Also secure fisheries and agriculture and produce of UK First.NO DEAL
xxxxxy
14/4/2020
17:59
Relative values of European fishing industries – and deciding what matters to usApril 14, 2020By Neil StrattonAN EARLIER ARTICLE in this series, The Twenty-Seven Musketeers, pointed out that only eight of the EU's twenty-seven remaining members actually fish in UK waters and that since those eight differed in – the tonnages landed from the UK Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ); in the proportion of their catch they landed from UK waters; and, how important to their domestic economies the fishing industry and its landings from the UK EEZ are – so might they differ in the importance they attached to fishing in the coming negotiations.In the previous article the tonnages landed were used as a measure of the size of the fishing industry or the significance of landings from the UK EEZ, and these were compared with GDP as a measure of the size of an economy. However, the various national fleets fishing in the NE Atlantic do not just differ in the overall tonnage they land or where they land it from but in the tonnages of the individual species that they land and these species in turn differ in value. Therefore, Table 1 below repeats a table from the previous article but instead of tonnage measures landings in terms of their first sale values [1].Table 1: Value of 'EU' landings from UK EEZ and NE Atlantic as a proportion of GDPFull articlehtTps://www.brexit-watch.org/relative-values-of-european-fishing-industries-and-deciding-what-matters-to-us
xxxxxy
14/4/2020
17:48
you can let the country go bankrupt when the plan is to blame it ALL on Boris and Trump
mr.elbee
14/4/2020
17:46
@mike,
Indeed. Not in Spain and Italy.

Nor Qatar. Not Bahrain. Nor Saudi.

Nor India.

It is spreading and whilst temperature/humidity is a mitigating factor, the summer will not see this end unfortunately..

crossing_the_rubicon
14/4/2020
17:42
He certainly is!!!

'the weather will do the rest when people are let out'

I think you will find 'the weather' didn't help Spain and Italy

mikemichael2
14/4/2020
17:36
No, the numbers for all the currency groups are enormous. Some are actual cash, some like the £330bn package are non-cash (guarantees).
All countries are in the deep sh-t - who will be the less weak?
Much too early to say.

alphorn
14/4/2020
17:24
Alp..is that a fudge response?...
diku
14/4/2020
17:11
"mr.elbee14 Apr '20 - 08:56 - 9106 of 9129
the lockdown was not to and will not deal with Corona"

Oh dear, you're spouting drivel from the off.


"It was to get the markets up..the weather will do the rest when people are let out"

There is no evidence that summer will be an ameliorating factor fyi.
It is spreading in warm climates already - not as fast,but spreading nonetheless.


"This is a mild flu ..a gigantic hoax. every epidemiolgist over sixty says this.."

False.
And you're an idiot if you think this is a mild flu.

crossing_the_rubicon
14/4/2020
17:05
Or Barrick, IGLN & SPGP :)I also have a holding in Avacta. Pity it took a ghastly event such as the world is currently witnessing but one can't grumble with its recent performance.
patientcapital
14/4/2020
16:55
Italy don't want it , if they take it they will get a Troika running the country once they get out of the pandemic, (if they ever do).

Its the defining moment for the Euro and the EU, shared debt or not..

hernando2
14/4/2020
16:43
diku - Are you a born worrier?
alphorn
14/4/2020
16:37
Should have invested in Purp, PFG and Capita.

ROFLMAO!

minerve 2
14/4/2020
16:37
Your savings are going down the plughole.
Your savings are going down the plughole.
Your savings are going down the plughole.
Your savings are going down the plughole.

minerve 2
14/4/2020
16:24
Is the 500bln euro EU rescue package really enough?...more than half Italy will probably gobble it...not much left for Spain?...and the rest?...
diku
14/4/2020
16:23
Is the 500bln euro EU rescue package really enough?...more than half Italy will probably gobble it...not much left for Spain?...and the rest?...
diku
14/4/2020
15:42
Theories all well and good Mr Javid - but we cant let the country go bankrupt in terms of jobs and people by maintaining this semi lockdown for very much longer.
Once businesses go down the pan there is no way out of negative equity.

jl5006
14/4/2020
14:51
Whatever happened to MRSA
That was a horror story infecting hospitals

Don't hear of it anymore...

ignoble
14/4/2020
14:39
EU bailout feud far from over: The EU's emergency financial plan to combat the effects of Covid-19 has collapsed days after it was agreed. Over the weekend, Giuseppe Conte took aim at the EU and its leaders saying he would block next week's EU video summit unless the bloc agreed to take a big step towards debt mutualisation. He said, "we will fight for eurobonds" and that "the ESM is a totally inadequate and improper instrument for the emergency we are facing." The bailout fund threatens to deepen the North-South divide in the EU and could mean, as the Mayor of Stazzema in Tuscany points out in his letter to Angela Merkel: "The next victim of Covid-19 will be Europe unless there is more solidarity between states."
k38
14/4/2020
14:30
?UK lockdown set to be extended into May as SAGE review its impact. Meanwhile, as care homes face Covid crisis, British companies work to keep PPE stocks replenished. No let up on the lockdown: The government is insisting the lockdown measures are working but stressed they must continue for the foreseeable future until we are certain we have reached the peak. This comes after increased concern over the economic impact of the measures. Yesterday France announced it will be extending the lockdown period and the British government has also made it clear now is not the time to ease up.Countries are beginning to consider relaxing measures for certain parts of the economy as they put together plans for an exit strategy, with some reports suggesting the list of shops that are allowed to be open could be extended as well as schools being reopened. We are still far from that as yet and SAGE will hold a video conference later today to assess the latest data and review the lockdown as they prepare to extend the current measures into May. Therese Coffey, the work and pensions secretary,  has told Sky News "this isn't going to be over in weeks, it will take months," revealing figures that show up to 1.4 million people have claimed universal credit but stressing that the department is capable of managing those claims. Covid in our care homes: Figures from five other European countries suggest that care  home residents have accounted for between 42% and 57% of all Covid-19 related deaths. This casts doubt over the accuracy of the official UK figures that fail to account for deaths outside hospital settings. The Office of National Statistics suggests that the total number of deaths up to the 3rd of April was 10% more than the government figures which only included hospital deaths. Professor Chris Whitty confirmed people's fears over the extent of the outbreak in care homes last night when he revealed 13.5% of the UK's care homes had at least one confirmed case. The charity director of Age UK, Caroline Abrahams, has suggested this is down to a lack of PPE and adequate testing in homes.Crowdsourced 3D printing initiative is supplying the frontline: The UK's 3D printing firms have had orders for hundreds of thousands of pieces of PPE in an effort to keep hospital supplies topped up after accusations that some hospitals were running dangerously low. The government has insisted that there is enough PPE but a crowdsourced 3D printing initiative, 3DCrowd UK, have pooled their resources to scale up production of face masks and other equipment for the NHS. Barbour repurposes factories to produce PPE: British fashion brand Barbour has repurposed its supply line to turn out 100,000 face masks a week. NHS staff have praised the efforts, noting the quality of the gowns being produced by the company. Company chairman, Dame Margaret Barbour has said "everyone has a role to play in fighting COVID-19," also stressing the importance of British companies helping in times of crisis like it has in both the World Wars. Louis Vuitton became the latest fashion brand to commit its factories to the production of PPE.EU bailout feud far from over: The EU's emergency financial plan to combat the effects of Covid-19 has collapsed days after it was agreed. Over the weekend, Giuseppe Conte took aim at the EU and its leaders saying he would block next week's EU video summit unless the bloc agreed to take a big step towards debt mutualisation. He said, "we will fight for eurobonds" and that "the ESM is a totally inadequate and improper instrument for the emergency we are facing." The bailout fund threatens to deepen the North-South divide in the EU and could mean, as the Mayor of Stazzema in Tuscany points out in his letter to Angela Merkel: "The next victim of Covid-19 will be Europe unless there is more solidarity between states."Economic revival rests on free markets: Sajid Javid has written an article in the Times stressing the importance of a free enterprise economy to create jobs and wealth to properly fund our public services post coronavirus. He praised the government and more specifically Rishi Sunak for his decisiveness during the crisis and said he will be working with the Centre for Policy Studies think tank to help arm the government with ideas on a speedy economic recovery. With economic pressure mounting on countries due to Covid-19, lockdowns will be relaxed and Javid argues we must resist calls to abandon our free-enterprise, free-trade economic model. On our site today: Today's article comes from Adrian Hill, who served with Her Majesty's Diplomatic Service for almost 30 years. His article criticises China and its ruling communist party for its handling of the pandemic. You can read the full article here.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
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