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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

54.74
-1.34 (-2.39%)
28 Jun 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
  -1.34 -2.39% 54.74 54.88 54.92 56.56 54.28 56.38 202,108,354 16:35:15
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.39 34.87B
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 56.08p. 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 £34.87 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.39.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 313876 to 313892 of 429500 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
21/5/2020
11:00
gnr - it was a straight question - you opened original positions at 1.36 and today is 1.11. What would you do? Take the gains because you believe that No Deal will be a success or still hold? Real positions; the only way to focus beliefs.
alphorn
21/5/2020
10:57
Bailey is no more than a clown he as failed on all is jobs He only gets them via friends in the club
portside1
21/5/2020
10:54
No Brexit trade deal odds shortening.

..................................................................................

Bring it on. I think we need to be completely clear of European influence so that we can take whatever action is needed to stimulate our economy without the EEC moaning that we are acting unfairly and violating their bureaucratic rules.

As a sovereign nation we have the ability to borrow money internationally and to print it ourselves if necessary. Not ideal I know, but the USA is printing money like there is no tomorrow.

There is no good way out of this crisis as far as I can see. However, long-term I would rather we stand on our own two feet and act in our own interests

cobourg1
21/5/2020
10:50
It would be worth the drop to 15p to come out of the EU with no deal.
gaffer73
21/5/2020
10:41
CPI was 0.8 yesterday (Apr figure). Down from 1.5% (Mar fig). Quite a fall!
m4rtinu
21/5/2020
10:36
No Brexit trade deal odds shortening.
Good chance Lloyds May get to 15p?

smartie6
21/5/2020
10:34
The Governor of the BOE has previously stated that negative interest rates had been considered but had been rejected because of the detrimental effects on the banks.

Negative interest rates are used to combat severe deflation, to force lending and spending. I don't think we know at this stage whether we will have severe deflation or not. Negative interest rates may well be coming but I don't think we will get them for some time. Also it is by no means certain that they will have the desired effect.

Things should be clearer in the Autumn.

cobourg1
21/5/2020
10:26
The answer is in the last para...to get some attention...





The reality for most of us is there's no access to the gyms and beauty treatments we might usually rely on.

And this can leave people with a totally different image of themselves.

Katy, 23, tells Radio 1 Newsbeat that it's taken time to get used to being without the fillers, nails and lash extensions she usually has.

She says lockdown has made her think about why she gets some treatments done in the first place.

"Over this time period, you've got a lot of time to yourself, it makes you think," Katy says.

"Why am I actually doing this - is it for me? Is it because I feel like I have to look good to other people? What is it I am actually doing it for?"

diku
21/5/2020
10:09
gnr - great news - I have run GBP down since early 2016. So with your prediction how low will GBP get and IYO when should anyone reverse their positions? A real question and real positions.
alphorn
21/5/2020
10:09
"ACTION 20 May '20 - 21:17 - 9851 of 986

Zero % interest rate coming to USA. how bank can make money?"
-‐--------
It's all about margin between cost of funds and rate at which it is lent out.

Base / savings rate 5% loans cost 10% margin = 5% margin. Base / savings rate 0% loans cost 5% = same 5% margin.

But if rates go negative banks will struggle to pass on negative rates to savers so, if lending rates then fall (especially on base rate linked loans where the bank was stupid enough NOT to add a collar to the base rate which says subject to minimum 0%) the margin is eroded.

The margin after costs is very small (sub 2%) so not much wriggle room...

dexdringle
21/5/2020
10:02
Damned if they do and damned if they don't there, max, as usual.
poikka
21/5/2020
10:02
David Frost told the Frenchman an extension is not on the cards. Au revoir !
The Royal Navy's UK Fishery Protection Squadron are preparing for skirmishes in our waters in 2021

gotnorolex
21/5/2020
09:04
Exclusive: Virus fading in London as major hospitals report no deaths in 48 hours

However, Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden ruled out regional variation in easing lockdown with the intention to move 'as a whole nation'

By
Sarah Knapton,
SCIENCE EDITOR ;
Tony Diver
and
Danielle Sheridan,
POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT
21 May 2020 • 7:52am

maxk
21/5/2020
09:00
Poik., don't spoil the narrative.
patientcapital
21/5/2020
08:54
Oink oink ..




Exclusive: peer 'milking' taxpayer by furloughing himself and claiming Lords allowance

Lord Fox, who owns two homes worth more than £2 million, is the first Parliamentarian known to use wage subsidy scheme to pay himself

By
Anna Mikhailova,
DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR
20 May 2020 • 9:00pm



A frontbench peer has furloughed himself despite having a £100,000 cash pot in his company and claiming the daily House of Lords allowance during lockdown, The Telegraph can reveal.

Lord Fox, who owns two homes worth more than £2 million, is the first Parliamentarian known to use the Government's wage subsidy scheme to pay himself.

The 62-year-old Liberal Democrat frontbench spokesman for business is the owner and sole employee of Vulpes Advisory, a "strategic communications" company.

His decision to double dip into the taxpayers' pocket was criticised as "milking the taxpayer" by MPs, who said on Wednesday that he should pay the money back.

The peer has chosen to take the £162 daily allowance for his work in the Lords, which is being conducted by Zoom during the lockdown....

maxk
21/5/2020
08:34
"U.S.-China tensions have spiked in recent weeks, with Pompeo and President Donald Trump slamming Beijing’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak, in which the United States has been hardest hit.

“This plague has cost roughly 90,000 American lives, more than 36 million Americans have lost their jobs since March; globally 300,000 lives. Could be as much as $9 trillion, according to our estimates, cost imposition on the world of the Chinese Communist Party’s failures,” Pompeo said."

Right on there, Pompeo. HK has special US economic status as being autonomous which has helped it become a financial centre. That could easily change, probably to the benefit of Singapore.

poikka
21/5/2020
08:27
BOE governor talking about negative int rate anger banking stocks are steady as well as Gold . Very weird.
action
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