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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 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.42 | 0.71% | 59.40 | 59.40 | 59.44 | 59.44 | 58.74 | 59.14 | 101,774,775 | 16:29:53 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Commercial Banks, Nec | 23.74B | 5.46B | 0.0883 | 6.73 | 36.48B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
07/8/2020 08:06 | No but they should be condoned. Far to many of them. | mitchy | |
07/8/2020 08:01 | She would probably finish him off with his weak immunity. | mikemichael2 | |
07/8/2020 07:55 | Any you think security breaches and IP theft by Chinese should be condoned do you? | geckotheglorious | |
07/8/2020 07:34 | FTSE set to slide after Trump moves to ban Chinese apps live updates ... Daily Telegraph | xxxxxy | |
07/8/2020 07:13 | The Planning White Paper the faults of the current systemBy JOHNREDWOOD | xxxxxy | |
07/8/2020 06:01 | Helping the UK on its path to recovery: Lloyds Banking Group launches The Big Conversation 06 August 2020 Lloyds Banking Group CEO, António Horta-Osório, announces plans for meaningful conversations about economic and social recovery across the UK’s nations and regions. Findings to be used to support businesses with their recovery, help communities rebuild and inform recommendations for public policy, with the ultimate aim of building back better. Business and industry leaders, community members, political representatives and expert voices across the UK’s nations and regions will participate in conversations about the road to recovery from the economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic as part of an ambitious grassroots programme being launched by Lloyds Banking Group this summer. As part of The Big Conversation: Helping Britain Recover, Lloyds Banking Group will run a series of virtual events, initially focusing on small and medium-sized businesses, bringing together local and regional voices to explore the best road to recovery for their region. The series, beginning in September, will consider the challenges, opportunities and critical areas of support needed to help rebuild businesses and communities and inform recommendations for public policy. Findings will be shared across the UK’s nations and regions later this year. The need for local recovery While all areas of the country have been affected by the coronavirus pandemic, different parts of the UK will inevitably face different challenges in recovery. In a study commissioned by Lloyds Banking Group in partnership with YouGov, 72% of leaders of small and medium-sized business stated that they think it’s important that economic recovery plans should be tailored to the local needs of each region. Three quarters (75%) said that it’s important for recovery plans to be tailored to meet the unique needs of different business sizes, while more than eight in ten (81%) said that it’s important for government plans for economic recovery to be tailored to the unique needs of different sectors. Convening expert voices The Group will partner with the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), whose representatives will bring the experiences of its 190,000 members to the events across Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and the English regions. The Group is also proud to partner with the CBI on a new report focused on what's needed to level up the English regions. António Horta-Osório, CEO of Lloyds Banking Group, said: “The UK is starting to get back on its feet, but the difficult task of rebuilding businesses and the economy lies ahead. “Our regions and nations have been affected by the coronavirus pandemic in different ways, and our knowledge of regions, sectors and businesses throughout the UK tells us that there is no one-size-fits-all approach to recovery. Lloyds Banking Group is here to help the UK weather this storm and, importantly, The Big Conversation: Helping Britain Recover will bring together key voices from across these regions, sectors and businesses to get to the heart of the issues that matter and encourage true collaboration along the road to recovery.” Dame Carolyn Fairbairn, CBI Director-General, said: “If the UK is to truly build back better from the sharp hit the country has taken from COVID-19, then we must work from the ground up. “Local communities have an integral part to play in how our villages, towns and cities recover, helping to ensure that opportunities for people can be both protected and created in the future. The Big Conversation: Helping Britain Recover from Lloyds Banking Group can provide that platform for local voices within communities to help get the economy back on its feet as soon as we can.” | freddie01 | |
07/8/2020 05:36 | Has he increased his hours? | scruff1 | |
06/8/2020 23:25 | Boris the part-time PM. | minerve 2 | |
06/8/2020 23:24 | More than Boris is doing. | minerve 2 | |
06/8/2020 23:16 | Well the DOW certainly sprinted up on employment figures so 29p - 30p but that would be in a 'normal' market. At the start of the week I would have written the script for lloy as a bounce to 28.5p with retrace to 25p - 26p before going sideways perhaps with an err to the down side. However here we sit circa 28p at the end of the week and the DOW looking perky so i'm guessing one last push to 30p - 30.5p before retrace to 26p - 27p next week. All of the above based around a thorough in depth analysis of my crystal ball. Thank me later. Good Luck. | mitchy | |
06/8/2020 23:13 | Thats more like it. | maxk | |
06/8/2020 23:11 | Or publicity boost for French President... | diku | |
06/8/2020 23:09 | Lebanon has no leaders. | maxk | |
06/8/2020 23:07 | Not sure why The French President has to visit Lebanon blast so quickly...doesn't that undermine Lebanon leaders?... | diku | |
06/8/2020 22:46 | Indeed cheshire pete. It is some very strange "Conservative" governments we have had lately, squeezing the middle classes until the pips squeak. | grahamite2 | |
06/8/2020 21:02 | Tory Governments far far tougher on landlords than labour ever were, the latter not realising what a good wheeze it was and some labour MPs landlords too btw. | cheshire pete | |
06/8/2020 20:55 | Mr Jenrick’s efforts to promote the new policy were complicated by his recent involvement in a planning controversy in which he pushed through approval for a £1bn development in London’s Docklands after lobbying by the project’s billionaire backer Richard Desmond. Cronyism is alive and well. | minerve 2 | |
06/8/2020 20:44 | Where do the Tories get their cash from? Putin cronies, property developers and city spivs. The result? Brexit, ripping up the planning regime and keeping the London money laundry fully operational. Treachery essentially. | minerve 2 | |
06/8/2020 20:43 | Anti-democratic bureaucratic corruption-friendly “reforms” Take Back Control indeed. | minerve 2 |
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