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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

55.34
-0.74 (-1.32%)
Last Updated: 12:23:08
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
  -0.74 -1.32% 55.34 55.32 55.36 56.56 55.34 56.38 55,081,468 12:23:08
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.50 35.47B
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 £35.46 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.49.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 326576 to 326596 of 429400 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
15/9/2020
10:08
Would that be Bill Cash the dinosaur right honourable gentleman of the 18th century?

LOL!

minerve 2
15/9/2020
10:07
Talking of hypocrisy:

The Daily Mirror takes aim at England's social distancing guidelines, as the new "rule of six" banning gatherings of more than six people came into force. The paper points out that grouse hunting is on the list of sports exempt from the rule. It quotes one Tory MP as saying the exemption shows the government's "topsy-turvy prioritisation" in its rules.

minerve 2
15/9/2020
10:03
Bill Cash, a short piece from yesterday, that spells out with clarity the hypocrisy of the behaviours of the EU.
lefrene
15/9/2020
09:59
$1.28?

LOL

I bought my property in Florida at 2$ cable.

Idiot you are Gecko.

minerve 2
15/9/2020
09:37
All those Remainer "Currency experts" must have their pens poised as cable is at $1.28 odd.
geckotheglorious
15/9/2020
09:37
Surprise surprise...




JP Morgan Shocked Young People Who Work From Home Are Less Productive


by Tyler Durden
Mon, 09/14/2020 - 20:20



JP Morgan was apparently surprised to discover that across its business lines, employees experienced a noticable decline in productivity during the last six months, as the world's corporate office workers retreated to their work-from-home 'rona rigs. The bank recently told its traders to report back to the office as the bank becomes the first Wall Street player to start recalling employees to the office, staking out a position opposite Google and the rest of 'Big Tech', which has (at least, publicly) embraced the 'work from home lifestyle'.

maxk
15/9/2020
09:33
That must be a relief to them can't be doing without now.... ride the gravy train.....
arjun
15/9/2020
09:26
Yet another day in the doldrums but on a positive note the share price will not adversely affect António's pay and perks!
gbh2
15/9/2020
09:17
Parliament vote and unemployment weight, this am ?
arjun
15/9/2020
09:13
Morning all,As you were, that was short lived...
arjun
15/9/2020
08:38
UK soft touch Country...when these guys cross all the Countries in between there must an arrow direction pole in each of these Countries pointing which way to UK...and obviously the distance in kilometres...






If the EU stick to international agreements how come so many refugees which should be accepted at the first safe country seem to cross the whole of Europe and settle in the UK. Cant remember who said it but 'Ive got my principles but I can always change them if you dont like them' One of the Marx brothers maybe

diku
15/9/2020
08:37
They can't see it Joe: the EU wants to break up the UK. Divide and rule, infrastructure bungs...you'll never see a clearer example. EU have of course been encouraged by the gobby SNP despite the clear indy ref result.
cheshire pete
15/9/2020
08:35
Keith Calder15 Sep 2020 8:13AMWhat is debt deflation anyway?Well, first of all load your economy up with debt until you get a financial crisis.At 25.30 mins you can see the super imposed private debt-to-GDP ratios.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vAStZJCKmbU&list=PLmtuEaMvhDZZQLxg24CAiFgZYldtoCR-R&index=6Economies fill up with private debt until they get a financial crisis.1929 – US1991 – Japan2008 – US, UK and Euro-zoneThe PBoC saw the Chinese Minsky Moment coming and you can too by looking at the chart above.Now you've got debt deflation.Debt repayments to banks destroy money, this is the problem.https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/-/media/boe/files/quarterly-bulletin/2014/money-creation-in-the-modern-economy.pdfJapan has been fighting debt deflation since 1991.The UK has been fighting debt deflation since 2008, but our policymakers can't see the problem.Why can't our policymakers see what is going on?This is why our experts put Japan's problems down to demographics; they couldn't understand the real problem.How does Ben Bernanke convince himself debt doesn't matter?Ben Bernanke is famous for his study of the Great Depression and here it is discussed in the Wall Street Journal.https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB113392265577715881"Theoretically, neither deflation nor inflation ought to affect long-run growth or employment. After a while, people and businesses get used to changing prices. If prices fall, eventually so will wages, and the impact on profits, employment and purchasing power will be neutral. Borrowers suffer during deflation because their debts are fixed in value, but creditors benefit because the dollars they get back will buy more. For the economy as a whole, deflation ought to be a wash."What has Ben Bernanke got wrong?He thinks banks are financial intermediaries and there was no way he could understand the debt deflation of the Great Depression.Policymakers can convince themselves "debt doesn't matter", as it doesn't appear to if banks are financial intermediaries, but they aren't.God only knows where they got the idea that banks were financial intermediaries, but this is what they think, so they can't understand debt deflation.LikeReplyfrank davidson15 Sep 2020 8:33AMInterestiing, good stuff, however, wages do not alway fall as you suggest. The public sector, at best, stay the same. Interestingly the top rate for a nurse is more than £105,000
xxxxxy
15/9/2020
08:18
They're prepared to see food supplies to Northern Ireland stopped

And head in the sand remoaners want to align with these self centered buffoons - they could always grab the dinghy at dover and sail back - after all they'll be allowed in/through without a passport

joe say
15/9/2020
08:15
If the EU stick to international agreements how come so many refugees which should be accepted at the first safe country seem to cross the whole of Europe and settle in the UK. Cant remember who said it but 'Ive got my principles but I can always change them if you dont like them' One of the Marx brothers maybe
scruff1
15/9/2020
08:03
Jacko 07:
"It is amazing that as usual the UK are being pilloried for reneging on a deal when it is par for the course for Europe to do it. They have been doing it ever since we joined the common market. Thatcher was the only PM to stand up to their little tricks, John Major would have dropped his trousers and bent down after giving them a jar of vaseline!!!

They move the goalposts all the time, good old Boris, stand your ground and let them know that the UK is no longer the mealy mouthed country it was with Blair and Major, now is the time!"


Well said Jacko. Boris played a blinder...giant compared with Blair, Major, Brown and May.

cheshire pete
15/9/2020
07:35
No symptomatic virus patient admitted overnight...and no virus patients death in last 3.5 months...only had 8 symptomatic cases in my ward.. all done well with simple treatment and went home..once in a life time opportunity to buy lloy and double the money in 1 year time frame from this level
covid 19 deal
15/9/2020
07:33
SovereigntyBy JOHNREDWOOD | Published: SEPTEMBER 15, 2020We voted for Brexit to take back control. Brexit voters wish to live in a free self governing independent country. Remain politicians thought the vote should be about trade. They wrongly asserted we would definitely be better off in and thought that was all that mattered.I have always thought sovereignty mattered more. I also think that we can follow policies that increase our prosperity once we restore our full powers of self government.I have set out at some length how we can be better off out. I can no more guarantee that than Remain politicians can guarantee greater income if we stay in. It will depend on how we use our freedoms and how the EU use theirs.The Remain politicians have used a variety of ploys and devices to try to delay, dilute or prevent our exit. One of their first was the court case to prevent Ministers sending in our notice to quit without further Parliamentary processes, despite the clear referendum vote. The Miller case produced a useful defence of Parliamentary sovereignty in the verdict. I had always urged Mrs May to hold a Parliamentary vote on a one clause Bill to speed us up and was not surprised by the Court decision, even though it was clearly a delaying tactic.The Judges said"This is because Parliamentary sovereignty is a fundamental principle of the UK constitution, as was conclusively established in the statutes referred to in para 41 above. It was famously summarised by Professor Dicey as meaning that Parliament has "the right to make or unmake any law whatsoever; and further, no person or body is recognised by the law as having a right to override or set aside the legislation of Parliament" – op cit, p 38. The legislative power of the Crown is today exercisable only through Parliament. This power is initiated by the laying of a Bill containing a proposed law before Parliament, and the Bill can only become a statute if it is passed (often with amendments) by Parliament (which normally but not always means both Houses of Parliament) and is then formally assented to by HM The Queen. Thus, Parliament, or more precisely the Crown in Parliament, lays down the law through statutes – or primary legislation as it is also known – and not in any other way "This is now very helpful to the cause of Parliament legislating to sort out our border, customs and trade issues for the UK, notwithstanding the EU's view of the Withdrawal Agreement. The Withdrawal Agreement is only the law because of the Act of Parliament that brings it into UK law. The UK Parliament is therefore free to amend it as it sees fit.There are those who still seem to think it would be bad faith for the UK to exercise its sovereign powers in this way, and claim it is a breach of international law to do so. This Agreement between the UK and the EU is not some world law enforced by some world court. It is an international Agreement where the two sides disagree about its meaning and each claim bad faith about the other. Such disputes have to be sorted out between the two parties. This dispute could still be sorted by negotiation. Otherwise it will be sorted by the UK exercising its sovereignty over our single market and customs union, and the EU exercising its powers over its own. Doubtless neither side will like the other's settlement. Each has to respect the powers of the other, as clearly stated in the Withdrawal Agreement itself.
xxxxxy
15/9/2020
00:02
Minny liar ..
maxk
14/9/2020
23:55
Boris is a winner.
k38
14/9/2020
23:53
Quiz, who said..Self made multi-millionaire by the time I was 30. Founded a company that listed. Had cars that cost more than your house. Understood concepts and issues you'll never understand. Had more holidays and visited more places before I was 40 than you'll do for the rest of your life. Lived in many countries. Fully sampled many cultures.
k38
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