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LLOY Lloyds Banking Group Plc

51.76
0.09 (0.17%)
28 Mar 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
  0.09 0.17% 51.76 51.70 51.72 52.43 51.57 52.23 248,468,301 16:35:16
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 23.74B 5.46B 0.0859 6.02 32.87B
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 51.67p. Over the last year, Lloyds Banking shares have traded in a share price range of 39.55p to 52.66p.

Lloyds Banking currently has 63,569,225,662 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Lloyds Banking is £32.87 billion. Lloyds Banking has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 6.02.

Lloyds Banking Share Discussion Threads

Showing 360051 to 360062 of 425775 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
22/6/2021
15:28
he probably does psycho

having a loser dad like that would rub off on you and the trailer trash id say is no different from him

I do hope I am wrong mind

sentimental rules
22/6/2021
15:19
Jules baby please calm down.This is just a repeat of when you were elcapital and made yourself unwell.Why do you let these ruffians upset you.Are you coming downstairs later to watch the footie only I need to clean your room.Turn porntub off when you come out.It was a bit of a shock last time.
pam sentimental jules mum
22/6/2021
15:09
Min, judged by you, I'm stupid, judged by society I'm reasonably intelligent,

Judged by you, you are very intelligent, judged by society, you are pretty thick.

I think there's a pattern there.

pierre oreilly
22/6/2021
15:05
Andrew Neil: Inflation at most dangerous point in decades0:00 / 2:37volume_upfullscreenmore_vertIf inflation hits 4% the average household would be £700 a year worse offGareth MilnerSENIOR DIGITAL PRODUCERPUBLISHED Monday 21 June 2021 - 21:12LAST UPDATED Monday 21 June 2021 - 21:44Inflation doubled in April and grew again in May. It's now growing at its fastest rate since before the financial crisis 13 years ago. Of course, at just over 2% it's nowhere near the staggering 25% it reached in 1975. Or even the 8% of 1990. But it's now above the Bank of England's target and forecast to rise further.It's even higher in America - at 5% - as President Biden pumps up the economy on an unprecedented scale. And America has a habit of exporting its inflation.Electricity and gas bills jumped over 9% in April.Broadband and rail tickets are rising too.Worldwide, basic food prices are growing at their fastest rate for over a decade. That's yet to be reflected in our supermarkets. But it could be only a matter of time.Fuel prices are up 18% on a year ago and manufacturers are paying 10% more for stuff they need. That will eventually find its way into higher prices for us.If inflation hits 4% the average household would be £700 a year worse off.The official line is - don't worry. These price rises are temporary, caused by one-off reasons and that they will soon settle back down again. That's the view of the Bank of England, the US Federal Reserve and just about every other major central bank.And they could be right. Most economies are recovering fast from the pandemic, supply chains are stretched, and shortages are pushing up prices. By this time next year inflation could be back under control.But if all these central bankers are wrong the consequences would be severe. The Bank would have to raise interest rates to stop inflation getting out of control. That would cost the government a lot more in interest payments, since it has £2 trillion in outstanding debt. But households have a ton of debt too and they'd also feel the pinch.And higher rates will slow economic growth.Last week on this programme the Chancellor told me he didn't really have a view on inflation. That's the responsibility of the Bank of England. But if inflation returns with a vengeance that's not a position he can sustain. And, as the outgoing chief economist of the Bank says, when it comes to inflation, we're at our "most dangerous moment" in three decades.And that's tonight Viewpoint... GB News
xxxxxy
22/6/2021
15:03
“someone with muscle like the EU”. Just not muscle in the right places, rather like the former KGB acting as the muscle for the Soviet Union. In fact, the growing muscle of the EU becomes more a reason to get out whilst you can do so for minimal initial pain.
psychochopper
22/6/2021
15:02
Pierre

We did have an EU vote and the EU did represent my family better than anyone the Tories or Labour can throw at us - that is for sure. You are so stupid you think geography has meaning in this context.

minerve 2
22/6/2021
14:58
But you are saying minnie that not having a vote for those who rule your life is better than having a vote which may take a while to come about.

Seems an effin stupid argument to me. May bamboozle those at ponty poly, but not those of average intelligence and up.

pierre oreilly
22/6/2021
14:52
Min, how can there be evidence for anything which is a future event? Even measuring it post fact is a near impossibility. So you can argue until the end of time, which will feed your anger so that’s good news for you.

If it makes you feel better misstating what Oxford did for me, that is your choice. Anyway, we can compare notes in a few years on what Cambridge is about to do for my younger daughter! She’s super bright, but no idea what her views on Brexit are. We’re not fanatics with anger all-consuming.

psychochopper
22/6/2021
14:49
So we reduced immigrants. No one can serve you in the restaurants. No one can pick your fruit and veg.

Slow hand clap everyone for the Brexit wisdom.

But don't worry everyone, at the end of the rainbow is a pot of gold. Well, psycho hopes there is.

His rainbow has promised to cover all mortgage payments, food bills and debts until it comes good. Whenever that is.

minerve 2
22/6/2021
14:47
"The EU has overreached"

In your opinion. No evidence, no facts.

We were the EU.

minerve 2
22/6/2021
14:37
psychochopper 22 Jun '21 - 15:30 - 342628 of 342629

"The taking back control is only something which will become apparent over time. But Brexit is not intended to be an upfront drugs hit. More of a beautiful symphony to be enjoyed over the full length."

Evidence?

Or are we placing the future of our nation on hope alone?

Ever run a business sentiment because 'hope' doesn't cut the mustard. For someone educated at Oxford you like common sense AND wisdom. Where did it all go wrong?

minerve 2
22/6/2021
14:37
You are a weird one minnie. Never married eh? I wonder why that is. Even paid for russian women wouldn't have you. lol lol lol. Judged by yourself, you are a rich womanising legend, judged by women, you are a pratt. Judged by those here you are the most dense pratt imaginable.
pierre oreilly
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