mitzy
- 10 Oct 2008 06:29
halifax
- 29 Oct 2013 10:00
- 4532 of 5370
Harry usual sell on the news reaction.
skinny
- 29 Oct 2013 10:06
- 4533 of 5370
They've had quite a run since May, so a period of consolidation around the results may not be a bad thing.
I'm contemplating adding at this level as I think these have finally cleared the majority of their problems.
skinny
- 29 Oct 2013 10:09
- 4534 of 5370
This lot keep banging their drum :- Espirito Santo Execution Noble Sell 77.91 79.62 59.00 59.00 Reiterates
halifax
- 29 Oct 2013 10:48
- 4535 of 5370
trying to get in on the cheap.... some hope!
skinny
- 29 Oct 2013 10:51
- 4536 of 5370
Halifax - hardly - see post 4515.
halifax
- 29 Oct 2013 10:55
- 4537 of 5370
skin meant the broker not you!
skinny
- 29 Oct 2013 11:01
- 4538 of 5370
Oh I see - I've just added a few @77.9p - my dearest purchase!
halifax
- 29 Oct 2013 11:27
- 4539 of 5370
waiting for more market reaction but certainly much better news this morning.
skinny
- 30 Oct 2013 07:12
- 4540 of 5370
Citigroup Neutral 0.00 83.00 83.00 Reiterates
Deutsche Bank Buy 0.00 77.00 90.00 Retains
Barclays Capital Overweight 0.00 85.00 85.00 Retains
HARRYCAT
- 06 Nov 2013 16:51
- 4541 of 5370
(Reuters) - The UK's Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY.L) said it has opened an internal probe into its own currency trading after regulators started investigating possible manipulation in the market.
"We are aware that a number of regulatory and enforcement authorities are investigating foreign exchange trading and, as a result, we believe it is prudent to review our own foreign exchange trading over recent years and have commenced such a review," the bank said in a statement on Wednesday.
It said it would report anything it finds to the relevant authorities and assist them as requested.
Several banks, including Barclays (BARC.L) and UBS (UBSN.VX), have said they were cooperating with regulators investigating possible manipulation.
At this stage, Lloyds is not part of the investigation, a person familiar with the matter said.
skinny
- 06 Nov 2013 16:54
- 4542 of 5370
Physician heal thyself!
halifax
- 06 Nov 2013 19:21
- 4543 of 5370
get in first admit misconduct no fine seems to be the order of the day.
HARRYCAT
- 13 Nov 2013 13:46
- 4544 of 5370
Broker note from Canaccord Genuity:
"Year to date, LLOY has returned 59% TSR, and trading on 1.5x current tangible book looks optically expensive vs. its 2 yr avg of 0.8x and UK peers on 0.8x. However a declining cost of equity, will likely drive further near term upside, due to i) dividend resumption, ii) rapidly improving capital levels iii) de-risking & better asset quality. Other near-term risk mitigants include, the Help to Buy scheme (mainly via a UK wealth effect) and more broadly the UK Government’s ‘ownership’ of the banking sector’s revival into the 2015 election. We re-iterate BUY with target price 85p (from 62p), seeing limited downside risk pre the May 2015 election.
Core LLOY has an impressive normalised RoTCE of 17.7%: While the incremental core earnings boost from declining deposit margins and falling loan losses is likely to fade somewhat in 2014, we expect that the core RoTCE will be supported by i) cost efficiencies, ii) business growth especially in underweight areas such as unsecured lending and corporate fee income where LLOY has only 12% UK market share vs. its 25% share of mortgages and current accounts.
Dividend resumption in 1Q14 = ‘clean bill of health’ from BoE Based on CEO 3Q13 results commentary, we think dividends will resume in 1Q14- which has signalling value to general investors that “LLOY is back” post crisis. A LIBe 2015e 4.0p dividend (c 55% payout) implies a 5.3% yield
Higher capital requirements a non issue: Investors will dust off their Modigliani and look through the BoE’s super-equivalence requirement (to operate with above Basel 3 capital levels) and view anything above 10% of RWAs as excess capital. By YE15 we forecast a Basel 3 core tier 1 of 11.5% implying excess capital of £4.1bn, 7% of market cap. While some will argue that any ‘excess’ capital is trapped, in fact it will be offset by a lower cost of equity (ignoring a minor tax shield impact)."
skinny
- 18 Nov 2013 07:12
- 4545 of 5370
Sale of Asset Mgt Business SWIP
LLOYDS BANKING GROUP ANNOUNCES SALE OF ASSET MANAGEMENT BUSINESS SCOTTISH WIDOWS INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIP
Lloyds Banking Group plc (Group) announces that it has agreed to sell its asset management business Scottish Widows Investment Partnership Group Limited (SWIP) to Aberdeen Asset Management plc (Aberdeen) for an initial consideration payable in Aberdeen shares with a value of approximately £560 million, and a further deferred consideration, payable in cash, of up to £100 million, as described below. As part of the transaction, the Group will enter into a long-term strategic asset management relationship, whereby Aberdeen will manage assets on behalf of the Group.
The sale and strategic relationship are expected to result in a stronger asset management partner for the Group and its customers, combining Aberdeen and SWIP's strengths across fixed income, real estate, active and quantitative equities, investment solutions and alternatives. SWIP's management and employees will transfer to Aberdeen upon completion.
The sale does not include Scottish Widows, the Group's life, pensions and investment business, which remains core to the Group.
In consideration for SWIP, the Group will receive approximately 132 million new ordinary shares of Aberdeen, equivalent to approximately 9.9 per cent of its enlarged issued ordinary share capital. Aberdeen has also committed to deliver additional consideration 12 months after completion calculated with reference to the amount by which Aberdeen's volume-weighted average share price for the five trading days prior to completion (the "VWAP") is below 420 pence but above a floor of 320 pence. To the extent the VWAP is below 320 pence, the Group has the option to terminate the sale. Based on Aberdeen's share price of 427 pence at close on 15 November 2013, the Group's shareholding in Aberdeen would have a value of approximately £560 million. In addition, further consideration of up to £100 million will be payable in cash over a five year period depending on the growth in business generated from the strategic relationship with the Group.
more..
HARRYCAT
- 25 Nov 2013 20:58
- 4546 of 5370
LONDON (Reuters) - Lloyds Banking Group will probably sell 30 to 50 percent of its stake in the 631 bank branches being re-branded as TSB when the new entity floats on the stock market in 2014, a newspaper reported.
TSB's Chief Executive Peter Pester told Britain's Sunday Telegraph that TSB will begin its roadshow relatively soon, with the listing planned for the middle of next year.
The share sale will also include a retail offering, Pester said.
Lloyds was ordered to sell the branches by European regulators as a penalty for receiving a 20-billion-pound ($32 billion) government bailout in the 2008 financial crisis.
Pester also said that in the ten weeks since TSB launched a new advertising campaign, customers had been signing up for current accounts twice as quickly as the group had estimated.
skinny
- 29 Nov 2013 07:06
- 4547 of 5370
Directorate Change
Lloyds Banking Group plc announces the appointment of Juan Colombás as an Executive Director with effect from 29 November 2013.
Commenting on Mr Colombás' appointment, Sir Winfried Bischoff, Chairman, said: "We are delighted to welcome Juan to the Board. Juan has significant banking and risk management experience. He has served as the Group's Chief Risk Officer and a member of the Group Executive Committee since January 2011. Juan is a valuable addition to the Board and we look forward to working with him."
HARRYCAT
- 29 Nov 2013 07:59
- 4548 of 5370
He sounds Portuguese to me. Hope this isn't an example of cronyism within the ex-pat community???!
smarty
- 29 Nov 2013 14:42
- 4549 of 5370
He is Spanish. Another one poached from Santander a couple of years back.
HARRYCAT
- 06 Dec 2013 08:01
- 4551 of 5370
StockMarketWire.com
Lloyds Banking Group has agreed the sale of a portfolio of non-performing Irish retail mortgages to Tanager, an entity affiliated with Apollo Global Management, for £257m in cash.
The transaction is part of the group's continued non-core asset reduction programme. The gross assets subject to the transaction are £610m. The portfolio generated losses of £33m in the year to 31 December 2012.
The sale proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes and the transaction, although capital accretive, is not expected to have a material impact on the Group, due to existing provisions taken against these assets. The transaction is expected to complete in the first half of 2014.