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Lloyds Bank (LLOY)     

mitzy - 10 Oct 2008 06:29

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=LLOY&S

skinny - 28 Jun 2017 07:59 - 5171 of 5370

Goldman Sachs Sell 67.00 58.00 58.00 Reiterates

Barclays Capital Overweight 67.00 77.00 77.00 Reiterates

Dil - 28 Jun 2017 09:52 - 5172 of 5370

Wonder how much the clowns who come out with those recommendations get paid ?

irlee57 - 28 Jun 2017 10:58 - 5173 of 5370

I get the impression goldman sachs doesn't like Lloyds,

2517GEORGE - 28 Jun 2017 11:01 - 5174 of 5370

GS trying to buy LLOY on the cheap perhaps

iturama - 28 Jun 2017 12:03 - 5175 of 5370

Lloy and GS have roughly the same net assets. Lloy revenue is almost 40% higher than GS. GS is valued at nearly twice Lloy. Go figure.

skinny - 30 Jun 2017 07:56 - 5176 of 5370

Credit Suisse Neutral 67.00 75.00 75.00 Reiterates

mentor - 05 Jul 2017 09:18 - 5177 of 5370

Bought some @ 65.99p

Has been touching 66p support for some time.

big.chart?nosettings=1&symb=UK%3aLLOY&uf

mentor - 06 Jul 2017 15:58 - 5178 of 5370

After the early marked down is now at best of the day 66.49p

mentor - 12 Jul 2017 23:25 - 5179 of 5370

Why it's time to buy Lloyds Bank, Shell and Vodafone - By David Brenchley | Wed, 12th July 2017 - 13:00

With such an increasingly uncertain macro backdrop - rising inflation, stagnant wages, political uncertainty and Brexit - the UK market has fallen out of favour with asset allocators at the big investment management firms.

The UK has been dismissed as a basket case and, true, recent data has hardly impressed. Corporate earnings momentum has also just turned negative for the first time in a year, as benefits of a weak pound and higher oil prices fade. We're now seeing more downgrades than upgrades.

"The relative risks do not appear to be fully priced in," argue strategists at broker UBS.

Elsewhere, with US markets expensive and earnings forecasts overly optimistic, investors are being nudged toward Europe and emerging markets.

But, while DIY investors should diversify through exposure to overseas markets via investment funds and trusts, a home bias is understandable, as UK stock markets are easily accessible.

The good news, then, is that plenty of UK-focused fund managers still see pockets of value. And, in a note to clients this week, UBS trumpeted that it has 94 'buy' ratings on the 213 UK companies it covers. Take that with a pinch of salt, of course, but it suggests selective stockpicking can still pay off.

According to UBS analysts, the FTSE 100's (UKX) 12-month forward price/earnings (PE) ratio is roughly in line with its long-run average - 14.2 times versus 14.7 - and trades at a modest 4% discount relative to history compared to Europe. "It's a similar story on the dividend yield and price/book value measures," they add.

"Whilst we see the bulk of sterling weakness as behind us, given the sharp deterioration in the domestic economy, we would have a preference for international exposure."

The broker's top FTSE 100 picks list is headlined by a couple of heavyweights, although they're at opposite ends of the scale regarding their level of domestic exposure.

Five most favoured stocks

The expected slowdown in the UK economy should not put investors off backing popular high-street lender Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY), says analyst Jason Napier. "In four of the last five UK recessions it paid to buy banks early."

He reckons Lloyds is "well positioned for a downturn", due in part to good capital levels, good forecast capital generation, its defensive loan portfolio and high levels of liquidity.

"Lloyds targets 200 basis points of capital generation in 2017, worth 6p of potential payout power. Compounded by the completion of the government sell-down, we believe Lloyds offers strong income returns."

Forecast earnings per share (EPS) and dividends per share (DPS) of 7.4p and 5.5p respectively put the stock on a forward PE of 8.8 times and yielding over 8%. At a discount to the European bank average, a re-rating is expected, so UBS tips Lloyds up to 85p, implying 30% upside.


lloy_1.jpg

mentor - 13 Jul 2017 10:37 - 5180 of 5370

67.15p +1.10p

gone over 67p not seeing for some time
you can not trust MAM chart spikes for sure

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=lloy&S..p.php?pid=staticchart&s=L%5ELLOY&width=5

skinny - 13 Jul 2017 12:04 - 5181 of 5370

GGYEAMQ.png

optomistic - 14 Jul 2017 16:05 - 5182 of 5370

141 mill buys against 35 mill sells and still sp is in the negative area!

Fred1new - 14 Jul 2017 20:13 - 5183 of 5370

You need to be an optimist to believe the volumes.

mentor - 16 Jul 2017 19:20 - 5184 of 5370

you have to learn that "AT" on the order book ( offer side) are sells instead of buys

and then maibe you will be less pessimistic

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=LLOY&S

mentor - 20 Jul 2017 09:47 - 5185 of 5370

68.84p +0.76p

breaking up from the recent intraday high 68p

p.php?pid=staticchart&s=L%5ELLOY&width=2.. p.php?pid=staticchart&s=L%5ELLOY&%20widt

iturama - 20 Jul 2017 14:24 - 5186 of 5370

It will pick up in expectation of the interims next week.

Stan - 24 Jul 2017 07:41 - 5187 of 5370

Banks could be preparing to take a further hit of £500 million to compensate victims of mis-sold payment protection insurance because claims have spiked since customers were given a deadline to complain. Lloyds could add about £200 million to its PPI bill when it reports its half-year results this week, taking its total cost from it to nearly £18 billion, according to analysts at UBS. Lloyds added an extra £350 million to its bill in March.

iturama - 24 Jul 2017 09:50 - 5188 of 5370

When this PPI business kicked off, Lloyds were approving payment on the nod. Then they decided to contest claims and middle son, a lawyer and CA, was hired along with a lot of others to review them. He now does the same for HSBC.
What gets me and to my mind is typical of rip-off Britain, is why the government didn't say "you sold some people unnecessary insurance, now contact them asap and compensate". It would have been the transparent and decent thing to do.
Instead we have a never ending situation of PPI shysters cold calling people and lawyers being paid to fend them off.

HARRYCAT - 24 Jul 2017 09:56 - 5189 of 5370

"you sold some people unnecessary insurance, now contact them asap and compensate".....I think it's partly because the banks have proven that they can't be trusted to get it right, so regulators have stepped in and forced them to take a hit.

iturama - 24 Jul 2017 10:34 - 5190 of 5370

My point is that the regulators could have insisted that the banks contact their customers direct, not wait for a PPI claim. It wouldn't have stopped the shysters bottom fishing for those of no fixed abode but it would have been the decent thing to do in the majority of cases. The most vulnerable to that type of sales tactic were the unsophisticated and cash strapped.
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