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Lloyds Bank (LLOY)     

mitzy - 10 Oct 2008 06:29

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

Balerboy - 22 May 2009 12:22 - 98 of 5370

He must be really bored.........

Master RSI - 22 May 2009 13:04 - 99 of 5370

HARRYCAT

Maybe you should be a "PUSSYCAT" by the content you Biografhy instead of HARRYCAT.

You commented yesterday about something not conected to you, and again today

Keep your comment for your Household if you have one.
when it was a good TIP for you. 'Get rich quick' brigade.

HARRYCAT - Biography
Regular online private investor.
50% in low risk companies.
50% actively traded in high risk companies.
Heavy subscriber to the 'Get rich quick' brigade.

Just call me Harry>>>>>>>>> I will call you PUSSY on anymore of you outburst

Master RSI - 22 May 2009 13:18 - 100 of 5370

Keeps the lending going and extract more income from it ...........


Lloyds Extends Banking Facility To Blacks Leisure

Blacks Leisure has put out an optimisitic note saying that it is engaged in discussions with Lloyds Bank regarding provision of a financial structure which will enable the Group to accelerate both the exit of the loss-making Boardwear business and the development of the Outdoor store portfolio.

The Company adds that the Bank is to continue to provide a 35m banking facility until 31 August 2009 whilst working towards an appropriate long-term financing solution.

The share price rose 5p , up 12.5% to 45p.

Master RSI - 22 May 2009 16:03 - 101 of 5370

Bank stress test release rejected
Fri 22 May,

LONDON (Reuters) - Revealing the results of confidential government studies into the financial health of major British banks could cause uncertainty in financial markets, a Treasury spokesman said on Friday.

The Treasury said on Friday that it had rejected a request made under freedom of information legislation by news agency Bloomberg for publication of stress tests conducted by the Financial Services Authority earlier in the year.

"The information was withheld on the grounds of a number of exemptions, including that disclosure of such information may lead to uncertainty in the financial markets, either in relation to specific institutions or more generally," the spokesman said.

So far Barclays (BARC.L) is the only major bank to have said that it passed the FSA's stress-testing process, despite others such as Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS.L) and Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY.L) being tested around the same time.

The Financial Times said the stress-testing included looking at whether banks would have enough capital to survive a 50 percent crash in house prices and a two-year recession.

An FSA spokesman said it had also turned down a freedom of information request from Bloomberg. "If we did release any specific information on stress testing it would be as an announcement to the market via (press release news wire) RNS, so it's not something I can comment on at this stage," said Joseph Eyre, press officer at the Financial Services Authority.

The United States has already published the results of its stress tests, saying it would boost financial market confidence -- a position supported on Friday by the Dutch financial market regulator AFM.

"Everybody is talking about a level playing field. There is an increasingly unlevel playing field between investors in American financial stocks and in European financial stocks," said AFM chairman Hans Hoogervorst.

"Investors in European financial stocks remain much more in the dark and there has not been -- and I don't think it's going to be very likely -- transparency in stress tests in the banking sector in Europe," Hoogervorst told a meeting of the Financial Crisis Advisory Group, which he co-chairs.

"This pressure is mainly exerted by bankers and ministers of finance, who are all bankers now, and obviously they have no natural interest in transparency," he said.

HARRYCAT - 22 May 2009 16:11 - 102 of 5370

'A PUSY' eh MRSI??? You have just embarrassed yourself, again.

Master RSI - 22 May 2009 17:28 - 103 of 5370

Who cares you are the same "barking mad, but no bite" theme

A double SS matches the double RR and the total of letters

HARRYCAT

PUSSYCAT

shaven-pussy.jpgpussyc1.gif

maestro - 22 May 2009 22:16 - 104 of 5370

i bet there are a few buying this at 68p today...what a bargain!

Master RSI - 25 May 2009 17:13 - 105 of 5370

SUNDAY MAIL

Midas Column: Steer clear of the Lloyds cash call

Master RSI - 25 May 2009 17:26 - 106 of 5370

I ONLY CAN SAY MIDAS LOST THE TOUCH SOME TIME BACK.
Now is a question if the economy is recovering soon after the record low interest rates,
the green shoots are apearing here and there at the moment.

Midas: Steer clear of Lloyds cash call
Midas is edited by Joanne Hart -- 24 May 2009

Last spring, HBOS was struggling so it asked shareholders for help. The bank had made so many bad lending decisions that it needed 4bn to put it on an even keel.

Many shareholders bought the story, expecting the company to prosper. Instead, the bank went from bad to worse, ending up in the arms of Lloyds TSB.
Until then, Lloyds shareholders were doing relatively well as the bank was not saddled with bad debts. HBOS changed all that and the combined business, Lloyds Banking Group (LBG), had to go cap in hand to the Government. It received more than 10bn in cash and the Government took a 44% stake

The Government then gave it a further 4bn and in return received preference shares that gave it a dividend of 480m a year.

Even that was not enough and earlier this year LBG applied to join the Government's Asset Protection Scheme. The details are still being hammered out but the Government will effectively insure 260bn of bad debts, most of which were made by HBOS.

In return, the Government has told Lloyds to redeem the preference shares - in other words pay back its 4bn. The bank still needs that money, so it is asking shareholders to stump up.

This time, chief executive Eric Daniels wants to raise the cash through a placing and compensatory open offer. This is like a rights issue but it is quicker.

Investors will receive documents this weekend offering them about six new shares for every ten they hold, at 38.4p per share. The offer closes at midday on June 5, so anyone wanting the extra shares must act fast.

LBG has 2.8m shareholders who own an average of 550 shares each. They have three options - take up the full entitlement, some of it, or do nothing. The first option would cost about 130 for the average of 340 new shares.

Those who do not take up the full amount might receive a small windfall. Any shares not taken up by shareholders will be sold in the open market at a discount to the prevailing-price but at a premium to the 38.4p offer price. Any excess will be handed to investors.

When this placing was hammered out with the Government, LBG shares were 42p. Today the price is 68.6p. If it stays at this level till the offer closes and the shares not taken up are sold at 60p, non-subscribers will receive about 20p per share - 60p minus 38.4p, plus a little for costs.

In practice, the shares are likely to drift lower over the next two weeks but some small compensatory payment is still a possibility.

So what should shareholders do? At first glance, investors may be tempted to buy the new shares as they are heavily discounted. But this is not the best way to make a judgment. The most important point to consider is the group's prospects. Is LBG going to do well over the coming year and beyond or not? Will the board manage to knit together Lloyds TSB and HBOS to make a great and powerful British bank or will HBOS simply drag its new parent down?

The early indications have not been good. Lloyds TSB did not realise what it was taking on when it bought HBOS and it has been forced to reassess its position repeatedly. Chairman Sir Victor Blank, once a darling of the City, decided last week to quit early after consistent criticism from key shareholders.

Another factor affecting the group's future is the EU. The bank admitted last week that it could be forced to sell off parts of the business if the European Commission does not approve the HBOS takeover.

It is also possible that the shares will take a beating over the next fortnight and fall below 38.4p. In that case, most investors would not take up their entitlements. The Government will buy any shares that no one wants so, at worst, it would end up owning 65 per cent.

Midas verdict: When HBOS asked shareholders to subscribe for the rights last year, the market price was 495p and the rights were 275p. When Lloyds first bid for HBOS its shares were about 300p and HBOS was about 200p. Shareholders have had a torrid time and the outlook is uncertain-Unless they have a real yearning to own more bank shares, they are best off waiting for a compensatory cheque in late June.

Master RSI - 25 May 2009 17:46 - 107 of 5370

From the TELEGRAPH

Lloyds to auction HBOS company stakes

Llloyds Banking Group has stepped up its efforts to offload its shareholding in more than 60 of Britain's largest companies including coffee chain CaffNero and David Lloyd Leisure, the health and fitness group.

UBS, the investment bank, is working on plans to auction the stakes, inherited from HBOS. The combined value of the investments have more than halved to 600m since last June. The auction process could begin in July, City sources told The Sunday Telegraph.

A number of potential financial bidders are understood to have expressed an interest in the stakes, which range from Polypipe, a pipe manufacturer, to Sunseeker, the yacht builder, as well as a number of smaller companies such as Aberdeen-based oil industry specialist Red Spider Technology and Leaseway Vehicle Rental.

The integrated finance division's larger real estate investments, including retirement home builder McCarthy & Stone and Crest Nicholson, are not part of the planned UBS auction.

Neither is the bank's 8pc stake in Sir Philip Green's Arcadia Group, which is held outside the division. Sir Philip said on Sunday that he had no plans to buy back the stake. "They are quite happy with me. Why should I buy it?" he said.

Lloyds has wanted to sell the equity stakes since it acquired HBOS in September and has sought advice from both
NM Rothschild and UBS. HBOS had previously paid UBS to assess private investor interest to acquire part of the portfolio.

The sale process concerns some of Lloyds' largest corporate customers, which had relied upon HBOS to provide a wide range of debt and equity banking services. Some had HBOS executives on their boards. Eric Daniels, Lloyds chief executive, has said there would be no "major wrenches" as part of the sale process. "We are going to be very careful," he said.

Last week, Lloyds announced that the former HBOS integrated finance, joint ventures and fund investment operations would "no longer be open to new business''.

Master RSI - 25 May 2009 18:21 - 108 of 5370

Balerboy

re - He must be really bored.........

Threat your words with care, there are posters that do the research and others that just take it IN ( you could very easy be one of them just being lazy).

For the last 9 years I have been opening a Weekly thread somewhere else, so I keep myself busy over there, where I keep in touch with the rest of the Financial World not just LLOY.

This week thread..............

SHARES STRONGLY UP week starting 26/05/09 (UPS)


And as a lat comment I will add, I can give you a lesson on dancing for FREE, if you change you nickname to - Balletboy


4356o45.jpgdancer030.gif                 8_11_1.gif                 ladiesm.gif

HARRYCAT - 25 May 2009 21:19 - 109 of 5370

"For the last 9 years I have been opening a Weekly thread somewhere else"
Please go back there, permanently.

Master RSI - 25 May 2009 22:01 - 110 of 5370

PUSSYCAT

I am there that is the last recomendation to make you boil to the point of explosion, but do not get sick yet
there is no hopital bed left for you at your area.

PHTM 14.75p

Reason: Share bouncing from 200 days MA with volume last Friday after retracement. Ex - CEO have increased stake to 22%
and 2 weeks ago got back to the board. Shareholders equity was 24p on last statement and gearing reduce to 33% from 57%.

p.php?pid=chartscreenshot&u=z18jCSvfosqM

Master RSI - 25 May 2009 22:10 - 111 of 5370

PUSSYCAT

A got a remedy for you irritation " Stinging nettles " your psycho-sexual implications could be satisfied well,
and you could make a "cup of tea" with the left overs. When dried, the leaves make a damn good tea, with a rich,
indescribable flavor, nettles pack a powerhouse of vitamins, minerals, and are perhaps the vegetable with the
highest protein content (10%).

737px-Brennnessel_1.JPG

Master RSI - 25 May 2009 23:45 - 112 of 5370

Here is someone with my ideas on last Saturday Times

From The Times -- May 23, 2009

Black horse shares can ride out storm.

But should investors take their little purse of monies and run? Hindsight shows that investors would have been better off ignoring the received wisdom on previous occasions, and shunning previous calls. Thoughts now might turn to piling in when everybody seems to be wanting you to do the opposite.

Why should investors subscribe for the new shares? Because it is possible to see recovery coming, and having endured so much financial pain it seems right to grab as much of the upside as possible. You could take 250 now. But if things continue to settle, that 250 could become 500 in as little as 12 months.

The Government is doing shareholders a substantial financial favour. The 4 billion raised by Lloyds will be used to repay preference shares, bought by the Government, that were issued only relatively recently. Because the preference shares are counted as debt, their existence weakens the Lloyds balance sheet. Shares aka equity count on the other side of the ledger so an equity-for-debt substitution does the books a double favour. Lloyds, moreover, is on the hook to pay 480 million a year in dividend interest on the preference shares. If they are replaced with ordinary shares, that drain disappears. It also means that the company will resume paying dividends on ordinary shares sooner rather than later. And while the Government is reclaiming its 4 billion of preference-share cash, it is reinvesting nearly half that sum back by buying new ordinary shares. In the process, it is set to maintain its 43 per cent shareholding in the bank.

If Lloyds can keep its act together, it will emerge as a powerful player in the financial services sector. That brings the risk it will become complacent, and idly fail to win the big operating cost advantages that are in the offing. In time, also, competition authorities may seek to dilute the monopolistic power it might enjoy. But that is not something shareholders necessarily have to fear, especially if division comes through demerger. Who knows, the black horse bank, a lumbering old faithful, could deliver one, or more, lively foals.

There is, of course, no certainty that new dosh invested will grow in value, while there is a calming certainty about taking cash when it is offered. Lloyds continues to mutter darkly about the state of the lending markets, and its bad debts, while doubt hangs over the exact cost, and extent, of the government-backed debt insurance scheme the crucial government asset protection scheme, or, to use its alarming acronym, the Gaps. Meanwhile, European authorities might throw a spanner in the works with rulings about unreasonable and unallowable, state aid. And the resignation this week of Sir Victor Blank, the chairman, while not unduly worrying, is hardly an indication of internal management strength.

And OK, so the banking sector recommendations in this column over the past 18 months are not blemish-free. It has been suggested that investors should support cash calls in the past, and it is true that shares could have been bought at substantially better subsequent prices. That said, analysis in this space at the time of the Lloyds-HBOS link, which suggested the deal was good for HBOS as it ensured its survival and bad for Lloyds as it saddled the black horse with a beastly burden stands the test of time. And as long as the banks do not go belly up, time may also prove that investors were right to provide them with the help. There was always a social responsibility to be met. Eventually, it may bring sound financial reward. Subscribe in full.

hlyeo98 - 26 May 2009 08:40 - 113 of 5370

LLOY will be under investigation for HBOS dodgy loans. Vince Cable will expose a closet of skeleton.

see news.

Continue to SELL LLOY.

marni - 26 May 2009 08:55 - 114 of 5370

whats it to do with vince?

anyway, eople will do their own thing.....as i say most people are not on these boards, anyway the taxpayer owns 43 per cent, doh.

see hyleo wasnt on this on friday when it was up! hyleo is unethical and immoral which is what is wrong with capitalism.....if these people dont change soon, then communist system is inevitable as theres lack of money in western world.....WESTERN WORLD!

Master RSI - 26 May 2009 09:56 - 115 of 5370

YES..........
They only come out of the woods on the marky days.
Anyway the FTSE is down a good 40 points so nothing to worry about those " NASTY PIECE of WOOD " spreading rumours and inuendo

Chart.aspx?Provider=Intra&Code=LLOY&Size

Master RSI - 26 May 2009 10:06 - 116 of 5370

For those that had a taste of my selection then they are on the money OK

PHTM
on the move with the spread of 15.50 / 16.25p +1.25p the last UT was at 15p
5 days chart
big.chart?symb=uk%3APHTM&compidx=aaaaa%3

Master RSI - 26 May 2009 10:45 - 117 of 5370

That is most likely the way of my thinking .... ........

From the INDEPENDENT - yesterday

Business confidence is returning, poll suggests

Although the economy remains deep in the worst recession in 75 years, further evidence emerges today that somebusiness confidence is returning - usually a reliable indicator of an eventual recovery, if not necessarily an especially vigorous one.

The latest quarterly survey of business professionals, compiled by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, suggests that there has been a return of confidence among those shell-shocked by the collapse in demand since the economy stopped growing a year ago. The poll has registered declines for the past 18 months, but is now showing an improvement in the banking, finance and insurance sectors and the property market.

One in five business professionals questioned are still much less confident about the next year, indicating the recovery may be some months away.

Michael Izza, chief executive of the institute, said: The rise in confidence is a positive step. The underlying data suggests that companies have heeded warnings, taking the right steps to ensure their businesses are positioned to survive the downturn.

Mr Izza added: While the change in outlook is encouraging, I still believe that difficult times lie ahead. I would urge businesses to not be complacent and be measuredinany steps they take in response to an economic recovery.

Sentiment improved across all UK regions and counties for the first time since the survey began in 2003. The West Midlands saw the largest increase, which is thought to be a result of recent measures to help the auto industry, such as the scrappage scheme.

The North of England remains the least confident region, the researchers found. More than 1,000 chartered accountants were questioned for the study.
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