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How far down will they go (LLOY)     

mojo47 - 16 Aug 2007 13:54

any one got a feelling in their water how far LLoyds will go looking to to buy but just dont know when they are low enough

skinny - 09 Oct 2009 09:12 - 450 of 483

Lloyds needs cash fast

tipton11 - 12 Oct 2009 16:29 - 452 of 483

Whats wrong with the other LLoy thread?

skinny - 12 Oct 2009 16:33 - 453 of 483

Full of idiots.

maestro - 12 Oct 2009 17:23 - 454 of 483

SOLD OUT AND PILED INTO VOG

jkd - 12 Oct 2009 19:53 - 455 of 483

maestro
this a a Serious Lloy thread.for serious Lloy posters only. it has lots of history.
please go post your comments on the appropriate alternatve threads.
thank you
regards
jkd

skinny - 13 Oct 2009 08:45 - 456 of 483

Down through 90p on strong volume this morning.

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

skinny - 13 Oct 2009 11:24 - 458 of 483

Lloyds falls amid cash call fears

skinny - 13 Oct 2009 16:36 - 459 of 483

Uncrossed under 90p.

hangon - 13 Oct 2009 17:55 - 460 of 483

I guess no-one believes thwey are (yet) out of the mire despite believing they did the deal of the decade. Sadly, the only "deal of" they did has resulted in their business decaying, hence 'decade' (geddit?).
Stupid management has not been ousted, to be replaced by sane Execs - and anyone that's "sane" will not want to touch this at least until they've fessed-up to further losses as the economy gfalters, despite our PM being plugged into the WWW (-wonderland).
I hold a few of these at a silly loss!

marni - 13 Oct 2009 18:58 - 461 of 483

sorry to hear that hangon.......i've no problem with people investing but not the ramping by master on other thread.

if gov could just leave lloy alone i'm sure they will be fine from now on......not plain sailing but will get better

skinny - 15 Oct 2009 08:15 - 462 of 483

Lloyds Banking In Talks With Rathbone Bros Over Sale Of Assets





LONDON -(Dow Jones)- Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LLOY.LN), the U.K. bank that is partly owned by the U.K. Government, said Thursday it is in discussions with Rathbone Brothers PLC (RAT.LN) regarding the possible sale of assets relating to certain non core private client discretionary investment management activities, principally the Bank of Scotland Portfolio Management Service.


skinny - 16 Oct 2009 07:55 - 463 of 483

SALE OF HALIFAX ESTATE AGENCY





TIDMLLOY TIDMLSL

RNS Number : 8960A
Lloyds Banking Group PLC
16 October 2009

?



90/09
16 October 2009


LLOYDS BANKING GROUP TO SELL HALIFAX ESTATE AGENCY
Lloyds Banking Group plc announces that it has reached an agreement in principle
to sell the Halifax Estate Agencies Ltd (HEA) business which operates through a
network of 218 offices, including 93 franchise operations, to LSL Property
Services plc (LSL). LSL is the parent company of estate agency brands Your
Move, Reeds Rains and Intercounty.


The proposed transaction is expected to complete in January 2010 and will
involve the assumption of Halifax Estate Agency's assets and liabilities for a
cash consideration of GBP1. The effect on the Lloyds Banking Group accounts is
not expected to be material. The Halifax brand is not included in the sale and,
in time, the Halifax Estate Agency offices will be rebranded to either Your
Move, Reeds Rains or Intercounty.


skinny - 25 Oct 2009 10:06 - 465 of 483

Lloyds seeks 23bn to exit state scheme

skinny - 26 Oct 2009 13:06 - 466 of 483

UK Banks To Give More And Standardized Disclosure Information





By Margot Patrick
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

LONDON -(Dow Jones)- Major U.K. banks will give investors more details and standardized explanations of how they value illiquid assets and otherwise mark their books, under a new regulatory code designed after confidence ebbed in banks' accounting practices during the financial crisis.

The new code, created by the U.K. Financial Services Authority, requires banks to clearly "tell a story" of their business performance in a reporting period, and to give detailed disclosure on their accounting policies and how and why a particular policy is applied to assets or liabilities.

It falls short, though, of requiring banks to start publishing quarterly financial statements, allowing them instead to continue publishing first- and third-quarter trading updates that may include no or few profit-and-loss numbers.

Though the code is still in draft form and out for consultation with banks, the FSA said Abbey National PLC, Barclays PLC (BCS), HSBC Holdings PLC (HBC), Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LYG), Nationwide Building Society, Standard Chartered PLC (STAN.LN) and Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC (RBS) have agreed to implement it in their 2009 annual reports.

In adopting the code, the banks agree to provide "high-quality, meaningful and decision-useful disclosures to users to help them understand the financial position, performance and changes in the financial position of their businesses," the FSA said.

While banks will have discretion - beyond required regulatory and accounting standards - on the level of details they give on various parts of their businesses and assets, disclosures should "be made at an appropriate level of granularity to aid understanding of the information or activity being explained."

Under the code, banks will look to make it easier for investors to compare disclosure across the U.K. banking sector, by putting in place consistent approaches to how assets and liabilities are valued, and including a glossary of terms in financial reports.

Other key principles include considering going beyond what is required under international reporting and regulatory standards, and continually reviewing how disclosure could be enhanced on areas of particular interest, to help shareholders better understand their businesses and exposures.

Banks should also make it clear in annual reports whether information is audited or not.

Paul Chisnall, executive director for financial policy and operations at the British Bankers' Association - which helped draft the principles based on the code - said U.K. banks accept there is a "great deal of interest" in their financial positions and are committed to providing strong disclosure.

"Nevertheless, they recognize the need to guard against complacency and are happy to formalize their past practice of working through the BBA to identify new trends, understand new requirements and enhance the comparability of their financial statements," he said.

The FSA is launching the code after an earlier review of the regulatory response to the global banking crisis found investors' confidence in financial reports had hit a low despite banks' efforts to give more details on struggling parts of their businesses.

Regulators are grappling globally with how to better supervise banks and whether to put limits on some of their practices to try to avert another financial crisis.

Company Web site: http://www.fsa.gov.uk


marni - 26 Oct 2009 13:28 - 467 of 483

timber!!!

marni - 26 Oct 2009 16:51 - 468 of 483

cup and handle....lol.....full of alcohol with master.

lloy is in deep trouble................could be nationalised in future
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