Treasury sells another £500m Lloyds stake

Lloyds Banking Group Plc Headquarters And Bank Branches
Lloyds Banking Group Plc Headquarters And Bank Branches


The Treasury has sold another chunk of its stake in Lloyds Banking Group, taking its holding in the bailed-out lender below 22%.


The latest disposal of around 1% of the group represents stock worth more than £500 million at its latest market value.

The announcement marks the latest milestone after the government announced in December it planned an "orderly and measured" sell-off of up to 5% over six months, raising about £3 billion.

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This is being done in small parcels, rather than through larger tranches as had been done previously. No shares are to be sold below the price the government paid for them, which was 73.6p. Lloyds closed at 80.5p last night.

In addition to the dividend announced by Lloyds last month, the latest transactions suggest the Treasury has recovered about £9 billion of the £20 billion injected into the group at the height of the financial crisis.

Chancellor George Osborne said on Twitter: "We have raised a further £500m through Lloyds share sales. £9bn now recovered & being used to pay down our national debt."

A pre-election sale of shares in Lloyds to ordinary members of the public was ruled out last year by Mr Osborne, but in last week's Budget he pledged to sell a further £9 billion of shares.

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The Treasury's stake is now 21.99%, compared with 40% at the time of the bailout in 2008. The stock market must be notified every time the government's shareholding in the bank crosses a one percentage point threshold.

A Lloyds spokesman said: "Today's announcement shows the further progress made in returning Lloyds Banking Group to full private ownership and enabling the taxpayer to get their money back.

"This reflects the hard work undertaken over the last four years to transform the group into a l

Lloyds' First Dividend Since Bailout
Lloyds' First Dividend Since Bailout



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