Britain sells further 1% of shares in Lloyds Banking

UK government stake falls to below 7% as it pushes for return to private ownership

Lloyds Banking Group: The British government has reduced its stake,  to 6.93%, from a high of 43% during the 2007-09 financial crisis. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg
Lloyds Banking Group: The British government has reduced its stake, to 6.93%, from a high of 43% during the 2007-09 financial crisis. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

The UK government has sold off another chunk in taxpayer-backed Lloyds Banking Group, taking its stake down to less than 7 per cent.

UK Financial Investments, which manages the stake in Lloyds, cut its holding in the lender to 6.93 per cent from 7.99 per cent less than a month after the last share sale.

More than £17.5 billion has been returned to Government coffers since the lender’s £20.3 billion bailout at the height of the financial crisis. All proceeds from the sales are being used to reduce the national debt.

The Government has progressively sold down its original 43 per cent stake in Lloyds. In October, chancellor of the exchequer Philip Hammond ditched plans for a share sale to the public, opting instead to offload the holding to institutional investors.

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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.”

Lloyds said it had set aside another £1 billion to meet compensation claims for the mis-selling of payment protection insurance as it attempts to draw a line under the scandal. – PA