Wednesday, 5 August 2009

Lloyds Banking Group Plunging into 'The Red' after the backlog of bad debts peak.


Higher-than-expected bad debts of £13.4bn drove Lloyds Banking Group to a £4bn loss in the first half of the year as the rescue takeover of HBOS continued to dent the black horse bank.

The biggest retail bank in Britain admitted that 80% of the soaring bad debts were caused by HBOS, the Halifax and Bank of Scotland, which the group controversially rescued last year during the height of the banking crisis.

But shares in the bank rose 6% to 89p after the bank reassured the market that it believed its so-called impairment charge had now peaked and that it expected the economy to stabilise with a "weak upturn in 2010". The shares are still trading below the 122p at which the taxpayer breaks even on its stake in the bank.

The chief executive, Eric Daniels, said: "Our first-half loss was driven by the high levels of impairment. The core business delivered a resilient performance, despite the weak economy. We are successfully managing the short-term issues and are well positioned to outperform over the medium term, providing value to our customers and shareholders.

"Overall impairments in the second half of 2009 are expected to be significantly lower than the first half with progressive reductions thereafter."
Source: The Telegraph

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Tuesday, 4 August 2009

FSA Launches Equity Markets Review

LONDON (Reuters) - The Financial Services Authority (FSA) has launched a wide-ranging review of UK equity markets, covering aspects such as high-frequency trading and so-called "dark pools," the Financial Times reported.

The study is being conducted by FSA staff and Henry Knapman, a veteran of trading and equity market structures at UBS who is on a one-year secondment to the FSA, the paper said in its Tuesday edition.

The move, which will take into account views on anonymous trading venues called "dark pools," comes amid growing questions about how the rise of electronic trading may be affecting investors, the paper added.

An FSA spokesman confirmed the watchdog was talking to market participants "to get their views about changes in the market post-Mifid," but said the review would not lead to a report.

Source: NY Times

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Growth In Key Money Supply Gauge Slows

LONDON (Reuters) - Annual growth in a key component of money supply slowed to its weakest since 1999 in the second quarter, Bank of England data showed on Tuesday, just two days before the central bank decides whether to expand its quantitative easing programme.

M4 broad money supply growth, excluding holdings of intermediate other financial corporations, slowed to an annual rate of 3.1 percent in the second quarter of 2009 from a downwardly revised 3.8 percent in the first quarter.

The Bank has identified this subcomponent of M4 growth as a key gauge of whether its quantitative easing policy is boosting the money supply, because it strips out the volatile and sometimes inflated money holdings of firms such as clearing houses included in the overall M4 measure.

"It still shows that money growth is weak up to and including the second quarter," said Philip Shaw, economist at Investec.
Source: NY Times

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