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Pin to quick picksBarclays Share News (BARC)

Share Price Information for Barclays (BARC)

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Share Price: 202.35
Bid: 202.15
Ask: 202.25
Change: 1.35 (0.67%)
Spread: 0.10 (0.049%)
Open: 202.50
High: 203.40
Low: 199.58
Prev. Close: 201.00
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CORRECTED-UPDATE 3-Lloyds warns mis-selling could cost it an extra $2.2 bln

Mon, 09th Sep 2019 07:33

(Corrects 600,0000 to 600,000 in para 8)

* Expects to set aside an extra 1.2-1.8 bln stg in Q3

* Suspends 2019 share buyback, scraps 2019 ROTE target

* Shares fall more than 2%

By Carolyn Cohn and Iain Withers

LONDON, Sept 9 (Reuters) - Lloyds Banking Group
will set aside up to an extra 1.8 billion pounds ($2.2 billion)
to settle mis-selling claims in Britain's costliest consumer
banking scandal, and said it was suspending its 2019 share
buyback programme.

Banks are putting aside more money to pay claims against
mis-sold payment protection insurance (PPI) following a rush of
consumer enquiries about compensation ahead of the deadline on
Aug. 29.

PPI policies were sold alongside a personal loan or mortgage
to cover repayments if borrowers fell ill or lost jobs, but many
were unsuitable.

The PPI saga has already cost lenders more than 36 billion
pounds in payouts, with analysts estimating the final bill could
top 50 billion pounds.

RBS said last week it faced additional costs of up
to 900 million pounds, while Clydesdale Bank made a fresh
300-450 million pound provision.

As Britain's biggest domestic lender, Lloyds has been the
most exposed to PPI and has already paid out more than 20
billion pounds.

LAST MINUTE CLAIMS

Lloyds said on Monday it had received 600,000-800,000
requests for information about PPI per week in August, well
above its expectations of around 190,000 per week.

As a result, it expects to set aside a further 1.2-1.8
billion pounds in its third quarter results to cover payouts.

The bank's shares fell more than 2% in early trading, before
paring some losses to stand down 0.7% at 0920 GMT.

Lloyds also said it had received a claim submitted by the
Insolvency Service's Official Receiver on behalf of bankrupt
consumers, pushing costs higher.

It added the charge would dent its profitability and
scrapped guidance for a return on tangible equity of around 12%
this year. It also warned the increase in its capital ratio in
2019 would be below its 170-200 basis points per annum guidance.

The lender made PPI provisions worth 650 million pounds in
the first half of this year, meaning the total combined cost for
2019 could hit as much as 2.45 billion pounds, equivalent to 41%
of its 6 billion pounds pretax profit last year. The bank set
aside 750 million pounds for PPI in 2018.

Lloyds had been expected to make a further provision
following its rivals' moves, with analysts at KBW saying they
had downgraded the bank last week partly due to the expected
charge. KBW said the top end of the charge at 1.8 billion was
marginally better than its worst case scenario.

Barclays could take a provision of up to 700 million pounds
when it reports third quarter results on Oct. 25, KBW estimated
based on provisions taken by the other banks.

A spokeswoman for Barclays declined to comment.

Lloyds was given some breathing space on capital in May,
when regulators reduced its required core capital ratio to 12.5%
from 13%, equating to around 1 billion pounds.

Lloyds is continuing to target paying a dividend and said it
would make a decision on surplus capital at the end of the year.

Ian Gordon, analyst at Investec, said he believed Lloyds'
dividend for this year would be "perfectly safe" despite the
forthcoming charge, but warned that if it came in at the upper
end it would likely delay buybacks until March next year.

($1 = 0.8154 pounds)
(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn and Iain Withers; Additional
reporting by Lawrence White; Editing by Rachel Armstrong and
Mark Potter)

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