Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksLegal & General Share News (LGEN)

Share Price Information for Legal & General (LGEN)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 224.70
Bid: 225.40
Ask: 225.50
Change: 1.00 (0.45%)
Spread: 0.10 (0.044%)
Open: 224.50
High: 227.40
Low: 222.80
Prev. Close: 223.70
LGEN Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

UPDATE 2-Bank of England takes steps as Brexit risks appear, pound falls

Tue, 05th Jul 2016 17:05

* BoE gives banks more room to lend

* More time for insurers to adjust to EU rules

* Sterling renews fall after fund closures

* Banks says strong on capital, liquidity - Osborne (Adds suspension of M&G real estate fund, updates marketprices)

By David Milliken and Huw Jones

LONDON, July 5 (Reuters) - The Bank of England took steps onTuesday to ensure British banks keep lending as the financialconsequences of the country's decision to leave the EuropeanUnion began to materialise, especially in commercial realestate.

Sterling hit a fresh 31-year low against the dollar afterthree big investment firms halted trading in real estate funds,reflecting fears of a Brexit hit to the property market.

There were other signs of how the fallout from thereferendum was hitting the economy. Business confidence plungedafter the vote, a survey showed, and retailer John Lewis saidits sales grew more slowly last week.

The BoE, which is trying to cushion the economy from theJune 23 referendum result, said it would lower the amount ofcapital banks must hold in reserve, freeing up an extra 150billion pounds ($196 billion) for lending.

Governor Mark Carney recalled the central bank's warnings inMarch that the referendum was the biggest near-term domesticrisk to financial stability. "Some of those risks have begun tocrystallise," he said.

Separately, finance minister George Osborne met the heads oftop banks and they issued a joint statement afterwards to saythe lenders would free up more capital for lending.

The BoE's move represented a reversal of a decision it tookearlier this year, when it started tightening the screws onlenders because the economy had appeared set for more growth.

"It means that three quarters of UK banks, accounting for 90percent of the stock of UK lending, will immediately havegreater flexibility to supply credit to UK households andfirms," Carney said.

It remains to be seen if consumers and businesses will wantto borrow while Britain's economic prospects remain uncertain.

Prime Minister David Cameron has said he will resign but his successor is not expected to take office until September,deepening the uncertainty. Cameron has left it up to the nextgovernment to decide how Britain might rework its ties with theEU, something which could take years to negotiate.

Sterling resumed its fall, sinking as much as 1.7 percent toits lowest level against the dollar since September 1985. It wasdown 1.4 percent against the euro. Yields on 10, 20 and 30-yearBritish government bonds hit new record lows as investors aroundthe world sought the safety of sovereign debt.

PROPERTY WORRIES

The pound slid after the fund arm of insurer Aviva suspended its 1.8 billion-pound UK Property Trust, following asimilar move on Monday by Standard Life. Later M&G, thefund management arm of insurer Prudential alsotemporarily closed its fund.

The BoE said foreign flows of capital into commercial realestate dropped 50 percent in the first three months of 2016 andtransactions fell further in the second quarter, an extremeexample of concern among investors about the referendum.

Although the closure of the funds brought back memories ofthe aftermath of the financial crisis in 2008-2009, EduardoGorab, a property economist at consultancy Capital Economics,said the limits on outflows could help prevent a collapse invalues.

On the stock market, housebuilding firms were tradingsharply lower, with shares in Berkeley Group, BarrattDevelopment, Taylor Wimpey and Persimmon all down more than 6 percent.

The BoE said it was closely monitoring investors'willingness to fund Britain's large current account deficit, high levels of household debt and the subdued global economy.

"The current outlook for UK financial stability ischallenging," it said.

But there were also signs of calm. A BoE auction to providebanks with liquidity and a sale of British government bonds wentsmoothly. The fall in sterling could encourage foreign investorsto buy gilts, a senior official at the UK Debt Management Officetold Reuters.

Carney said the fall in sterling should help to ease thebalance of payments shortfall although the pace of investmentwould also be important.

More responsibility has fallen on Carney and the BoE tosteer Britain through its political crisis because ofuncertainty over Osborne's future as finance minister.

Carney said last week that he believed the BoE would easemonetary policy soon. A Reuters poll showed economists mostlyexpect the Bank will not cut interest rates when it meets nextweek and wait until August instead.

"These measures are really about Carney aligning the Bank ofEngland's guns in case the UK economy enters a downturn,"Aberdeen Asset Management Investment Manager James Athey said.

Also on Tuesday, the BoE gave insurers more time to adjustto new EU capital rules to avoid pressure on them to dumpcorporate bonds. The central bank said it would keep a close eyeon the buy-to-let mortgage sector, in case landlords sell asproperty prices fall, and on the rising numbers of indebtedhouseholds. ($1 = 0.7651 pounds) (Writing by William Schomberg and David Millken; additionalreporting by Andy Bruce, Jemima Kelly, James Davey, DharaRanasinghe and Carolyn Cohn; editing by Anna Willard and DavidStamp)

More News
6 Feb 2023 12:23

CORRECT: Frasers could buy British shopping centres for GBP100 million

(Corrects that Mike Ashley is not the chief executive officer of Frasers.)

Read more
6 Feb 2023 09:32

TOP NEWS: Frasers CEO could buy shop centres for GBP100 million -Press

(Alliance News) - The Times on Saturday reported that Frasers Group PLC Chief Executive Officer Mike Ashley is mulling to buy two shopping centres in Great Britain for a total of GBP100 million.

Read more
31 Jan 2023 09:26

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Barclays cuts Relx; Jefferies raises Team17

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Tuesday morning:

Read more
31 Jan 2023 08:05

Berenberg downgrades L&G and M&G to 'hold'

(Sharecast News) - Analysts at Berenberg downgraded insurers Legal & General and M&G from 'buy' to 'hold' on Tuesday, citing high correlation to credit and the UK economy, as well as a lack of organic growth in the latter's asset-management business.

Read more
30 Jan 2023 17:31

FTSE 100 gains ahead of central bank meetings, Unilever up on new CEO

Unilever names Dutch dairy boss Schumacher as CEO

*

Read more
30 Jan 2023 17:00

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks broadly lower with eyes on central banks

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London closed largely lower on Monday as investors looked nervously ahead to looming interest rate decisions from a number of central banks.

Read more
30 Jan 2023 12:14

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Stocks fall ahead of busy week for central banks

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were down on Monday around midday, as investors anxiously look ahead to three crucial interest rate decisions that will be announced later this week.

Read more
30 Jan 2023 08:57

LONDON MARKET OPEN: 888 boss leaves, Middle East activities suspended

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened lower on Monday morning, amid market caution at the start of an important week for interest rate decisions by the world's top central banks.

Read more
30 Jan 2023 08:28

TOP NEWS: Legal & General Wilson to retire as CEO after over 10 years

(Alliance News) - Legal & General Group PLC on Monday said Chief Executive Nigel Wilson plans to step down, after more than a decade in post.

Read more
30 Jan 2023 08:06

L&G chief executive Nigel Wilson to retire

(Sharecast News) - Legal & General said on Monday that Sir Nigel Wilson is planning to retire after more than a decade as chief executive.

Read more
30 Jan 2023 07:55

LONDON BRIEFING: Unilever hires dairyman as CEO; Wilson to depart L&G

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are set to open lower on Monday, as investors look ahead to three key interest-rate decisions this week.

Read more
24 Jan 2023 11:45

JPMorgan-backed Smart Pension to raise more than 100 mln stg in equity -sources

LONDON, Jan 24 (Reuters) - Smart Pension, a British pension services provider backed by JPMorgan and Legal & General, is in discussions with investors to raise more than 100 million pounds ($123.13 million) worth of equity capital, two sources close to the matter told Reuters.

Read more
23 Jan 2023 10:37

Glass Lewis recommends vote against Capricorn board, NewMed merger

Big question mark over Capricorn's planned merger with NewMed

*

Read more
23 Jan 2023 09:20

Legal & General Chair John Kingman to become chair of Barclays Bank UK

(Alliance News) - Barclays PLC and Legal & General Group PLC on Monday said L&G Chair John Kingman will join the board of Barclays as a non-executive director on June 1 and will become the next chair of Barclays Bank UK PLC.

Read more
16 Jan 2023 15:48

L&G plans to vote against Capricorn leadership and NewMed merger

LONDON, Jan 16 (Reuters) - Asset manager Legal & General plans to take the rare step of voting to oust energy group Capricorn's senior leadership and halt its planned merger with NewMed, according to a company document seen by Reuters.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.