focusIR May 2024 Investor Webinar: Blue Whale, Kavango, Taseko Mines & CQS Natural Resources. Catch up with the webinar here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksLloyds Share News (LLOY)

Share Price Information for Lloyds (LLOY)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 55.52
Bid: 55.48
Ask: 55.50
Change: 0.50 (0.91%)
Spread: 0.02 (0.036%)
Open: 55.00
High: 55.56
Low: 54.96
Prev. Close: 55.02
LLOY Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

RPT-UPDATE 2-UK ombudsman: PPI insurance complaints may have peaked

Tue, 30th Jul 2013 07:00

* 2,000 new cases received each day, down from 3,000

* Ombudsman Ceeney says suspects complaints on "downwardcurve"

* Ceeney says banks have not taken enough care overcomplaints

* Ceeney says sharp rise in complaints on payday lenders

By Matt Scuffham

LONDON, July 29 (Reuters) - Britain's Financial OmbudsmanService is starting to see a decline in the number of complaintsit receives about mis-sold loan insurance but levels remain veryhigh, Chief Financial Ombudsman Natalie Ceeney said.

Britain's biggest banks are expected to this week set asidehundreds of millions of pounds more to compensate customersmis-sold the insurance but Ceeney's comments will raise theirhopes that the worst is behind them.

The industry has already set aside more than 14 billionpounds ($21.5 billion) to compensate customers mis-sold paymentprotection policies (PPI), which were meant to protect borrowersin the event of sickness or unemployment but were often sold tothose who would have been ineligible to claim.

Ceeney said the ombudsman, which steps in where customersand their banks can't reach an agreement, is now receiving 2,000new cases every working day compared with 3,000 at its peak sixmonths ago.

"I think somewhat inevitably the people who care most aboutcomplaining and trying to get compensation do so first. In anycomplaints cycle the numbers rise and you subsequently see themfall. I suspect we're on the downward curve," Ceeney toldReuters in an interview on Monday.

Ceeney cautioned it was difficult to predict future trends.

"Will it fall to 1,000 in six months? I just don't know. Theinteresting thing about PPI is none of us know where it's goingto go," she said.

Despite the ombudsman working with banks to improve theircomplaints handling procedures, Ceeney said 78 percent of caseswere being resolved in the customer's favour.

"We should be seeing uphold rates at 20 to 25 percentbecause banks should know what they're doing now. These are nowso well trodden. When customers do complain it should be handledproperly," she said.

--------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------

Barclays is expected to add to the 2.6 billionpounds it has set aside for PPI costs, when it becomes the firstUK bank to report results on Tuesday. Lloyds, which hasset aside 6.8 billon pounds already, the most of any bank, isalso expected to increase its provision on Thursday.

Lloyds ended a contract with Deloitte in June after problemswere uncovered in the way a call centre operated by the businessservices firm handled customer complaints about PPI.

"Too many of the banks have not taken enough care on PPIcomplaint handling. Most of the big banks have outsourced it.The problem if you outsource is that you have to pay hugeamounts of care to make sure your outsourcers are working to theright standards," Ceeney said.

According to figures from Britain's financial regulator, 50million PPI policies were sold and only around 15 percent ofpeople who had the policies have claimed for compensation.

Ceeney also said the ombudsman had seen a sharp rise incomplaints about payday lenders although the numbers remainedrelatively low, which she blamed in part on the stigma felt bythose who had used payday lenders.

More News
17 Jan 2024 12:00

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: UK inflation uptick, weak China data hits stocks

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were lower at midday Wednesday, as hotter-than-expected UK inflation data served as a setback to early rate cut expectations.

Read more
15 Jan 2024 16:57

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Sluggish stocks slip back in absence of US spur

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London were marked lower on Monday with the lack of direction from Wall Street, with US markets closed, adding to the subdued mood.

Read more
11 Jan 2024 17:03

M&S shares, Wall Street sell-off drag FTSE lower

U.S. inflation data sparks selloff

*

Read more
11 Jan 2024 11:36

UK finance watchdog probes possible motor finance misconduct

LONDON, Jan 11 (Reuters) - Britain's finance watchdog said on Thursday it would start looking into the motor finance industry, amid rising tensions between thousands of consumers and finance providers about commission arrangements.

Read more
11 Jan 2024 09:26

TOP NEWS: Big Yellow rent hike saves revenue from decreased occupancy

(Alliance News) - Big Yellow Group PLC on Thursday said that revenue and lettable area had increased despite occupancy dropping during the "seasonally weaker third quarter".

Read more
4 Jan 2024 12:56

Royal London tabling bid to buy bulk annuities from Lloyds - report

(Sharecast News) - Life insurance, pensions and investments group Royal London is in discussions to purchase Scottish Widows' bulk annuities arm, according to Sky News.

Read more
2 Jan 2024 22:01

Top-rated US companies raise over $29 billion in new-year bond supply rush

Jan 2 (Reuters) - Top-rated U.S. companies raised over $29 billion in debt on Tuesday, giving the corporate bond market a strong start to the new year, as the companies tapped demand from investors anticipating lower interest rates later this year.

Read more
20 Dec 2023 09:25

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: UBS cuts DS Smith; Kepler likes Genus

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

Read more
19 Dec 2023 16:06

UK banks face 'step change' rule to reimburse defrauded customers

LONDON, Dec 19 (Reuters) - Britain's banks and other payment firms must reimburse defrauded customers to a maximum of 415,000 pounds ($529,000) from October next year to help combat scams, the Payment Systems Regulator (PSR) said on Tuesday.

Read more
19 Dec 2023 15:11

UK banks face 'step change' rule to reimburse defrauded customers

LONDON, Dec 19 (Reuters) - Britain's banks must reimburse defrauded customers to a maximum of 415,000 pounds ($529,000) from October next year to help combat scams, the Payment Systems Regulator (PSR) said on Tuesday.

Read more
18 Dec 2023 10:51

Business travel emissions drop as many firms fly less -survey

LONDON, Dec 18 (Reuters) - Almost half of 217 global firms cut their business travel carbon emissions by at least 50% between 2019 and 2022, analysis published on Monday found, as corporate air travel returned at a much slower pace since the pandemic than leisure flights.

Read more
17 Dec 2023 23:01

Business travel emissions drop as many firms fly less -survey

LONDON, Dec 18 (Reuters) - Almost half of 217 global firms cut their business travel carbon emissions by at least 50% between 2019 and 2022, analysis published on Monday found, as corporate air travel returned at a much slower pace since the pandemic than leisure flights.

Read more
14 Dec 2023 12:00

Fnality completes 'world's first' blockchain payments at Bank of England

LONDON, Dec 14 (Reuters) - Fnality, a blockchain-based wholesale payments firm, said on Thursday that shareholders Lloyds Banking Group, Santander and UBS had completed the "world's first" live transactions that digitally represent funds held at a central bank.

Read more
12 Dec 2023 09:10

UK lenders face smaller impact from Basel rules than rivals, BoE says

LONDON, Dec 12 (Reuters) - The Bank of England said on Tuesday that implementing the final leg of the global Basel bank rules will increase capital requirements at UK banks by 3%, far less than for their European Union and U.S. peers.

Read more
12 Dec 2023 07:16

BoE says UK lenders to be hit less than EU, U.S. rivals by Basel capital rules

LONDON, Dec 12 (Reuters) - The Bank of England said on Tuesday that implementing the final leg of the global Basel bank rules will increase capital requirements at UK banks by 3%, less than for their European Union and U.S. peers.

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.