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: 55.34
Ask: 55.38
Change: -0.02 (-0.04%)
Spread: 0.04 (0.072%)
Open: 55.66
High: 55.78
Low: 55.16
Prev. Close: 55.54
LLOY Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

UPDATE 3-Britain launches home loan guarantee plan as property prices climb

Tue, 08th Oct 2013 13:00

* Scheme designed to help homebuyers with small deposits

* Critics worry scheme could fuel new property bubble

* Survey shows house prices rising at fastest in 11 years

* Lenders to pay commercial fee but will get capital relief

By Christina Fincher and Huw Jones

LONDON, Oct 8 (Reuters) - Britain kicked off a flagshipscheme on Tuesday to help people get on the property ladder,defying critics who believe the state-backed mortgage guaranteescould fuel another housing bubble as the country's economy picksup speed.

Hours before the government launched "Help to Buy," a surveysuggested British house prices were rising at their fastest pacein 11 years. Also on Tuesday, the International Monetary Fundsharply raised its forecasts for economic growth in Britain.

RBS and Lloyds, two banks in which thegovernment retains big stakes after bailing them out during thefinancial crisis, will start marketing state-backed mortgagesthis week. HSBC, Europe's biggest bank, announced itwould join the scheme later this year.

Smaller lenders Virgin Money and Aldermore have also agreedto participate. But Barclays and the British unit ofSpain's Santander were still considering whether tojoin the programme which allows homebuyers to put down a depositof as little as 5 percent.

In a sign of the breadth of concern, a cross-party committeeof lawmakers warned the scheme risked raising prices rather thansupply. "Mistakes could distort the housing market or carrythreats to financial stability," the head of parliament'sTreasury Committee, Andrew Tyrie, said.

When the programme was announced in March, Britain's housingmarket and its economy both looked in need of serious help. Nowthings look very different.

House prices nationally are rising at more than 6 percent ayear, according to mortgage lender Halifax, and parts of thecapital are seeing gains in excess of 10 percent.

The government and Bank of England say there is no obviousrisk of overheating and note that housing transactions remainwell below long-term norms.

More broadly, Britain's economy is also recovering morequickly than expected. A survey on Tuesday showed British firmsrecorded the best growth in domestic trade for at least sixyears in the third quarter.

The British Chambers of Commerce said the results of itsquarterly economic survey suggested economic growth sped up toaround 0.9-1.0 percent in the third quarter.

The IMF, which earlier this year urged the government tospeed up infrastructure spending to get Britain's weak economygrowing, said it was now expecting gross domestic product toexpand by 1.4 and 1.9 percent in 2013 and 2014, respectively.

That was up from its previous forecasts of 0.9 and 1.5percent, made as recently as July, and represented the biggestupgrade of forecasts by the Fund for advanced economies in a newreport issued on Tuesday.

EARLY START

Prime Minister David Cameron and his finance minister,George Osborne, trumpeted the mortgage guarantee scheme at theConservative Party conference last week and announced it wouldstart three months early.

Their opponents say the plan was rushed out to give thegovernment a boost ahead of a 2015 general election, similar tothe way former Conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcherreaped the popularity of a programme to allow people to buyhomes they rented from local authorities in the 1980s.

Under the scheme, the government will offer to guarantee upto 15 percent of mortgages, helping people who in recent yearshave been unable to get on the property ladder because they lackthe high deposits lenders now require.

Now, a deposit of 5 percent, could suffice on any propertyworth up to 600,000 pounds ($965,000).

Participating banks won't have to set aside capital to coverthe state-backed portion of mortgages they offer as part of theprogramme, the Bank of England said.

In exchange for the guarantee, the government will charge afee of up to 0.9 percent of the loan's value. This is designedto cover any losses to the taxpayer, if borrowers default, andto comply with European Union state aid rules.

The opposition Labour party said the scheme would not fixthe fundamental problem of low levels of housebuilding andrising prices might make it harder for first-time buyers to geton the housing ladder.

The number two at Britain's Treasury stressed thegovernment's case for the plan.

"I don't think our housing market should be shut for peoplewho aren't lucky enough to have wealthy parents who can paytheir deposit, or have accumulated all the assets to pay a 25 or30 percent deposit," Danny Alexander, chief secretary to theTreasury, told BBC radio.

More News
30 Jun 2023 07:56

LONDON BRIEFING: Markets ponder strong US economy, slow China recovery

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London were called higher on Friday, as investors weighed conflicting economic data from the world's two largest economies.

Read more
29 Jun 2023 12:35

Intel vs Nvidia: mind the gap

STOXX Europe 600 up 0.3%

*

Read more
29 Jun 2023 11:28

What a PP, Vox-led Spain could mean for equities?

STOXX Europe 600 up 0.1%

*

Read more
29 Jun 2023 10:29

UK banks: reasons to buy on weakness

STOXX Europe 600 up 0.1%

*

Read more
29 Jun 2023 09:00

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Exane cuts Ashtead; Investec likes De La Rue

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

Read more
26 Jun 2023 17:39

UK banks face profit hit from rising threat of economic hard landing

(Alliance News) - JPMorgan on Monday warned that high street lenders, Lloyds Banking Group PLC, Barclays PLC and NatWest Group PLC, face a profit squeeze in the event of a hard-landing for the UK economy.

Read more
26 Jun 2023 16:28

UK finance minister Hunt says banks are slow to pass on rate hikes to savers

LONDON, June 26 (Reuters) - Britain's finance minister Jeremy Hunt said on Monday that banks are too slow to pass on increases in central bank interest rates to savers and this is a problem that needs to be resolved.

Read more
26 Jun 2023 11:57

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Risk-off amid higher rates, Russia instability

Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were lower at midday on Monday, as an aborted uprising in Russia over the weekend and hawkish moves from central banks over the past two weeks caused investors to tread carefully.

Read more
26 Jun 2023 10:10

JPMorgan downgrades Lloyds to 'underweight'

(Sharecast News) - JPMorgan Cazenove downgraded its stance on Lloyds on Monday as it took a look at UK banks.

Read more
26 Jun 2023 08:55

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: JPMorgan cuts Lloyds Banking to 'underweight'

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

Read more
26 Jun 2023 07:56

LONDON BRIEFING: Stocks firm; Aston Martin signs Lucid, Mercedes deals

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London were set to start the new week marginally lower, with financial markets unfazed by a failed revolt by a mercenary army in Russia over the weekend.

Read more
26 Jun 2023 07:40

Broker tips: Lloyds, Cranswick, On The Beach

(Sharecast News) - JPMorgan Cazenove downgraded its stance on Lloyds on Monday as it took a look at UK banks.

Read more
23 Jun 2023 15:50

UK banks agree limited mortgage relief measures for stressed borrowers

LONDON, June 23 (Reuters) - British banks agreed on Friday to give homeowners who miss mortgage payments a year of grace before foreclosing and to protect credit scores of borrowers who change loan terms, as the government sought to ease the strain of rising interest rates.

Read more
23 Jun 2023 14:15

UK Chancellor Hunt agrees measures with banks to cool mortgage crisis

(Alliance News) - UK Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has agreed measures with lenders aimed at helping mortgage holders struggling with high interest rates, but has resisted offering government support.

Read more
23 Jun 2023 13:12

UK's Hunt: Agreed measures with banks to ease mortgage payments strain

LONDON, June 23 (Reuters) - British finance minister Jeremy Hunt said he had agreed new measures with bank lenders on Friday to help ease the pressure on mortgage holders of raising interest rates.

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.