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Lloyds profits more than double to £4.2bn Lloyds reports its biggest profits since the financial crash
(about 5 hours later)
Lloyds Banking Group’s profits have more than doubled as the bailed-out bank shrugged off the Brexit vote and avoided further hefty charges for payment protection insurance mis-selling. Lloyds Banking Group’s profits have more than doubled as the bailed-out bank shrugged off the Brexit vote and avoided further hefty charges for mis-selling payment protection insurance.
Its profits of £4.2bn are the highest for a decade and shares in the bank rose by 4%. Lloyds’ profits of £4.2bn are the highest for a decade and the bank’s shares rose 4% after it promised a dividend of 3.05p a share including a 0.5p one-off special payout.
The bonus pool at the bank, in which taxpayers own a stake of just under 5%, increased by 11% while its chief executive, António Horta-Osório, was paid £5.5m for 2016. The government was expected to cut its holding in the bank, which stood at 43% after the 2008 bailout but is on course to fall below 4% in the coming days.
Unlike at rival bailed-out bank Royal Bank of Scotland, shareholders are receiving a dividend of 3.05p a share, including a special payment of 0.5p. The bonus pool increased by 11% while Lloyds’ chief executive, António Horta-Osório, was paid £5.5m for 2016. His basic salary is increasing to £1.2m, the second stage of pay rise from £1m two years ago. A total of 53 Lloyds’ bankers were paid more than £1m.
Speculation has swirled that the Portuguese banker will walk away once the final part of the taxpayer’s holding in the bank is sold off probably by May. However, he said: “The job is never done. I’m very happy at Lloyds.” The Portuguese banker has rattled off the changes since he took the helm in March 2011 that have allowed the government to cut its stake.
The bank’s profits have been weighed down in recent years by the cost of bad lending at HBOS the bank that Lloyds took over during the 2008 financial crisis and £17bn of charges to cover PPI compensation. Horta-Osório insisted he was “very happy” to stay at the bank and promised a new strategy - his third three-year plan - later in 2017, with a focus on costs. “The job is never done,” he said.
The bank avoided taking another provision for PPI in the last quarter of the year, which helped bolster its profits from £1.6bn a year ago. Underlying profits were down. The bank’s chairman, Lord Blackwell, said: “There’s no sense of complacency here ... There is a still a lot to do. Our objective is to make Lloyds into a great British institution.”
Even so, the bank’s total PPI charge for the full year amounted to £1bn down from £4bn a year ago. It also took another charge of £1bn during the year for other compensation payouts, including a new £475m provision in the fourth quarter for complaints related to packaged bank accounts and other problematic products. As well as owning Halifax and Bank of Scotland, the group owns 200,000 cars through its leasing business, provides financing for car deals through Black Horse where lending increased 20% during the year and is in the process of buying the MBNA credit card business.
Those provisions meant that the bank sliced 19% off its bonus pool taking it to £393m, still 11% higher than last year. Profits, which were just £1.6bn a year ago, have been weighed down in recent years by the £50bn cost of bad lending at HBOS the bank tLloyds took over during the 2008 financial crisis and £17bn of charges to cover PPI compensation.
Horta-Osório, whose pay fell from £8.7m a year ago, said: “Given our UK focus, our performance is inextricably linked to the health of the UK economy, which has been more resilient than the market expected post-referendum, with GDP growth of 2% in 2016. The UK’s decision to leave the European Union means the exact nature of our relationship with Europe going forward remains unclear and the economic outlook is uncertain.” Last year the PPI charge was £1bn , down from £4bn a year ago.
Lloyds’ shares plunged to 48p after the referendum result in July and have since risen 40% but remain below the 73p average price that taxpayers paid for 43% stake during 2008 and 2009. Their 4% rise after the results were announced took the price to 69p. However, the bank set aside a further £1bn during the year for other compensation payouts, including a new £475m bill for mis-selling packaged bank accounts and to compensate mortgage customers whose arrears were miscalculated. There was no provision for about 100 customers affected by the HBOS Reading fraud for which two former HBOS bankers were jailed.
While the fall in the shares has prevented the government carrying out its plan to conduct a cut-price offering to retail investors, Philip Hammond has sanctioned a sell-off of the shares below the average price paid for them. As a result, the taxpayer is no longer the largest shareholder in the bank – which it had been since the 2008 crisis. The provisions meant that the bank sliced 19% off its bonus pool taking it to £393m, still 11% higher than last year.
Gary Greenwood, banks analyst at Shore Capital, said the bank was increasing its guidance for profits measured by net interest margin for this year. “Guidance for 2017 would appear to be better than implied by consensus market estimates, notably in respect of the net interest margin but also on the impairment ratio and capital generation.” With the provisions and other one-off items stripped out, underlying profits were down as revenue slipped and bad debts rose 14%.
There was some scepticism about the bank’s ability to achieve these goals. Sandy Chen at Cenkos said: “We don’t see much to revise our long-held scepticism about Lloyds’ ability to achieve its lofty long-term targets.” Even so Horta-Osório was pleased with the performance. “Given our UK focus, our performance is inextricably linked to the health of the UK economy, which has been more resilient than the market expected post-referendum, with GDP growth of 2% in 2016. The UK’s decision to leave the European Union means the exact nature of our relationship with Europe going forward remains unclear and the economic outlook is uncertain,” he said.
Horta-Osório apologised to victims of the HBOS Reading fraud for which two former HBOS bankers were jailed this month but provided no updates on whether compensation might be paid to small business customers caught up in the £245m scandal. His pay fell from £8.7m a year ago, because of a reduced value of a three-year pay deal. His annual bonus rose from £850,000 to £1.2m and he could be handed shares worth about £3.5m under a new three-year scheme.
Neither was there any information about potential job cuts following the £1.9bn acquisition of the MBNA credit card business announced in December. Horta-Osório said no further deals were on the cards. Lloyds’ shares plunged to 48p after the referendum result in July and have since risen 40%, but they remain below the 73.6p average price during the £20bn bailout. Their 4% rise after the 2016 results were announced took the price to 69p.
Gary Greenwood, banks analyst at Shore Capital, said the bank was increasing its guidance for profits – measured by net interest margin – for this year. “Guidance for 2017 would appear to be better than implied by consensus market estimates, notably in respect of the net interest margin but also on the impairment ratio and capital generation.,” he said.
But was some scepticism about the bank’s ability to achieve these goals. Sandy Chen at brokers Cenkos said: “We don’t see much to revise our long-held scepticism about Lloyds’ ability to achieve its lofty long-term targets.”
It is not clear what the impact on any new strategy will have jobs: more than 50,000 job losses have been announced the HBOS rescue.