Taxpayer stake in Lloyds cut to below 10%


George Osborne hailed the development on the Chancellor’s Twitter account as “a big milestone” in returning the bank to the private sector and getting taxpayers’ money back.
Lloyds received a £20 billion taxpayer bailout after its ill-fated acquisition of HBOS, owner of Bank of Scotland and Halifax, at the height of the crash.
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Hide AdIn further good news for the taxpayer yesterday, Britain’s “bad bank”, which is running down the loans of two other bailed out lenders, Northern Rock and Bradford & Bingley, disclosed that it had repaid £500 million to the government in the six months to September.
UK Asset Resolution (UKAR), a state-owned “zombie bank” that is closed to new business, said it had now returned £14.6bn, or 30 per cent, of the taxpayer loan to the government. UKAR said its interim underlying profit fell to £612m from £692.9m a year ago.
UK Financial Investments, which manages the government’s stakes in Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland, has now recouped £16bn of the state lifeline to Lloyds.
Earlier this month, the Treasury said that it would sell at least £2bn of Lloyds to small private investors next spring. By contrast, the drip-drip feed of stock bringing the government holding steadily down since last December has targeted institutional investors.