- Starwood Property Trust IPO May Be Biggest This Year
- Applied Materials Expects to Break Even This Quarter
- Fed Unlikely to Raise Rates, but May Boost Confidence
- China Arrests Rio Tinto Staffers On Suspicion of Spying
- Bove: Bank Stocks Running on Fumes, Expect Pullback
- Bank of America Faces More Bonus Embarrassment
- Chevy Volt Claims 230 Miles per Gallon in the City
- Muscle Cars Ripe for Collectors
- Faber Report: Atticus Founder Walks Away
- Traders Reposition Risk on United Rentals
- GDP to Grow 3% by End of 2010: Strategist
- AMAT Delivers; Now Can We Relax?
- Dykstra Gets Extra Innings
- Roginsky: Keep Yelling, Rush Limbaugh
- How Much Is LeBron Worth To Nike?
- Dendreon: From Data To A Deal?
- Stock Picker: US and Europe Drive Techs in 2010
- Cisco Reports for Duty in 'GI Joe'
|
CNBC'S MOST SHARED
- Consumer Confidence Stronger in August: Survey
- Second Stimulus Needed to Avoid Lost Decade: Krugman
- Why Ayn Rand Is Still Relevant
- Freddie Mac Posts First Profit in 2 Years; Shares Jump
- Housing Shows Stablization, Led By Strong Demand
- Stocks Rally for a Fourth Straight Week
- Jobless Claims Fall More Than Expected
- Morgan Stanley Pays $950 Million for TARP Warrants
- Ex-AIG CEO Greenberg Settles Fraud Charges With SEC
- The National Debt Never Sleeps—and Neither Should You
Britain's Lloyds Banking Group sank to a 4 billion pounds ($6.8 billion) loss in the first-half of the year as it was hit by a surge in bad debts from the HBOS business it bought earlier this year.
Lloyds said on Wednesday its impairment losses in the six months to the end of June jumped to 13.4 billion pounds, more than five times the 2.5 billion pounds a year ago and up from 12.4 billion in the previous six months.
Some 80 percent of the impairments came from HBOS legacy assets, it said.
Lloyds' first-half loss compared to a proforma profit of 2.8 billion pounds in the first half of 2008 and a forecast loss of 5.1 billion pounds, according to the average forecast of six analysts polled by Reuters.
Lloyds, which is 43 percent owned by the UK government after taxpayer cash was used to rescue the lender, said impairments were likely to have peaked in the first half of the year and to come in significantly lower in the second half.
"With impairments anticipated to have peaked in the half, management expects the group's results to improve in the second half and through 2010," it said in a statement.
![]() |
Sharon Lorimer |
It said about three-quarters of the impairment charge is related to assets intended to be included in the UK government's Asset Protection Scheme, which aims to limit the bank's exposure to losses on bad loans.
Eric Daniels, Lloyds chief executive, told Reuters he remained in talks with HM Treasury to finalize terms for the complex APS scheme and is confident of agreeing terms that are not too different to those already outlined.
The bank said it expects to run off around 200 billion pounds of assets over the medium term to reduce the balance sheet, which it said would have a modest impact on income. It expects to deliver "high single-digit" income growth within two years.
Lloyds said its integration of HBOS was on track to deliver more than 1.5 billion pounds run rate annual cost savings by the end of 2011.
Shares in Lloyds TSB were 6 percent higher in early trade.









