British taxpayers have now recovered all of the £20.3 billion they
injected into Lloyds Banking Group during the financial crisis.
Speaking in Washington, the Chancellor of the Exchequer,
, confirmed that the
government has received £20.4 billion since it began selling its
stake in Lloyds in 2013, which includes both sales and dividends.
Market conditions withstanding, the government also expects to
exit its remaining shareholding of less than 2% in the coming
months.
The Chancellor, said:
“Recovering all of the money taxpayers injected into Lloyds marks
a significant milestone in our plan to build an economy that
works for everyone.
“While it was right to step in with support during the financial
crisis, the government should not be in the business of owning
banks in the long term. The right place for them is in the
private sector and I’m pleased to be able to say we are
approaching the point at which we will sell our final shares in
Lloyds Bank.”
In September 2013, the Government began to sell its shares in
Lloyds Banking Group through an Accelerated Bookbuild (ABB) worth
£3.2 billion. ABBs involve selling a large block of shares to
institutional investors overnight. A second ABB worth £4.2
billion took place in March 2014.
A further £9.2 billion of Lloyds Banking Group shares were sold
through a trading plan between December 2014 and June 2016. A
trading plan drip feeds shares into the market on a daily basis,
over an extended period of time. In October 2016, the Chancellor
launched a second trading plan. So far, it has raised over £3.4
billion. In addition, the Government has received dividend
payments totalling £0.4bn from Lloyds.