News1 min ago
Can anyone make sense of this?
// The Treasury is expected to rake in £1.4bn from the sale of 620 Lloyds sites and the whole of Northern Rock, in a move which is likely to change the face of UK high street banking.
Investment banks are putting the finishing touches to sale documents that will start the bidding process on £4.4bn worth of assets and could introduce a new name to mainstream high street banking. //
http://www.telegraph....-Lloyds-branches.html
How can selling £4.4bn worth of assets for £1.4bn be a good idea? After bailing out the banks are the tax payers being further ripped off by such give aways?
Investment banks are putting the finishing touches to sale documents that will start the bidding process on £4.4bn worth of assets and could introduce a new name to mainstream high street banking. //
http://www.telegraph....-Lloyds-branches.html
How can selling £4.4bn worth of assets for £1.4bn be a good idea? After bailing out the banks are the tax payers being further ripped off by such give aways?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Gromit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.And to add to the comment, it helps clean up the portfolio for the eventual refloation. There were articles in the FT and serious press back at the start of the year that the Govt may see Lloyds alone being worth some £45 bln when it comes to that stage - so one must assume that RBS may be worth something similar and then there is the rest for Northern, Dunfermiline and the others.........
IMO, this is what DC and GO are in part betting on as we swing in towards the next election, plus some signs of strong growth shoots in the economy. The article today in the Observer has shades of that similar letter from economists weeks before Thatcher's economic figures showed a massive turn around happening, largely resulting in her re-election as the economy went into a strong bull run.
IMO, this is what DC and GO are in part betting on as we swing in towards the next election, plus some signs of strong growth shoots in the economy. The article today in the Observer has shades of that similar letter from economists weeks before Thatcher's economic figures showed a massive turn around happening, largely resulting in her re-election as the economy went into a strong bull run.
Someone in that article didn't do their sums right
// At the same time, Deutsche Bank is compiling an information memorandum on Northern Rock which will be used to market the state-owned bank and its 70 branches. It is expected to generate around £1.4bn for the Treasury. //
That's where the £1.4bn figure comes from - selling the Lloyds branches will bring in some more money, but the only reasonably certain figure they have is for the Northern Rock sale, hence the headline figure.
// At the same time, Deutsche Bank is compiling an information memorandum on Northern Rock which will be used to market the state-owned bank and its 70 branches. It is expected to generate around £1.4bn for the Treasury. //
That's where the £1.4bn figure comes from - selling the Lloyds branches will bring in some more money, but the only reasonably certain figure they have is for the Northern Rock sale, hence the headline figure.
The Telegraph article is very badly written. This makes is better, and I now understand the figures.
http://www.bloomberg....n-telegraph-says.html
http://www.bloomberg....n-telegraph-says.html
The sale of LLoyds brnches will rake in £3bn and will belong to Lloyds bank of which the Government (taxpayer) is a shareholder and the only gains will be if the share price goes up.
The £1.4bn is for the sale of Northern Rock which is owned by the Government (taxpayer) and will go directly into the country's coffers.
So no-one as far as I can see being ripped off here. We will get our money back from Lloyds when the share price is good enough for them to be sold at a profit.
The £1.4bn is for the sale of Northern Rock which is owned by the Government (taxpayer) and will go directly into the country's coffers.
So no-one as far as I can see being ripped off here. We will get our money back from Lloyds when the share price is good enough for them to be sold at a profit.