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Britain Earns £3.2 bn from Part-sale of Lloyds Bank

The British government earned £3.2 billion from the sale of 6.0 percent of part-nationalized Lloyds Banking Group, it announced on Tuesday.

The coalition government had on Monday launched plans to sell part of its stake in bailed-out LBG, marking the lender's first crucial step towards a return to the private sector.

UK Financial Investments (UKFI), which manages the state's bank holdings, said about £3.211 billion ($5.12 billion, 3.83 billion euros) was earned from the sale of LBG shares priced at 75 pence each to institutional investors.

Lloyds shares finished at 77.36 pence on Monday ahead of the divestment announcement. That was higher than the 63.1-pence that the coalition government says it needs to break even following the bank's bailout.

"Further to its announcement on 16 September 2013, UKFI announces the successful completion of the disposal of part of HM Treasury's shareholding in Lloyds Banking Group," a statement said Tuesday.

The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government's stake in LBG has in turn dropped to about 32.7 percent from 38.7 percent.

The government is hoping to eventually recoup £20 billion of taxpayers' cash that was ploughed into the group at the height of the global financial crisis in 2008.

Lloyds Banking Group was created by a merger of Lloyds TSB and rival British lender HBOS amid the crisis.

But with HBOS saddled at the time with toxic or high-risk property investments, LBG subsequently received a vast state bailout under the then-Labor administration.

British finance minister George Osborne, a member of the Conservatives that is headed by Prime Minister David Cameron, authorized Monday's part sale.

It comes after LBG in August revealed that it had bounced into profit and was looking to resume shareholder dividend payments.

Source: Agence France Presse


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