| Type | Public (LSE: LLOY, NYSE: LYG) |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1995 (Lloyds Bank: 1765) (Trustee Savings Bank: 1810) |
| Headquarters | London, Group Headquarters Edinburgh, Registered office, United Kingdom |
| Key people | Sir Victor Blank, Chairman Eric Daniels, Chief Executive |
| Industry | Banking |
| Products | Banking Investment banking Insurance |
| Revenue | £16,874 million GBP (2007) |
| Operating income | £5,139 million GBP (2007) |
| Profit | £3,321 million GBP (2007) |
| Employees | 74,000 (2006) |
| Website | lloydstsb.com |
Lloyds TSB Group plc (LSE: LLOY, NYSE: LYG) is a leading British financial institution with its Group head office in London and its registered office Edinburgh, Scotland and operations that span the globe including the US, Europe, Middle East and Asia. Its individual business units provide an extensive range of financial products and services, both in the United Kingdom and overseas. It was formed in 1995 by the merger of Lloyds Bank and the Trustee Savings Bank (TSB).[1] The Group's head office is 25 Gresham Street, London with its Registered address at Henry Duncan House, 120 George St, Edinburgh.
Lloyds TSB is currently the fifth-largest banking group in the UK, operating in England and Wales as Lloyds TSB; and in Scotland as Lloyds TSB Scotland plc. Its other subsidiaries include the mortgage bank Cheltenham and Gloucester; life assurance company Scottish Widows; and finance house Black Horse.
Lloyds TSB Group's activities are organised into three businesses: UK Retail Banking and Mortgages, Insurance and Investments, and Wholesale and International Banking. Lloyds TSB provides a service to a large number of clients in a broad range of markets. Lloyds TSB's Triple A (Moody's) senior-debt rating was placed on review for possible downgrade following the announcement of the organization's planned acquisition of HBOS.
On 17 September 2008, UK banking and insurance group HBOS confirmed that it was in "advanced" takeover talks with Lloyds TSB about a deal to merge. [2] These talks arose following a run on the share price of HBOS connected with the subprime mortgage credit crisis and short selling of shares[3]. Later in the day it was announced that Lloyds TSB had agreed to buy HBOS for 232p per share.[4] On 18 September, Lloyds TSB confirmed the £12.2 billion deal.[5]
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Lloyds TSB was created in 1995, when the Lloyds Bank and the Trustee Savings Bank ("TSB") agreed to merge their operations,[1] creating at that time the second-largest bank in the UK by market capitalisation after HSBC Holdings; and the largest by market share.
Lloyds Bank was one of the oldest banks in the UK, founded by John Taylor and Sampson Lloyd in 1765 in Birmingham.[6] Through a series of mergers, Lloyds emerged to become one of the Big Four banks in the UK.
The TSB can trace its roots back to the first savings bank founded by Henry Duncan in Ruthwell, Dumfriesshire in 1810. The TSB itself was created in 1985, by an Act of Parliament that merged together all (except Airdrie Savings Bank) the remaining savings banks in Great Britain under TSB Bank plc. [7]
The creation of Lloyds TSB was the beginning of a large-scale consolidation in the UK banking market. In 1995, the merger between TSB and Lloyds Bank formed Lloyds TSB Group plc, one of the largest forces in domestic banking.[1]
In June 1999, TSB and Lloyds Bank branches in England and Wales were re-branded Lloyds TSB. Branches in Scotland came under the new brand of Lloyds TSB Scotland, which now has branches stretching from the Northern Isles to the Mull of Galloway.
In 2000, the group acquired Scottish Widows, a mutual life-assurance company based in Edinburgh in a deal worth £7 billion.[8] This made the group the second-largest provider of life assurance and pensions in the UK after the Prudential. In September the same year, Lloyds TSB purchased Chartered Trust from the Standard Chartered Bank for £627m to form Lloyds TSB Asset Finance Division which provides motor, retail and personal finance in the United Kingdom under the trading name Black Horse.[9]
Lloyds TSB continued to take part in the consolidation, making a takeover bid for the Abbey National in 2001, although this was later rejected by the Competition Commission.[10]
In October 2003, Lloyds TSB Group agreed the sale of its subsidiary, NBNZ Holdings Limited comprising the Group's New Zealand banking and insurance operations to Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited.[11]
In July 2004, Lloyds TSB Group announced the sale of its business in Argentina to Banco Patagonia Sudameris S.A[12] and its business in Colombia to Primer Banco del Istmo, S.A.
On 20 December 2005, Lloyds TSB announced that it had reached an agreement to sell, for cash, the credit-card business of Goldfish to Morgan Stanley Bank International Limited for a premium of G.B.P.175 million.[13]
In 2007, Lloyds TSB announced that it has sold its Abbey Life insurance division to Deutsche Bank for £977m.[14]
Lloyds TSB also became the first mainstream bank to launch a sharia-compliant business account, with the Islamic Business and Corporate account being the latest financial product to be run in line with sharia principles.[15]
On 17 September 2008, the BBC reported that HBOS was in takeover talks with Lloyds TSB, in response to a precipitous drop in HBOS's share price connected to short selling.[16] The takeover talks concluded successfully that evening, with a proposal to create a banking giant which would hold a third of the UK mortgage market.[17]. An announcement was made at 0700 on 18 September 2008.
Although the announcement by the HBOS board confirmed agreement to be taken over by Lloyds TSB, two main steps are required for this to take place:
As most of the shareholding votes with HBOS are in the hands of institutional investors, it is unlikely there will be sufficient shareholder protest to the takeover, and as Prime Minister Gordon Brown personally brokered the deal with Lloyds TSB[19], the dispensation should be a formality. The only event which could hold up these steps is a criminal investigation by the Serious Fraud Office over the circumstances of the short selling, as has been initiated by New York's Attorney General into similar events on the NYSE.[20] However, the SFO has not indicated it is conducting such an enquiry.
The Lloyds TSB board stated that troubled banks Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley were amongst the advisers recommending the takeover.[18]
The Group is organised as follows:
In July 2007, Euromoney announced Lloyds TSB as the winners of its Awards for Excellence.[24]
In April 2008, Lloyds TSB Corporate Markets was recognised as ‘Bank of the Year’ for the fourth year running.[25]
In June 2008, Lloyds TSB came top in the Race for Opportunity’s (RfO) annual survey.[26]
Lloyds TSB was appointed the first Official Partner for the London Olympics 2012.[27]
Lloyds TSB is also currently the official sponsor for the Asian Jewel Awards. The awards recognise the contribution made by the Asian community in Britain today. An example of this support is the bank's sponsorship of Peter Santamaria-Woods in motor racing.[28]
In January 2008, Lloyds TSB received the unusual recognition of being the first-ever commercial business to see a single enter the UK top 40 in support of a public campaign against it. "I Fought the Lloyds" by Oystar was based on the song made famous by The Clash and adapted as a humorous song in support of those campaigning to get their bank charges refunded by Lloyds.[citation needed]
Lloyds had previously featured in a Manic Street Preachers song "Natwest-Barclays-Midlands-Lloyds", the second track on their album Generation Terrorists, a song critical of capitalism and banks pushing consumer debt.
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