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4 February 2014

Five questions answered on Lloyds’ announcement on increasing PPI provisions

Will it affect the groups’ profits?

By Heidi Vella

Lloyds Banking Group today announced it is to increase its provision for the mis-selling of payment protection insurance (PPI). We answer five questions on the bank’s announcement.

By how much is the bank increasing its PPI provisions?

The group said it will increase the fund by another £1.8bn, bringing the total to nearly £10bn. It said this extra provision reflects an increase in successful claims.

Has this affected the group’s profits?

The banking group also announced that its underlying profits for 2013 would be £6.2bn, which is nearly double what analysts have been expecting. As a result, the bank has said it could restart dividend payments this year. Lloyds has not paid any dividends to shareholders since 2008.

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What is the total cost of the PPI scandal expected to be for all banks?

The bill for all banks is expected to be around £20bn.

What else has Lloyds said?

Antonio Horta-Osorio, chief executive of Lloyds, said: “Our profitability, despite legacy issues, is testament to the strength of our business model and the commitment of our people, and has enabled the UK government to start to return the bank to full private ownership.”

The bank also announced it will be setting aside another £130m to cover the cost of compensation payments to SMEs mis-sold interest rate hedging products.

Does the government still have shares in the Lloyds bank?

Yes, the UK government still owns 32.7 per cent of the bank’s shares. However, it hopes to sell these, most likely in April, because it wants the bank to return to private ownership by the next general election.

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