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Lloyds Bank plc [1] [4] is a major British retail and commercial bank with a significant presence across England and Wales. It has traditionally been regarded one of the "Big Four" clearing banks. [5] Established in Birmingham in 1765
Lloyds Banking Group — is a financial services company (banking, life assurance, and pensions). Established in 1995, its headquarters are in Edinburgh, Scotland, and London. It was formed by the merger of Lloyds Bank with TSB. In 2019 its revenue was £42.3 billion, with net income of £2.9 billion.
Lloyds Banking Group plc is a British financial institution formed through the acquisition of HBOS by Lloyds TSB in 2009. It is one of the UK's largest financial services organisations, with 30 million customers and 65,000 employees. [ 4 ]
Lloyds Banking Group confirmed that the rebranding to TSB would still take place. [23] The new TSB Bank was launched on 9 September 2013 and all Cheltenham & Gloucester branches were rebranded TSB on this date. The new bank was divested from Lloyds Banking Group in 2014 through a stock market flotation, and was acquired by Sabadell Group in ...
Online only Bank of Ireland UK: 1783 London, England 1,700 Barclays: 1690 London, England 1,477 100,000 347 HSBC UK: 1865 London, England 2,975 220,861 327 Danske Bank UK: 1824 Belfast, Northern Ireland 1400 24 Lloyds Banking Group [a] 2009 Edinburgh, Scotland: registered office London, England: operational headquarters 794 63,000 893 Metro ...
In 2009, following the UK bank rescue package, the Government of the United Kingdom took a 43.4% stake in Lloyds Banking Group, which later announced that it would sell a standalone retail banking business of 632 branches and most accounts held at those branches in order to comply with European Commission state aid requirements.
The former Lloyds Bank International (LBI), both directly and through its banking subsidiaries, BOLSA and BOLAM, [4] together with the National Bank of New Zealand, Lloyds Bank California and the colonial and foreign (later overseas) department of Lloyds Bank, was responsible for the international and foreign banking business of the Lloyds Bank ...
In 2001, a wave of consolidation in the UK banking market led Halifax to agree a £10.8 billion merger with the Bank of Scotland. [9] The new group was named Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) with headquarters in Edinburgh, and retained both Halifax and the Bank of Scotland as brand names. Halifax branches in the rest of the UK use the Bank of ...