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Lloyds Sells Remaining 21 Per Cent Stake In St James's Place
Stephen Little
10 December 2013
, the partly UK
state owned group, has sold its remaining 21 per cent stake in wealth
management firm St James's Place
for £680 million($1.17 billion). The UK-listed
bank said in a statement that it was selling 109 million shares at 630 pence
per share as part of its strategy to focus on its retail and commercial
businesses. Settlement of the placing will
take place on 13 December 2013. Following completion of the placing, Lloyds
will no longer hold any shares in St James’s Place. Lloyds said that as a result of
the placing, it expects the group will realise a gain on sale of approximately
£105 million and that the tier 1 capital ratio would increase by about £685
million, equivalent to 24 basis points under Basel III rules. Lloyds has been
partly owned by the UK
taxpayer since it was bailed out after the 2008 financial crisis by the British
government for £20.5 billion to save it from collapse. As part of the UK government's
plan to return Lloyds to full private ownership, the bank has sold a number of its
non-core assets to strengthen its balance sheet. In March, Lloyds
sold a 20 per cent stake in St
James's Place and a further 15 per cent in May.
Last month, the bank sold its Scottish Widows Investment Partnership business
to UK-listed Aberdeen Asset Management. "The group
launched its strategy in 2011 to reshape the business to concentrate on its
core UK
retail and commercial banking customers. As part of that approach, the group
has been reducing non-core businesses and addressing historic issues, while
focusing on increasing net lending to its core segments. The sale of the
remaining stake in SJP releases further resources and represents another step
towards refocusing this business on its core customers," said chief
executive Antonio Horta-Osorio.