London, May 26, 2026, 08:59 BST
Lloyds Banking Group shares climbed over 1% out of the gate in London on Tuesday, trading back above 100 pence as UK banks started the first session after a long weekend. Lloyds Bank’s share-dealing feed showed offers at 101.00p to sell and 101.05p to buy at 08:42 BST, up 1.26%. Prices are delayed by at least 15 minutes. Prior close was 99.60p.
This is the first full London session since Monday’s Spring Bank Holiday. The London Stock Exchange trades from 08:00 to 16:30 BST. UK markets stayed closed on May 25.
Lloyds gives a clear look at the UK consumer and small business picture. The market is sorting a steady Q1, ongoing buybacks, and what’s next for strategy, while concerns about motor finance claims and stressed borrowers are still in play.
Barclays gained 1.75% in early trading, with NatWest up 1.47%. The rise was across UK banks, not only at Lloyds.
Lloyds filed paperwork ahead of the open for a block admission of 500 million ordinary shares on the LSE’s main market, tied to staff share plans. Admission is set for May 27. The bank said these shares will be issued as needed and will have the same rights as current shares.
Lloyds’ buyback is still the key capital move for the stock. Late Friday, the bank announced it grabbed 5 million ordinary shares from Goldman Sachs International for an average 99.5708p apiece and will cancel them. Buybacks shrink shares in the market.
The last major earnings update was April 29. Lloyds posted statutory pretax profit of £2.0 billion in the first quarter, 33% higher than the previous year. Underlying net interest income gained 8% to £3.6 billion. The bank’s net interest margin was 3.17%.
Chief Executive Charlie Nunn said the group had “strong profitability” and is “confident in our delivery” for 2026. More detail on its strategy and progress is coming with half-year results July 30, when the company will present its new strategy. Lloyds Banking Group
Lloyds took a 151 million pound charge in April to account for the Iran war’s effect on the global economy, Reuters said. The bank also warned the conflict could weigh on UK growth and unemployment.
The rally is now more at risk from a tighter credit cycle — basically, more borrowers having trouble making payments. Morningstar senior equity analyst Niklas Kammer flagged risks for Lloyds, citing higher credit costs, household pressures and sluggish growth. He said the shares at 94p earlier this month were still not cheap enough to be a buy.
The 100p mark is the level traders are watching. If shares hold above it, the market stays focused on buybacks, income growth and what’s coming in July’s strategy update. Slip below, and redress costs, UK rates and questions about the loan book take over again.