London, June 16, 2026, 20:10 (BST).
- Lloyds Banking Group ended Tuesday up, beating the FTSE 100.
- UK financial stocks rose, and Lloyds kept up its buyback programme. That’s what drove the move.
- Investors are watching two things next: the Bank of England’s rate call on June 18 and Lloyds’ half-year numbers and strategy update coming July 30.
Lloyds Banking Group plc shares were higher Tuesday as UK banks moved with the FTSE 100. Lloyds closed near 104p, up by 1.3%–1.4% on the session. The FTSE 100 added 0.61%. MarketWatch said Lloyds settled at £1.04. Hargreaves Lansdown quoted 103.95p/104.05p at the close. Reuters said gains in financials and industrials, with oil weaker, helped the FTSE 100. MarketWatch HL
Lloyds is tightly linked to the UK rate cycle, mortgage appetite, and consumer credit. Higher rates help banks boost their net interest margin – the spread between lending and deposit costs. But if rates stay too high for too long, loan growth can dip and defaults may go up. Investors now look to the Bank of England’s June 18 meeting. Bank Rate holds at 3.75% with the next call that day.
Lloyds returned more capital. According to a June 16 SEC filing, it bought back 2,632,073 ordinary shares at a volume-weighted average price of 103.6345p. The shares are set for cancellation. A share buyback uses company cash to repurchase shares and then cancel them, cutting the outstanding share count. That can support earnings per share if profits stay level. On its investor page, Lloyds puts its current buyback at £1.75 billion, with the programme started January 30, 2026 and still going. SEC
Bulls point to Lloyds’ strong first-quarter numbers. The bank reported statutory pre-tax profit of £2.0 billion, up 33% from a year earlier, and underlying net interest income at £3.6 billion, up 8%. Banking net interest margin came in at 3.17%. CEO Charlie Nunn said, “In the first quarter of 2026, the Group delivered sustained strength in financial performance, growing our income, maintaining our cost discipline and delivering strong profitability.” Lloyds kept its full-year 2026 guidance, with underlying net interest income expected to top £14.9 billion and return on tangible equity over 16%. Investegate
Valuation and ties to the UK economy are the main bear arguments. AJ Bell put Lloyds on a P/E ratio of about 13.5 and a dividend yield at 3.56%. The P/E ratio measures how much investors pay for every pound of earnings. Lloyds trades close to 104p, around 1.8 times its tangible net asset value of 57.9p per share from March, which is a bank’s net worth per share minus intangibles. That’s not distressed territory. It shows a bank that looks fairly valued. More share price upside depends on steady profits, solid credit quality and no nasty surprises from interest rates. AJ Bell
Lloyds looks fairly valued, not especially cheap after the recent rally. Buybacks, a dividend yield above 3%, and steady Q1 profits back the bull view. But risks are plain—weakness in UK consumer demand, tighter mortgage margins, regulatory or conduct charges, and any Bank of England move that rattles rate expectations. The next big event after Thursday’s rate decision comes July 30, 2026, when Lloyds will release its half-year numbers and a strategy update. That’s when it should be clearer if the management can keep turning earnings momentum into longer-term growth.