LONDON: The UK government has sold 10 percent of Lloyds Banking Group in the past five months through its trading plan, reducing its stake to less than 15 percent.
The latest disposal cuts the government’s holding by a percentage point from the level reported on 2 July, according to a statement on Thursday. The stake has dropped from 24.9 percent when the Treasury’s trading plan started in December.
The sale of shares in Lloyds brings the total recovered for taxpayers to more than 13 billion pounds ($20 billion), according to a separate statement from the Treasury.
Chancellor George Osborne said he’ll start start returning Royal Bank of Scotland Group to private ownership in the coming months, even though it may come at a loss for the taxpayer. The government owns about 79 percent after bailing out the lender.
I am determined to build on this success, and to continue to return Lloyds to the private sector and reduce our national debt,” Osborne said in the statement.
If the government sold its remaining stake in Lloyds at today’s price, it would raise another 9.2 billion pounds, increasing the total to more than 21 billion pounds.
That’s almost 700 million pounds more than taxpayers spent to bail out the lender during the financial crisis.
Lloyds gained 0.4 percent to 86 pence at 9.14 a.m. in London trading. The stock has risen 13 percent this year.