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Lloyds profit growth hit by impairment

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LONDON: No news is good news at Lloyds Banking Group Plc as it continues on its path to being a leaner UK retail bank.

Britain’s largest mortgage lender said first-quarter pre-tax profit increased 23% to £1.6bil (US$2.2bil), and it expects the nation’s “resilient” economy to perform similarly for the rest of the year. The earnings narrowly missed analysts’ expectatio­ns.

“There are no signs of deteriorat­ion across the economy,” chief financial officer George Culmer said on a call with reporters after its statement yesterday. “We are on track to deliver our financial targets for 2018 and maintain our longer-term guidance.”

Chief executive officer Antonio HortaOsori­o has been cutting costs since taking the top job around seven years ago.

The London-based bank, which has almost all its assets in the UK, is targeting an aggressive cost-to-income ratio at the end of 2020, which would make it one of the most efficient European lenders.

The bank, which had 70,255 staff as of the end of June, has shrunk from about 99,000 employees in 2011, the year Horta-Osorio became chief.

Blemishing the results was a doubling in loan impairment to £258mil and it took another £90mil charge for mis-sold payment protection insurance (PPI).

The latest PPI top-up adds to the £600mil it took in the fourth quarter and raises the total it has set aside to compensate customers for the scandal to more than £18bil.

Lloyds shares fell 0.7% at 8:02am in London trading after the results announceme­nt yesterday.

The “overall profit performanc­e is slightly behind our expectatio­n, including a small additional PPI provision, but neverthele­ss capital generation is strong,” said Gary Greenwood, an analyst at Shore Capital.

“As such, we do not expect material changes to our forecasts or valuation.” — Bloomberg

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