Scottish Daily Mail

Lloyds’ investors lose their claim on HBOS

- By Cathy Gordon

LLOYDS shareholde­rs have lost a multimilli­on-pound High Court action over the acquisitio­n of HBOS.

A judge sitting in London yesterday dismissed an action by a group of 5,803 former Lloyds TSB shareholde­rs who claimed they were ‘mugged’ when the bank recommende­d the January 2009 deal without disclosing HBOS’s true financial state.

Sir Alastair Norris announced his decision following a 2017 trial of the case brought by the shareholde­rs against Lloyds Banking Group and former executives over alleged losses running into millions of pounds.

Lloyds ‘robustly’ contested the civil legal action, saying it did not consider there was ‘any merit’ in the claims.

The acquisitio­n left Lloyds saddled with toxic assets and it was later forced to take a govern

‘Our clients are deeply disappoint­ed’

ment bail-out worth £20.3billion, which has been blamed in part on the takeover.

During the hearing of the dispute, the judge heard from a lawyer for the shareholde­rs that directors recommende­d the ‘disastrous’ acquisitio­n when, based on informatio­n they had, no reasonable director would have done so.

But it was argued on behalf of Lloyds that the allegation­s of wrongdoing were ‘entirely devoid of merit’, and the unpreceden­ted claim was ‘fundamenta­lly flawed at every level’.

A Lloyds Banking Group spokesman said: ‘The group welcomes the court’s decision.

‘Throughout this process, the group has sought to act in the interests of our shareholde­rs as a whole.’

Damon Parker, founder and partner of law firm Harcus Parker, which represents 300 institutio­ns and almost 6,000 individual­s in the case, said: ‘Our clients are deeply disappoint­ed by today’s judgment.

‘They wish to assess their options and will be considerin­g whether to appeal.’

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