THE taxpayer's stake in Lloyds Banking Group, owner of Bank of Scotland, has been cut to below three per cent as the Government continues to sell down its shareholding.
UK Financial Investments, which manages the stake in Lloyds, cut its holding by around one per cent to 2.95 per cent, seeing the bank edge another step closer to full private ownership.
The sale means more than £19.5 billion has now been returned to Government coffers since the lender's £20.3bn bailout at the height of the financial crisis.
This includes around £500 million in payouts to shareholders since the bank resumed paying dividends in 2014 as it has returned to profit growth in recent years.
Lloyds chief executive Antonio Horta-Osorio said: "Today's announcement moves Lloyds another step closer to full private ownership, and we are pleased that the group's strong financial performance has kept us on track to return more money to taxpayers than was put in."
The stake sale is the latest in a series by the Government, which said in October that it hoped to offload its remaining shares in Lloyds within a year, with the City expecting Lloyds to return to full private ownership by June.
The Government has progressively sold down its original 43 per cent stake and Chancellor Philip Hammond scrapped plans for a share sale to the public in October, opting instead to offload the holding to institutional investors.
Since January, the Government has no longer been the bank's largest shareholder.
All proceeds from the sale will be used to reduce the national debt.
Lloyds unveiled its highest annual profits for a decade last month, with bottom-line profits more than doubling to £4.24bn last year from £1.64bn in 2015, thanks largely to lower costs of compensation for payment protection insurance (PPI).
Simon Kirby, economic secretary to the Treasury, said: "Lloyds' recent annual results show that we are in a good position to reduce our shareholding further and expect to recover all of the money taxpayers injected into the bank during the financial crisis."
But Lloyds has said the PPI scandal continues to cost it dear, revealing an extra £350m in provisions for compensation just last week, bringing its total PPI bill to £17.3bn.
The lender hived off additional funds after the Financial Conduct Authority extended its proposed deadline for new claims by two months to the end of August 2019.
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