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Lloyds Bank lifts outlook and dividend as rate hikes boost returns

Britain's biggest domestic bank reported pretax profits of 3.7 billion pounds for the six months to June
Britain's biggest domestic bank reported pretax profits of 3.7 billion pounds for the six months to June

Lloyds Banking Group has hiked its dividend and full-year profitability forecast despite lower first-half earnings and a murky outlook for the UK economy, as rising interest rates outpace modest growth in provisions for troubled loans.

Britain's biggest domestic bank reported pretax profits of 3.7 billion pounds for the six months to June, down from 3.9 billion pounds the prior year, but above the 3.2 billion average of analyst forecasts compiled by the bank.

The performance from Lloyds' core consumer banking and lending businesses mirrored US counterparts focused on retail banking such as Bank of America, which earlier this month reported better than expected profits.

Lloyds proposed an interim dividend of 0.80 pence per share, up 20% on the first half of last year, in a show of confidence in the face of inflation at 40-year highs that is threatening to pitch Britain back into a downturn.

Lloyds also raised its forecast for return on tangible equity, a key measure of profitability, to 13% for 2022, up from a forecast of greater than 11% as of March.

The bank's shares rose more than 4%, the second-best performers in the benchmark FTSE 100 index.

Lloyds said that while more customers were struggling with price rises, loan defaults remained below pre-pandemic levels and high employment was likely to keep them under control.

However, Chief Executive Charlie Nunn told reporters one in five of its 26 million customers were having to adapt their spending significantly - with 2.2 million cancelling subscriptions since last summer and the average family spending 89 pounds a month more on energy and food.

Around 1% of customers "are really struggling to make ends meet", Nunn said, adding the bank was targeting support such as offering to consolidate debts and financial health checks.