Will Lloyds Shares Reach £1 in 2025?

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Richard Berry Moderator

Does anyone think that Lloyd’s shares can break through £1 in 2025?

Jackson Wong Participant

For all practical purposes, Lloyds’ share price has “reached” £1 this year.

A quick glance at its daily share price shows intra-day peaks this week of 96p (95.86p to be exact). Yes, we may not have traded at £1, but that’s close enough – close enough for many profit takers to slam in sell orders on the last trading day of the week (Friday 14 Nov) to lock in some profits. Jittery in the Wall Street is spreading; and risk appetite is waning for many previously red-hot sectors.

Of course, there could be another northerly spurt in the run-up to Christmas. But as we are only a few weeks to that holiday season, time is in short supply.

The next question is: Will Lloyds shares rally above £1 in 2026?

The past year and a half was an excellent period for bank shares. Barclays (BARC) jumped through 400p while NatWest (NWG) also cleared 500p. All three banks are now worth £50 billion or more. So Lloyds’ rally was not only an individual stock rally but an industry-wide advance.

If we take a longer view for Lloyds, it seems that its base pattern is just being explored to the upside. 90p for Lloyds is such a massive ceiling – a ceiling that dates back a decade earlier to 2015. Naturally Lloyds needs to consolidate around this level before making another attempt to trade above the magical £1.

My gut feeling is that the share price won’t hit £1 in 2025. Why? There are a few reasons:

* The valuation looks pretty full right now. Currently, analysts expect earnings of 7.33p per share from Lloyds this year. That puts the bank’s P/E ratio at 12. For a domestic bank that has minimal exposure to higher growth areas of banking such as wealth management, investment banking, and trading, that multiple is high. Barclays and HSBC trade at 9.2 and 9.9 times this year’s forecast earnings. So, Lloyds is trading at a premium to these banks. Note that the average price target is 97p. So, analysts don’t expect to see £1 in the near term.

* Key/round numbers often act as a form of ‘resistance’ for a share price. This is technical analysis 101. I believe we’re likely to see that here with £1. What I think will happen is that near £1, a lot of investors will look to take profits. This will put pressure on the share price and stop it from breaching the £1 mark. It’s worth pointing out that Lloyds’ share price has risen a lot in 2025 – year to date it’s up 60%+. After that kind of gain, some profit taking is to be expected.

* The UK Budget (to be announced on 26 November) threatens to throw up a few negatives for UK banks. Recently, there has been talk of higher taxes on banks, which could reduce profitability.

* Those looking for income have many superior options today. Right now, Lloyds shares yield less than 4%.

Now, I’m not saying that Lloyds shares can’t keep rising in the medium term. I just think that £1 (more than 10% higher than the share price today) is unlikely in 2025.

Darren Sinden Participant

Lloyds Banking Group has come within a whisper of trading at £1.00 in recent sessions, posting a high of 95.861p.

So, will one of the UKs most widely traded and owned shares be able to reach the round number, and what would it take to get it there?

Lloyds has comfortably outperformed the FTSE 100 so far this year. Its shares have risen by 65.30% as of the time of writing, compared to a +16.71% gain for the blue-chip index.

Over 52 weeks, Lloyds’ stock has beaten all of the large UK banks apart from Standard Chartered, whose +69.50% gains eclipse the +61.00% per cent gain at Lloyds.

Lloyds Banking is integral to parts of the UK economy, for example, the bank processes1 in 4 card payments made in the country, and it’s also the largest mortgage lender in Britain, with a 20.0% market share, lending some £47.0 billion to homeowners in 2024.

That’s the good news.

The bad news is that once again the Bank’s past conduct has come back to haunt it once more.

This time it’s the payment of undisclosed commissions, to car dealers, who arranged motor finance for their customers, through Lloyds Bank and its subsidiaries.

Lloyds isn’t alone in this. Santander, Close Brothers and the finance arms of several motor manufacturers are also implicated.

However, because Lloyds was a very active lender in the space, it now faces the very real possibility of paying compensation to car owners, who used Lloyds finance to buy their vehicle .

The FCA, the courts and the lenders are still wrangling about the size of the compensation and the time scale for payments. Lloyds was sufficiently concerned to make a further £800 million provision against them. Which meant that Q3 2025 profits were down by around -33.0%. when compared to Q3 2024.

For now at least the Bank England isn’t cutting UK base rates further, and that should help Lloyds earnings going forward.

The Chancellor of the Exchequer is alsoreported to have ruled out a further levy or surcharge on bank profits as part of her late November Budget. If the UK budget on November 26th isn’t as unfriendly as it’s been painted, then we might see a relief rally in UK equities.

And, given that Lloyds Banking shares have posted 14 new highs over the last month, it seems plausible that they could test to £1.00 under those circumstances.

However, without that, we may have to wait for a favourable resolution in the Auto finance scandal, to act as positive catalyst for the share price.

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