Lloyds Bank Group has reported a 7% fall in annual pre-tax profits to £1.6bn compared with £1.8bn a year earlier.
The bank increased provisions for payment protection insurance (PPI) compensation in the year to £4bn.
That was after the City watchdog said it was considering a deadline on compensation claims.
Lloyds shares are up 12% in afternoon trading, making the bank the biggest riser on the FTSE 100.
Lloyds Banking Group
has faced the largest amount of PPI compensation claims. The new
provisions takes the total the bank has set aside to pay compensation to
£16bn.
The bank said it welcomed "the decision of the Financial
Conduct Authority to consult on a deadline for PPI complaints and the
certainty that this will bring for both customers and shareholders".
The
FCA has proposed a time bar that will allow people to claim
compensation for mis-sold PPI until 2018 before drawing a line under the
affair.
'Strong start'
The
bank also said it incurred a charge of £837m relating to complaints
about packaged bank accounts and "a number of other product
rectifications primarily in retail, insurance and commercial banking".
The bank, which restarted dividend payments
to shareholders last year after a six year break, announced it would
pay shareholders an ordinary dividend of 2.25p per share, plus a special
dividend of 0.5p giving a total payout to shareholders of £2bn.
Lloyds Banking Group
chief executive, Antonio Horta-Osorio said: "We made a strong start in
2015 to the next phase of our strategy and have delivered a robust
financial performance, enabling increased dividend payments."
The bank announced he had been awarded a deferred bonus of 723,977 shares and his salary had risen by 6% to £1.3 million.
'Worst is over'
Ian Gordon, an analyst at Investec, said today's results suggested that "the storm clouds are really clearing at last."
He said investors were now looking at Lloyds as "a safe, but boring, regular bank with little or no growth".
And
market analyst, Michael Hewson of CMC Markets said the share price was
also boosted by the perception that the payouts for PPI were coming to
an end.
"It really does seem the worst is behind us and that there
can't be much more left to pay out for customers mis-sold these
policies."
Paying out a dividend, despite the fall in profits, he said, was a sign of confidence from the bank's management.
The bank's annual results come a month after the Treasury announced it was postponing plans for a sale of Lloyds' shares to retail investors worth £2bn until global stock market volatility had eased.
The government, which held 43% of Lloyds after its rescue in 2008 has reduced the taxpayer's stake in the bank to around 9% now.
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