The UK government is no longer the biggest stakeholder in Lloyds Banking Group, after it cut its stake to less than 6%.
The government spent £20.3bn to acquire a 43% stake in Lloyds at the height of the financial crisis.
It has already said it wants to return the bank to full private ownership during the course of 2017.
The biggest shareholder in Lloyds is now Blackrock, the world's largest asset manager.
Royal
Bank of Scotland (RBS) is still about 71%-owned by the government. In
the aftermath of the 2008-2009 banking crisis the UK government had to
spend a total of £115bn to rescue Lloyds Banking Group and RBS from
imminent collapse.
UK Financial Investments, which manages the
government's stake, stopped selling Lloyds' shares last January because
of financial market volatility.
In October, it resumed sales to
institutional investors, but because of continued volatility, the shares
were not made available to member of the public.
"Returning Lloyds to the private sector and recovering all of the
cash the taxpayer injected into the bank during the financial crisis is a
priority for the government," said Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip
Hammond.
"Confirmation that we are no longer the largest
shareholder in the bank and that we've now recouped over £18bn for UK
taxpayers is further evidence that we are on track to recover all of the
£20bn injected into the bank during the financial crisis."
Nicholas
Hyett, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: "Retail investors
had the disappointment of being denied involvement in a Lloyds share
sale, although there is still time and plenty of opportunity to rectify
this with the remaining circa £2bn stake."
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