Following a 12% decline over last year, recent gains may please Lloyds Banking Group plc (LON:LLOY) institutional owners

In This Article:

Key Insights

  • Significantly high institutional ownership implies Lloyds Banking Group's stock price is sensitive to their trading actions

  • 50% of the business is held by the top 25 shareholders

  • Insiders have been selling lately

If you want to know who really controls Lloyds Banking Group plc (LON:LLOY), then you'll have to look at the makeup of its share registry. We can see that institutions own the lion's share in the company with 79% ownership. In other words, the group stands to gain the most (or lose the most) from their investment into the company.

Last week's UK£1.1b market cap gain would probably be appreciated by institutional investors, especially after a year of 12% losses.

In the chart below, we zoom in on the different ownership groups of Lloyds Banking Group.

See our latest analysis for Lloyds Banking Group

ownership-breakdown
LSE:LLOY Ownership Breakdown February 19th 2024

What Does The Institutional Ownership Tell Us About Lloyds Banking Group?

Institutional investors commonly compare their own returns to the returns of a commonly followed index. So they generally do consider buying larger companies that are included in the relevant benchmark index.

Lloyds Banking Group already has institutions on the share registry. Indeed, they own a respectable stake in the company. This suggests some credibility amongst professional investors. But we can't rely on that fact alone since institutions make bad investments sometimes, just like everyone does. It is not uncommon to see a big share price drop if two large institutional investors try to sell out of a stock at the same time. So it is worth checking the past earnings trajectory of Lloyds Banking Group, (below). Of course, keep in mind that there are other factors to consider, too.

earnings-and-revenue-growth
LSE:LLOY Earnings and Revenue Growth February 19th 2024

Since institutional investors own more than half the issued stock, the board will likely have to pay attention to their preferences. Hedge funds don't have many shares in Lloyds Banking Group. The company's largest shareholder is BlackRock, Inc., with ownership of 8.1%. With 4.7% and 4.5% of the shares outstanding respectively, The Vanguard Group, Inc. and Harris Associates L.P. are the second and third largest shareholders.

A closer look at our ownership figures suggests that the top 25 shareholders have a combined ownership of 50% implying that no single shareholder has a majority.

While it makes sense to study institutional ownership data for a company, it also makes sense to study analyst sentiments to know which way the wind is blowing. There are plenty of analysts covering the stock, so it might be worth seeing what they are forecasting, too.