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Lloyds Buys Tesco’s Home Loan Book for About $4.6 Billion

Lloyds  will acquire over 23,000 mortgage customers as part of the deal, according to the statements from both companies.

Lloyds Buys Tesco’s Home Loan Book for About $4.6 Billion
Pedestrians pass a Lloyds Bank branch, a unit of Lloyds Banking Group Plc, on Oxford Street in London, U.K. (Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Lloyds Banking Group Plc is snapping up Tesco Plc’s mortgage portfolio for about 3.8 billion pounds ($4.6 billion) as the British bank bets the U.K. economy will hold up despite the prospects of a disorderly Brexit.

The country’s biggest mortgage lender is tightening its grip, acquiring over 23,000 mortgage customers as part of the deal, according to statements from both companies. Tesco, which has been cutting costs and slimming staff, said in May that it’s ending mortgage lending and exiting its home loan book, citing challenging conditions that have pushed some smaller lenders out of the market.

It’s in line with Tesco Bank’s “strategy of focusing on a reduced number of products and services that serve the broad range of Tesco customers, and will reduce operating and funding costs,” the supermarket operator said in its statement on Tuesday.

Tesco shares fell 0.6% in early London trade, while Lloyds slipped 1.3%.

The Lloyds purchase comes amid warnings that U.K. banks could see a decline in profitability as the risk of a no-deal Brexit increases. Citigroup Inc. has estimated that such an event could cut domestic banks’ earnings by as much as 25%, while U.K. house prices have been falling over Brexit and higher property taxes.

Lloyds has taken a less downbeat tone and is one of the few U.K. banks to not make a large provision for a Brexit-related downturn. Still, Chief Executive Officer Antonio Horta-Osorio has said that continued uncertainty over the U.K.’s European Union withdrawal could affect the economy.

‘Target Areas’

A “strong free capital build gives us flexibility to consider inorganic growth opportunities in selected target areas where we see value for shareholders,” the bank said. “The transaction is in line with this approach.”

In May, Lloyds was given more breathing space on its capital requirements. It has lowered its targets for its CET1 ratio, a measure of capital strength, to around 12.5%, potentially freeing up about 1 billion pounds in excess capital. The purchase will be funded using existing “internal resources” with minimal impact on capital, Lloyds said.

The deal is Tesco CEO Dave Lewis’s largest divestment since the 4 billion-pound sale of Korean assets four years ago. In his five years leading the company, Lewis has trimmed debt enough for the supermarket operator to regain its investment-grade credit rating at Moody’s Investors Service. Tesco is also reducing costs through job cuts, having announced the elimination of another 4,500 positions last month.

To contact the reporter on this story: Thomas Mulier in Geneva at tmulier@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Ambereen Choudhury at achoudhury@bloomberg.net, Eric Pfanner, Marion Dakers

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