Lloyds Banking Group plc (NYSE: LYG) still attracts attention as a U.K. dividend bank, but its latest quarter makes a stronger case that the stock should be judged on earnings resilience, capital generation, and credit performance. In the first quarter of 2026, Lloyds reported statutory profit before tax of £2.0 billion versus £1.5 billion a year earlier, net income of £4.8 billion, up 9%, net interest income of £3.6 billion, up 8%, and a banking net interest margin of 3.17%, up 14 basis points year over year. Return on tangible equity was 17.0%, compared with 12.6% a year earlier, and management said it still expects return on tangible equity for full-year 2026 to be greater than 16%.
Those figures matter more than the dividend label because they show a bank still benefiting from hedge income, lending growth, and stable credit. The real question for investors is whether Lloyds can keep translating those advantages into earnings and capital returns as U.K. rates and credit conditions evolve.
Why Lloyds should be judged on margin resilience, capital returns, and credit quality rather than on a dividend label alone
The first reason is that Lloyds is still proving it can grow core income even while asset margin pressure persists. The group said underlying net interest income in the first quarter was £3.569 billion, up 1% from the fourth quarter of 2025, as a growing structural hedge contribution offset headwinds from asset margin compression. Average interest-earning banking assets rose to £473.5 billion from £470.3 billion in the prior quarter, reflecting growth across the Retail division, led by U.K. mortgages, and growth in Commercial Banking.
That means Lloyds is not simply coasting on a static deposit base or legacy rate tailwind. The structural hedge remains a major earnings engine. As of March 31, 2026, the notional balance of the sterling structural hedge was £246 billion, up from £244 billion at year-end 2025, and the group generated £1.6 billion of total income from structural hedge balances in the first three months of 2026 versus £1.2 billion a year earlier. Management now expects structural hedge earnings to be greater than £7.0 billion in 2026 and greater than £8.0 billion in 2027.
The balance-sheet trends support that story. Lending reached £486.2 billion, up £5.1 billion in the quarter and up 4% year over year, with growth across all business lines. Customer deposits were £495.9 billion, down only £0.6 billion in the quarter and still up 2% year over year, as a £3.1 billion reduction in Retail deposits was partly offset by £2.3 billion growth in Commercial Banking deposits. Those are the kinds of trends that matter more than a dividend headline because they help determine whether Lloyds can keep compounding net interest income without stretching risk.
Capital return is part of the case, but it is downstream from operating strength. Tangible net assets per share rose to 57.9 pence from 57.0 pence at December 31, 2025, even after the ongoing share buyback announced in January. By March 31, the group had repurchased about 0.6 billion shares at a cost of £0.7 billion and an average price of 97.7 pence. That is useful, but it only works because the income and capital engine remains intact.
What the latest reported net interest income, capital ratios, impairments, and U.K. loan-growth context say about upside and risk now
The best sign in the quarter is that Lloyds paired higher income with disciplined credit. Underlying impairment was £295 million versus £309 million a year earlier, producing an asset quality ratio of 25 basis points. The group said the charge stayed low because of strong and stable credit performance across portfolios and benefits from quarterly model calibrations. It also said observed Commercial Banking charges were very low in the quarter, and it continues to expect the asset quality ratio to be about 25 basis points for 2026.
That does not mean risk has disappeared. The quarter included a £101 million charge from updated multiple economic scenarios, reflecting a £151 million impact from a deterioration in the economic outlook tied to the Middle East conflict, partly offset by a £50 million release of a post-model adjustment for tariff and political disruption risks. So Lloyds still has to navigate a macro backdrop that can change quickly, even if current credit performance looks calm.
Capital remains solid enough to support that navigation. Lloyds reported strong capital generation of 41 basis points in the quarter and a CET1 ratio of 13.4% after the ordinary dividend accrual. Risk-weighted assets were £240.8 billion, up from £235.5 billion at year-end 2025, reflecting lending-driven growth. The group also reported a total capital ratio of 18.2%, a loan-to-deposit ratio of 98%, a liquidity coverage ratio of 144%, and a net stable funding ratio of 123%. Those are healthy figures, but they also show the bank is using balance sheet capacity rather than sitting on it.
The cost line is another thing to watch. Lloyds said the cost:income ratio was 51.9% versus 58.1% a year earlier and reiterated that it expects the 2026 cost:income ratio to be below 50%, with operating costs still expected to be less than £9.9 billion. If management delivers that while keeping the asset quality ratio near 25 basis points and net interest income above £14.9 billion for the year, the case for Lloyds looks much stronger than a simple dividend screen.
Key Signals for Investors
Lloyds’ earnings case still starts with margin resilience, with net interest income of £3.6 billion and a banking net interest margin of 3.17% showing the hedge is still doing heavy lifting.
Lending growth to £486.2 billion alongside broadly stable deposits at £495.9 billion suggests the bank is still growing the balance sheet without obvious funding stress.
A 13.4% CET1 ratio after the dividend accrual and 41 basis points of quarterly capital generation keep capital returns credible, but rising risk-weighted assets mean discipline still matters.
The 25 basis point asset quality ratio remains benign, yet the quarter’s £101 million MES charge is a reminder that Lloyds is not insulated from macro shocks.
If Lloyds can keep net interest income above £14.9 billion in 2026 while taking the cost:income ratio below 50%, the stock will look more like an earnings-compounder than a simple high-yield bank.
Sources
https://www.lloydsbankinggroup.com/assets/pdfs/investors/financial-performance/lloyds-banking-group-plc/2026/q1/2026-lbg-q1-ims.pdf
https://www.lloydsbankinggroup.com/assets/pdfs/investors/financial-performance/lloyds-banking-group-plc/2026/q1/2026-lbg-q1-shareholder-faqs.pdf
https://www.lloydsbankinggroup.com/investors.html

















