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Lloyds Banking Group (LSE: LLOY) shares are often the go-to pick for investors looking to build a strong foundation in a long-term retirement portfolio.
The bank’s deep connection to the UK mortgage industry makes it something of a bellwether for the broader economy. When housing activity, interest rates, and consumer confidence move, Lloyds’ lending income and credit losses usually move with them.
But with house prices rising, population growth under pressure, and political sentiment shifting, how does it compare to other banks in 2026?
Side-by-side comparison
Lloyds’ Q1 2026 results were respectable, although not quite as impressive as some rivals. Net income rose 9% to £4.785bn, operating costs fell 3% to £2.47bn, and banking net interest margin improved to 3.17% from 3.03%.
That helped lift return on tangible equity (RoTE) to 17%.
Barclays reported Q1 2026 total income of £8.163bn, up 6%, with operating costs of £4.54bn and RoTE of 13.5%.
In the same quarter, NatWest posted total income (excluding notable items) of £4.22bn, up 6.9%, with a 46.5% cost-to-income ratio and RoTE of 18.2%.
On raw efficiency and profitability, NatWest came out ahead, while Lloyds still looks good on mortgage-linked earnings power. But when I run these statistics side-by-side, it’s clear to see it’s not the only bank doing well…
| Bank | Period | Income | Costs | Cost-to-income | RoTE |
| Lloyds | Q1 2026 | £4.78bn | £2.47bn | 51.9% | 17.00% |
| Barclay | Q1 2026 | £8.16bn | £4.54bn | 56% | 13.50% |
| NatWest | Q1 2026 | £4.22bn | £2.04bn | 46.5% | 18.20% |
Risk exposure
Lloyds’ biggest strength is also its main risk. It’s the UK’s largest mortgage lender by outstanding balances, with a £324.7bn mortgage book as of 31 March. That leaves it highly exposed to UK housing sentiment, even though its lending mix is broad and its credit quality was stable in Q1.
The bank’s own scenario work assumes UK house price growth of 0.7% in 2026 and 3.6% in 2030 under its base case. It also shows house prices falling in downside cases, which matters because slower lending growth and weaker margins would hit income.
Lloyds says its Q1 margin strength came partly from structural hedge income, but it also notes mortgage asset-margin compression. For a lender with such a heavy mortgage bias, that’s the key concern.
What this all means for investors
For British investors adopting a long-term retirement outlook, I’d frame Lloyds as the steadier, more UK-focused bank.
At the same time, I wouldn’t entirely ignore NatWest as a serious alternative in 2026. It has shown stronger recent profitability metrics and better efficiency, which usually allows more room for dividends or buybacks. For investors keen on earning income along the road to retirement, that matters.
Meanwhile, Barclays offers more diversification but is less of a pure retirement-income feel. That matters for those who feel the mortgage risk is significant, so it may appeal as a safer option. It has broader international reach, stronger investment banking exposure, and potentially more advanced digital tools.
In the end, it really comes down to each investor’s personal preference and long-term goals. But if I wanted one simple bank holding to consider for a long-term portfolio, Lloyds still makes the most sense, in my mind.
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Mark Hartley owns shares in Lloyds Banking Group.
This story originally appeared on Motley Fool
