Insurance UK

  • March 26, 2025

    Claims Firm Beats Whistleblower's Fraud Case

    A claims manager didn't blow the whistle on forged signatures at an insurance claims handler because he had waited until his resignation day to alert senior management, an employment tribunal has ruled.

  • March 26, 2025

    UK Accounting Firms Warned On Capital Restructuring

    The Financial Reporting Council has instructed audit firms that are considering a capital restructuring to engage with the watchdog "at an early stage" and with "full candor."

  • March 26, 2025

    Insurers Could Pick Up Bill For Replacing Dangerous Cladding

    Britain's professional indemnity insurance market could be forced to pick up a significant portion of the £22.4 billion ($29 billion) bill for replacing flammable cladding from buildings, an underwriter warned.

  • March 26, 2025

    Gov't Expands UK Fraud Strategy With Focus on Scammers

    Fraud Minister David Hanson announced at a summit on Wednesday that work has started on an expanded fraud strategy, with a focus on combating scams enabled by artificial intelligence, according to the Home Office.

  • March 26, 2025

    FCA Presses London Insurers Into Misconduct Training

    The scandal-hit London insurance market has drawn up a training program for staff after pressure from the Financial Conduct Authority, a group of trade bodies said.

  • March 26, 2025

    UK Insurer Beam Buys Commercial Lines Broker KDH

    Beam Insurance Solutions has acquired commercial lines broker KDH, as The Broker Investment Group-backed company strengthens its presence in the U.K.'s Midlands and targets hitting £22 million ($28 million) in gross written premiums by the end of 2025.

  • March 26, 2025

    Most DC Savers In Plans With 'Productive Asset' Investment

    Almost nine in 10 defined contribution pension savers are in schemes that invest in at least one "productive asset" class, such as infrastructure, Britain's retirement watchdog has said.

  • March 25, 2025

    Chubb Settles £3M Building Defect Claim With Housing Assoc.

    An affordable housing association has agreed to settle the £3.1 million ($4 million) claim it brought against Chubb European Group SE and other insurers to cover the costs of fixing a string of defects in a building project in northwest London.

  • March 25, 2025

    Aviva Pays Out £1.9B In Protection Claims In 2024

    Insurance giant Aviva said on Tuesday that it paid out more than £1.89 billion ($2.45 billion) on almost 62,000 individual and group protection claims in 2024.

  • March 25, 2025

    Howden To Buy Pensions Adviser Barnett Waddingham

    Insurance broker Howden Group said on Tuesday that it is acquiring U.K. professional services consultancy Barnett Waddingham to provide the group with expertise in pensions and fuel its continued global expansion.

  • March 25, 2025

    Ex-National Grid Worker Partially Wins Appeal In Pension Row

    A London court has ruled that a former National Grid employee can forge ahead with a claim accusing the energy company of failing to give him a fresh opinion about its decision to deny him a pension over his ill health.

  • March 25, 2025

    Quarter Of Pension Schemes Still Have 'Nondigital' Data

    The U.K. retirement saving watchdog said it has warned pension schemes that are failing to meet data standards, as one in four providers still have consumer information in a paper format.

  • March 25, 2025

    FCA Issues Regulatory Reform Plan To Promote UK Growth

    The Financial Conduct Authority unveiled a five-year plan on Tuesday to encourage more risk-taking by business, part of a wider effort to fire up the economy.

  • March 25, 2025

    FCA Boss Presses Pro-Reform MPs For Clarity On Risk

    The chief executive of the Financial Conduct Authority called Tuesday on MPs pressing for regulatory reform for clarification of how much risk is acceptable in the pursuit of growth as he warned of a potential rise in money laundering and property defaults.

  • March 24, 2025

    A&O Shearman Dials In £10B Pension Deals For BT Scheme

    One of the U.K.'s largest private-sector pension funds said it had offloaded £10 billion ($13 billion) in longevity risk to two reinsurers, in a deal steered by A&O Shearman and Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP.

  • March 24, 2025

    EU To Ease Financial Benchmark Rules For Administrators

    European Union negotiators approved on Monday an amended regulation on financial benchmarks to ease the burden on small and medium-sized firms that operate as administrators.  

  • March 24, 2025

    Global M&A Rebound Drives Insurance Boom, UK Broker Says

    Insurers are seeing growing demand from businesses for protection from risk connected to mergers and acquisitions, amid a global recovery in deal making in 2024, a survey by Marsh McLennan has found.

  • March 24, 2025

    Schroders Wins £740M Pension Management Contract

    Schroders' pension investment and advisory arm has confirmed its appointment as fiduciary manager of a pension scheme linked to Aga Rangemaster and will oversee £740 million ($958 million) worth of assets on behalf of the kitchen appliance brand scheme.

  • March 24, 2025

    UK Car Insurance Premiums Drop 17% Amid Lower Claims

    U.K. motorists are now paying £777 ($1,005) on average for their car insurance, a 17% year-on-year fall, broker WTW said Monday.

  • March 24, 2025

    UK Pension Deal Market Hit £47.6B In 2024

    The total value of pension deals carried out last year hit a near-record £47.6 billion ($61.6 billion) — a level that could prove to be a new norm for the market, a consultancy said.

  • March 21, 2025

    Spanish Lottery Co. Accused Of Tax Insurance Market Breach

    Spain's competition authority said Friday it is investigating a lottery company on suspicion of suppressing the marketing of tax insurance coverage for lottery winners.

  • March 21, 2025

    Insurers Provide £14.9B Of Cover With Post-Grenfell Program

    The insurance industry has provided cover worth £14.9 billion ($19.2 billion) for more than 680 high-risk buildings during the nine months of a program designed to expand insurance capacity for properties with combustible cladding, a trade body has said.

  • March 21, 2025

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London has seen a sub-postmaster sue the Post Office and Fujitsu, Russian insurer Ingosstrakh hit the Financial Times with a defamation claim, and Britvic-owned Robinsons Soft Drinks file a passing off claim against Aldi. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • March 21, 2025

    Insurance Giant Howden Buys Scotland Broker SKB

    Insurance broking giant Howden Group said it has bought Scotland-based SKB Independent Insurance Brokers.

  • March 21, 2025

    Insurer MS Amlin To Write €110M For Ukraine War Facility

    Lloyd's of London insurer MS Amlin said Friday that it has committed up to €110 million ($119 million) in reinsurance over five years to support war-risk policies underwritten by three Ukrainian insurers.

Expert Analysis

  • What Growing Focus On ESG Means For Insurers

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    As the world pays steadily more attention to environmental, social and governance issues, insurers and reinsurers will need to integrate ESG risks into their underwriting and compliance efforts, but doing so will help attract consumers and achieve positive investment returns, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • Finance Firms May See Increased FCA Enforcement This Year

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    Financial firms will likely see increased investigation and enforcement actions from the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority following Brexit and the COVID-19 pandemic, including in the areas of financial crime, customer protection, operational resilience and conduct, says Tracey Dovaston at Boies Schiller.

  • UK Supreme Court Ruling Clarifies Arbitrator Bias Standard

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    The U.K. Supreme Court's judgment in Halliburton v. Chubb, likely the court's most important decision in the area of international arbitration in the past decade, articulates important guidelines for how English courts will police issues of arbitrator disclosure and bias, even as it fuels concerns among insurance policyholders, say Allan Moore and Ramon Luque at Covington.

  • Evaluating Ethical And Legal Risk In Ransomware Payments

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    Deciding whether to pay the demanded ransom during a cyberattack is complex and requires a careful balancing of the risks to the firm's business against the reputational and regulatory risks, but companies can also prepare for this eventuality by taking concrete steps now, say Rob Dedman and Kim Roberts at King & Spalding.

  • How Climate, Finance And Trade Will Intersect In 2021

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    In the coming year, the Biden administration will likely align its policies on climate change, finance and trade more closely with those of international partners and organizations, leading to more coordinated action on climate standards that will be applied across the global economy, say consultants at C&M International.

  • Perspectives

    Finding A Path Forward To Regulate The Legal Industry

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    Gerald Knapton at Ropers Majeski analyzes U.S. and U.K. experiments to explore alternative business structures and independent oversight for law firms, which could lead to innovative approaches to increasing access to legal services.

  • Whether And How To Compel Remote Arbitration

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    As the pandemic delays in-person arbitration hearings, mediator and arbitrator Theodore Cheng provides arbitrators with a checklist to examine the rationale and authority for compelling parties to participate in remote hearings.

  • Creditors Welcome UK Supreme Court's Reflective Loss Decision

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    The U.K. Supreme Court's recent Sevilleja v. Marex decision benefits creditors and other stakeholders by excluding their claims from the reflective loss principle, which precludes third-party complaints that merely reflect company loss, say Robert Fidoe and Jack Moulder at Watson Farley.

  • How Courts Are Encouraging Mediation In England And Wales

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    As the judiciary braces for widespread pandemic-driven contractual disputes, courts in England and Wales are showing enthusiastic support for mediation, both when determining the implications of a party's refusal to mediate and when assessing whether normal restrictions on the use of mediation-derived information apply, says Leah Alpren-Waterman at Watson Farley.

  • Opinion

    EU Class Action Policy Guided By Wrong Measure Of Success

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    The political agreement obtained last month on the first European Union-wide rules on collective redress illustrates the fact that the main goal of the authorities is to increase the number of class action claims rather than focus on the application of standard civil liability principles, says Sylvie Gallage-Alwis at Signature Litigation.

  • An Attractive Regime For Governing Jurisdiction Post-Brexit

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    As indicated by the U.K.'s recent application to join the Lugano Convention, this is an "oven-ready" option for the U.K. for governing questions of jurisdiction and the enforcement of judgments with European Union countries after Brexit — but not without important differences from the current regime, say attorneys at Latham.

  • Reinsurance Implications Of COVID-19 Biz Interruption Laws

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    In light of legislative and public pressure in the U.S. and U.K. on insurers to cover business interruption losses related to COVID-19, reinsurers will face new questions regarding their obligation to cover claim payments, say Robin Dusek at Saul Ewing and Susie Wakefield at Shoosmiths.

  • UK Appellate Rulings Clarify Arbitral Choice Of Law

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    Two recent U.K. Court of Appeal decisions have changed the operation of the choice-of-law test for arbitration — a resolution as significant as changing the test itself because it affects the implied choices of the contracting parties, say attorneys at Squire Patton.

  • Post-Pandemic Litigation To Expect In England And Wales

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    Globally, we are already starting to see insolvency-related claims and a number of insurance, breach of ‎contract, employment and securities class actions across numerous sectors. These and other claims will likely increase for U.K. businesses, say Tracey Dovaston and Fiona Huntriss at Boies Schiller.

  • UK Lawyers Can Adapt Due Diligence To Screen New Clients

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    As COVID-19-related fraud gains pace, U.K.-based practitioners should help combat money laundering by using alternative methods to verify that new clients are who they say they are, says Christopher Convey, a barrister at 33 Chancery Lane and chair of the Bar Council's Money Laundering Working Group.

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