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Insurance UK
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September 19, 2025
AmTrust, Novitas Settle £56M Litigation Funding Dispute
A legal loans company has settled its £56 million ($76 million) claim against AmTrust over who should cover the costs of a failed litigation funding scheme, a lawyer for the insurance giant told a court Friday.
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September 19, 2025
Norton Rose-Led Howden To Buy US Rival Gravitas
Howden Group Holdings Ltd. has agreed to acquire Gravitas Insurance, a U.S.-based contingency insurance brokerage for music, sport and live events.
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September 19, 2025
Gov't Pensions Unit Puts Dashboards At Heart Of 3-Year Plan
The U.K. government-sponsored body tasked with delivering the long-awaited pensions dashboards program designed to allow people to track their retirement savings has said the project is central to its strategy over the next three years.
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September 19, 2025
Specialty Insurer Fortegra Joins UK Trade Body ABI
Fortegra Insurance UK has signed up to Association of British Insurers, saying joining the trade body marks a significant step in its commitment to the market.
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September 18, 2025
Women 'Hit Hard' By State Pension Age Increases
Historical increases in the state pension age have had a disproportionate adverse effect on women in their late 50s who are not working, the Institute for Fiscal Studies has said.
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September 18, 2025
Charity Pension Plans 'Closer Than Ever' To Buyouts
The combined reserves of the 40 biggest charities in England and Wales that sponsor defined benefit retirement savings plans has dropped slightly, but many pension programs in the sector are now "closer than ever" to buyout, according to Hymans Robertson.
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September 18, 2025
Watchdog Weighing Rules Change On Offshore Reinsurance
The U.K.'s financial watchdog said Thursday it is considering changes to regulation because it is worried about the threat posed by offshore risk transfer deals used by life insurers to meet surging demand from the pensions industry.
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September 18, 2025
Gov't Told To Remove Barriers To UK Pension Investment
The government should lower the barriers to investment faced by the U.K.'s £3.2 trillion ($4.4 trillion) pensions sector if it is to secure additional funding for the economy, a trade body has said.
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September 18, 2025
UK Faces Pensions Crisis As Millions Risk Retirement Penury
Britain will have to radically rethink what retirement means, amid a growing number of warning signs that millions of savers will have to work longer and retire with less income than their parents, unless the government intervenes, pension experts have warned.
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September 18, 2025
UK Gov't Urged To Clarify Climate Plans For Pension Schemes
The government must make its proposals for large companies and financial institutions to publish strategies for how they intend to align their businesses with global climate targets "clear, concise and relevant for pension schemes," a consultancy has said.
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September 18, 2025
Allied World Denies Liability In £3M 'Ponzi Scheme' Dispute
An insurer has argued that it does not have to indemnify the liquidators of the business behind an investment plan for more than £3 million ($4 million), arguing there is no evidence that the investment was a Ponzi scheme.
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September 17, 2025
Generali Denies £2M Claim Over Astellas Worker's Alzheimer's
Generali Group has denied unreasonably refusing to pay out almost £2 million ($2.7 million) to Astellas on an income protection policy for a staffer with Alzheimer's disease, arguing that the employee did not become unable to work before the policy ended.
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September 17, 2025
FCA Unveils Tough Proposed Rules For Crypto Firms
The Financial Conduct Authority set out Monday its proposed crypto-assets regulatory regime, with some wider reach than its rules for other sectors like banking or insurance to address technological exposures.
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September 17, 2025
FCA Sets Out Plan For Insurance Protection Market Review
The Financial Conduct Authority has said it is on track to publish the first stage of its investigation into the insurance protection market by the end of the year.
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September 17, 2025
Watchdog Floats New Enforcement Plan Amid Oversight Shift
Britian's retirement savings watchdog has said it plans to become a more proactive regulator through a new strategy it hopes will make enforcement "smarter, more strategic and more impactful."
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September 17, 2025
Pensions Watchdog Sharpens Focus On Professional Trustees
The Pensions Regulator said Wednesday that it will continue with its plans to strengthen oversight of the professional trustee sector, after it emerged that 80% of the market was controlled by just four providers.
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September 17, 2025
Workers Cutting Pension Contributions To Make Ends Meet
More than half of British workers have at least considered reducing their pension payments in the past year to help pay bills, according to research from a retirement company published Wednesday.
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September 17, 2025
Spanish Online Bank Can't Void Insurance Brokerage's EU TM
A Spanish online bank has lost its attempt to void an insurance brokerage's "Insurance Advisors Associated" trademark, failing to convince European Union officials that there is a risk of confusion with its earlier registrations.
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September 17, 2025
Dentons-Led REIT To Close, Sell Portfolio For £646M
PRS said Wednesday that it has agreed to sell its property portfolio to a vehicle controlled by Waypoint Asset Management Ltd. for £646.2 million ($882 million) and then liquidate the real estate investment trust.
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September 16, 2025
BoE Set To Ease Rules For Foreign Insurers In UK
The regulatory arm of the Bank of England set out proposals on Tuesday to raise the liability threshold for foreign-based insurance groups that operate subsidiaries in the U.K. and reduce some reporting requirements.
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September 16, 2025
Insurer Can't Duck $6M Bond Payout Over Ghana Power Plant
A London court ordered a Ghanaian insurance company on Tuesday to pay a subsidiary of Greek industrial conglomerate Metlen almost $6.3 million for wrongly refusing to pay up under a bond the insurer claimed was obtained by fraud.
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September 16, 2025
Pension Pot Withdrawals Surged Nearly 36%, FCA Says
Savers in Britain withdrew £70.9 million ($96.8 million) from their pension pots in the financial year that ended in March, data published by the Financial Conduct Authority on Tuesday shows, amid suggested concern over government plans to amend tax rules linked to retirement pots.
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September 16, 2025
UK Pensions Industry Should Drive 'Small Pots' Fix
The government should use existing retirement industry infrastructure rather than create a costly new central "clearing house" for merging small pension pots, a trade body warned Tuesday.
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September 16, 2025
Conister Bank To Work With Fintech Biz On Overdraft Product
Conister Bank said Tuesday that it will work with financial technology company Fiinu to introduce an overdraft product in the U.K. using open banking rules.
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September 16, 2025
State Pension Could Breach Tax Threshold In 2027
British pensioners will be forced to pay income tax on state pension benefits from 2027 unless minimum earnings thresholds are lifted, experts said Tuesday in response to new data.
Expert Analysis
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How Greenwashing Litigation Is Affecting Financial Services
A rising demand for sustainable investment is likely to lead to an increase in claims of greenwashing, where a company's marketing falsely portrays its output as producing positive environmental outcomes, which carries risks for investors and insurers, says Kirsty Finlayson at Browne Jacobson.
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FCA Consumer Duty Shows Shift In Retail Financial Services
The Financial Conduct Authority’s newly published guidance on consumer duty sets higher expectations of the standard of care that financial firms give retail customers, meaning boards and senior management should expect to be held accountable for embedding a culture in which consumers' needs come first, say Claire Carroll and Sumitra Subramanian at Eversheds Sutherland.
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Pandemic Rent Ruling Is A Blow To Commercial Tenants
The recent U.K. Court of Appeal decision in London Trocadero v. Picturehouse demonstrates that even exceptional COVID-19-related circumstances will not induce courts to interfere with a previously considered allocation of risk between parties or imply terms in a contract, says Gurpreet Sanghera at Simkins.
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Building Inspector Insurance And Its New Relaxed Rules
The U.K. government recently opened up the market for approved building inspector insurance in the aftermath of the 2017 Grenfell Tower tragedy, but it does not appear to have considered the impact this may have on homeowners and developers, say Alan Stone and Jonathan Carrington at RPC.
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New Corporate Insolvency Data Reveals Unexpected Results
For a variety of reasons there has been a slower than anticipated increase in U.K. corporate insolvency figures in recent months, although there may be a time lag between economic difficulties and sentiment among investors, lenders and business owners, and it is likely that numbers will rise in the autumn, says Jeremy Whiteson at Fladgate.
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How The Latest Trends In Litigation Funding Are Developing
With investors looking for alternative assets that can achieve returns and claimants likely to be cash poor in the current economic downturn, the signs are that the litigation funding market is not only here to stay, but is set to expand, says Simon Thomas at Baker & Partners.
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Pros And Cons Of Regulating Finance Sector's Third Parties
Recent proposals by the U.K. Treasury could lead to regulation of those designated as critical third parties in finance, and legislation will be needed to ensure technology suppliers are not deterred from participating in the financial services markets, say attorneys at Addleshaw Goddard.
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UK Online Safety Bill Delayed, But Firms Should Still Prepare
Despite delays and content providers' concerns regarding the impact on their profitability, it appears certain that the Online Safety Bill will be enacted in one form or another, mirroring proposals in the EU and U.S., so tech firms must prepare for a new regulatory framework that will require them to tackle illegal and harmful content on their services, say attorneys at Dechert.
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A Look At The Solvency II Insurance Sector Proposed Reforms
It is hoped that the proposed reforms of Solvency II will not only ensure policyholder protection and a successful insurance industry, but that released capital will be invested in long-term infrastructure and green projects, yet there are questions and even concerns surrounding potential changes and what their impact might be, says Dónal Clark at Kennedys.
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4 Ways M&A Deals Are Changing
There are signs that the market may be cooling, but recent trends in M&A transactions reflect more than just market strength and indicate that there has been a more general change in deal approach, say attorneys at DLA Piper.
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The Digital Markets Act: Key Implementation Issues To Watch
The success of the Digital Markets Act, intended to regulate online services and protect consumers in the digital economy, and the most significant addition to the European Commission's regulatory toolbox in decades, will depend on how it is implemented by the commission, would-be gatekeepers, other market participants and national regulators, say attorneys at Linklaters.
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New FCA Listing Rules May Start Regulatory Shift On Diversity
Listed companies that fail to meet new Financial Conduct Authority rules for minimum executive board diversity currently risk reputational damage mainly through social scrutiny, but should prepare for potential regulatory enforcement actions, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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Examining UK Commission's Corporate Crime Reform Ideas
The Law Commission of England and Wales' recent recommendation of changes to corporate criminal law is a pragmatic attempt to address the practical shortcomings with the existing identification doctrine, and is likely to be welcomed by both companies and the agencies that would be enforcing it, say Alun Milford and Matthew Burn at Kingsley Napley.
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FCA Review Offers 'Challenger Banks' Advice On Crime Risks
Challenger banks should take heed of concerns arising from the Financial Conduct Authority's review of their crime control practices, and thus prove to insurers that they have taken adequate measures to improve their risk profile, say James Wickes and Amber Oldershaw at RPC.
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New Anti-Modern Slavery Bill Unlikely To Accomplish Goals
A new bill has been introduced to increase the accountability of organizations to tackle modern slavery, but without requiring the establishment of a corporate strategy and imposing sanctions for noncompliance, the U.K.'s response to modern slavery in general is unlikely to meaningfully improve, says Alice Lepeuple at WilmerHale.