Insurance UK

  • January 19, 2026

    Slaughter And May Guides Zurich's £7.7B Bid For Beazley

    Swiss insurance giant Zurich said Monday that it has made a £7.7 billion ($10 billion) proposed offer for London-listed Beazley PLC after the British rival rejected a lower offer earlier in January.

  • January 19, 2026

    Pensions Provider TPT Picks New Chief Compliance Officer

    British pensions provider TPT Retirement Solutions said Monday that it has hired Helen Taylor as its new chief legal, risk and compliance officer.

  • January 19, 2026

    MPs Endorse Emma Douglas For Chair Of Pensions Watchdog

    Senior MPs on a cross-party House of Commons committee have formally endorsed Emma Douglas to be the new chair of the pensions watchdog.

  • January 19, 2026

    Lloyd's Market Picks PwC Global Insurance Head As CFO

    Lloyd's of London has named its next chief financial officer, a PwC veteran who is set to join the insurance marketplace in April.

  • January 19, 2026

    Insurance CEOs Have 'High M&A Appetite,' KPMG Says

    Insurance chief executives have entered 2026 with confidence in the sector's growth prospects and a bullish appetite for mergers and acquisitions, but warn of increasing risks from AI and cyber-attacks, according to a report by KPMG published on Monday.

  • January 19, 2026

    PRA Warns Of 'Competitive Pressure' On Life Insurers

    The Prudential Regulation Authority has said it is concerned that insurers involved in the pension deals market could be tempted to take risks in order to maintain an edge in an increasingly competitive market.

  • January 19, 2026

    Tribunal Upholds FCA Ban, £2M Fine For 'Dishonest' Adviser

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Monday that a court has upheld its decision to ban and fine a financial adviser more than £2 million ($2.7 million) for misconduct it described as the worst it has seen over the British Steel Pension Scheme scandal.

  • January 19, 2026

    ​Eversheds Sutherland-Led Fintel Buys Data Biz For £11M

    ​Fintel PLC said Monday that a subsidiary has acquired the market pricing business of Pearson Ham Group for £11 million ($14.7 million) as it looks to expand its software and data division and strengthen its position in Britain's insurance sector.

  • January 19, 2026

    Over 1M Retired Households 'Mainly' Reliant On State Pension

    More than 1.2 million retired households in the U.K. are "mainly" dependent on the state pension for their retirement income, a retirement specialist company said Monday.

  • January 16, 2026

    London Broker Seeks Toss Of Yacht Owner's $2M Suit

    A London insurance broker urged a Florida federal court to toss a yacht owner's suit seeking $2 million in coverage over the sinking of its vessel off the coast of North Carolina, saying the court lacks personal jurisdiction because the broker has "woefully insufficient contacts" with the state.

  • January 16, 2026

    Lenders Seek To Halt $68M Nigerian Debt Proceedings

    The International Finance Corp. and Ninety One have asked a London court to block a Nigerian real estate company from pursuing proceedings in the west African country that say the lenders agreed to settle a roughly $68.6 million debt for less than half that amount. 

  • January 16, 2026

    Parliament Watchdog Targets Women's Pension Failings

    The parliamentary watchdog said Friday it has "serious concerns" over delays by the Department for Work and Pensions in its efforts to learn from the women's state pensions scandal.

  • January 16, 2026

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

    This past week in London saw the David Lloyd gym chain file an intellectual property claim against its founder, security company Primekings reignite a long-running dispute with the former owners of an acquired business, and a pair of Belizean developers sue a finance executive they say shut them out of a cruise port project.

  • January 16, 2026

    Travelers Latest Insurer To Pen AI Agreement With Anthropic

    American insurance giant Travelers has become the latest insurer to pen a partnership with artificial intelligence company Anthropic after announcing it had signed a deal that it said would grow its AI-powered engineering and analytics capabilities.

  • January 16, 2026

    EU Pensions Watchdog To Tighten Single Market Integration

    The European Union has launched its long-term strategy to strengthen and streamline the bloc's insurance and retirement sectors through to 2030, amid rising geopolitical, economic, environmental and technological turbulence.

  • January 16, 2026

    UK Businesses See AI As Growing Legal Threat, Allianz Warns

    More than half of U.K. businesses fear legal risks and damage to reputation from the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence, insurance giant Allianz has warned.

  • January 16, 2026

    Insurance Brokers Plan Directory To Boost Cyber Protection

    The British Insurance Brokers' Association has said it is working with the government to develop a directory of cyber insurance brokers in an effort to close the so-called protection gap at U.K. businesses.

  • January 15, 2026

    Insurance Sector Unveils Plan To Boost Consumer Access

    Two of Britain's leading insurance trade bodies on Thursday launched a plan to help retail customers find suitable cover in the wake of government efforts to improve financial inclusion in the U.K.

  • January 15, 2026

    Axiom Ince Says SRA Negligently Failed To Spot £65M Fraud

    Axiom Ince has accused the Solicitors Regulation Authority in a court claim of bungling a probe into the firm and missing a chance to prevent further losses stemming from its former chief executive's alleged misappropriation of £65 million ($87 million) of client money.

  • January 15, 2026

    Real Estate Investor Sues Insurance Broker Over Unpaid Loan

    A real estate investment company and an affiliate firm have sued an insurance broker and its sole director for their alleged failure to repay a loan worth almost £227,000 ($304,000) and breaches of obligations linked to the businesses.

  • January 15, 2026

    Gov't Drops Planned Probe Into UK Pensions Ombudsman

    The government confirmed it has dropped a pledge to carry out a review of the U.K.'s pension arbitration body, in the wake of the Atomic Energy Agency Technology retirement fund scandal.

  • January 15, 2026

    Pensions Watchdog Hires Treasury Mandarin As Policy Chief

    The Pensions Regulator said Thursday it has appointed as its new policy chief one of the leading architects behind the government's push for retirement funds to invest more in the economy.

  • January 15, 2026

    BoE To Streamline Big Firms' Risk Reviews With 2-Year Cycle

    The regulatory body of the Bank of England said Thursday that larger businesses will have to attend formal risk reviews only every two years as it moves to streamline their supervision.

  • January 15, 2026

    Pensions Co. Vidett Acquires London Governance Biz

    Governance and pensions services provider Vidett has acquired Bridgehouse Company Secretaries, an outsourced corporate governance business, as it strengthens its position in an evolving corporate services market.

  • January 14, 2026

    City Council Sues Hermes Over Gamble On Wind Farms

    A Scottish local authority is suing the managers of its pension fund at the High Court over a decision to invest £104 million ($140 million) in a "highly risky" portfolio of Swedish wind farms that led to substantial losses.

Expert Analysis

  • How EU Proposal Would Affect Corporate Sustainability Duties

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    The European Commission recently released its proposal for a directive on corporate sustainability, human rights and environmental due diligence, that, if adopted, will have a substantial impact on the external corporate regulation and the internal corporate governance of the largest companies operating in the EU, says François Holmey at Carter-Ruck.

  • How Will UK Use New Penalties For Debt-Dodging Directors?

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    Thomas Shortland at Cohen & Gresser discusses the scope of the new disqualification regime for company directors who dissolve their businesses to avoid paying back state COVID-19 loans, and identifies factors that may affect how frequently the government exercises the new powers.

  • Automated AML Compliance Tools Are No Silver Bullet

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    As financial institutions increasingly use automated tools for anti-money laundering compliance, attorneys at Covington discuss the risks of overreliance on such tools, regulatory expectations, potential liability and insurance coverage implications, as well as lessons from recent enforcement actions.

  • Issues To Watch In Potential English Arbitration Act Reform

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    Summary dismissal, confidentiality, technological updates and certain other topics that could fall under the England and Wales Law Commission's upcoming review of the 25-year-old Arbitration Act should be of particular interest to those considering an English-seated arbitration, say Neil Newing and Alasdair Marshall at Signature Litigation.

  • UK's Vicarious Liability Juggernaut Shows Signs Of Slowing

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    In the last five years, U.K. court decisions have generally broadened the scope of vicarious liability, holding organizations responsible for individuals' crimes, but more recent decisions suggest that courts are finally taking steps to limit such liability, say Stephanie Wilson and Philip Tracey at Plexus Legal.

  • What 9th Circ. Arbitration Case May Mean For Insurance

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    If the plaintiffs in CLMS Management Services v. Amwins Brokerage of Georgia appeal the Ninth Circuit's recent decision that state law does not bar the enforcement of arbitration clauses in insurance contracts, the case may have a significant effect on the different dispute resolution options for insurers and policyholders, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.

  • UK Focus On Int'l Data Transfers Shows Appetite For Reform

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    Recent U.K. public consultations on international transfers of personal data and structural amendments to the country's General Data Protection Regulation illustrate the post-Brexit appetite for reform and signal changes to the international data transfers regime, say Kate Brimsted and Tom Evans at BCLP.

  • Policyholder Outlook Following UK Biz Interruption Test Case

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    In the nine months since the U.K. Supreme Court ruled in favor of policyholders in the Financial Conduct Authority’s test case on insurance coverage for COVID-19 businesses interruption claims, similar lawsuits filed against insurers show that a positive outcome for insureds is not guaranteed, say Peter Sharp and Paul Mesquitta at Morgan Lewis.

  • What The Future Holds For UK Auditing Reform

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    The U.K.'s Financial Reporting Council has shown itself to be an increasingly effective and proactive regulator in its final months, and the greater powers of its incoming replacement — the Audit, Reporting and Governance Authority — will likely continue an era of heightened scrutiny for auditors, say Paul Brehony and Kate Gee at Signature Litigation.

  • How UK Data Breach Ruling May Rein In Insurance Claims

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    The recent U.K. High Court ruling in Warren v. DSG Retail, which held that claimants can only pursue personal data claims provided for in data protection legislation, narrows the basis upon which claims can be made following a data breach, and could make lower-cost recovery of after-the-event insurance premiums a thing of the past, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.

  • 2nd Circ. Arbitral Award Ruling Signals Restrictive Approach

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    The Second Circuit's recent ruling in Gater Assets v. Moldovagaz, reversing a default judgment arbitration award on jurisdictional grounds, fortifies U.S. court protections for foreign states and state-owned entities, and forecasts the court's conservative approach to when nonparties can be bound by arbitration agreements, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • Lloyds EU Operations Highlight Challenges For UK Insurers

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    Potential problems facing Lloyd's Europe could be shared by other U.K. insurers operating in the European Union's more stringent post-Brexit regulatory landscape, but individual countries' discrete provisions allowing for certain cross-border activities could enable a more nuanced approach, says Jeremy Irving at Browne Jacobson.

  • The Risky Reality Of GDPR Noncompliance

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    With the General Data Protection Regulation remaining in force in the post-Brexit European Union, businesses should be aware not only of the increasing fines levied for noncompliance, but also of the expenses incurred for lost management time, the professional costs and the reputational damage, says Alexander Egerton at Seddons Law.

  • An Underused Group Litigation Tool Could Help UK Claimants

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    Though the Financial Markets Test Case Procedure has only been used as a collective redress mechanism for the first time recently in Financial Conduct Authority v. Arch Insurance, hopefully it will be called on more often to resolve future post-Brexit issues and other pandemic cases, says Becca Hogan at Signature Litigation.

  • Risk Management Lessons From Recent Finance Co. Failures

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    Investor exposure to Archegos Capital and Greensill Capital before their high-profile collapses earlier this year show puzzling lapses in internal controls and highlight key risk management considerations for investors, says Benedict Roth at Martello Financial Services.

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