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Insurance UK
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November 19, 2025
Gov't Promises To Decide Soon On Women Pensions Redress
The government said Wednesday that it is still working through evidence submitted as part of a judicial review into women's pension compensation, amid speculation ministers could be forced into a U-turn.
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November 19, 2025
English Water Co. Pens £40M Pension Deal With Just Group
A pension scheme sponsored by an English water company has offloaded £40 million ($52.5 million) of its retirement scheme liabilities to Just Group, in a deal announced by Lane Clark & Peacock.
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November 19, 2025
Watchdog Tells Small Companies How To Improve Accounting
The accounting watchdog set out on Wednesday ways in which smaller companies listed on the London Stock Exchange should improve their financial reporting to investors.
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November 19, 2025
Trustees Urged To Prioritize Data Before 'Dashboards' Launch
Pension plan trustees must treat their members' data as a strategic asset, the retirement savings watchdog has said, after its industry review revealed inconsistent quality that the regulator said must be addressed before the pensions dashboards project is launched.
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November 19, 2025
UK Plans Collated Equity Data To Boost LSE Appeal
The City watchdog floated plans on Wednesday to collate data about trades of U.K. equities as it seeks to boost confidence and encourage participation in London markets, part of the government's growth agenda.
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November 25, 2025
Capsticks Taps Employment Head For New Managing Partner
Capsticks Solicitors LLP has appointed the head of its national employment and pensions team to serve as the next managing partner of the firm.
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November 18, 2025
EU Targets Financial Cyber Risks With New IT Provider Rules
The three financial watchdogs of the European Union named on Tuesday the designated third-party providers of critical information and communication technology for finance companies, which it will regulate directly.
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November 18, 2025
Kuwaiti Pension Chief's Heirs Fight To Avoid $1B Fraud Debt
The children of a former Kuwaiti pensions fund director told an appeals court on Tuesday that they should not be held liable for their now-dead father's alleged $1 billion fraud debt, arguing that successors outside the English jurisdiction cannot be forced to pay.
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November 18, 2025
Aviva To Launch AI Tool For Life Insurance Applications
Aviva said Tuesday it will launch what it called an industry-first artificial intelligence tool designed to speed up the underwriting process in life insurance applications.
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November 18, 2025
40% Of Pension Trustees Would Consider 'Surplus Release'
Four in 10 pension trustees would consider tapping into defined benefit surpluses in what represents a "vast amount of capital" that could be reinvested in the economy, a law firm said Tuesday.
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November 18, 2025
Pensions Lifeboat Retains Zero Levy On UK Schemes
The Pension Protection Fund said it would retain its zero levy on workplace retirement plans in the next financial year, provided new legislation is successfully passed by then.
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November 18, 2025
State Pension Shortfall Highlights Retiree Savings Gap
A single pensioner maintaining a minimum standard of living in 2025 would "theoretically run out of money" on Nov. 22 if their only source of retirement was the state pension, analysis by Just Group shows.
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November 17, 2025
UK Lifeboat Fund To Boost Deposit Protection To £120K
The Bank of England said Tuesday that the Financial Services Compensation Scheme will increase the limit for reimbursement on deposits held by customers of failed banks to £120,000 ($158,000) from December.
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November 17, 2025
UK Life Insurers Show Resilience In 2025 Stress Tests
The Bank of England said Monday that it has found in a stress test that major life insurers can withstand large market shocks — but some are unprepared for risky outcomes from transferring responsibility for pension payouts through funded reinsurance.
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November 17, 2025
Insurance Body Sets Out Plan To Close Global Protection Gap
Governments, policymakers and regulators should take steps to close the gap between insured and uninsured losses from natural catastrophes across the world, as more than $180 billion in losses go uninsured every year, a public-private partnership has said.
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November 17, 2025
CMS, Freshfields Steer £600M Aviva, Wolseley Pension Deal
Wolseley Group, the U.K.'s largest specialist merchant for plumbing, heating, cooling and infrastructure products, has offloaded pension liabilities worth £600 million ($790 million) to insurance giant Aviva in a deal guided by Freshfields and CMS, the insurer said Monday.
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November 17, 2025
Fraudulent Insurance Claims Continue To Top £1B A Year
Fraudulent claims in the U.K. general insurance sector rose again in 2024, with those linked to motor cover driving much of the increase, the Association of British Insurers warned on Monday.
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November 17, 2025
SocGen To Launch An Additional €1B Share Buyback Program
Société Générale said Monday it will roll out a new €1 billion ($1.2 billion) share repurchase program, a move expected to lower its outstanding share capital.
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November 14, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Freeths face a professional negligence claim from a Scottish car dealership, Rolls-Royce sue logistics giant Kuehne + Nagel, and a team of Oberon Investments Group investment managers sued by their former employer.
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November 14, 2025
UK Compensation Program To Slash Annual Levy To £342M
The Financial Services Compensation Scheme said it is on track to slash £14 million ($18.4 million) from its levy on businesses in 2026 as it predicts that claims against pension providers will fall.
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November 14, 2025
BoE Weighs New Role For Capital Markets In Life Insurance
The Bank of England said Friday it is considering ways in which life insurance companies can package risk for private investors in a bid to further boost the rapidly growing industry.
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November 14, 2025
Denmark Has Until Dec. 12 To Appeal £1.4B Cum-Ex Defeat
Denmark has 28 days to try to revive its £1.4 billion ($1.8 billion) case over a tax fraud allegedly orchestrated by convicted hedge fund trader Sanjay Shah, a judge said Friday as he gave full reasons for refusing permission to appeal.
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November 14, 2025
AXA XL Settles With Lessor In $334M Stranded Planes Claim
An Irish aircraft lessor has reached a settlement with AXA XL in its $334 million claim against several major insurers over payouts for planes stranded in Russia following the invasion of Ukraine, the latest development in wide-ranging multibillion-dollar litigation.
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November 13, 2025
Geopolitical Uncertainty Pushes UK Pension Profit Warnings
More than half of the profit warnings issued between July and September by London-listed companies that have a defined benefit pension scheme cited policy change and geopolitical uncertainty as the cause, a professional services firm said Thursday.
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November 13, 2025
Broker Says Asset Manager Owes Unpaid Finder's Fees
Investment broker Musst Holdings Ltd. said Thursday that an asset manager owed it unpaid finder's fees for $85 million in investments Musst had facilitated.
Expert Analysis
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What 9th Circ. Arbitration Case May Mean For Insurance
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.
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UK Focus On Int'l Data Transfers Shows Appetite For Reform
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.
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Policyholder Outlook Following UK Biz Interruption Test Case
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.
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What The Future Holds For UK Auditing Reform
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.
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How UK Data Breach Ruling May Rein In Insurance Claims
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.
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2nd Circ. Arbitral Award Ruling Signals Restrictive Approach
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.
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Lloyds EU Operations Highlight Challenges For UK Insurers
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.
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The Risky Reality Of GDPR Noncompliance
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.
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An Underused Group Litigation Tool Could Help UK Claimants
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.
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Risk Management Lessons From Recent Finance Co. Failures
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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3 Risk Management Lessons From Pandemic Insurance Wars
As appellate decisions in COVID-19 business interruption insurance claims continue to clarify the state of the law, there are some things that policyholders' lawyers and risk managers can do in the meantime to help prepare for future unforeseen events affecting coverage, says Peter Halprin at Pasich.
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What New UK Money Laundering Law Means For Fintech
New U.K. money laundering legislation will likely benefit electronic money and payment institutions, but an increase in state forfeiture powers and a lingering possibility of a broad failure-to-prevent offense leave the fintech industry's regulatory future uncertain, say Andrew Herd and Helena Spector at Red Lion Chambers.
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UK Bill Must Navigate Crosscurrents Of Internet Regulation
The U.K.'s draft Online Safety Bill seeks to regulate a broad swath of online content and internet services but faces a number of potential implementation challenges, including balancing digital safety with freedom of expression and administering regulatory goals with frequently opposing objectives, say Ben Packer and Jemma Purslow at Linklaters.
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2 UK Pension Cases Guide On 3rd-Party Due Diligence
The U.K. Court of Appeal's recent decision in Adams v. Options UK, and upcoming hearing in Financial Conduct Authority v. Avacade, highlight important precautions self-invested personal pension operators should take when dealing with unauthorized third parties, says Paul Ashcroft at Wedlake Bell.
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Evaluating Insurance Options In Light Of Suez Canal Blockage
The recent blockage of the Suez Canal by the cargo ship Ever Given illustrates that manufacturers, carriers and recipients of internationally shipped goods should consider all the insurance offerings available to cover losses resulting from shipping delays, say David Klein and Ryan Vanderford at Pillsbury.