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Insurance UK
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April 13, 2026
Reinsurer Pool Re Launches Terrorism Cover Plan For SMEs
The U.K.'s state-backed reinsurer said Monday it has started a program designed to encourage small and midsized businesses to take up terrorism cover.
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April 13, 2026
Longevity Insurance Deals Set To Rise, Broker Aon Says
The longevity insurance market is likely to experience an increase in demand this year as a result of pension reforms and changes in mortality rates, a broker said Monday.
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April 10, 2026
Tax Deal Coverage Row Must Precede Tort Claims, Judge Says
A Georgia federal judge won't allow a conservation easement entity to litigate tort claims against its insurance broker while arbitrating a dispute with its insurer over coverage for an IRS settlement, ruling that those claims could only be sorted out after an initial coverage determination.
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April 10, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
The past week in London has seen the owner of an oil tanker stuck in the Strait of Hormuz sued by an energy company and an insurer, law firm Boodle Hatfield LLP and two Serle Court barristers sued by a group of Winston Churchill's great-grandchildren, and Welsh Water hit with a fresh class action over polluted rivers.
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April 10, 2026
COVID Insurance Claims Near Endgame As Deadline Looms
An approaching deadline for new claims for COVID-19 business interruption has prompted a series of last-minute court filings, but lawyers say that any fresh disputes will be narrow and likely to focus on complex questions not resolved by earlier test cases.
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April 10, 2026
FCA Warns Asset Managers On Conflicts, Consumer Duty
The Financial Conduct Authority has warned that some applicants for authorization as asset managers are failing to manage conflicts of interest or to demonstrate they adequately apply its Consumer Duty regime.
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April 10, 2026
Catastrophe Insurance Pool For Bloc Proposed By EU Bodies
The European Union should create a bloc-wide insurance pool and emergency lending backstop worth up to €65 billion ($76 billion) to protect households, businesses and governments from rising losses caused by natural disasters, two EU bodies have said.
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April 10, 2026
Middle East Conflict Reverses Gains In Pension Plan Funding
Funding levels for defined benefit pension plans fell in March as heightened market volatility linked to conflict in the Middle East reversed gains made earlier in 2026, a financial services consultancy said Friday.
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April 10, 2026
Slovenian Bank Makes Rival €566M Bid For Austria's Addiko
Slovenian lender NLB Group has begun a bidding war for Addiko, an Austrian banking group, after proposing a €566 million ($663 million) takeover bid a day after a rival €449 million approach from Austria's Raiffeisen Bank.
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April 09, 2026
Canada Life Hires Pensions Risk Pro From Rival Insurance Biz
Insurer Canada Life said Thursday that it has recruited pensions risk transfer specialist Rhian Littlewood from Standard Life as a director in its bulk purchase annuities business.
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April 09, 2026
Insurance Body Calls For Changes To EU Tax Reform Plans
Insurance Europe has urged European Union lawmakers to give workplace pension institutions that are regulated as insurers the same fast-track dividend tax relief as other pension providers in tax reforms which are pending.
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April 09, 2026
FCA Finds Customer ID Gaps At Banks, Asset Managers
The Financial Conduct Authority has found in a review that banks, asset managers and other financial institutions are failing to make proper background checks on customers to prevent crime.
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April 09, 2026
Lawyer Group Calls For Driverless Car Crash Transparency
The U.K. should introduce a new law to require crash data from self-driving vehicles to be disclosed to people who suffer injuries and their lawyers, a claimant injury lawyers' association said Thursday.
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April 09, 2026
Adviser Loses Challenge To FCA Ban Over Stalker Disruption
A financial adviser has lost his challenge to a ban for failing to comply with regulatory requirements for six years, as a tribunal ruled that having to move house because of a stalker and suffering health problems did not excuse him.
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April 08, 2026
EU Clarifies Small Insurer Definition Under Simplified Rules
The European Union's insurance watchdog introduced a harmonized approach on Wednesday to help insurers and national regulators better identify small and non-complex insurance undertakings and groups subject to simplified capital rules under Solvency II.
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April 08, 2026
EU Fund Managers Urge Simpler Cross-Border Tax Rules
A trade body for European fund managers called Wednesday on lawmakers to simplify tax rules for cross border investments through funds by making some further changes to an initiative that is underway to simplify tax rules.
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April 08, 2026
EU Sustainable Rules Need Clarity, Finance Body Warns
The consumer investment group Better Finance on Wednesday urged the European Union to simplify its sustainable finance rules so that investors can more easily weigh whether products deliver tangible environmental and social benefits.
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April 08, 2026
Geopolitical Risk 'Heightens Pensions Security Concerns'
Trustees of defined benefit pension plans should regularly assess the strength and reliability of their sponsoring employers as geopolitical instability, inflation and higher business costs combine to threaten company finances, a consultancy warned on Wednesday.
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April 08, 2026
Squire Patton Steers Aviva's £100M Iveco Pension Plan Buy-In
Aviva PLC said Wednesday it has completed a pension insurance deal worth £100 million ($134 million) with the Iveco Ltd. Pension Scheme, securing the retirement benefits of more than 1,350 U.K. members of the commercial vehicle maker's plan.
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April 07, 2026
UK Treasury Pressed To Widen Equivalence Regime With EU
Trade bodies for U.K. and European financial institutions have urged HM Treasury to extend post-Brexit capital rules that allow overseas businesses to operate in Britain when they comply with home regulations.
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April 07, 2026
Iran War Could Revive 'Grip Of Peril' Insurance Rule
Insurers are likely to run again into the thorny question of whether aircraft grounded amid airport closures in the Middle East are already within the "grip of the peril" if leasing companies make claims for damages on canceled policies, lawyers said.
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April 07, 2026
City Body Foresees Problems In Gov't Digital ID System
A trade body for financial institutions raised concerns on Tuesday over how a new national online identity system will work alongside the existing requirement for checks to identify future customers under the money laundering regulations.
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April 07, 2026
DWF Joins FCA And PRA Supervision Panels
The Financial Conduct Authority and the Prudential Regulation Authority have added DWF to their panels that provide oversight of the financial sector, the law firm said Tuesday.
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April 07, 2026
ING Ends Russian Unit Sale Amid Doubts On Buyer Approval
Dutch bank ING Groep NV said Tuesday that it will not sell Russian subsidiary ING Bank (Eurasia) JSC to Global Development JSC as it does not expect the Moscow-based buyer to get regulatory approvals.
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April 07, 2026
Pensions Biz Blames Outdated Rules For Transfer Delays
Electronic pension transfers hit a record 1.7 million in the U.K. in 2025 but "outdated" rules and disparities in processing time could mean months of delay for savers moving their retirement funds, a pensions provider warned Tuesday.
Expert Analysis
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What To Expect As FCA Preps To Launch AI Testing Service
The Financial Conduct Authority’s forthcoming artificial intelligence live testing service will provide participants with access to appropriate regulatory expertise, but to gauge the tool’s potential utility, it is important to understand how it fits in with what the regulator is already doing, says Omar Salem at Fox Williams.
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EU Banking Watchdog Regulations Herald New AML Era
The European Banking Authority’s forthcoming anti-money laundering package will set a framework for compliance across the European Union by redefining the rules of engagement between financial institutions and supervisors, setting a new standard for transparency and accountability, say lawyers at A&O Shearman.
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What To Expect As UK, US Gov'ts Develop Stablecoin Policies
While the U.K. and U.S. governments’ policies both suggest that fiat-backed stablecoins can improve efficiency and safety in payments systems, a perception that crypto-assets remain high risk means consumers are unlikely to use them in significant volume anytime soon, say lawyers at Cadwalader.
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What Insurers Can Do To Prepare For PRA 'Solvent Exit' Rules
With less than a year until the Prudential Regulation Authority's new solvent exit rules for insurers come into force, it is critical that firms prepare to meet the imminent deadline by outlining an execution plan and establishing clear governance arrangements, say lawyers at Holman Fenwick.
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How Regulators Want Online Platforms To Fight Finance Fraud
Recent statements from the International Organization of Securities Commissions and the European Securities and Markets Authority make clear that online platform providers are expected to adopt proactive measures to prevent the promotion of unauthorized financial services and related misconduct, say lawyers at Taylor Wessing.
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FCA Notes Industry Criticism But Keeps Transparency Focus
The Financial Conduct Authority’s recently updated enforcement guide finally gives up the "naming and shaming" public interest test, demonstrating that the regulator has recognized the industry's serious concerns while maintaining less contentious aspects of its proposals to improve transparency in investigations, say lawyers at Irwin Mitchell.
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Court Backing Of FCA Pensions Ruling Sends Key Message
The Upper Tribunal’s recent upholding of the Financial Conduct Authority's decisions against CFP Management directors serves as a judicial endorsement of the regulator’s approach to defined benefit transfers, underscoring that where the advisory model is fundamentally flawed, the consequences for those in control can be severe, say lawyers at RPC.
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Pension Schemes Bill's Most Notable, Controversial Measures
The long-awaited Pension Schemes Bill recently introduced to Parliament creates a framework for harnessing money saved in U.K. workplace pension funds to grow the country’s economy, but provisions relating to local government pension scheme investment, and scale and asset allocation, are controversial, says Claire Dimmock at Squire Patton.
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Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Prestige's Jurisprudential Legacy
The U.K. Supreme Court's recent denial of appeal ended Spain's decades-long quest to enforce an €855 million arbitral judgment against a London insurer, throwing into stark relief the increasingly complex relationship between arbitral sovereignty, foreign state immunity and the shifting terrain of post-Brexit private international law, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.
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UK Securities Tax Reform Will Be Welcomed By Investors
The proposed reforms resulting from HM Revenue & Customs' recent consultation on modernizing stamp taxes on shares, suggesting a single digital tax on securities to replace stamp duty and stamp duty reserve tax, are expected to reduce complexity for investors transacting in U.K. securities, say lawyers at Ropes & Gray.
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A Shifting Landscape Of Greater Scrutiny After Data Breaches
Recent Information Commissioner's Office fines for personal data breaches and a Home Office consultation signal a shift in the U.K. regulatory landscape, and with an increase in mass actions and resulting exposure, organizations should prepare for potential third-party claims from those incurring consequential losses, say lawyers at Atheria.
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What To Note As HM Treasury, FCA Plan New Crypto Regs
Taken together, HM Treasury’s recently proposed crypto-asset regulations and the Financial Conduct Authority’s new discussion paper on regulating crypto-asset activities provide key insights into the government's planned regime, which represents significant changes that will affect all firms providing related services, says Mark Chalmers at Davis Polk.
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Russia Sanctions Spotlight: Divergent Approaches Emerge
With indications of greater divergence and uncertainty in Russia sanctions policy between the U.K., European Union and U.S., there are four general principles and a range of compliance steps that businesses should bear in mind when assessing the impact of a potentially shifting landscape, says Alexandra Melia at Steptoe.
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FCA Update Eases Private Stock Market Disclosure Rules
The Financial Conduct Authority’s recently updated proposals for the Private Intermittent Securities and Capital Exchange System would result in less onerous disclosure obligations for businesses, reflecting ongoing efforts to balance an attractive trading venue for private companies while maintaining sufficient investor protections, say lawyers at Debevoise.
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Why Cos. Should Investigate Unethical Supply Chain Conduct
The U.K. government’s recent updated guidance for businesses on reporting slavery and human trafficking in supply chains underscores the urgent need for companies to adopt transparent and measurable due diligence practices, reinforcing the broader need for proactive internal investigations into unethical or criminal conduct, say lawyers at Seladore and Matrix Chambers.