Insurance UK

  • December 22, 2025

    Insurer Travelers Denies Liability For £6M Axiom Client Funds

    Insurer Travelers has argued at a London court that it is not liable under its policy with Axiom Ince for £5.8 million ($7.8 million) that a home buyer lost when the now-collapsed law firm misappropriated his cash during a property deal.

  • December 22, 2025

    Whiplash Injury Reforms Have Failed, Law Society Says

    The Law Society said Monday that reforms to the U.K.'s compensation system for whiplash injuries have not delivered on governmental promises, and have even hindered claimants' access to justice.

  • December 22, 2025

    Skadden Guides Miami Insurer On Buy Of £5B Utmost Unit

    Miami-based JAB Insurance said Monday it will buy the £5 billion ($6.7 billion) bulk purchase annuity business of U.K. insurer Utmost Group PLC, in a transaction guided by Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom and King & Spalding.

  • December 22, 2025

    FCA Strips Regulatory Permissions From Pensions Adviser

    The Financial Conduct Authority has slapped a pension adviser with a ban on carrying out regulated activity after a series of breaches, including a failure to pay off an arbitration award.

  • December 19, 2025

    Man Jailed For 28 Months Over Fake Stolen Lego Claims

    A man based in South Yorkshire has been jailed for 28 months for making a string of fraudulent insurance claims, the financial crime police unit said this week, including over allegedly stolen high-value Lego sets that were later found by police on display in his house.

  • December 19, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen the designer of an 88-facet diamond bring a copyright claim against a luxury watch retailer, collapsed firm Axiom Ince bring legal action against the solicitors' watchdog, and the Post Office hit with compensation claims from two former branch managers over their wrongful convictions during the Horizon information technology scandal.

  • December 19, 2025

    Canada Life Pens £189M Pension Deal With Healthcare Co.

    Insurer Canada Life on Friday said it has taken on £189 million ($252.5 million) in retirement liabilities from an unnamed pension scheme in the healthcare sector, in a deal guided by Stephenson Harwood and Baker McKenzie.

  • December 19, 2025

    Watchdog Names First EU Trading Data Feed Provider

    The European Union's financial markets regulator said Friday it has chosen EuroCTP as its first consolidated tape provider for shares and exchange-traded funds, in a bid to improve transparency and boost the attractiveness of the bloc's equity markets.

  • December 19, 2025

    The Biggest UK Commercial Litigation Rulings Of 2025

    The biggest commercial dispute rulings in 2025 included a landmark decision by the U.K. Supreme Court in a multibillion-pound motor finance misselling case, mining giant BHP being held liable for the collapse of a dam in Brazil and a surprise judgment that has thrown the conduct of litigation work into disarray.

  • December 19, 2025

    Watchdog Floats Rules For New Collective Pension Plans

    Britain's retirement savings watchdog floated proposals on Friday that are designed to help more businesses join new collective pension plans, broadening the scope of existing rules and allowing more workers to access "lower risk" and "better outcome pensions."

  • December 18, 2025

    CMS Steers PIC On £230M Port Co. Pension Deal

    Pension Insurance Corp. said Thursday that it has completed a £230 million ($308 million) pension deal with Peel Ports Group Ltd. in a deal guided by CMS and Gowling WLG.

  • December 18, 2025

    European Insurtech Lumera To Buy UK Pensions Consultancy

    European insurance technology company Lumera said Thursday it has penned a deal to buy Acuity, a British pensions and workforce reform consultancy.

  • December 18, 2025

    Gov't Freezes UK Pension Enrollment Salary Thresholds

    The government decided on Thursday against changing the salary threshold at which employers must automatically enroll their staff into a workplace pension, despite growing suggestions that removing the limit could help mitigate the looming savings crisis.

  • December 18, 2025

    EU Plans To Boost Retail Investment In Capital Markets

    The European Union on Thursday proposed a broad package of updated retail investment rules aimed at empowering consumers and boosting competition in financial markets.

  • December 18, 2025

    Debevoise, Eversheds Lead £525M Pension Deal For Skanska

    The U.K. subsidiary of Swedish builder Skanska AB said Thursday that it has transferred £525 million ($705 million) of its pension commitments in Britain to Standard Life in a buy-in transaction, which secures the retirement savings of about 5,500 members.

  • December 18, 2025

    FCA To Boost Insurance Standards After Super-Complaint

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Thursday that it will boost customers' awareness of cover as part of a plan to drive up standards in the home and travel insurance sector after a super-complaint was filed by consumer group Which.

  • December 17, 2025

    Funds Dropping ESG Labels Amid EU Greenwashing Review

    The European Union's financial markets regulator said Wednesday its new naming guidelines governing how investment funds use environmental, social and governance, and sustainability-related language are curbing greenwashing and improving transparency in the financial sector.

  • December 17, 2025

    UK Watchdog Hands Gov't Plan To Tackle Payments Crime

    The Financial Conduct Authority told the Treasury in a letter published Wednesday that it is investing more in intelligence and data to disrupt those committing and enabling crime in the payments sector.

  • December 17, 2025

    Womble Bond Steers £107M Pension Deal For Co-Op

    British insurance company Rothesay Life has completed a £107 million ($143 million) pension deal for Lincolnshire Co-operative Ltd., guided by Womble Bond Dickinson.

  • December 17, 2025

    Capital One Loses 'Discover' TM For Insurance, Real Estate

    The European Union Intellectual Property Office has partially revoked Capital One Financial Corp.'s rights to the "Discover" trademark in the bloc, finding that the mark was not used for some services covered by its registration.

  • December 17, 2025

    Stonegate Hospitality Cos. Say Marsh Botched COVID Cover

    A group of companies in the Stonegate Pub Company portfolio has sued insurance broker Marsh for allegedly failing to arrange interruption cover for each individual business, which the group said left it short in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • December 17, 2025

    Pensions Watchdog Reveals Shrinking Defined Benefit Market

    The number of lucrative final salary-type retirement savings plans has dropped by nearly a third over the past 13 years, according to data from The Pensions Regulator.

  • December 17, 2025

    Pension Plans Plot 'Run-On' From £160B Surplus Reforms

    More than a quarter of retirement savings plans are considering "running on" to generate investment returns, due to new reforms that could boost the economy by up to £160 billion ($213 billion), according to a survey on Wednesday by PwC.

  • December 16, 2025

    Weil-Led Insurance Brokerage Howden Lands $3B Refinancing

    British insurance broker Howden Group has refinanced approximately $3 billion worth of loans on better terms, including upsizing one of the credit facilities to help it achieve financial stability.

  • December 16, 2025

    Claims Inflation Poised To Batter Insurers Next Year, EY Says

    Motor insurers are likely to face major losses next year, a consultancy warned, following a period in which the sector slashed prices while under political scrutiny.

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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