Insurance UK

  • January 06, 2025

    Insurance Losses From Baltimore Bridge Pinned At $1.5B

    Insurers expect to face a total of $1.5 billion in losses from the Baltimore Bridge disaster last year, according to broker Gallagher Re.

  • January 06, 2025

    'Third Way' Pension Scheme Rules To Be Expanded This Year

    The regulatory foundations could be laid this year for a massive expansion in new types of collective pension schemes, a retirement savings provider said Monday.

  • January 06, 2025

    Most Fraud Starts On Social Media And Tech, Barclays Finds

    Most frauds start on social media and technology platforms, with investment scams accounting for a third of the total, according to new findings by Barclays Bank.

  • January 03, 2025

    Clyde & Co. Merges With Dallas Insurance Boutique

    Clyde & Co. LLP has announced a merger with Dallas boutique Tillman Batchelor LLP, expanding the global law firm's insurance capabilities in Texas amid its ongoing growth in North America.

  • January 03, 2025

    Complaints Commissioner To Warn FCA About P2P Lending

    The Complaints Commissioner for financial regulators has undertaken to write to the Financial Conduct Authority on significant issues in the peer-to-peer lending sector.

  • January 03, 2025

    Lloyd's Insurer Says No Business Interrupted In £3.7M Row

    A Lloyd's of London insurer has reiterated that the owner of a property in Greater Manchester cannot claim £3.7 million in damages and business interruption cover because no actual business was occurring at the building damaged by a burst water pipe.

  • January 03, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen Chris Eubank Jr. hit with a libel claim from a boxing promoter, a perfume boss face proceedings from his businesses following sanctions violations claims, and Israeli broadcasters file intellectual property claims against BT and Sky. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • January 03, 2025

    UK Levy Hike Drives Labor Costs Up In 2025, Think Tank Says

    U.K. businesses are facing a spike in labor costs, thanks to the government's decision to raise employers' National Insurance contributions, a payroll levy used to fund social programs, a think tank said Friday.

  • January 03, 2025

    Early Settlements Could Cut Russia Aviation Claims By $10B

    Insurers could reduce claims for aircraft stranded in Russia by as much as $10 billion through early settlements, a broker has said, but warned that the final bill will still be the largest aviation loss in history.

  • January 03, 2025

    Trustees Warned On 'Dead Money' Over Pensions Portal

    Trustees of pension scheme should carefully decide whether it is in the best interest of their members to connect to the long-awaited online retirement savings dashboards program and incur its associated costs, a retirement savings specialist said Friday.

  • January 02, 2025

    Legal Expenses Insurer Restructures After DAS Acquisition

    British insurer ARAG PLC said Thursday it has now fully integrated DAS UK, the legal protection insurer that it bought a year ago amid a broader restructuring of the company's operations.

  • January 02, 2025

    EU's 1st Financial Regulation Deal With Japan In Force

    The European Union said that a first-ever agreement with Japan designed to improve regulation in banking and other financial services and to combat money laundering has come into force.

  • January 02, 2025

    Global Insurance Prices Dip For First Time Since 2017

    Insurance prices for businesses globally fell by 0.9% last year, the first decrease after seven years of rate hikes and a possible sign of a market turn, Howden said Thursday.

  • January 02, 2025

    Elite Law Denies Fault In Lender's £1.9M Loan Fraud Case

    An English firm of solicitors has denied a claim that it cost a lender £1.9 million ($2.4 million) by failing to spot that the borrower of a property loan was allegedly a fraudster, telling a London court that it was not obliged to verify his identity.

  • January 02, 2025

    New Superfund Expected In 2025 Pension Deals Market

    A second defined benefit superfund could enter the pensions risk transfer market in 2025, a retirement savings consultancy said on Thursday as it predicted another bumper year ahead for transactions.

  • January 01, 2025

    Pensions, Insurance Risk Consolidation On Radar For 2025

    The main themes in 2025 for the insurance and pensions sectors will be consolidation and government priorities for greater investment in the economy —although potential legal and systemic risks loom.

  • January 01, 2025

    Regulation To Prioritize UK Growth Over Risk-Aversion In 2025

    Financial regulators have committed to giving priority to economic growth over risk-aversion in 2025 under new government priorities, a rebalancing that could create a conflict of interest with a recent focus on protecting consumers.

  • December 23, 2024

    Clifford Chance Steers Aviva's £3.7B Offer For Direct Line

    Insurer Aviva PLC said Monday that it will buy a rival company, Direct Line, in a £3.7 billion ($4.7 billion) cash and stock deal, a move that will create a British motor and home insurance giant.

  • December 20, 2024

    Many Firms Lack AI In Risk Operations, Study Finds

    A new study highlighted by UK Finance on Friday has found that almost four in 10 financial services organizations have not implemented artificial intelligence in their risk operations, leaving them with a widening technology gap compared with those who are so prepared.

  • December 20, 2024

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

    This past week in London has seen the University of Southampton sue a drone-maker over the rights to an uncrewed aircraft patent, Importers Service Corp. and its subsidiary ISC Europe take action against a former director who allegedly owes the company over £1.1 million ($1.4 million), and DAC Beachcroft face a fraud claim by a "prolific litigant." 

  • December 20, 2024

    Pension Scams Body Held Back By Lack Of Industry Funding

    An influential campaign group on pension scams said Friday that it will not be able to play a bigger role in raising awareness without funding from the retirement sector.

  • December 20, 2024

    Law Firm Awarded £4.2M For Co.'s Mishandled PPI Claims

    A London court awarded a specialist litigation law firm almost £4.2 million ($5.3 million) on Friday for the costs of a professional services company's botched handling of payment protection insurance claims.

  • December 20, 2024

    The Biggest Developments In Insurance In 2024

    The financial watchdog has come under pressure this year from the Labour government to tackle the cost of insurance, which has soared because of rising claims caused by the ongoing repercussions from Brexit and the war in Ukraine. 

  • December 20, 2024

    Pinsent Masons Hires Brabners' Head Of Pensions

    Pinsent Masons LLP has recruited the head of Brabners' pensions team to join its growing pensions practice in Manchester, as the firm looks to respond to the continued consolidation of the pensions market.

  • December 20, 2024

    The Biggest UK Commercial Litigation Cases Of 2024

    The High Court and Court of Appeal resolved some landmark legal disputes in 2024 — the justices liberated the open-source cryptocurrency community from spats over intellectual property protection and determined liability for the high-profile collapse of London Capital & Finance.

Expert Analysis

  • 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.

  • 3 Risk Management Lessons From Pandemic Insurance Wars

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    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.

  • What New UK Money Laundering Law Means For Fintech

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    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.

  • UK Bill Must Navigate Crosscurrents Of Internet Regulation

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    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.

  • 2 UK Pension Cases Guide On 3rd-Party Due Diligence

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    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.

  • Evaluating Insurance Options In Light Of Suez Canal Blockage

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    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.

  • Data Protection Considerations For Insurers Post-Brexit

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    Now that companies must comply with both U.K. and EU data protection laws, insurers operating in Europe face additional data exposure liability risks and should adjust their underwriting practices and policy wordings accordingly, says Charlotte Worlock at Atheria Law.

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