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Insurance UK
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February 04, 2025
FCA Warns Smaller Payment Firms Of Consumer Duty Failings
The City watchdog has warned smaller payments firms that they sometimes fail to act in the best interests of customers and have weaknesses in their financial crime controls.
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February 03, 2025
All-Risk Insurers Demand War-Risk Payouts For Stranded Jets
Insurers that covered aircraft lessors whose planes were stranded in Russia after the invasion of Ukraine told a London court on Monday that other insurers that covered the lessors for war-related risks should pay out for the allegedly lost aircraft.
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February 03, 2025
Pension Deal Demand To Be Unaffected By Surplus Reform
The government's plans to allow U.K. businesses to tap into £160 billion ($198 billion) of pension surpluses will be unlikely to significantly dent demand for insurance risk transfer deals in the near future, a ratings agency said Monday.
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February 03, 2025
FCA Response To Critical Report 'Disappointing,' MPs Say
The Financial Conduct Authority's response to a highly critical parliamentary report has been lackluster and continues to demonstrate that the regulator is "in dire need of transformation," the MPs who penned the report said Monday.
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February 03, 2025
EU Watchdog Warns That All Crypto Firms Are High Risk
The European Union's finance watchdog has briefed national regulators authorizing crypto-assets firms to consider every candidate high risk, particularly from money laundering.
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February 03, 2025
Schroders Commits To Extracting Pension Surplus
Asset manager Schroders said that it has struck a deal to allow its staff retirement savings plan to run on as the government weighs regulation to allow businesses to extract surpluses from their pension scheme.
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February 03, 2025
Watchdog Launches 1st Stage Of Probe Into SME Auditing
The accounting watchdog launched a study on Monday to gauge how effectively the audit market supports small and midsized businesses amid a wider campaign to improve the access of smaller companies to services in the sector that help to raise capital.
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January 31, 2025
Brexit Five Years On: The Legal Landscape After Europe
Five years after the U.K. formally left the European Union, Law360 looks at how Brexit has changed the legal, regulatory and financial terrain.
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January 31, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen another claim by Woodford investors against Hargreaves Lansdown in the widening £200 million ($248 million) dispute over the fund's collapse, a solicitor barred for his role in a suspected advance fee fraud face action by a Swiss wholesaler, and The Resort Group, which markets investments in luxury hotel resorts, hit with a claim by a group of investors. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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January 31, 2025
EU Extends UK CCP Equivalence Regime By Three Years
The European Union's executive body said Friday it has adopted a decision to extend equivalence for U.K. central counterparties for three years until June 30, 2028, following agreement between the European Parliament and the Council of the EU.
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January 31, 2025
Claims Management Sector Warned Over Misleading Adverts
The Financial Conduct Authority has written to claims management companies warning that it will respond to multiple cases of misleading advertising with new consumer protection measures.
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January 31, 2025
FCA Launches Survey To Gauge Opinion On Its Work
The Financial Conduct Authority has launched its annual market survey of regulated firms to gauge industry opinion on its performance, which comes amid calls from the financial sector for more growth-geared regulation.
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January 31, 2025
Banks, Insurers Told To Go Further On Managing Climate Risk
The regulatory arm of the Bank of England has said that the lenders and insurers it supervises have made progress on managing financial risks linked to climate change, but expects more ahead of a planned update to its expectations this year.
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January 31, 2025
5 Years On, Dust Settles On UK Insurance's Brexit Upheaval
The insurance market faced major upheaval when the U.K. crashed out of the European Union five years ago without a deal on financial services, which started a transition to a new way for British insurers to compete in Europe.
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January 30, 2025
Marsh Loses Appeal To Ax Chemical Co.'s Negligence Claim
Marsh Ltd. has failed in its bid to strike out a global chemicals group's claim that the insurance broker negligently arranged faulty motor insurance cover after a London appeals court said Thursday that the allegations need more clarity.
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January 30, 2025
Osborne Clarke Guides Aviva's £23M Pension Deal
Insurance giant Aviva has taken on £23 million ($28.7 million) of retirement savings liabilities from The Colthrop Board Mill Pension Scheme in a deal guided by Osborne Clarke, according to lead advisers on the transaction Thursday.
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January 30, 2025
FCA Says Ban On Pension Advice Contingent Charging Works
The Financial Conduct Authority said Thursday that almost 200 financial advisers stopped offering pension transfer services after it changed its rules on contingent charging five years ago.
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January 30, 2025
Growth Stocks Need Rule Changes, City Group Says
The government and regulators need to rewrite the rulebook for growth stocks in share trading, including an urgent review of "hampering" regulations like the Consumer Duty and "Dear CEO" letters, a leading City trade body said Thursday.
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January 30, 2025
UK Gov't Vows To Overhaul Pension Lifeboat Levy
The government said Thursday that it is considering allowing the Pension Protection Fund more flexibility over how it sets its levy, as it looks at further measures to boost economic growth.
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January 30, 2025
SMEs Urged To Insure Against The Risk Of Cyberattacks
There is a "severe" cyber-protection gap among small and midsized business in the U.K., a trade body for the insurance sector has warned as it urged companies to reassess whether they are too small to fall victim to an attack.
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January 30, 2025
City Struggles With Compliance Amid Post-Brexit Rule Shifts
Brexit paved the way for Britain to rip up the EU's financial services rule book and create a more U.K.-friendly regime — but some regulatory analysts say the process is taking too long, which imposes a bigger compliance burden on companies.
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January 29, 2025
Pension Plans To Start Entering Data Into Portals In April
The first retirement savings plans will start to input customer data to the government's pension dashboards project in April, a top civil servant said Wednesday.
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January 29, 2025
CMS Steers £1.4B Pension Deal For Pharma Co.
Legal & General said Tuesday that it has covered £1.4 billion ($1.7 billion) of pension liabilities for U.K. pharmaceutical company Aventis Pharma Ltd. to secure the benefits of all members of the retirement savings plan.
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January 29, 2025
Aercap Says Sanctions Don't 'Excuse' Insurers For Lost Jets
Aircraft lessor Aercap told the High Court on Wednesday that insurers should have to cover losses over planes stranded in Russia because of Western sanctions imposed after the invasion of Ukraine.
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January 29, 2025
Pensions Watchdog Backs Gov't Surplus Investment Plans
Britian's retirement savings watchdog has given its backing to proposals recently floated by the government that would relax rules to allow pension funds to invest billions of pounds tied up in surpluses.
Expert Analysis
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Creditors Welcome UK Supreme Court's Reflective Loss Decision
The U.K. Supreme Court's recent Sevilleja v. Marex decision benefits creditors and other stakeholders by excluding their claims from the reflective loss principle, which precludes third-party complaints that merely reflect company loss, say Robert Fidoe and Jack Moulder at Watson Farley.
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How Courts Are Encouraging Mediation In England And Wales
As the judiciary braces for widespread pandemic-driven contractual disputes, courts in England and Wales are showing enthusiastic support for mediation, both when determining the implications of a party's refusal to mediate and when assessing whether normal restrictions on the use of mediation-derived information apply, says Leah Alpren-Waterman at Watson Farley.
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Opinion
EU Class Action Policy Guided By Wrong Measure Of Success
The political agreement obtained last month on the first European Union-wide rules on collective redress illustrates the fact that the main goal of the authorities is to increase the number of class action claims rather than focus on the application of standard civil liability principles, says Sylvie Gallage-Alwis at Signature Litigation.
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An Attractive Regime For Governing Jurisdiction Post-Brexit
As indicated by the U.K.'s recent application to join the Lugano Convention, this is an "oven-ready" option for the U.K. for governing questions of jurisdiction and the enforcement of judgments with European Union countries after Brexit — but not without important differences from the current regime, say attorneys at Latham.
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Reinsurance Implications Of COVID-19 Biz Interruption Laws
In light of legislative and public pressure in the U.S. and U.K. on insurers to cover business interruption losses related to COVID-19, reinsurers will face new questions regarding their obligation to cover claim payments, say Robin Dusek at Saul Ewing and Susie Wakefield at Shoosmiths.
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UK Appellate Rulings Clarify Arbitral Choice Of Law
Two recent U.K. Court of Appeal decisions have changed the operation of the choice-of-law test for arbitration — a resolution as significant as changing the test itself because it affects the implied choices of the contracting parties, say attorneys at Squire Patton.
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Post-Pandemic Litigation To Expect In England And Wales
Globally, we are already starting to see insolvency-related claims and a number of insurance, breach of contract, employment and securities class actions across numerous sectors. These and other claims will likely increase for U.K. businesses, say Tracey Dovaston and Fiona Huntriss at Boies Schiller.
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UK Lawyers Can Adapt Due Diligence To Screen New Clients
As COVID-19-related fraud gains pace, U.K.-based practitioners should help combat money laundering by using alternative methods to verify that new clients are who they say they are, says Christopher Convey, a barrister at 33 Chancery Lane and chair of the Bar Council's Money Laundering Working Group.
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A UK Business View Of COVID-19's Economic Fallout
Covington attorneys Alex Leitch and Harry Denlegh-Maxwell provide a bird's-eye view of how U.K. businesses will navigate the legal and economic aftermath of the pandemic, including discussion of where litigation funding, class actions, insurance disputes and force majeure fit it.
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Remote Depositions Bring Ethics Considerations For Lawyers
Utilizing virtual litigation technologies and participating in remote depositions require attorneys to beware of inadvertently violating their ethical obligations, including the principal duty to provide competent representation, say attorneys at Troutman Sanders.
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Time For Presumptive Virtual Mediation In The UK
While the COVID-19 outbreak is a real-time test of the U.K. justice system’s adaptability and innovation, it is also an opportunity to deliver alternative dispute resolution through virtual technology — and there are two ways in which this could be achieved, says Suzanne Rab at Serle Court.
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UK 'Property' Classification Boosts Confidence In Bitcoin
In AA v. Persons Unknown, the English High Court classified bitcoins as property that can be the subject of proprietary injunctions, indicating the slow but growing acceptance of virtual currencies within the U.K., say Steven De Lara and Colin Grech at Signature Litigation.
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3 EU And UK Data Protection Tips During COVID-19
Though EU and U.K. data protection laws should not impede the fight against COVID-19, companies must continue to protect individuals' data, and the challenges of managing a remote workforce and the desire for information about the virus’s impact have significant implications for that responsibility, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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Novolex Case Brings Lessons On R&W Insurance
A New York state court dispute between Novolex and a few of its insurers concerning coverage under a representations and warranties policy for a $267 million loss offers a rare glimpse into how a court might interpret acquisition agreements and insurance policy provisions, say attorneys at Hunton.
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How Proposed EU Class Action Directive Could Affect Insurers
Insurers should beware the explosive potential of the EU's proposed directive providing for cross-border class actions and third-party funding for such actions, although it also bears strict requirements that will limit the number of cases, say Emmanuèle Lutfalla and Simon Fitzpatrick at Signature Litigation.