Insurance UK

  • January 23, 2024

    UK Biz Registry Rules Tighten Against Economic Crime

    Britain's business registry said Tuesday it aims to introduce tougher reporting rules for businesses as part of the fight against economic crime such as fraud and money laundering.

  • January 23, 2024

    UK Watchdog Floats Rules On Solvent Exit For Insurers

    The Bank of England set out new requirements Tuesday for insurers to draw up plans to exit the market without going bust.  

  • January 23, 2024

    Businesses Chase Liberty Mutual For COVID Relief

    A pub landlord and seven other business owners have claimed that Liberty Mutual Insurance wrongly refused to cover them for disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic to their businesses.

  • January 22, 2024

    Kennedys Lands In Fort Lauderdale With 10th US Office

    Global insurance law giant Kennedys announced Monday the opening of its 10th office in the U.S. with the creation of a four-attorney outpost in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

  • January 22, 2024

    MoFo Adds Sanctions Expert From Deutsche Bank As Partner

    Morrison Foerster LLP has hired an expert in sanctions compliance as a partner to its national security group in London as the firm looks to bolster its practice during a period of geopolitical turmoil.

  • January 22, 2024

    Broker Predicts UK Pension Deal Market Will Hit £80B In 2024

    The U.K. is likely to see £80 billion ($102 billion) in deals involving pension schemes offloading their liabilities to insurers in 2024, a broker predicted on Monday, saying improved retirement savings funding may make it another record year.

  • January 22, 2024

    UK Insurers Covered €120B Of Russian Oil At Sea, Report Says

    The U.K. insurance sector provides cover to around a third of Russian oil shipments, according to a think tank report, in spite of sanctions introduced following the invasion of Ukraine nearly two years ago.

  • January 22, 2024

    Accounting Watchdog Revises Rules In Bid To Boost Growth

    Britain's accounting regulator confirmed changes to the U.K. Corporate Governance Code on Monday that it said will help promote economic growth after it watered down its original proposals.

  • January 22, 2024

    Judge Tosses Civil Servants' 'Vexatious' Age Bias Claim

    Twenty civil servants backed by their union have failed to resuscitate claims that provisions in their pension scheme were age discriminatory, after a tribunal ruled that it was vexatious to pursue litigation as another panel had already settled the issue.

  • January 19, 2024

    BoE, FCA Brought Into MPs' Probe Of Fujitsu Gov't Contracts

    A parliamentary committee said Friday it is seeking details on contracts between Fujitsu and 21 government agencies, including the Bank of England and financial regulators, after the company's faulty Horizon accounting system was found to be behind the Post Office IT scandal.

  • January 19, 2024

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

    The past week in London has seen a bankrupt English local council bring a construction claim against property maintenance company Axis, a Cypriot cheese trade protection body appeal a UK IPO decision granting trademark registration for "Grilloumi" and employees of supermarket giant Morrison’s shop around for compensation in a claim over equal pay. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • January 19, 2024

    EU Watchdog Proposes Stablecoin Guidance For Crypto Rules

    Europe's banking regulator on Friday proposed guidelines to combat fraud, cyber and compliance risks where firms issue stablecoins pegged to several currencies or else commodities, under new blocwide crypto-assets market rules.

  • January 19, 2024

    FCA Able To Insist On Office Work In Manager's Claim

    The Financial Conduct Authority has beaten a manager's bid to continue working full-time remotely, as the Employment Tribunal ruled that the regulator "clearly established" that her performance would suffer — even though she had been doing so successfully for more than two years.

  • January 19, 2024

    Pension Surplus Rules Could Bring Change For Deals Market

    The pensions deal market could be reshaped this year by changes to how companies are able to use surpluses from their savings plans, consultancy Mercer Ltd. has said.

  • January 19, 2024

    Gov't Urged To Rethink 'Pot For Life' Pension Reforms

    The government has been urged to reconsider its plan to introduce a retirement savings "pot for life" for workers, as finance experts said on Friday the reforms are the wrong measures introduced at the wrong time.

  • January 18, 2024

    Advisers See Rising Demand After Pension Tax Reforms

    Almost half of U.K. financial firms offering retirement advice have seen demand for retirement planning rise as a result of changes to the pension tax allowance, according to research published Thursday.

  • January 18, 2024

    EU Sets Stricter AML Regulations, Includes Crypto-Assets

    European Union policymakers unveiled a provisional agreement Thursday on new stricter anti-money laundering rules that would comprehensively harmonize requirements and improve national approaches to regulation and law enforcement.

  • January 18, 2024

    Pensions Body Warns UK Gov't Over 'Pot For Life' Reforms

    The U.K. government's proposed fix for the spiraling number of small pension pots in existence risks creating "more problems than it solves," retirement savings experts warned on Thursday.

  • January 18, 2024

    Owners Of Ship Detained By Indonesian Navy Fight For $37M

    The owners of a merchant ship seized by the Indonesian navy told a High Court trial Thursday that their efforts to recover $37 million from six insurers is a "classic case" of a claim for constructive total loss.

  • January 18, 2024

    Depressed Broker Forced To Quit Due To Unfair Treatment

    A manager at an insurance broker was constructively dismissed and discriminated against because of her depression and anxiety, a tribunal has ruled, finding that bosses no longer valued her after a mental health absence.

  • January 18, 2024

    Life Insurers Likely To Pass On Interest, Fitch Says

    Fitch Ratings has said it expects U.K. life insurers will pass on the interest they earn from customer cash balances instead of banking it to avoid harm to their reputations and being named and shamed by the Financial Conduct Authority.

  • January 17, 2024

    Pension Scheme Trustees To Pay £35K After £14M Fraud

    Two pension scheme trustees convicted of helping a fraudster con hundreds of savers into transferring almost £14 million ($18 million) out of their retirement pots were ordered to repay £35,000 following confiscation proceedings in London on Wednesday. 

  • January 17, 2024

    FCA Probes Banks, Insurers For Non-Financial Misconduct

    Financial Conduct Authority executives told MPs at a parliamentary hearing on the "Sexism and the City" inquiry on Wednesday that the regulator has started an investigation into how banks and insurers deal with non-financial misconduct, amid evidence that firms are not acting against known offenders.

  • January 17, 2024

    HM Treasury Floats Tax Changes For Alternative Finance

    HM Treasury is proposing reforms to U.K. capital gains tax and tax allowances for alternative refinancing arrangements, including Islamic financial products.

  • January 17, 2024

    EU Banking Watchdog Sets Out AML Rules For Crypto Firms

    Europe's banking watchdog has issued new guidance for providers of crypto-asset services to help them manage their exposure to money laundering risk, a significant step forward in the European Union's fight against financial crime.

Expert Analysis

  • Obtaining DPAs In The UK Will Not Be Easy

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    In a recent speech, the U.K. Serious Fraud Office's joint head of bribery and corruption, Camilla de Silva, made it clear that deferred prosecution agreements will not be given out to each and every company seeking one. Self-reporting, internal investigation, cooperation and reform are all factors that the SFO assesses to determine which companies deserve DPAs, says Azizur Rahman of Rahman Ravelli Solicitors.

  • Lessons From 4 Recent Athlete Insurance Lawsuits

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    This month, former University of Arkansas star running back Rawleigh Williams III sued Lloyd's of London, seeking to recover $1 million under a permanent total disability insurance policy. This is one of several recent cases shining a spotlight on the murky world of specialized athlete policies and the brokers who procure such policies, says Richard Giller of Reed Smith LLP.

  • Raising Issues In UK Preliminary Hearings Can Be Risky

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    The hearing of preliminary issues in LIC SAR & Empreno Ventures v. VTB Capital provides important insight into the range of issues that U.K. courts might consider hearing at the preliminary stage, and serves as a warning about potential wasted costs when engaging with complex matters in preliminary hearings, say Galina Usorova and Philip Gardner of Peters & Peters Solicitors LLP.

  • 3rd-Party Litigation Finance In UK: To Brexit And Beyond

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    Despite potential market volatility, England's preeminence as a global litigation center will likely survive post-Brexit. Therefore, the litigation funding sector looks poised to benefit from new opportunities in this jurisdiction and abroad, say Daniel Spendlove and Johnny Shearman of Signature Litigation LLP.

  • Can D&O Policies Enhance Presumption Of Innocence In UK?

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    The presumption of innocence allows U.K. directors access to company indemnities and directors and officers liability insurance when they defend against criminal proceedings. Despite some doubts, the presence of repayment extension in D&O policies should provide directors with additional reassurance, says Francis Kean of Willis Towers Watson.

  • Litigation Funding Is On The Rise In Europe

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    The rising popularity of litigation funding across Europe is a positive force for litigation and arbitration proceedings, but its growth and influence should be carefully managed, say Klaus Oblin and Florian Wettner of IR Global.

  • Judging The Financial Conduct Authority 5 Years On

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    The U.K.'s Financial Conduct Authority, 5 years old this month, has had significant success in securing record financial penalties against firms in relation to misconduct, but it remains to be seen whether it will be able to hold senior individuals to account, says David Rundle of WilmerHale.

  • The Outlook For Anti-Suit Injunctions After Brexit

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    It remains to be seen whether, after Brexit, the U.K. will issue anti-suit injunctions in relation to proceedings in EU member states. Much will depend on whether the U.K. adopts the common law approach or Lugano Convention, or negotiates a new agreement with the EU, say Nicholas Greenwood and Nicola Kelly of Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP.

  • New Tax Rules For Termination Payments In UK

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    New rules aim to simplify the taxation of termination payments and mean that income tax and national insurance contributions must now be paid on all payments which relate to the notice period, says Justin Tarka of Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC.

  • EU Ruling Casts Doubt On Bilateral Investment Treaties

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    In March, the Court of Justice of the European Union ruled that an arbitration clause in a bilateral investment treaty between two member states was incompatible with EU law. This decision may impact foreign direct investments significantly, as similar clauses are common to almost 200 BITs currently in force, says Charles Goldblatt of Seddons.

  • GDPR Will Benefit Financial Services In The Long Run

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    We are entering the next data age very soon, and the financial services industry must get on board and comply with the General Data Protection Regulation, which provides firms with opportunities to devise new competitive advantage from handling data and cleansing systems, says Phil Beckett of Alvarez & Marsal Holdings LLC.

  • IP Considerations For UK Open Banking App Developers

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    Since January of this year, consumer-facing banks in the U.K. have been required to make customers' banking data available to authorized third parties in a standardized format. As competition between open banking app developers increases, intellectual property rights will become a key legal tool, say Rajvinder Jagdev and Peter Damerell of Powell Gilbert LLP.

  • Opinion

    BigLaw Doesn't Have A Diversity Problem

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    Although the lack of racial and gender diversity among the ranks of the majority of both midsized and top law firms is a major issue, it’s past time to shed light on the real problem — inclusion, or lack thereof, says Marlen Whitley of Reed Smith LLP.

  • Equity Partnership Isn't What It Used To Be

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    To many young attorneys, becoming an equity partner shows a firm's long-term commitment, meaning job security and a voice in important firm matters. However, the industry has changed and nowadays it may not be better to enter a new firm as an equity partner, says Jeffrey Liebster of Major Lindsey & Africa.

  • Breaching Policy Warranties Can Partially Void UK Coverage

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    The U.K. Commercial Court's recent decision in BlueBon v. Ageas highlights the need for policyholders to comply with all warranties, but also indicates that failure to comply may not necessarily invalidate an entire policy, says Richard Mattick of Covington & Burling LLP.

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