Reinsurance News

Lloyd’s shifts to more competitive, capital-driven market, says Howden Re

21st April 2026 - Author: Taylor Mixides -

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Howden Re, the reinsurance broker, has published a new syndicate analysis of the Lloyd’s of London market, pointing to a transition toward a more competitive and capital-rich environment where underwriting discipline and capital deployment are becoming the key drivers of performance.

In its latest report, Howden Re says capacity continues to expand, supported by strong capital inflows, while profitability remains resilient despite softer pricing. Growth is increasingly focused on higher-margin lines, even as competition intensifies with new entrants and a greater emphasis on efficiency and capital discipline.

Drawing on its NOVA data platform, Howden Re finds that Lloyd’s fundamentals remain strong, but the basis of success is shifting. The market is becoming more performance-driven, with less reliance on pricing and greater focus on execution.

Howden Re reports that gross written premium increased by 4.2% year-on-year in 2025, with profitability holding firm. Pricing momentum has eased, meaning growth is now being driven more by volume, portfolio mix and new entrants rather than rate.

Michelle To, Head of Business Intelligence at Howden Re, commented: “Lloyd’s continues to demonstrate the strength of disciplined underwriting. Even as pricing softens, the market is proving that profitability doesn’t depend on rate alone. It’s driven by portfolio quality, capital allocation and consistency of execution.”

Howden Re highlights capacity expansion as a defining feature of the market, with stamp capacity continuing to rise on the back of strong investor confidence. As a result, competition for risk is increasing, margins are tightening and differentiation is becoming more challenging, placing greater importance on underwriting discipline and effective capital use.

The firm adds that profitability is being supported by strong performance in property and reinsurance lines, favourable loss experience and prudent reserving.

“What we’re seeing is not just growth, but a shift in how that growth is achieved,” added To. “As capacity expands and competition intensifies, the focus is moving towards smarter deployment of capital and a more selective approach to risk.”

Howden Re also notes that Lloyd’s is evolving structurally, with efforts to improve efficiency and reduce costs enhancing capital efficiency and attracting broader investor participation.

Overall, Howden Re concludes that while Lloyd’s remains fundamentally strong, increasing competition means underwriting quality, operational efficiency and disciplined capital management will define future performance.