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London company market premium up 10% in 2019: IUA

7th October 2020 - Author: Matt Sheehan

New data from the International Underwriting Association (IUA) shows that premium income for the London company market grew by 10% last year with £21.436 billion of large commercial and wholesale risks underwritten by firms in the City.

The IUA also found that a further $6.197 billion was written in other offices outside London but overseen and managed by London operations.

Combining these two figures gave an overall intellectual and economic premium of £27.633bn for 2019.

Many companies experienced strong rates of premium growth across a wide range of business lines last year, with hardening market conditions supplemented by growing appetite for areas such as cyber and transfers of business from Lloyd’s into the company market.

Company restructuring necessitated by Brexit, however, resulted in a large fall in the amount of ‘controlled’ premium written in European offices, but overseen and managed by London.

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The IUA says that a total of £4.508bn previously written in this manner is now recorded by continental operations instead.

“Our annual statistics report reveals a remarkable performance by the London company market in 2019,” said Dave Matcham, Chief Executive of the IUA.

“Particular growth has been noted in energy, aviation, property and professional lines, though all classes appear to have benefited from improved market conditions to some extent. More business is also being written through managing agents with the amount of delegated authority premium up by 28%.”

He continued: “With the end of the Brexit transition looming our report shows that IUA members are well positioned to continue serving their clients with new operational structures up and running.”

“Reorganisation and the impending loss of financial services passporting rules has meant that a large amount of business written in Europe is no longer overseen and managed in the same way by London, but reported directly to operations located within the EU,” Matcham added.

“Such restructuring has increased costs for IUA members, making them globally more inefficient and, ultimately, less able to offer a better deal for clients.”

The IUA head concluded: “Our market has certainly changed significantly over the decade in which we have been studying it. There has been substantial growth, from a total of £19.620bn in 2010 to £27.633bn for 2020. The make-up of market participants has also altered with an increase in overseas capital, consolidation amongst the largest players and firms increasingly operating in both the Lloyd’s and company markets.”

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