Tuesday, January 27, 2026
25.6 C
Lagos

British Court: Insurers Wrong to Deny COVID-19 Claims

London judges have ruled that some of the world’s biggest insurers were wrong to reject tens of thousands of claims from small firms battered by the COVID-19 pandemic, Britain’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said on Tuesday.

The FCA, which brought the test case against eight insurers, said the court had found in favor of policyholders’ arguments on the majority of key issues in a complex, 162-page judgment.

However, some of the insurers said the ruling meant they wouldn’t have to pay out, or would have to pay out much less than modeled in a worse-case scenario, and Britain’s Federation of Small Businesses called the judgment a “partial” victory.

The lawsuit has been closely watched because it is estimated to affect 370,000 businesses and billions in insurance claims.

The FCA brought the case against the insurers, including Hiscox, RSA, QBE and Zurich, in June to clarify whether 21 types of business interruption (BI) policy wordings should pay out for closures and disruption caused by the pandemic.

The ruling had 21 “lead” policies to consider.

The regulator has estimated the case could affect more than 60 insurers and 700 different types of policies because many insurance policies have similar wording. It is also being watched overseas, the LIIBA insurance brokers’ trade body said.

Small businesses – from cafes, wedding planners and beauty parlors to events businesses – have said they faced ruin after attempts to claim compensation for business losses during the pandemic, which has prompted the most stringent government restrictions in peacetime history, were rejected by insurers.

FCA interim chief executive Christopher Woolard said the judgment was a “significant step” in resolving the uncertainty faced by policyholders and called on insurers to “reflect on the clarity provided,” irrespective of any possible appeal, and consider how to progress claims.

SHARE SURGE

But the devil was in the detail.

The Association of British Insurers (ABI) said the judgment “divided evenly” between insurers and policyholders on the main issues.

Zurich Insurance and Ecclesiastical, a smaller insurer, said the judgment confirmed their disputed policies did not need to pay out.

Hiscox said fewer than one third of its 34,000 UK BI policies would have to pay out and that the net cost would be less than 100 million pounds ($129 million) – compared with initial guidance of up to 250 million pounds.

Shares in Hiscox and RSA, which restored its canceled 2019 dividend and pointed out that some of its policy interpretations had been upheld by the court, leapt by 15% and 6% respectively, as the market welcomed the removal of uncertainty and a fresh focus on growth.

The other four insurers did not respond to requests for comment.

‘IMPORTANT OUTCOME’

But some policyholders were jubilant.

Justin Stead, CEO of accessories firm Radley London, said the judgment was “an extremely important outcome to secure the future for Radley,” adding insurers should pay out quickly “to save as many businesses as possible.”

Sonia Campbell, partner at law firm Mishcon de Reya, which represented two business action groups in the case, said the outcome was a “resounding victory” for many firms.

The FCA lawsuit offered a new legal route by pooling together a group of company policies and taking insurers to court with minimal costs to businesses.

The case was designed to quickly clarify whether the pandemic and a government lockdown in March should trigger BI policies, which provide cover when insured premises cannot be used because of restrictions imposed by a public authority and in the event of a notifiable disease or infection.

Insurers have argued that most policies did not cover the pandemic, that they were paying out valid claims as quickly as possible and that being forced to stump up for all losses from the pandemic would be catastrophic for the insurance industry, and its backup, the reinsurance industry.

If the judgment is appealed it could leapfrog straight to the Supreme Court, the highest UK court, to reduce delay for buckling businesses, lawyers say.

 

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

First Asset Management Receives Upgraded Ratings from Agusto & Co, DataPro

First Asset Management, a subsidiary of FirstHoldCo Plc has...

SERAP Sues Adelabu, NBET over ‘Failure to Account for Missing N128bn in Power Ministry’

Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has filed a...

NGX Group, Lagos State, HEI Expand Project BLOOM to Alimosho, Building on Measurable Social Impact

Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group), in partnership with...

NDIC, EFCC Strengthen Collaboration to Enhance Asset Recovery, Prosecution of Bank Failure Offences

L-R: MD, Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), Mr. Thompson...

ONEDOSH Raises $3m Pre-Seed to Build Global Stablecoin Payment Rails

Money should move without borders. It doesn’t, yet. OneDosh has...

Topics

Polaris Bank, Eventful to Showcase Nigeria’s Vibrant Fashion Industry at 2023 Souk

Polaris Bank, a leading Digital Retail Bank, is partnering...

Dangote Contracts Honeywell for Major Refinery Capacity Upgrade to 1.4m BPD

Dangote Group is pleased to announce that it has...

CIIN President, Edwin Igbiti, Pays Courtesy Call on Sovereign Trust Insurance

L-R: Sanni Oladimeji, DGM, Risk Management and Compliance, Sovereign...

Bank Fraud Threatens CBN Cashless Policy

Researchers at the University of Ibadan have warned that...

NIGERIA: Between Mismanagement & Leaking Treasury

The Treasury of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is sick. According to economic doctors, the Nigerian treasury is suffering from acute mismanagement and basket-type leakages. Other diagnosed ailments include falling oil prices and dwindling foreign reserves. The sicknesses were made public recently by Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Federal Minister of Finance and Co-ordinating Minister of the Economy in Abuja.

Ecobank Supports Women Entrepreneurs, Partners WOWe Festival

In line with its corporate disposition to sustainable women empowerment, Ecobank Nigeria is partnering Women’s Entrepreneurship Day (WED) on the hosting of the 2015 Women of West Africa Entrepreneurship (WOWe) Festival. The WOWe Festival 2015 with the theme ‘Vision to Reality’ slated for June 25 and 26, will provide the opportunity for female entrepreneurs and corporate professional women with entrepreneurial ambitions, to secure practical information on how to transform their businesses and realise their entrepreneurial ambitions.

AfDB Approves $50m to Fidelity Bank for SME Support in Nigeria

The African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved a US$50...

FG Pledges Stronger Policy, Funding Support for Creative Industry

The Presidency has reaffirmed President Bola Tinubu’s commitment to...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img