Lloyd's
-
The syndicate is expected to write ~$300mn of business in 2026.
-
While rates have “definitely come down,” they were coming off a high base, Rachel Turk said.
-
Ryan Alternative Capital Re was launched in partnership with Axis Capital.
-
The capital supported sidecar-style syndicates and reinsurance start-ups.
-
Syndicate 1440 was approved to assume business incepting January 2026.
-
The ILS manager revised down slightly its forecast for the syndicate’s 2023 YOA.
-
The headcount at the start-up now stands at around 40.
-
Recent transactions on the platform include cat bonds from Flood Re and Brit.
-
MAP’s Christopher Smelt said impact on nationwide programmes will cause risk aversion.
-
Both syndicates also reported a deterioration in their combined ratios.
-
This came as the market’s underwriting profit dipped 10% for 2024.
-
The executive spent a brief period at Wakam in a capital and reinsurance role.
-
The deal is being issued through Lloyd’s London Bridge 2 PCC.
-
The vehicle has $2.55bn in capital committed by institutional investors.
-
The move means Lloyd’s will have a new chairman and a new CEO in the same year.
-
The carrier has used Lloyd’s London Bridge 2 structure for the launch.
-
The top quartile, which includes Nephila 2357, were set to shrink overall.
-
Lloyd’s has taken around 6% of aggregate US hurricane losses in recent years, and disclosed estimated net losses from Helene and Milton of $1.8bn to $3.4bn.
-
Other capacity supporting the syndicate is mostly individual Names, sources have said.
-
It is targeting $25mn GWP this year and $50mn GWP in 2025.
-
Better performance data and clarity around entry are key, report says.
-
-
Evercore is leading the capital raise process and Aon is assisting with the Lloyd’s application process.
-
Reinsurers “weren’t getting paid” before 2023’s hardening, the Lloyd’s executive argued.
-
Latin America and the Caribbean accounted for 4.6% of GWP for Lloyd's in 2023.
-
The syndicate has appointed former Munich Re active underwriter Stuart Newcombe.
-
The syndicate snatched the number one spot from Chaucer’s Syndicate 1176.
-
The platform distributed ~$50mn to investors for 2023.
-
ILS platform London Bridge II has had a good year as volumes reached $750mn, the CFO said.
-
The pension fund was one of the first investors to use London Bridge.
-
Envelop SPA 1925 was launched at the start of the year with Chris Baddeley as active underwriter, based in London.
-
Roughly $750mn of securities across 13 cells are available to institutional investors via London Bridge vehicles.
-
With plans to support three different types of Lloyd’s syndicates, the vehicle intends to trade under the new name London Innovation Underwriters by 15 November.
-
Lloyd’s CFO Burkhard Keese, speaking at Guy Carpenter’s Baden-Baden Symposium, said there are $500mn-$1bn of London Bridge deals in the pipeline.
-
The US could be exposed to economic losses of $1.1tn in the event of a cyberattack, the highest of any country.
-
The company said Ki is the first algorithmic underwriter to offer capacity from multiple syndicates.
-
The Corporation’s chairman said that Names and other third-party capital are essential to maintaining the market’s unique nature.
-
SCS accounted for nearly two-thirds of global first-half catastrophe losses.
-
The new SPA will write cyber reinsurance initially and could progress to writing insurance.
-
Financials Acquisitions Corp is looking to extend its merger deadline and raise “substantial” extra funds.
-
Howden Tiger worked on the structure of the deal with the unnamed syndicate.
-
Nephila Syndicate CEO Adam Beatty said that the firm hopes to grow its new specialty syndicate to $500mn of premium within the next few years.
-
At Trading Risk’s annual ILS conference, Lloyd’s CFO Burkhard Keese explained how the Corporation is working with the market to attract investors to participate in risk transfer across the Lloyd’s market.
-
Lloyd’s has launched a fund on its new investment platform to enable the market to invest globally in assets themed around climate adaptation, mitigation and social inclusion.
-
The syndicate had the second-lowest combined ratio for 2022.
-
The £50mn syndicate made most of its profits in aviation.
-
Reserve releases connected to 2017 events helped the segment deliver a 95.6% combined ratio.
-
The sub-syndicate will complement Hiscox’s existing portfolio, offering additional capacity to qualifying clients.