Showing posts with label pounds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pounds. Show all posts

UK insurers face a year billions of pounds of regulatory calculation in 2011

Tim Breedon is chairman of the Association of British Insurers and group chief executive of L & G Photo: Newscast

A series of game-changing reforms will come together in 2012, presenting a defining juncture in the way our industry is funded, regulated and provides products. We have just a year to get these Exchange right.


Delivering change effectively matters to the millions of customers we serve and the wider economy. Insurance fulfils an important social purpose by protecting people against the financial costs of unexpected events. It also helps create a more resilient society - resilient against the costs of floods, resilient against the costs of rising longevity. We also help when it comes to accident, sickness and bereavement.


Insurance works best when there is a clear and effective partnership between the industry, its customers and policymakers. Each member of that partnership needs to be clear about their obligations if we are to provide products people need at prices they can afford. This has never been more important than it is today, as the shrinking state forces people to be more self-linking, and the "Big Society" encourages greater diversity of supply goods and services in return for greater responsibility and social commitment on the part of business.


I often think of the UK insurance industry as a paleoflood, relatively effectuée giant, but we employ 275,000 people, contribute £ 8.2 trillion in taxes and are a major export. As investors, we manage assets 17,347,400 to almost a quarter of the UK's total net worth. We provide insurance services covering 90pc of UK households, providing long-term security through thought and short-term security through products such as travel insurance and public liability cover.


By the end of 2011, UK insurers will need to be ready for a new European capital regime under Solvency II, has dramatically altered regulatory structure in the UK and Europe, and the introduction of automatic enrolment into pension schemes.


Alongside this, a radical reform to the way people buy financial advice will go live, benefiting customers through transparency on expenses and increased adviser professionalism. The insurance industry will have to finalise a way forward on provision of property insurance for people in high flood-risk areas, ahead of the end of the industry's agreement with the Government in 2013. There is also much to be done to achieved the ambition to pass on to contact some of the risks currently pillar by the state in areas such as long-term care.


The EU directive capital, Solvency II, seeks to create a modern and effective capital regime for insurers to operate within all 27 member states. The ABI supports this aim and - as the UK has the largest insurance sector in Europe - we have a huge stake in getting it right. If done badly, over-influenced by banking worries, and the sector is required to carry excess capital, the 450 million insurance customers within the EU will have to pay more for their insurance. This would hardly be compatible with the idea of greater personal responsibility and choice - individuals cannot be expected to make sensitive choices about managing risks if the price of doing so is driven too high as the result of poorly thought-through regulation.


These changes occur under the shadow of major structural reform to the bodies that regulate insurers in both the UK and EU. The reforms have been driven by failures during the banking crisis, but we need these new bodies to be effective for insurers and differentiate between banks and insurers exposed in the way they are set up and operate.


Insurers and banks are vital to each other, but operate in fundamentally different sectors; insurers operating for the long-term with assets matched to liabilities while banks manage short-term risks from a highly leveraged capital base and rely upon liquidity. "One size fits all" regulation makes sense, no. intellectually or in practice, when the risks each sector runs are so profoundly different.


We also need to keep the regulatory implementation costs, which are ultimately paid for by customers, to a minimum. The ABI has estimated that the average cost for each large firm of implementing Solvency II, excluding any capital increases it may involve, could be as high as £ 100 m. The FSA has upped its estimate of the costs over the first five years of reforms to its cross-industry sales of investment products to between £ 1.4 and £ 1. 7bn. Both reforms can and should benefit the industry and the consumer if done right. Aim key judgments still need to be made correctly for this to be the case.


Competitiveness matters and I want the UK to be a leading global financial centre. For insurers, holding and moving large amounts of capital is at the heart of our business model. Taxation of capital and income, for example on profits earned abroad, is one of the key issues firms consider when deciding where to Headquarters. The Treasury has made real progress here, outlining a five-year plan to make the UK competitive.


The insurance industry's response to floods showed how we can react quickly and effectively to customer needs, and we must make sure this ethos extends into all our work. We must never forget that insurance is a social good and must always be as available and affordable to as many people as possible. We also have to be sure our products work for customers, giving clarity on what customers can expect of insurance, ensuring quality complaints processes and being honest about whether a product is suitable. A customer relationship that works is one where both parties understand what is covered, where genuine claims are met quickly, and where both parties can be confident they are operating within a regulatory framework Canova.


Finally, the next few years could see the industry develop in new areas as the coalition Government publicly considers more varied supply of public services. We need to show we can work with Government to develop workable alternatives to state funding to assist with welfare reform, helping in areas such as long-term care. So we need to build industry-government trust through resolution of issues such as provision of insurance in flood-risk areas and auto-enrolment into a pension scheme. Success here means that perhaps the industry can step forward in other areas.


So insurers face a critical time as the new year beckons with challenges and opportunities in every area. It is vital we work effectively with government, regulators and, most of all our 57 million customers in the UK to get this right.


? Tim Breedon is chairman of the Association of British Insurers and group chief executive of L & G


View the original article here

Terra Firma and Citi lawyers come into conflict on a Treaty of Union in pursuing EMI billion pounds

Kirsten Randell, an assistant compliance with Terra Firma, who was also responsible for drafting the minutes of the meetings of the Council, said the Court she took notes and writing the minutes of a meeting of the company Investment Advisory Committee (IAC) on Sunday, 20 May 2007 - the eve of Terra Firma is his ill-fated 5.3 £ 4 bid for music label.

His handwritten notes of the meeting were projected on a wall in the courtroom of Manhattan and included a line reading "other bidders - to 262 p.

Ms. Randell said jurors who, in his separate Treaty of Union a question that was requested by an individual meeting with a given response, indicating that the question of a rival offers 262 p has been discussed.

Terra Firma, the company founded by Guy Hands private investment capital, says Citi billion in damages, alleging mistaken Terra Firma to bid of 265 percent from Monday May 21 by claiming that he had a bidder rival.CITI American Bank rejects all allegations.

More specifically, the hands of Mr. alleges that he has received three calls of David Wormsley, Star a banker, Citi in London and long-time friend telling him that Cerberus, an American company, was going to make a bid of 262 p on Monday matin.M.hands admitted that there is no written record that Mr. Wormsley gave this information during the weekend.

Jay Cohen, Citigroup, lawyer pointed out other features of the Union in the IAC, Randell's difficult Ms while meeting notes they too were used to separate a question with an answer.

Ms. Randell, Australian and who worked for Terra Firma in London since September 2004, said that he had not "necessarily" bidders, but only in the case of the line.

Mr. hands is due at the end of his testimony today.


View the original article here

Ten Alps Bob Geldof loses many Government of 10 million pounds per year for teachers

Shares in Sir Bob Geldof's production company Ten Alps yesterday plunged 37pc to 9.7p as the Government axed its ?10m-a-year contract to make Teachers TV.Sir Bob Geldof holds more than 3.5 m shares in the company of production ten Alps.

Annual Government contract is defined to be cut from April 2011 for the plans of the Government to reduce the dépenses.On believes contract had run in 2013, but a break clause was invoked.

The liberal-conservative Democrat coalition will unveil a comprehensive review of spending record October 20, seeks to reduce spending on average in departments by a quarter to tackle a budget deficit.

Geldof, who plays in the film of Pink Floyd 1982 the wall, who is known for the words, "we must not education", is Chairman of the Group and holds more than 3.5 m shares in the group.

Alex Connock, Chief Executive, said the new exit from the next day came, but the Group hoped to take on the project and to develop a subscription service.

"We had no warning at all the", said Mr. Connock. ""But our thinking has always should this day occur that go back and try to run on a subscription.

Mr. Connock said the company has a market capitalisation of £ 11.4 m, seek to adapt the project to the departments of education, individual users and courses universitaires.Enseignants TV, launched in 2005, is designed to help new teachers by providing training on how to conduct lessons materials and update known to teachers on changes to the programme.Il began life as a string of TV digital but turned into a site online in September and has about 400,000 registered users.

Trading update reveals that the Alps ten has "started a reorganization of its business to reduce overhead costs and simplify the company flow offers on the market" with directors should "do other ads."

Mr. Connock is supposed to be particularly eager to develop the service in other territoires.Dix sold the teachers TV format on the Canadian market and is reportedly to negotiate an agreement in Thailand.

Science online channel Newton TV is tested after a grant from the Northeast development agency.

Ten Alps shares fell by 65pc last year.


View the original article here

Crown Estate sells 150 million pounds London properties to Peabody

Elimination by the power of the Crown, which manages assets belonged to Queen's has been very controversial because residents fear that they might be forced to leave their homes by increasing new owner rental payments.

However, Sir Stuart Hampson, President of the Estate, State said that Peabody "synonymous with safe and dynamic communities and responsible management".

Only 1 230, based in Tower Hamlets.Westminster, Lewisham and Camden, properties were not sold to a private company will stimulate residents. The price of 150 million from £ is also significantly below of the 250 m £ the power of the State was first thought to look.

State succession is to sell the property in its strategy to diversify its portfolio of property outside of London and reinvest capital in new developments.It is also selling a set of 25pc of Regent Street for about 400 m £ in one year more publicized sales propriété.Quatre funds overseas are running, including Future Fund the Australia and Norwegian sovereign wealth funds.

Peabody agreement is subject to conditions such as the maintenance of letting workers key to 90pc and legally bound to the "Backup existing frameworks rental and security provisions of the occupation of the existing tenants".a consultation on the sale was launched with residents, and a final decision by the Board of Directors the power of the State will be taken to its conclusion on 23 November.

Sir Stuart said: "anyone who cares about the future of affordable housing in the capital would warmly welcome this nouvelle.Peabody houses have been at the heart of London since 150 years and their name is a synonym for responsible and safe communities dynamiques.Nous hope residents and others take the time to understand Peabody proposals for the future management of these assets and let us know their views on the proposals."

The Chief Executive of Peabody, Stephen Howlett, added: "we are absolutely committed to keep these affordable properties .the ' succession of State workers housing key current commitment will not change if the selling continues."


View the original article here

Powered by Blogger