Editor's PickInvesting

Lloyd’s of London to give staff a £2,500 helping hand ahead of winter

2 Mins read

Lloyd’s of London is to give staff earning less than £75,000 per year a £2,500 one-off payment later this month to help with surging inflation.

Chief Executive John Neal told  media this morning that it was set to be a “pretty rotten winter” and “as employers we’ve got an obligation to think, to care and to look after our employees.”

Neal was speaking after the insurance marketplace announced a bump in underwriting profits in the first half of its financial year to £1.2bn, up from just shy of £1bn in the first half of 2021.

The firm also saw a fall in the combined ratio, where a drop is a measure of increased profitability for insurers, despite what Lloyd’s called “a challenging year of natural catastrophes, the invasion of Ukraine, inflation and other geopolitical factors.”

Neal said Lloyd’s and the insurance industry at large had shown its value during a difficult 12 months on the global stage.

“There are points in time in history when insurance matters, and uncertainty is really critical to that way of thinking,” he said.

“When you think of financial crises, when you think of systemic risk and the issues from Covid-19, or dare I say it appallingly Russia invading Ukraine, that creates a crisis of confidence for customers and businesses and that’s when as insurers we’ve got to lean in.”

Neal said that the firm had placed £1.1bn in reserve for claims related to the war in Ukraine, but warned the “manifestation of claims is going to take a long, long time.”

However Neal said he felt as if “we’ve got our arms around the financial consequences of it and it’s not that difficult for us to manage financially.”

There had been fears early on the crisis that losses related to the war could be systemic for the marketplace and some syndicates, particularly when the Russian government expropriated hundreds of foreign-owned aircraft, but the firm said yesterday in its results presentation that it expected the war to be a “major but financially manageable event (with) no concerns for capital or solvency at a Lloyd’s or syndicate level.

Neal said the job of insurers would be easier if global governments could join up their responses to the Ukraine crisis, with Lloyd’s sitting at the heart of the sanctions regime.

“The challenge is really understanding what governments do and don’t want us to do. The respective sanctions being imposed in the UK versus Europe versus the US is head in your hands, let’s get this right, let’s understand what’s needed,” he said this morning.

“And then you’ll get obvious requests in the middle of it to say can we affect and allow the transportation of Ukrainian food and Ukrainian fertilisers? The answer is yes, of course we can, but administratively it becomes complex.”

Lloyd’s underwrote the passage of Ukrainian grain ships in the middle of this year, but Neal said it would be “helpful” if the sanctions regime was clearer and more aligned.

Related posts
Editor's PickInvesting

Made in Britain teams up with Carrington to drive UK manufacturing growth

1 Mins read
Made in Britain, the not-for-profit organisation behind the official trademark for UK manufacturing, has forged a new partnership with Lincoln-based digital marketing…
Editor's PickInvesting

Government to shake up AI funding rules to drive innovation and cut waste

2 Mins read
The government is to transform the way it funds and manages AI experiments and digital projects, hoping to cut wasteful spending, drive…
Editor's PickInvesting

Scottish Power owner urges Labour to scrap Miliband’s ‘zonal pricing’ plan

2 Mins read
Spanish energy giant Iberdrola has urged Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves to reconsider her party’s plans to introduce regional electricity pricing, arguing it…
Power your team with InHype
[mc4wp_form id="17"]

Add some text to explain benefits of subscripton on your services.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *