Legislation
Airmic 2016: Airmic publishes fair presentation clause
Airmic has published a clause to protect policyholders who innocently breach the duty of fair presentation introduced in the Insurance Act.
Digital: Snooping in the age of social media
The access that private and public bodies have to our personal data has been a continual point of debate in the electronic age and the current passage through the Houses of Parliament of the Investigatory Powers Bill is a case in point
C-Suite Insurer: LV's Euros Jones on why commercial insurance needs agility
Insurers must strengthen broker relationships and adapt their solutions for customers in order to survive
Blog: Enterprise Act - how other jurisdictions have dealt with late payments
The absence of a right to damages for late payment of claims in English law was based upon a legal fiction that the insurer's obligation is to hold the policyholder harmless against the insured peril, and any recovery under the policy constitutes damages…
Blog: Loss adjusters must get ready for new insurance contract law
The Enterprise Bill received royal assent on 4 May and the Insurance Act comes into force in August, both with the proclaimed aim to bring insurance contract law up to date and provide greater clarity for all customers
Interview: Clive Clarke, Airmic
Incoming Airmic chair Clive Clarke talks to Burhan Khadbai about his journey to the role and the key issues facing the risk management and insurance communities
In Depth - Brexit: What would a Brexit mean for the insurance industry?
The issue of the referendum has stirred debate – but what’s at stake?
Blog: New minimum wage increases retail's exposure to claims
The new minimum wage brings new risks to the retail sector, increasing premiums, exposure to claims and reputational risks
Blog: Insurance contract law reform concludes with a bang, not a whimper
There is a crescendo building as we near the end of this 10-year journey to bring insurance contract law into the 21st century.
CJCA s57 fundamentally dishonest ruling sends 'strong message' to fraudsters
The first fundamentally dishonest ruling under section 57 of the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015 will act as a significant deterrent to potential fraudsters, according to the Association of British Insurers and law firm Horwich Farrelly.
C-Suite Broker: Marsh's Charles Beresford-Davies on the importance of communication around the Insurance Act
With the implementation of the Insurance Act imminent, insureds are already attempting to seize the opportunity to gain the benefits
Riot cover to continue as standard as Act gets Royal Assent
Property insurers will continue to include riot damage cover as standard after lobbying by the Association of British Insurers contributed to the government introducing a £1m per claim limit in the Riot Compensation Act 2016.
C-Suite Insurer: Covéa's Adrian Furness - Standing up for customers
I’m concerned that as the debate about the latest whiplash reforms gets louder (I’m being polite), the most important person in the process is being forgotten - the customer
SRA warning notice on PI fraud ‘a marker in the sand’
The warning notice on potential fraud in personal injury cases issued by the Solicitors Regulation Authority on 21 March is a vital move and serves a clear function to remind lawyers of their duties to address the issue, according to legal commentators.
Europe: Market realities could trump cross-border aims
Although the European Commission is considering moving cross-border barriers for insurance sales, detractors are making their voices heard.
C-Suite Insurer: Esure's Stuart Vann - Fraud and what more the industry can do
Although there has been significant progress, there is more for insurers to do in reducing levels of opportunistic fraud
Blog: Bring on the Enterprise Bill
The Enterprise Bill should mean quicker payments for SMEs - and for insurers, a chance to stand up and be counted.
Europe - Vnuk: EU ruling is a black cloud over motorsport
The Vnuk ruling - making third-party insurance compulsory - could make motorsport participation too expensive and supporters are calling for an exemption to be made.
CII's Fisher proposes insurance apprentice 'buddy scheme' to government
Sian Fisher, CEO of the Chartered Insurance Institute, has written to the government to propose an insurance buddy scheme for apprenticeships, which would take advantage of the ability to use levy contributions outside of firms.
Editor's comment: The bad apple?
Regulation is a good thing … except where it is bad thing.
Brain Training: 10 things you need to know about ... workplace monitoring
1. Insurance firms are increasingly well informed about the risks and obligations entailed in handling client data, but often less so about personal data relating to their own employees.
Europe: Telematics and the gender directive
The Gender Directive put a brake on insurers' underwriting purely on the basis of gender. So has it encouraged the development of telematics which helps them price in way that does not differentiate rates between males and females?
Claims Club: Late payment legislation to add ‘new pressure’ to difficult fraud cases
Insurers have been urged to prepare a late payment strategy now, after an insurance barrister warned the late payment clause, due to be introduced with the Enterprise Bill, will add additional pressures in suspected fraud cases.
Fraud Focus: Joining up the dots …
Financial services sectors must work together to fight against fraud despite facing their own problems