A London Insider’s View
The global business community is contending with challenging economic conditions, continued natural catastrophe risk, and an ever-changing regulatory environment. We caught up with Croft to learn how these factors are affecting London-based and international insurance brokers.
Obviously, we have our own problems with inflation, probably slightly worse than yours. And we have this slightly odd position whereby we are almost in a lame duck government in that now, while it’s not an absolute certainty that [the Conservative party] will lose the general election sometime next year, it’s very likely. I mean, it’s perfectly possible that they’ll win, but at the moment, not many people would think that. And their reaction to that is to become more and more populist.
So we have this issue with 15,000 people pitched up on the south coast of Kent in small rubber dinghies from France this year already, which is on top of something like 45,000-50,000 coming last year—in a world where at least a significant portion of our nation thought that what they voted for was to take back control of the borders when we left the European Union. And ever since, more and more people are coming in. It is a very emotive issue. So it’s pretty unstable and divisive.
We ran four workshops with brokers in their 20s, and they’re all really keen to be back meeting people. Therefore, I think that, in terms of modernization and digitization, we would make a distinction between the deal and the transaction. You can digitize the transaction and take cost out of that. But the deal is probably something that still needs to be done in person for certain bits. We would reckon now that up to 30% of the business that’s done in London is quite commoditized and you can do it remotely and equally. Big global programs don’t lend themselves to trading in an underwriting room. They’re all big meetings of broker, client, insurer, quite often reinsurer, and a whole collection of lawyers. But that still does leave a big tranche in the middle, where going from underwriter to underwriter and doing deals is the best way of finding solutions that other markets tend not to. And that’s what London is there for.
But we are doing a massive amount of work on modernization that hopefully will start to bear fruit next year. Anything we can do to provide better service to clients is pretty fun.
The challenge, in addition to getting physically in the underwriting room, is getting to a place where underwriters will take decisions at the box, which is challenging nowadays because of things like modeling and capacity management that the regulators tell them they ought to do and that actually probably are quite a good idea as well. So we need to find ways of catering for that.
The interesting thing about climate is that, over the last couple of years, we’ve spent a lot of time with our government trying to persuade them that we’ve got lots of clever people who know about climate risk and they can be really useful to them. But there was a by-election in Uxbridge and South Ruislip about a month ago, which was Boris Johnson’s old constituency, after he resigned as an MP. It is just outside the boundaries of the London low-emission zones. So if you’ve got an old car that you still drive, then you have to pay 12 pound 50 a day in the low-emission zone. There’s a proposal to extend that to places like Uxbridge. The Conservative party, which was on course to lose Boris Johnson’s seat, hung on to it by about 450 votes, at least in part as a protest vote against the extension of the low-emission zone, because that’s being done by Sadiq Khan, who’s a Labour mayor of London.
So, in the wake of that, the government has more or less completely abandoned net zero as a concept.
But back to the point I made earlier, I think it’s an enormous opportunity. There is a syndicate just about to go live, if it hasn’t already, in Lloyd’s. They have a relationship with the fire department in California, and they will send people in to assess your house from a wildfire risk perspective and give you a whole list of recommendations, and then they’ll provide you with property insurance on the basis that they’ve minimized the risk and made it possible. That’s the sort of thing you would want to see the international insurance industry doing. Also part of the cover is that they’ll send people back if there is a wildfire heading towards your property to help you manage the risk of it getting to you. So it’s a manifestation of what we’ve talked about for quite a long time—services becoming more important than just paying a premium and getting a check a few months later. It’s actually a complete risk management solution.
So there is definitely a faction of opinion within the EU that they shouldn’t export specialty insurance, which seems pretty ill advised on the basis that, if nothing else, it just creates a massive risk bubble in the EU because they’re all just insuring each other. It’s a faction that’s seemingly gained ground at the same time that we have left the Union.
Us leaving has coincided with the growth of a slightly isolationist protectionist faction in the EU. Protectionism is quite a general world trend at the moment. So they might do it.
Equally, we are seeing some of the larger insurance groups looking at creating hubs, some in Madrid. The idea is you could create your own specialty hub in Madrid that does all your EU business but you can also move your Latin American book through it because a lot of Latin American business comes to Madrid, either via Miami or directly.
It’s the inevitable consequence of a seismic change. Everyone goes, “Well, why are we doing that? And should we carry on doing it?”
We’re still interested in growing insurance penetration in markets where we haven’t been successful. Basically Asia, Africa and Latin America. We talk of a global insurance industry, and it’s sort of global, but it’s quite focused on a relatively few number of territories where significant economic growth is happening and, thus, demand for commercial insurance.
Our penetration into those markets is less than 5%. It hasn’t grown, in fact, might have shrunk. So that’s a challenge.
Certainly in Asian markets it’s understanding the nuances of how business works in those territories. I’m not so sure that we’ve yet developed enough expertise in London to do that. It’s very different from how it works in other parts of the world.
It’s a question of how we do that while not losing focus on our traditional markets. Everybody sees a huge growth in the U.S. excess and surplus lines market, and our members who are particularly focused there are making a lot of money and bringing a lot of business in.
Partly that was thriving in domestic markets during the pandemic because everyone got a bit nervous, but it’s carried on afterwards. So we would hope that others would sit there and think, “Wow, maybe it is a good idea to put your risk into international markets.”
On another note, the Financial Services and Markets Act is a new piece of proposed legislation which gives both regulators and international competitiveness objectives. So we are keen that that actually makes some tangible difference. One of the things we’ve been discussing with them is, at the moment, they’re very unclear about what responsibility they have for overseas clients. Because our Financial Conduct Authority won’t definitively say we have no responsibility for the end client, what you tend to find is that the broker here will try to second-guess the recommendation in case they get held accountable for it. That just creates an amount of work that is costly and unnecessary. They ought to be able to say, “My client is the producing broker. They have given me instruction. I’m just going to now go carry that out.”
So if we can get that sort of clarity from the FCA, that will be a real win for U.S. clients, because they are as much a victim of this as anything. It should be a much more efficient process. So maybe even more E&S business will come our way.