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Assetsure News 29th September 2007
Lloyds Of London sees profits rise
Lloyds of London the global Insurance market has unveiled a massive
34% first half rise in profits to £1.8bn. Lloyds has attributed this
set of results to the relatively low level of catastrophes and the
present favourable rating environment.
Lloyds in the worlds largest
insurance market, via various
sources, you can obtain all manner of products from simple home
insurance through to complex commercial and aviation risks. Lloyds
have stated that these positive results will help to balance the
weaker but still in the main profitable underwriting conditions
experienced in the first 6 months to June.
Lord Levene, the chairman of Lloyds said " These numbers serve as
proof as to the progress that Lloyds has made in recent years" "
Lloyds continues to outperform its major international peers and is in
good shape to meet the challenges ahead".
These latest set of figures will give the market a much needed boost
of confidence, in 2005 following hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma,
Lloyds was forced to declare a £105 million loss.
The present market is made up of 66 underwriting syndicates who
recorded a combined loss ration of 82.9% in the first half of the
year, any figure below 100% represents a profit. In contrast to this
set of figures, European insurers and reinsures revealed a combined
loss ratio of 97% for the same period. Lloyds chief executive Richard
Ward stated that this set of results would pressure to on to reduce
rates but it was essential to continue to focus on underwriting for
profit.
Lloyds of London is an Internationally important insurance market,
from humble begging's, It started at Edward Lloyd's coffee house on
Tower Street in London The first reference to Lloyd's as a coffee
house was made in the London Gazette, in 1688. Lloyd himself was not
involved in insurance, but he provided a free information service on
shipping, as this led to his establishment being the place to go for
information, soon the wealthy ship owners were buying insurance from
Lloyd's coffee house. Lloyd himself died in 1713 but the coffee house
remained the centre for insurance in London. His information sheet
became known as the 'Lloyd's list' and it is still published today
providing important shipping, transport and insurance news. Lloyd's
continued to prosper as a place for marine insurance and by 1774 the
underwriters ( acting on behalf of the names) had organised a
committee and had moved to the more appropriate surroundings at the
Royal Exchange building. In 1871, in return for supporting and funding
the government, the Lloyd's Act gained Royal Assent, incorporating
Lloyd's. Lloyd's of London was now placed firmly on the map as the
most important insurance market in the British Empire, which of course
at the time meant the world..
Lloyd's of London is historically, a collection of 'gentlemen
insurers'; a group of people (not necessarily men) who together put up
their personal money to underwrite insurance and of course to pay out
claims. An underwriting member of Lloyd's is referred to as a Name. If
you are a name at Lloyds of London, you are fully accountable for your
personal losses, this means that everything you own, including you
home and contents could in theory be sold to make good your losses.
Names at Lloyds join together to form syndicates, usually people with
a common strategy join together and these syndicates have managing
agents. Syndicates are therefore not legal entities, merely a
collection of individual who hope that by joining together in a common
purposes will be able to sell insurance, pay claims and still make a
profit.
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Copyright Assetsure Limited 2007
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