Context
In January this year the FCA sent a Dear CEO letter to insurers affected by the Test Case which explained that it intended to gather information on all non-damage Business Interruption (BI) policies that are capable of responding to the Covid-19 pandemic following the Court judgments. A list of updated policies was published on 12th March 2021. The letter also set out the intention to gather information from all affected insurers regularly on the progress of their non-damage BI claims and to publish some of this data. The FCA has now published a fifth set of data in relation to BI claims.
Key points to note
The FCA has decided to publish the following information at individual firm level:
- BI claims where the insurer has received all the information required to enable them to calculate the total value of the claim
- BI claims for Covid-19 related loss that have been accepted
- BI claims where the insurer’s decision as to whether there is a valid claim is pending
- Unsettled BI claims where an interim/initial payment has been made to the policyholder or their representative
- BI claims where an offer of final settlement has been made, accepted by the policyholder, and paid in full
Some of the figures published include:
- The aggregate value of the interim/initial payments made for the 5,040 unsettled claims where such payments have been made is £331,285,812.
- The aggregate value of the payments made for the 21,198 claims where final settlements have been agreed and paid is £636,799,954.
- This means that, at the point of this information submission, 26,238 BI policyholders out of the 41,666 who had had claims accepted, had received at least an interim payment.
On analysis of the figures, we can see that out of the 48 published insurers only 13 have accepted over 80% of BI claims submitted to them. On the other end of the scale there are 13 insurers who have accepted less than 20% of the BI claims submitted to them. Overall, less than 50% of BI claims have been accepted by insurers.
Next actions
Primarily this is provided for information, but firms involved in dealing with BI claims should be aware of the data and keep the results in mind when considering their claims handling processes.