Asia-Pacific Insurance Update – 2 March 2020

This is our regular update of new insurance regulatory developments relevant to the Asia-Pacific* and India, new insurance-related case law in Hong Kong, Australia and England and interesting insurance articles from across the world.

Insurance regulatory updates

Hong Kong

Submission of Audited Financial Statements and Auditor’s Report under Section73(1) of the Insurance Ordinance for licensed inurance broker companies

Insurance Authority introduces temporary facilitative measures to reduce the risk of virus infection in the selling process of selected insurance products

Australia

APRA releases general insurance statistics for December 2019

APRA releases life insurance statistics for December 2019

APRA outlines plans for climate risk prudential guidance and vulnerability assessment


UK

FCA highlights its areas of concern in financial services markets (including pricing practices in insurance)

China

CBIRC Releases Notice on Related Matters to Strengthening Actuarial Supervision of Life Insurance

CBIRC Ends the Takeover of Anbang Group

CBIRC Releases Supervisory Statistics of the Banking and Insurance Sectors — 2019 Q4

General Office of CBIRC Issues the Notice on Further Improving Financial Services for Epidemic Prevention and Control
 

Insurance cases

PC Case Gear Pty Ltd v Instrat Insurance Brokers Pty Ltd (in liq) [2020] FCA 137

Federal Court of Australia – 19 February 2020

Insurance brokers negligence – An insurance broker was found liable for losses flowing from its failure to advise its client on the availability of insurance that would have covered liability for copyright infringement.


Marino v FM Capital Partners Ltd [2020] EWCA Civ 245

English Court of Appeal – 26 February 2020

Settlement of claims – apportionment of monies to separate elements of claim – In the case, some of the defendants had settled with the claimaint. One defendent had not settled and argued that he should be able to discount the quantum of the claim against him with the settlement amounts paid by the other defendants. The claimant had, instead, apportioned the settlement to different parts of the overall claim. The Court of Appeal held that the first instance judge had not erred in accepting the claimant was entitle to choose how to apportion a settlement provided that it was not “obviously unsustainable”.

It held that policy considerations favouring the encouragement of compromise between parties would be undermined if a claimant who made a settlement with one of the defendants to a claim had to give credit to the other defendant for the sum paid under the settlement, unless the claimant was able to prove the merits of the case against the defendant who had settled.

Chapelgate Credit Opportunity Master Fund Ltd v Money & Ors [2020] EWCA Civ 246

English Court of Appeal – 26 February 2020

Litigation funding – cap on costs payable by non-party – The approach set out in Arkin v Borchard Lines Ltd (Costs Order) [2005] EWCA Civ 655, [2005] 1 W.L.R. 3055, [2005] 5 WLUK 695 to capping the costs payable by a non-party who had provided funding did not represent a binding rule, and judges did not necessarily have to adopt it when determining the extent of a commercial funder’s liability for costs.

Insurance articles / news

IASB concludes talks on amendments to IFRS 17

Future at Lloyd’s update released – insurance industry offers its reaction

Demand for liability insurance surges in India

India: Pension regulator expects 35m subscribers by end-March under its umbrella

Asian insurtechs raised over $3b in 121 deals since 2015

Malaysian life insurance market to surpass US$13 billion in 2023 – report

Munich Re confirms US$1bn buyback timetable

Stella Fok to retire from Liberty Hong Kong

FWD appoints former AIA exec as managing director

Jon Hancock to lead AIG’s international GI operation

South Korea: Co-insurance spells solvency solution to insurers, opportunities to reinsurers

Asian insurance pricing gains lag rest of world: Marsh

Allianz’s property/casualty writings boom in Asia Pacific

AXA rolls out COVID-19 care package

Manulife Singapore commits $1m for enhanced COVID-19 coverage

Prudential Singapore commits $1.5m COVID relief package



*Hong Kong, Singapore, China, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand and Australia.

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