The FCA calculates that 20,347 policyholders out of 37,702 who have had BI claims linked to the test case action accepted have received at least an interim payment so far
Since the Supreme Court’s January decision in the FCA’s test case around Covid-19-related business interruption (BI) claims, a total of £756,846,662 has been paid out by insurers for either interim or final BI claims payments across 20,347 claims, according to updated data published by the FCA yesterday (14 June 2021).
In a ‘Dear CEO’ letter dated 22 January, the regulator outlined its aim to gather information on all non-damage business interruption policies that would be affected by the High Court and Supreme Court judgments – a list of the policies capable of responding to claims arising from the coronavirus pandemic was published on 12 March.
The same letter also confirmed that the FCA planned “to gather information from all affected insurers regularly on the progress of their non-damage BI claims and to publish some of this data”.
So far, this data has been published on a monthly basis since March.
Pursuing payouts
The regulator’s most current figures, which relate only to claims and complaints on non-damage BI policies that were directly affected by the test case, against its updated list of policies, found that as reported on 5 June 2021, the aggregate value of interim or initial payments that have been made for 4,188 unsettled claims amounted to £289,595,404.
This compares to 3,632 identified unsettled claims reported on 5 May that received interim or initial payments totalling £268,248,492.
Meanwhile, the aggregate value of agreed final settlements that have been paid across 16,159 BI claims was £467,251,258 as at 5 June 2021.
By comparison, on 5 May, 13,895 claims had final settlements agreed and paid, amounting to £433,125,666.
The FCA calculated that on 5 June, 20,347 BI policyholders out of 37,702 who have had their claims accepted have received at least an interim payment from their insurer.
Some firms submitted a ‘nil return’ response to the FCA’s data request because they did not have any policies within its scope. The regulator was specifically collecting data on policies:
- Which are, in principle, capable of responding to the Covid-19 pandemic.
- Which do not represent contracts of large risk.
- Where more than five claims have been made.
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