Harry Curtis
Senior Reporter, Post
Harry is a senior reporter for Insurance Post covering the London market, corporate lines and risk management.
He joined Insurance Post in 2018 and won the British Insurance Brokers’ Association most promising newcomer award in 2019.
Follow Harry
Articles by Harry Curtis
MGA market trends to drive years of growth for independent program managers, says R&Q's Spiegel
Randall & Quilter expects its program management business to benefit from secular trends in the managing general agent market for at least the next five years, following a bumper growth year in 2020.
Post LIVE Tech: External technology providers are here to stay
External technology solution providers are here to stay as insurers ramp up their digitisation agendas, representatives of two leading carriers said on Thursday.
Huw Evans to step down as ABI director general
Association of British Insurers director general Huw Evans will step down from the trade association at the end of this year to join KPMG.
Analysis: The insurance domino that toppled Greensill
The founder of Greensill Capital pinned the blame for the finance firm's collapse on its insurers when addressing politicians last week.
Climate stress tests not a 'capital generation exercise': BoE's Claus
The Bank of England’s forthcoming climate stress tests of the UK financial services sector have been designed to provide a view of “the size of the adjustment that is needed”, regulators told an industry summit on Thursday.
Cyber threat to insurers on the rise as criminals target data treasure trove
The threat of cyber-attacks on insurers is on the rise as criminals pivot to less opportunistic tactics to gain access to data, according to cybersecurity experts.
Nuventure to launch personal and commercial lines MGAs within next month
Managing general agent platform Nuventure will launch two MGAs within the next month and aims to develop propositions for the UK terrorism, UK SME directors’ and officers’, and agriculture markets, CEO Andy Colbran has told Post.
High Court expedites trial in legal dispute between Mulsanne and Marshmallow
The legal dispute between Mulsanne and Marshmallow will be heard by the High Court before the end of the year, following a court order to expedite the proceedings.
Analysis: Could pet damage insurance soften landlords' 'no pets' stance?
With pet ownership on the rise, could pet damage insurance persuade more landlords to allow their tenants to keep an animal companion?
ABI aims to kickstart 'revolution' with flexible working charter
The Association of British Insurers has launched a charter that will commit its 27 initial signatories to advertising a majority of roles as part-time or open to flexible working or job sharing within a year.
IFB to launch AI fraud detection system
The Insurance Fraud Bureau has partnered with software-as-a-service automation specialists Shift Technology to build a fraud detection system that will launch in early 2022.
Zurich argues fraud allegations ‘mischaracterise’ its role in defective Swansea housing development
Zurich has denied that it acted fraudulently in connection to inspections it undertook of a defective development in Swansea, saying the checks were carried out for the purpose of deciding whether to insure the building against future faults and not to…
Mental health to feature prominently on Airmic's agenda alongside 'megatrends'
People risks, particularly those relating to mental health, are “the next big issue” facing companies, Airmic CEO Julia Graham has said.
Q&A: Ant Middle and Adam Beckett, Ageas
Ageas CEO Ant Middle and chief distribution officer Adam Beckett spoke to Post about the insurer’s intention to grow its intermediated personal lines business and plans to invest in what it calls its ‘technical engine room’.
European Commission pushes back deadline for Aon/WTW merger decision to July
The European Commission has pushed back the deadline for its decision on whether or not to approve the Aon’s acquisition of Willis Towers Watson, after the broker submitted new commitments.
Markerstudy names former Tesco Bank boss as group chair as it completes Brightside buy
Markerstudy has appointed former Tesco Bank CEO Benny Higgins as its group chairman.
Lawyers appointed as Tokio Marine Kiln faces BI group action lawsuit spearheaded by Marco Pierre White business
Tokio Marine Kiln is facing a group action lawsuit from businesses in the hospitality sector, including Marco Pierre White's Black and White Hospitality, that claim their policies provide cover for losses suffered during last spring’s Covid-19 lockdown.
'Me Too' moment for education could lead to claims on schools' liability policies
A ‘Me Too’ moment in the education sector could lead to claims against schools that trigger insurance coverage, a specialist abuse lawyer has told Post.
Former Alpha directors sued as liquidators allege unrated insurer was insolvent a year before collapse
Two former directors of failed Danish insurer Alpha are facing a DKr200m (£22.9m) lawsuit brought by the firm’s liquidators for allegedly misrepresenting the financial condition of the company a year before its collapse in 2018.
Lloyd's CEO Neal says market must maximise underwriting returns after £887m loss
Lloyd’s must take advantage of “once in a generation trading conditions” to return an underwriting profit in 2021, CEO John Neal has said after the market posted an £887m pre-tax loss for 2020.
Analysis: Deconstructing Aviva
With a new group CEO in role, Aviva has made serious strides in offloading its overseas operations. What inspired these moves and what does this mean for its core operations in the UK, Ireland and Canada?
Aviva joins global initiative in pursuit of 2025 electric motor fleet target
Aviva has signed up to a global initiative that will require it to report annually on the progress it has made switching its motor fleet to electric vehicles, Post can reveal.
Aversion to spare capacity hurting resilience, Carnegie-Brown tells bioterrorism conference
Governments and businesses must overcome the “fundamental behavioural challenge” of building spare capacity to bolster resilience to events such as a bioterrorist attacks and future pandemics, Lloyd’s chairman Bruce Carnegie-Brown has said.
Pandemic business interruption risks uninsurable, says Scor's Kessler
Pandemic-related business interruption is “not insurable”, Scor CEO and chair Denis Kessler has said, likening the risk to that of property damage suffered during a war.