FCA fines Lloyds Bank insurance arm nearly £91m
The Financial Conduct Authority has today fined Lloyds Banking Group’s general insurance arm nearly £91m for false promises on renewal premiums over an eight year period.
The fine - £90,688,400 in total - applies to Lloyds Bank General Insurance Limited, St Andrew’s Insurance Plc, Lloyds Bank Insurance Services Limited and Halifax General Insurance Services Limited.
The regulator says the firms failed to ensure that language contained in millions of home insurance renewals communications was “clear, fair and not misleading.”
Between January 2009 and November 2017 LBGI sent nearly 9m renewal communications to home insurance customers which included language to the effect that they were receiving a “competitive price” at renewal.
LBGI did not substantiate the “competitive price” language included in the renewal communications by taking steps to check that it was accurate, said the FCA. Policies were renewed in approximately 87% of renewal communications containing this language.
The FCA said the false claim caused a risk of harm for the majority of LBGI’s home insurance customers who received these communications, because it was likely that the premium quoted at renewal would have risen when compared to their previous premium.
Separately, LBGI told approximately half a million customers that they would receive a discount based on either their “loyalty”, or the fact they were a “valued customer” but in fact the described discount was not applied and was never intended to apply.
LBGI has voluntarily made payments of approximately £13.5m to customers who received communications that wrongly referred to the application of a discount.
Mark Steward, executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA said: “Firms must ensure their communications with customers are clear, fair and not misleading. LBGI failed to ensure that this was the case. Millions of customers ended up receiving renewal letters that claimed customers were being quoted a competitive price which was unsubstantiated and risked serious consumer harm.”
Lloyds Banking Group is now working on customers affected and is contacting customers proactively.