Royal Liver Assurance

Royal Liver Assurance was a friendly society with over 1.7 million members in Ireland and the United Kingdom. Subject to Financial Services Authority (FSA) approval, Royal Liver and its subsidiaries became part of the Royal London Group on 1 July 2011.

History

The Liverpool Lyver Burial Society was founded by a group of working men from Liverpool in the Lyver Inn on 24 July 1850 to "provide for the decent interment of deceased members". By 1857 the Society had moved to its fourth head office and had expanded throughout the United Kingdom. By the end of the 1890s a decision was taken to build what would become the Royal Liver Building; it opened on 19 July 1911. During the 20th century, Royal Liver Assurance expanded to cover the whole of Ireland and the UK.

Today, Royal Liver Assurance employs around 900 people, has approximately 3.4 million policies in force for 1.7 million members and manages more than £3.7 billion in funds.

The Royal Liver Assurance has operated a delegation system since 1886; today, there are about 230 or so elected delegates.

The Royal Liver Poetry of Place competition sees schoolchildren write poems about their favourite Liverpool places, which are voted for by the public via the Royal Liver website.

Royal Liver Group

At the time of its acquisition by the Royal London Group in 2011 The Royal Liver Group consisted of:

RLAL had two subsidiary companies:

Royal Liver previously had a financial advisor company called Park Row, however this was wound up following an investigation by the FSA.[1]

Although owned by Royal Liver, Citadel is an independent company offering financial advice on a wide range of issues and financial services in Ireland.

Takeover

In 2007, Royal London approached Royal Liver about a possible combination of their businesses, but Royal Liver decided to remain as an independent entity.[2]

Since then, however, the financial downturn hit the insurance industry hard. The FSA launched Project Chrysalis, aimed at mutual insurance companies. Companies were asked to hold more capital, and to either stop writing new policies, or justify that continuing selling new business wouldn't put existing policyholders at a disadvantage. At the time, it was anticipated that several mutuals would merge due to lack of capital.[3]

There were unconfirmed rumours of a takeover by Liverpool Victoria in October 2009, but no transaction emerged.[4]

Royal Liver were then approached again by Royal London in February 2010.[5] Talks continued for some time, and the board of Royal Liver agreed the terms of a potential merger in April 2011.[6] The delegates of Royal Liver voted in favour of the merger at the AGM on 12 May 2011.[7] The transfer to Royal London was completed on 1 July 2011.

References

External links