British-American insurance business goes to Sagicor

Published: Thursday | March 21, 2013 Comments 0
The Sagicor Building in New Kingston. - Ricardo Makyn/Staff Photographer
The Sagicor Building in New Kingston. - Ricardo Makyn/Staff Photographer

Eastern Caribbean governments Wednesday said they had finalised an agreement, allowing for the transfer of British-American Insurance Company Limited (BAICO) traditional insurance business to Sagicor.

In June last year, the governments, grouped under the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU), said they would provide funding to assist in restoring value to the transferring policies as they sought to deal with the fallout caused by the collapse of the Trinidad-based CL Financial Group that includes the Colonial Life Insurance Company (CLICO) and BAICO.

A statement posted on the websites of the governments noted that following approval from all nine insurance regulators and courts within the ECCU and the Bahamas where BAICO is incorporated, the transfer of the traditional insurance businesses to Sagicor had been finalised on March 15.

RECAPITALISATION

"As a result of the transaction, over 15,000 former BAICO policyholders have had their policies recapitalised and are once again able to enjoy their original policy terms and access their insurance benefits," the statement said.

It said that Sagicor will make contact with each affected policyholder whose policy has been transferred "and to confirm how to continue receiving their policy-related benefits, pay premiums and make claims".

"Sagicor has made interim arrangements with BAICO for BAICO branches in the ECCU to provide ongoing customer support to policyholders. This means that BAICO will accept premiums and claims, and conduct other customer services on behalf of Sagicor," the statement said.

"Sagicor will also directly contact over an estimated 1,500 persons in the ECCU who are owed historical claim amounts, surrender payments, maturity payments and bonuses by BAICO in order to make these payments. The ECCU governments have provided funding for these amounts to be paid. Recipients will need to sign an appropriate release as a condition of receiving their payment," the statement added.

It said the governments and Sagicor "will now focus on identifying whether a solution can be implemented for those traditional life insurance policyholders whose policies lapsed between the commencement of BAICO's judicial management and the announcement of the sale of the traditional life insurance business to Sagicor."

- CMC

 

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