London, April 30, 2026, 20:05 BST
Zurich Insurance Group now holds a 3.019% stake in Beazley Plc, according to a Thursday disclosure from the London-listed specialty insurer. The Swiss firm’s position—18.16 million voting rights—put it just over the 3% threshold as of April 29, as Zurich’s £8.1 billion acquisition of Beazley continues down its legal track.
The filing lands at a key stage, shifting the deal from contested bidding to the next phase: execution. Beazley shareholders already signed off on Zurich’s cash bid last week—overwhelmingly, with 99.9% support. Still, the acquisition isn’t a done deal until it clears court approval. Completion is penciled in for the back half of 2026.
Investors eyeing a quick payout have something on the table: Zurich is offering Beazley shareholders 1,310 pence per share in cash, with a 25 pence permitted dividend due May 1. That brings the overall value to 1,335 pence a share.
Beazley’s stock changed hands at 1,275.5 pence on Thursday, trading under not just the cash offer but also the total bid including the dividend. The spread comes down to market skepticism about the deal closing—timing, regulatory OK, execution—not a renegotiation on value.
Beazley and Zurich on Wednesday disclosed that an amended and restated clean team agreement, dated April 29, had been posted on their respective websites. The agreement sets out the rules for handling sensitive commercial information as both sides negotiate a potential deal.
If it goes through, the deal would see Beazley—known at Lloyd’s of London for insuring everything from cyber risks to fine art—become part of Zurich’s wider insurance portfolio. For Zurich chief Mario Greco, the tie-up represents a chance to build “the world’s leading Specialty underwriter.” Beazley’s Adrian Cox, for his part, said the new group would be “Beazley at its core.” Investegate
Specialty insurance covers risks that are tough to price or out of the ordinary, typically handled by brokers and syndicates—not the usual home or auto policies. Large insurers have started paying closer attention as the market grows, fueled by rising cyber threats, major infrastructure projects, and new risks from the energy transition.
The competitive story isn’t over yet. Back in February, Reuters highlighted that the Zurich-Beazley move had analysts, advisers, and at least one broker lining up potential next steps—Hiscox, Lancashire, and Conduit Holdings came up as possible acquisition targets in the London specialty scene.
Still, major obstacles remain. The deal requires court approval, along with the green light from regulators and antitrust authorities like the PRA, FCA, Lloyd’s, FINMA, MFSA, CID, CMA and the European Commission. Any holdup or new demand could set back the timetable.
Beazley heads into the deal after posting a 19% slide in annual pre-tax profit back in March. Reuters pointed to a less favorable insurance pricing landscape and sluggish cyber insurance growth as reasons behind the weaker numbers.
Zurich is quietly adding to its disclosed stake, according to the latest filing, as the offer process keeps moving. The immediate hurdle isn’t a shareholder vote—what matters next is sign-off from the court and regulators, who will decide if the companies can stick to their planned schedule.