LONDON, June 19, 2026, 10:06 (BST)
- Beazley shares were down 0.04% at 1,284.5 pence in Friday morning trading, with Zurich’s remaining cash offer set at 1,310 pence per share.
- Australia’s competition watchdog has approved the £8.1 billion takeover, taking out one requirement. UK, Swiss and European regulators have yet to clear the deal.
- Beazley shares are trading at a gross spread of roughly 2% to cash. The allowed 25p dividend went out May 1.
Beazley shares traded just under Zurich Insurance’s planned takeover price on Friday, after Australian regulators approved the deal. The move is a small advance for one of London’s biggest insurance deals still in play. The stock stood at 1,284.5 pence at 10:00 BST, down 0.5 pence from Thursday’s close.
The 25.5-pence gap to the 1,310-pence cash offer left for investors works out to about 2% before allowing for trading costs, taxes or time value. This difference, known as the merger-arb spread, is the gap between the stock and the agreed payout. It’s a tight spread, showing traders mostly expect the deal to close, with some risk priced in. Zurich’s full proposal had been 1,335 pence, including a dividend that has already been paid.
Zurich and Beazley aren’t “close competitors” in Australia, the ACCC said. According to the regulator, the two insurers each have strengths in different segments. Their market shares overlap only a little, and the ACCC said buyers would still have other choices for cyber, marine, corporate property, liability and other specialty insurance. Insurance News
There are still bigger obstacles ahead. Zurich still needs rulings from Britain’s Prudential Regulation Authority and Financial Conduct Authority, Lloyd’s of London, and Swiss regulator FINMA. The European Commission is also still reviewing case M.12434 after a notification on June 10.
Shareholder risk mostly eased after 99.9% of votes supported the takeover back in April. Now, the deal just needs regulatory and court sign-off before it can take effect, which is expected in the second half of 2026.
Zurich has agreed to buy Beazley, aiming for a bigger slice of Lloyd’s and to pick up more business in complex lines like cyber, marine, aviation, space and fine art. “Together with Beazley, we will create the world’s leading Specialty underwriter,” Zurich CEO Mario Greco said as the deal was announced. Combined gross written premiums for the two companies are expected to reach about $15 billion. Reuters
The offer has put a spotlight on London-listed insurers Hiscox and Lancashire. Salman Siddiqui, associate managing director at Moody’s Ratings, said weaker commercial-insurance prices may lead to years of dealmaking as insurers look for scale and face shrinking margins.
Beazley traded flat while the FTSE 100 picked up 0.07% by 09:47 BST. The two aren’t fully comparable, yet the gap shows Beazley’s price is now tied to the Zurich deal. Big market moves have less of an effect than any shift in odds or timing for Zurich’s payout.
The leftover return is limited compared to the risk if the deal falls through. Any lengthy review, extra regulatory conditions or missing court approval could push payment back and make the spread wider. If the deal falls apart, the 1,310-pence price target goes away. Getting more routine approvals isn’t likely to push shares higher—most of that is already priced in, with the market seeing a strong chance of the deal going through.