London, June 23, 2026, 11:03 BST
Beazley shares were unchanged at 1,284.5 pence in Tuesday morning trading after Zurich Insurance Group disclosed it bought another 346,122 shares in the specialist insurer on Monday. Zurich paid between 1,284p and 1,285p, spending about £4.45 million and lifting its holding to 33.72 million shares, or 5.60%, from 5.54%.
The tight move suggests the takeover timetable, rather than day-to-day underwriting news, is setting the price. Beazley sits 25.5p below the 1,310p cash payment still due under Zurich’s £8.1 billion offer, a gross deal spread of roughly 2%.
A deal spread is the gap between a takeover target’s market price and the buyer’s offer; it compensates investors for waiting and for the chance that a transaction is delayed or fails. The separate 25p dividend included in the headline 1,335p value was paid on May 1, so current buyers are trading against the remaining 1,310p cash leg.
Zurich’s repeated purchases may also be helping to insulate Beazley from a weak London session. The FTSE 100 was down 0.7% at 0919 GMT, while delayed prices showed specialty-insurance peer Hiscox falling 0.9% and Lancashire Holdings losing 1.9%.
Beazley shareholders approved the takeover in April, with 99.9% of votes cast in favour. The transaction still requires court sanction and other regulatory clearances, with completion expected in the second half of 2026.
The European Commission is conducting a Phase I merger review under its simplified procedure. The regulator has set July 15 as its provisional decision date, giving deal traders the next clear checkpoint in the approval process.
Zurich Chief Executive Mario Greco said in March that the combination would create “the world’s leading Specialty underwriter,” with about $15 billion in combined gross written premiums—premium volume before reinsurance is deducted. Specialty insurance covers complex risks including cyber, marine, aviation, space and fine art. Reuters
But the narrow discount is not risk-free. A longer regulatory review or slower court timetable would cut the annualised return available from the spread; if the deal failed, Beazley could lose the takeover support anchoring its share price and trade again on standalone factors such as catastrophe and cyber claims.
For now, Beazley remains tethered to Zurich’s 1,310p cash price. Each penny below that level reflects the remaining wait—and the market’s judgment on whether the takeover closes as planned.