LLM1120 - Introduction to Lloyd's: syndicate capacity
A syndicate’s ‘capacity’ is the term used
to refer to the amount of premium income that a syndicate may
underwrite for a year of account – that is the maximum amount
of premium income, net of reinsurance premiums paid, that it may
accept. The syndicate’s capacity is itself the total of the
premium limits of all the syndicate’s members on that
syndicate.
A member’s overall premium limit (OPL) – often
referred to as the member’s capacity – is directly
related to the capital they put at risk: their Funds at
Lloyd’s (
LLM1200).
This means that a syndicate’s capacity is directly
related to the amount of the capital backing provided by its
members. The syndicate should therefore have sufficient capital
backing for it to meet all claims by policyholders against policies
written by the syndicate.
Syndicate capacity is referred to in terms of its notional
amount.
A syndicate may have ‘capacity’ for a year of
account of say £100m. A member may have a 10% share of that
syndicate, that is, capacity on that syndicate of £10m. The
member’s underwriting on that, and any other, syndicate is
taken into account in determining the member’s capital
requirement, that is, how much Funds at Lloyd’s the member
must hold.
It is not unusual for premiums received net of reinsurance to
fall short of a syndicate’s capacity, especially where there
is plenty of capacity available in the insurance market generally.
Establishing the true legal character of syndicate capacity
is difficult, given the fact that it relates to ‘annual
ventures’ - see
LLM4210.
