LLM2010 - Syndicate accounts: overview of accounting and tax
The accounting rules
Accounting rules for insurance undertakings are set out in the
European Insurance Accounts Directive of 1991 (‘IAD’).
GIM2000+ in the General Insurance Manual (see
LLM10000) gives more on insurance
accounting. The IAD was implemented in UK law as Schedule 9A to the
Companies Act 1985, replaced from 6 April 2008 by Schedule 3 to The
Large and Medium- sized Companies and Groups (Accounts and Reports)
Regulations 2008.
However, different accounting arrangements for Lloyd’s
syndicate and aggregate accounts (the Lloyd’s
‘global’ accounts) were specified in an Annex to the
Directive. These arrangements continued in the form of three-year
fund accounting which had traditionally been used in the market (
LLM2020). In 2003, the Modernisation of
Accounts Directive (2003/51/EC) repealed the Lloyd’s Annex
and changed Lloyd’s accounting to an annual basis and aligned
the accounting requirements for Lloyd’s syndicates to the
requirements for other types of insurance undertaking.
In consequence, from 1 January 2005 Lloyd’s syndicates
have prepared annually accounted results in accordance with UK
GAAP, and company law. Also from 1 January 2005, Lloyd’s as
whole has produced its global results, which aggregate (rather than
consolidate) all the syndicate results, on an annually accounted
basis under UK GAAP.
The tax rules
A syndicate has no legal personality and is not a taxpayer.
Members of syndicates are taxable on their proportionate share of
the profit or loss of the business conducted by the syndicate, in
accordance with rules in Finance Act 1993 for individual members (
LLM5000) and Finance Act 1994 for
corporate members (
LLM4000).
Syndicate results are the key component of a member’s
taxable profits or losses from Lloyd’s that are taxable on
the ‘declaration basis’ (see
LLM4060 in relation to corporate members
and
LLM5230 in relation to individual
members). Syndicate results include
- the profit or losses arising directly from membership of one or more syndicates, and
- the profits or losses from assets forming part of a premium trust fund
as set out in FA93/S172 (1)(a) and (b) and FA94/S219 (2).
The syndicate’s profit or loss for tax purposes is
computed in accordance with the normal rules for computing trade
income. Regulations require a return of the syndicate result to be
made to HMRC (
LLM2180). The syndicate result is then
apportioned to the members of the syndicate, who then include their
share of the profit or loss in their own tax returns. Private
members do not usually prepare accounts of their own. A corporate
member will include the results of their aggregate syndicate
participations in their own accounts which they prepare in
accordance with company law.
