Firm enters £12.5m redress scheme over GI sales

A direct mail order and online business with permission to sell general insurance products has agreed to provide £12.5m redress to approximately 330,000 customers who were sold insurance that the FCA says offered "little or no value".

Related topics:  Protection
Rozi Jones
17th February 2017
FCA
"We expect firms to identify where insurance products of little or no value have been sold to customers and take appropriate action."

The insurance products sold by Express Gifts Ltd covered against accidental damage and theft for all products purchased from their Ace or Studio brands. The insurance was called “Property Insurance” from January 2005 to August 2008 and “Purchase Protection Insurance” from September 2008 to May 2015, with premiums calculated as a percentage of the customer account balance.

The firm agreed with the FCA the insurance cover it had sold did not provide adequate value to customers because it covered items which customers would not generally consider insuring.

Jonathan Davidson, Director of Supervision – Retail and Authorisations at the FCA, said: “It is good news for consumers that Express Gifts has reached agreement with us that this insurance was of low value to customers. It is important that firms offer value for money.

“We expect firms to identify where insurance products of little or no value have been sold to customers and take appropriate action. There is a responsibility on firms, whether they are responsible for the design or the distribution of these products, to ensure the products offer value for their customers.”

Express Gifts Ltd will now write to all affected customers with details of how they will be paid the redress due.

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