Full Capacity: Survival of the fittest – Asia’s regulatory shake-up

November 22 2025 by

Welcome to Full Capacity, a weekly briefing on all the most important developments of the past week with a personal take on the news from our editor-in-chief, Mithun Varkey, delivered to your inbox every Saturday.  

IAN exclusives. MS Amlin Asia Pacific is preparing to expand its Phoenix ILS vehicle during the upcoming 1.1 renewals and return to the ILS market in the first quarter of 2026 with a broader range of Asian risk products 

Mapfre Re is preparing to set up shop in India’s Gift City, as the Spanish reinsurer accelerates its push into the Indian market, InsuranceAsia News reported exclusively. 

HK marine pool. Hong Kong has launched a marine specialty risks insurance pool to provide stable risk coverage for the Asian shipping industry by consolidating local underwriting capacity, InsuranceAsia News first reported. 

The Hong Kong Marine War Risks Insurance Pool will be managed by Alliance Risk Transfer and counts China Taiping, PICC, CMB Wing Lung, CPIC and Asia Insurance as founding members. 

Risk losses. A fire at South Korean fashion giant E-Land’s logistics centre could potentially see hundreds of millions of dollars in insured losses from both property damage and inventory losses.  

Hanwha General Insurance is the lead carrier on E-Land’s insurance programs, with Hyundai Marine & Fire Insurance, DB Insurance, KB Insurance, and Heungkuk Fire & Marine Insurance among the co-insurers. 

The program’s reinsurers, primarily Korean Re, are likely set to face significant claims. 

Internal affairs. Lloyd’s has opened an investigation into John Neal’s six-year stint as CEO of the UK insurance exchange after “new information has emerged” in recent days. 

Lloyd’s said that it had earlier commissioned an independent fact-finding review in October over an “alleged workplace affair”. 

Meanwhile, another Australian insurance CEO, Robert Kelly of Steadfast, returned to work on Tuesday following the conclusion of an external investigation into a workplace complaint, the Australian broker said in a stock exchange announcement. 

Big move. Marsh Asia president James Addington-Smith has been appointed CEO of Marsh UK. Marsh McLennan Asia CEO David Jacob, meanwhile, will assume the additional role of president of Marsh Asia. 

IPO bound. Chubb Malaysia will list on Bursa Malaysia to comply with regulatory requirements for foreign insurers to reduce their stakes in their local units. 

The carrier’s sole shareholder, Chubb INA International, plans to divest a 30% stake in the company. 

Regulatory burden 

One of the key topics at SIRC earlier this month was changing solvency regimes and increasing regulatory and compliance burdens in the region’s fragmented insurance markets. 

Especially in Southeast Asia, regulatory changes will be a theme that will play out over the next couple of years and could potentially change the industry landscape. 

Regulator’s increasingly tough stance on capital and risk is not an incidental backdrop to market dynamics – it is the central driver of a march towards consolidation. 

Indonesia, Vietnam, the Philippines and Thailand are rolling out the most significant solvency reforms the region has seen in decades, explicitly tightening capital regimes and demanding more sophisticated risk management.  

These moves go far beyond consumer protection or technical housekeeping; they favour scale, sophistication and balance sheet muscle over incumbency. 

In practice, only large or deeply specialised insurers can bear the fixed cost of compliance without distorting business models.  

And with these changes mandating more capital, more modelling, and more governance layers, “staying small” becomes a slow path to obsolescence. 

Indonesia shows how blunt capital thresholds can serve as an explicit consolidation trigger.  

Minimum capital requirements for insurers are being ratcheted up in phases to some of the highest levels in Asean, with reinsurance capital floors set to rise dramatically by 2028.  

These new thresholds will deliberately squeeze under-capitalised and sub-scale players toward one of three outcomes: raise fresh equity at punishing terms, sell to a stronger rival, or exit. 

It does seem that in the regulatory environment, scale is not just an advantage but a regulatory expectation. 

Regional and global carriers with diversified portfolios and access to deep capital pools are positioned to snap up assets, while local and niche firms are pushed into defensive mergers or fire-sale exits.  

People moves

Aon has named Jason Disborough as chief commercial officer for the Pacific region. 

Willis has promoted Anthony Wong to head of casualty for the Asia region. 

In a leadership reshuffle, Sedgwick has named New Zealand CEO Phil van Zyl as interim CEO of Australia and Simon Kay as chief operating officer. 

Cynthia Yuan Xi has become the new head of China Re’s climate risk research centre. 

To keep up with the latest people moves in the region, don’t forget to check out our weekly people move round-up. 

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