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Lloyd’s Yacht Club

The club has a vast history which has been founded through the years alongside the members on the London insurance Community. Lloyd’s yacht club was officially formed in 1938, but in 1936, Sandy Haworth, who had joined RORC having participated in the 1935 Fastnet race, set out on an informal race from Gosport to Cherbourg – it was during their evening meal in a Café in Cherbourg that the formation of a Lloyd’s Yacht Club began…

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Website: lloydsyachtclub.com

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Clubs and Societies in the Lloyd’s market

Explore the clubs.

The following Clubs and Societies are set up, run and managed by passionate individuals who work within the Lloyd’s and wider London insurance market.

These clubs and societies are independent of Lloyd’s, and provide an opportunity for people to get involved and build connections across the market.

Lloyd's Art Group

A collective of professional and talented amateur artists who work in the Lloyd's market or are a close family relation of someone who does.

Lloyd's Choir

Founded in 1922, we are a high quality mixed choir (soprano, alto, tenor, bass) under the professional direction of Jacques Cohen.

Lloyd’s Cricket Club

The home of Men's and Women’s Cricket at Lloyd's of London.

Lloyd's FC Mens

The club is an open, friendly football club with around 8 games per year.

Lloyd’s Football Club – Womens

A Football Club open to all women of varying abilities.

Lloyd's Flyfishing Society

The Society is a non-profit organisation established to encourage flyfishing and to promote an interest in flyfishing within the London insurance market.

Lloyd's Golf Club

Lloyd's Golf Club was founded in 1894 and has grown to a membership of over 500 golfers throughout the Lloyd's community.

Lloyd's Lawn Tennis Club

The club was established over 60 years ago, historically competing in the Insurance Tennis Leagues and Cups.

Lloyd’s Marine and Energy U35’s Insurance Group

More details coming soon.

Lloyd's Motor Club

Lloyd’s Motor Club was founded in 1951 by a group of enthusiasts working in the London insurance market and remains committed to offering our members involvement in all forms of motorsport.

Lloyd's Netball Club

As one of the first female oriented Lloyd’s of London Sports Club, we provide a platform for women in the insurance profession to network in an informal and inclusive environment.

Lloyd's Rugby Club

Lloyd's Rugby Club was founded in the 1920s and provides a welcoming and inclusive environment for rugby players in Lloyd's and the London market to play good quality, social rugby.

Lloyd's Squash Rackets Club

The Lloyd’s Squash Rackets Club (LSRC) was founded in 1970 and today boasts 15 fixtures per season.

Lloyd's Three Rooms Club

The Club was started by a group of like minded individuals who all worked in the Three Rooms at Lloyd’s.

Lloyd's Wine Society

The club exists to encourage interest in Oenology, Viticulture and Viniculture in the Lloyd's and/or insurance market community.

Lloyd’s Yacht Club

Lloyd’s yacht club has been encouraging sailing and making it accessible for the Lloyd’s insurance market since 1938.

Under 35’s Reinsurance Group

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  • Sep 19, 2019

Nine Lloyd’s of London Clubs & Societies You Can Join

lloyd's of london yacht club

Lloyd’s Wine Society

If you prefer wine glasses to beer goggles, then the Lloyd’s Wine Society may be for you. This society is open to not just the Lloyd’s community but also the London Insurance and Reinsurance market. The next wine tasting is taking place on the 24th September. Prospective members need to be proposed and seconded by the committee, follow the link to find out more about how to apply.

http://lloydswinesociety.co.uk/join-us/

London Market Language Exchange

This club currently offers classes in eight different languages: French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish and Mandarin. The language clubs are open to anyone within the London area and also offer social events. Follow the link below to see the list of relevant contacts.

http://www.iua.co.uk/languageclubs

Lloyd’s Shotgun Club

Join Lloyd’s Shotgun club to take part in clay pigeon shoots, enjoy an annual dinner and prize giving, as well as other non-shooting events. The last event of the year is scheduled for the 4th October, with shoot dates confirmed for 2020. This club is open to anyone in the insurance industry regardless of shooting experience.

http://lloydsshotgunclub.co.uk/index.html

Lloyd’s Yacht Club

This yacht club is open to anyone connected to the insurance market, interested in sailing. There are some broad joining criteria, so head over to the memberships page to find out more. Perks include social events, club weekends on Lutine and sailing events like the Lutine Lineslip Regatta, amongst others.

https://www.lloydsyachtclub.com/index.php/club/membership-information

Lloyd’s Motor Club

Get your pulse racing at the Lloyd’s Motor Club. Membership is available to anyone with an involvement in the Lloyd’s community. Whether you race, rally or are just interested in motor sports, be sure to take a look at the list of membership benefits, including a bi-annual club dinner.

https://www.lloydsmotorclub.com/membership/

Lloyd’s Rugby Club

Lloyd’s Rugby Club is open to all members of the Lloyd’s of London community. The club plays matches in the ‘City League’ as well as hosting four annual events, including the renowned Rugby 7s. Complete an application form through the link below.

https://www.lmalloyds.com/LMA/Young_Professionals/Sports_Clubs/Rugby_Club.aspx

Lloyd’s Netball Club

Lloyds Netball Club is currently the only female oriented Lloyd’s of London sports club, offering great opportunities for women to network. Only recently founded in 2018, LNC has proved very popular, with four teams now playing weekly at Waterloo and at London Bridge. This club also offers social events such as the LNC Christmas Party. Find out more below.

https://www.lloydsnetballclub.com/membership

Lloyd’s Football Club

Lloyd’s F.C., founded over 60 years ago, is made up of players from the Lloyd’s and London insurance markets, legal, accounting and ancillary services. This club boasts a wide range of fixtures, international tours and social events. Follow the link below to find out more.

http://www.lloydsfc.co.uk/

Lloyd’s Golf Club

Founded in 1894, and now with over 500 members, Lloyd’s Golf Club is well established in the London market. They play 29 matches a year and hold three seasonal meetings, with members welcome to play in any of the events. There are some joining criteria, so be sure to find out more on the LGC website.

https://www.lloydsgolfclub.com/

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The History

Lancaster tennis & yacht club.

In 1943, the building that currently houses the Lancaster Tennis and Yacht Club at 2615 Columbia Ave. was a barn on a working farm. That year a group of horsemen and women bought the twenty acre farm and formed the Lancaster Riding Club.

The newly formed Riding Club built a bar downstairs below the present dining room while continuing to use the upstairs as stables for the horses. During the spring and fall of 1946, nationally sanctioned horse shows were held on the grounds. These shows became a very popular yearly event.

In 1950, the bar, dining room, and kitchen moved upstairs to their present location.The rather modest size of the Riding Club membership made it difficult to support the dining room and bar.

A few years earlier, in 1939, a group of tennis players formed the Lancaster Tennis Club, building six clay courts on a site near Boas Fruit Market on Columbia Avenue. The Tennis Club had no dining facilities. In 1965, the two clubs merged forming the Lancaster County Riding and Tennis Club and  constructed six Har-tru courts on the Riding Club grounds. The clay court property was sold.

A devastating fire in 1968 destroyed the Club’s new cement block barn. Almost all of the horses were lost in this tragic fire. This may well have caused the gradual change in the make-up of the club as it transformed itself into primarily a tennis and social club.

In 1986, a locally based Yacht Club, registered with Lloyds of London, merged with the Riding Club becoming the Lancaster Tennis and  Yacht Club. All club members, through reciprocity, are welcome as guests at over 800 Yacht Clubs nationwide.

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Explore historical editions of the Register of Ships online now

Volumes of the  Register of Ships , formerly  Lloyd’s Register of Shipping , fully accessible and searchable online (between 1764-1998) can be accessed for free and in PDF format via:

  • Internet Archive  
  • Wikimedia Commons
  • Google Books

This is the first time that pages from the original edition of the Register of Ships 1764-66 have been made available online. The only surviving volume is on permanent loan to the British Library. Please note that not all volumes have been digitised yet, but the Heritage & Education Centre (HEC) are creating searchable scans of our entire collection up to the 2000 edition.

The Registers for 1930-1945 were digitised as part of the  Plimsoll ship data project   by the Southampton City Libraries and Archives Services in conjunction with HEC. A small percentage of the online volumes listed in the table below were scanned in by Google Books and Internet Archive independently of HEC.

Vessels across the Registers can be found in alphabetical order of ship name. All digitised Registers can be searched by any of the fields such as:

  • Place of build

For information on the  Lloyd's   Register of Yachts  please click here .

In some cases, fields may be abbreviated such as ‘Capt’. for Captain or ‘Amer.’ for America). If you want to understand the meaning of certain symbols, terms, and abbreviations found in the Registers, please check out our Interpreting the  Register Books  pages for more information.

Please note that copyright of all images of the 1764-66 edition remains with Lloyd’s Register. If you wish to use our resources please ensure that you properly reference the Lloyd's Register Foundation Heritage & Education Centre in your work and consult our Licensing and Terms of use pages. Images © Lloyd’s Register Group Limited 2017.

Online access to the Lloyd's Register of Ships

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Casualty Returns

The Casualty Returns refer to the total losses of ocean going merchant ships over 100 gross tonnes. The Returns were published quarterly and annually, recording losses according to flag and cause of loss.

Lloyd's Register of Yachts online

Digitised historic volumes of the Lloyd's Register of Yachts 1878-1980

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Lloyd's Register Of Yachts 1929

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The Lloyd’s Register of Yachts was first issued in 1878, and was issued annually until 1980, except during the years 1916-18 and 1940-46. Two supplements containing additions and corrections were also issued annually.

The Register contains the names, details and characters of Yachts classed by the Society, together with the particulars of other Yachts which are considered to be of interest, illustrates plates of the Flags of Yacht and Sailing Clubs, together with a List of Club Officers, an illustrated List of the Distinguishing Flags of Yachtsmen, a List of the Names and Addresses of Yacht Owners, and much other information. 

For more information on the Lloyd’s Register of Yachts , please click here: https://hec.lrfoundation.org.uk/archive-library/lloyds-register-of-yachts-online

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PROPERTY CONSTRUCTION YACHT CLUB

Wed, 03 Apr

Members Tour of Lloyd's of London

An opportunity for 5 members of Property Construction Yacht Club to Tour Lloyd's of London Building looking at its famous architecture and its maritime insurance history including Old Lloyd's library and The Nelson Collection.

Members Tour of Lloyd's of London

Time & Location

03 Apr 2024, 15:00 – 16:30

London, 1 Lime St, London EC3M 7HA, UK

About the event

Lloyd's passes will be issued for all visitors.

Meet in the concourse reception at Lloyd's. 1 Lime Street, London. EC3M 

Visit the Old Lloyd's Library and the Nelson Collection with a brief history of Lloyd's of London.

Progress to the Trading Floor to view the operation of the insurance market, The Loss Book and The Lutine Bell.

Visit the Adam Room on the 11th Floor at Lloyd's

Tour completion around 4pm

For those interested in remaining for an early evening drinkwe will visit The Brokers Wine Bar in Leadenhall Market.

Share this event

London’s largest insurance market, famed for its male-dominated culture of alcohol and drugs, finally cracks down on drinking at work

A group of young men sing karaoke at Coates Wine Bar in London

A Wolf of Wall Street alpha male culture in finance may seem antiquated for today’s world. But Lloyd’s of London is still associated with it. 

The British insurance market has an infamously laddish culture of drugs and daytime drinking. Some of its not-so-colorful chronicles also include cases of sexual harassment .

In short, the 300-plus-year-old marketplace stayed stuck in its backward ways for far too long.

But now, Lloyd’s of London, which has about 380 brokers and a network of 4,000 insurance professionals, is finally planning to take action to end years of misconduct. It’s looking to implement changes that “ modernize and streamline ” its approach to poor behavior, including around harassment, bullying, and discrimination. 

In the 21-page consultation published Thursday, the insurance market wants to set up better processes for investigating employees who raise disciplinary complaints and bring “greater clarity” about unacceptable actions.

Proposed changes to Lloyd’s of London’s culture

Among the proposed changes to Lloyd’s of London’s bylaws is one that will ban “conducting Lloyd’s business when under the influence of alcohol where it leads to unprofessional behaviour.” 

Lloyd’s put a stop to day drinking for its own employees in 2017, which often saw scores of employees spilling over the famous Leadenhall Market’s historic-looking pubs. These new proposed rules cover all brokers and insurance professionals who work on the Lloyd’s market but are employed by other firms.

Nearly empty beer glasses in the City of London.

It admitted its current processes are “unclear,” as are the possible actions taken to address the concerns. Lloyd’s plans to add a category of “improper” conduct in addition to “discreditable” and “detrimental” ones that broaden the scope of what behaviors it will take action against. 

The British insurance market will consider forms of misconduct that happen outside but related to the workplace, such as at an offsite or in social gatherings related to the job. 

Its proposal also includes protections for whistleblowers who flag bad behavior and remediation for managing agents who underperform because of poor culture.   

Lloyd’s of London declined to comment beyond its press release.

Black marks 

Lloyd’s is a behemoth in its own right—and a high-profile one at that. It insures pretty much everything under the sun, from David Beckham’s legs to Cadburys’ chief taster’s sense of taste. 

Still, its culture has stayed stubbornly male-dominated and toxic for far too long.  

Even when the British market appointed a female CEO, Inga Beale, in 2014, she faced pushback in implementing fixes to the company’s culture. 

Two years later, a Bloomberg report highlighted the rampant culture of alcohol, inappropriate remarks, and inertia for change. Part of the reason is that a large chunk of those who work at Lloyd’s aren’t its employees but work at insurance companies in tandem with the marketplace. 

Shortly after, the insurance marketplace said it would bar people who are believed to be drinking or taking drugs in its offices , acknowledging at the time that it had “more work to do.” Lloyd’s also announced an action plan for those reporting sexual harassment at work. 

If Lloyd’s decides to make the long-due sweeping changes to its approach, it might finally help repair its tainted reputation as an institution that turns a blind eye to practices frowned upon by most other firms—whether or not they’re in finance.

In a post #MeToo era and amid growing calls to stop sexism and male-centric culture in the corporate world, Lloyd’s probably has a long way to go before it can turn its reputation around.

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Lloyd’s Of London Falling Down

H oping to earn income to help pay for her children’s tuition, Dona Evans invested in Lloyd’s of London in 1987. The legendary insurance giant was recruiting fresh capital–in fact, Lloyd’s was desperate for it–and Evans jumped at the chance to become a Lloyd’s Name, as the elite 300-year-old institution calls its investors. In Britain, being a Name was a sure thing; you became economic royalty, even if you weren’t one of the many Names who held real titles.

Still, Evans was worried about reports that Lloyd’s was facing a rising tide of claims from asbestos-industry workers who were dying of lung diseases–cancer and asbestosis–caused by exposure to the building material. Tut, tut, said a Lloyd’s executive who dismissed the risk and explained that while the Names “were of course liable in theory for losses right down to their cufflinks, in practice it never happens because it’s all reinsured.”

Fast-forward to the present. Lloyd’s has indeed been rocked by ruinous asbestos claims, and managed to survive only with the help of a pliant Parliament. But a stone-broke Evans has lost her home. Thousands of Names have been wiped out financially. Some committed suicide. Even such notables as brokerage founders Charles Schwab and Dan Lufkin have been exposed to the loss of millions in what has been called the biggest and baldest swindle in history, perpetrated behind the clubby doors of the world’s most respected insurance organization.

Evans is fighting it out, party to a huge lawsuit born of Lloyd’s alleged perfidy, which comes to trial in London next week. The suit was filed on behalf of dissident Names who have refused to join a 1996 settlement, claiming that Lloyd’s, facing insurmountable losses, duped them by concealing the billions of dollars of asbestos claims it knew to be in the pipeline. “I believed I could trust Lloyd’s to look after my interests in much the same way I would trust my bank,” says Evans, who lives in London. As a result, she says, “I pledged my house and lost everything.”

Lloyd’s denies any wrongdoing and will defend itself vigorously. The insurance behemoth “has never been found guilty of fraud,” says spokesman Adrian Beeby. Lloyd’s has already beaten back a welter of legal actions in Britain. But it faces more charges on this side of the Atlantic. The U.S. Attorney in New York City has made Lloyd’s the target of an intensive criminal investigation. And in a pivotal case due for trial early next year before a California state court in Los Angeles, a father and two daughters who lost heavily in Lloyd’s have brought allegations of fraud that closely parallel the London charges.

TIME’s European edition last week published a 23-page investigative report on Lloyd’s by author David McClintick, whose books include the 1983 best seller Indecent Exposure, about embezzlement and power games at Columbia Pictures. The TIME report lends some support to assertions that top Lloyd’s execs were aware of the devastating impact that the asbestos claims were likely to have, even as Lloyd’s was feverishly recruiting unsuspecting new Names to help absorb the losses.

The TIME investigation tracked the alleged conspiracy through the labyrinthine structure of Lloyd’s, which is not an insurance company like, say, Allstate, but a vast insurance exchange that evolved from Edward Lloyd’s wharfside coffeehouse in the 17th century. As then, members bid for underwriting business, although today they do so from a four-story-high, block-square trading room in London. These underwriters form syndicates that are in turn backed by Names–investors who range from British notable Camilla Parker Bowles to U.S. business tycoons like Lufkin and Schwab, columnist Robert Novak, Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer and smaller fry like Evans. Names are required to risk their entire personal wealth when they back Lloyd’s policies in exchange for the right to a slice of underwriting profits. Atop the whole shebang sits the Council of Lloyd’s, a ruling body of 18 exchange members who regulate the market.

It’s this Council that has orchestrated a conspiracy for more than two decades, says Sir William Jaffray, the lead Name in the upcoming London trial. “By the late 1970s,” he told TIME, “the Committee [Council] of Lloyd’s knew they were facing a crisis, and by 1982 the hierarchy knew that Lloyd’s was bust. The only way they could keep going was to suppress the asbestos information, cook the books to ensure they were still showing profits, and go after new investors.”

Evidence in a number of lawsuits indicates that many new recruits wound up on syndicates that were heavily exposed to asbestos claims, allowing key insiders–including Murray Lawrence, a future chairman of Lloyd’s, who would serve from 1988 to 1990–to quietly lay off their own risks. “It has been a classic Ponzi scheme, in my opinion,” British investor John Finlay told a House of Commons committee in 1995.

Lloyd’s troubles began in the U.S., in Beaumont, Texas, where in 1969 a dying insulation installer named Clarence Borel sued 11 asbestos companies for failing to warn him about the hazards of handling the material. Four years later, a federal appeals court held the companies liable. The lawyers did the rest, opening the floodgates to damage claims that would eventually bring down huge asbestos companies like Johns Manville Corp., which restructured itself after a trip through bankruptcy court. The insurer of last resort–the party most exposed to the torrent of claims–was Lloyd’s of London.

To withstand the financial exposure, the Jaffray suit says, Lloyd’s launched its biggest recruitment drive ever. Veddy British recruiters fanned out across the U.S., enlisting the aid of big brokers like E.F. Hutton (now part of Citigroup) to line up prospects. The number of Names soared from about 6,000 in the mid-1960s to 14,000 in 1978 and exceeded 34,000 by the late 1980s. These were discount Names too, Lloyd’s having lowered the net worth needed to become a Name to substantially below $1 million. The lower bar gave entry to investors such as Shirley Cook, a third-grade teacher from Texas, and Elizabeth Bencsics, the wife of an electrician in New Mexico, who lost big chunks of their life savings. “At school we were taught that there was nothing more honorable than Lloyd’s of London,” Bencsics says. “I was thrilled to be part of it.”

Yet by the early 1980s Lloyd’s had begun to fear not only the onset of asbestos losses but future litigation arising from the recruitment drive. Its answer was to persuade Parliament to grant the company immunity from lawsuits by the Names–something the lawmakers might not do were they to get wind of the insurer’s financial problems. And so, according to the London suit, Lloyd’s duly set out to cook the books. The complex scheme allegedly involved closing the books prematurely on growing losses to conceal them.

That was good enough for an unwitting Parliament, which in 1982 gave Lloyd’s its exemption from future lawsuits. The insurer could thenceforth be held liable for damages only if a plaintiff could prove “bad faith,” something that is difficult to establish under British law.

The Bank of England was less awed by Lloyd’s than Parliament. In fact, it grew alarmed by what it was hearing and in that same year launched a top-secret inquiry into Lloyd’s. The bank concluded, in a letter to Lloyd’s chairman, Peter Green, that if the insurer collapsed, it would threaten the entire British banking system. As an insider told TIME: “This was a significant factor behind the continued recruitment, or indeed the increased rate of recruitment, of Names.”

In an effort to stabilize Lloyd’s worsening condition, the Bank of England exerted its influence to have an outsider, Ian Hay Davison, named chief executive officer in 1983. But the real power remained with chairman Green, a richly corrupt official who in 1986 was found guilty by a tribunal of Lloyd’s members of “gross negligence” and “discreditable conduct.” Davison lasted only two years as Lloyd’s CEO, and later published a bitter book describing the experience.

By the late 1980s the signs of trouble at Lloyd’s had surfaced enough to alert investors. News accounts noted that a growing number of Lloyd’s Names were cashing in their investments. Lloyd’s finally acknowledged the extent of the asbestos calamity in 1991, when it reported a loss of $980 million. The jarring news accompanied a cash call to unlucky Names who had backed the affected syndicates. Lloyd’s reported loss climbed to $3.85 billion in 1992, in part as a result of disasters ranging from the Exxon Valdez oil spill to the San Francisco earthquake of 1989. The 1993 loss was even more dismal: $4.4 billion.

The disclosures of Lloyd’s true financial condition set off a frenzy of lawsuits and government probes on both sides of the Atlantic. British police were swamped by reports of fraud. “We were hearing the same thing from every direction,” a senior law-enforcement source told TIME. “There was worry that the whole insurance business of the U.K. could collapse.” In Washington the Securities and Exchange Commission launched two separate investigations of Lloyd’s in 1991, only to halt both a year later in what former chairman Richard Breeden describes as deference to British court actions.

The growing legal storm lashed Citibank in New York, where some $12 billion of Lloyd’s North American reserves were on deposit. Paul Cohen, a supervising examiner for the New York State insurance department, declared in 1995 that the reserves were “seriously deficient” and “unlikely to cover all losses” at Lloyd’s. Cohen accused Citibank of permitting Lloyd’s to shift assets from the accounts of Names who owed nothing to pay the obligations of those Names who did–in violation of the Names’ contracts with Lloyd’s and trust agreements with Citibank. Citibank declined comment, citing pending litigation.

In Britain, Lloyd’s has been protected by its own act of Parliament and by an abiding fear of the insurer’s still formidable clout. “Lloyd’s has more power than the government,” says a knighted landowner and victim of a bad Lloyd’s investment. “We are scared. People are frightened. This is not the England I knew.”

Even as Lloyd’s deflected the lawsuits, it hounded its Names to pay the price. Some did. Roy Bromley, a ruined Name, balanced a shotgun on the ledge of open French windows at his London home and shot himself in the chest. Richard Burgoyne shot himself at his home in 1993–his wife and two sons, ages 8 and 11, found his body in their living room. Estimates of Lloyd’s-related suicides range from a dozen to more than 30. The gentlemen at Lloyd’s acknowledge only seven.

Reeling from financial pressure and haunted by the specter of suicides, thousands of Names agreed to a 1996 settlement Lloyd’s concocted in response to legal actions and growing public outrage. Called Reconstruction and Renewal, the settlement created a reinsurance company known as Equitas that assumed responsibility for all of Lloyd’s pre-1993 obligations. At the same time, Lloyd’s reduced and capped the pre-1993 debts of Names who agreed to pay up and waive all claims against the company. But this global deal has raised more questions than it has answered. A committee of the House of Commons derided it as little more than a scheme “to shore up an institution reeling from past failings.” Today the structure of the settlement looks fragile, its future in doubt and its legality under fire.

Lloyd’s too is struggling mightily. It is a shadow of its former self, with estimated losses of nearly $200 million for 1998 and 1999 combined. Corporations now account for 80% of Lloyd’s capital, leaving the Names to play only a minor role. But even with this corporate cash, Lloyd’s capacity to write insurance is lower today than it was in 1990. Meanwhile, Lloyd’s share of the worldwide insurance market has fallen from 10% at the beginning of the 20th century to less than 2% today. Even the insurer’s name has been diminished. No longer the sonorously alliterative Lloyd’s of London, since 1997 it has been just Lloyd’s.

The company publicly exudes confidence, the stiffest of upper lips. “Our future vision is of a Society containing strong, well-managed, increasingly independent businesses operating to very high standards,” says a recent Lloyd’s brochure titled Priorities for Growth 2000-2003.

Very nice, that, but Lloyd’s now faces a trial that threatens to expose its darkest doings. “Finally, Lloyd’s is in the dock and will have to answer the tough questions it has been dodging for years,” says former Name Clive Francis, a retired Royal Air Force pilot. How well Lloyd’s responds to those questions could determine whether the institution that once was part of the very bedrock of Britannia has any future at all.

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Lutine Yachts Ltd

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Welcome to the Lutine Yachts Ltd Booking Portal

lloyd's of london yacht club

From here you can book and pay on line for Club Events and Corporate Charters on Lutine, the X-55 belonging to the Lloyd's of London Yacht Club.  

Note: You will need to register when you first make a booking.

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  1. Swan 53 yacht Lutine owned by the Lloyds of London Yacht Club heads for

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  2. Lloyd's of London Iconic Rostrum

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  3. Swan 53 yacht Lutine owned by the Lloyds of London Yacht Club heads for

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  4. Round the Island race, UK. 1st June 2013. A Germán Frers designed

    lloyd's of london yacht club

  5. Swan 53 yacht Lutine owned by the Lloyds of London Yacht Club heads for

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  6. Lloyd's Yacht Club

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VIDEO

  1. Nikata London Yacht 2023

  2. Jack London Yacht Club Jack to Jack race 04-06-24

  3. 240507 Pre E BACRC 24 Lloyd's London RFC 45

  4. Staycation Vlog

  5. LONDON YACHT PARTY!

  6. Lloyd Charmers

COMMENTS

  1. Lloyd's Yacht Club

    Lloyds yacht club are fortunate to own Lutine, an X-55 Danish designed and built cruiser racer. At 55 feet and weighing in at 16 tonnes, with a carbon fibre rig, it is fast around the race circuit whilst having all the luxuries one would expect of a high end cruising yacht. Built in 2010 and acquired by the club in 2014 Lutine is maintained to ...

  2. Lloyd's Yacht Club

    Club contact: Vivienne Russell. [email protected] 07766395547. Visit Lloyd's Yacht Club website. Lloyd's yacht club has been encouraging sailing and making it accessible for the Lloyd's insurance market since 1938.

  3. History of Lloyd's Yacht Club and Lutine

    The club has a vast history which has been founded through the years alongside the members on the London insurance Community. Lloyd's yacht club was officially formed in 1938, but in 1936, Sandy Haworth, who had joined RORC having participated in the 1935 Fastnet race, set out on an informal race from Gosport to Cherbourg - it was during ...

  4. Club

    Club Weekends. Whatever your experience, there can be no better way to enjoy a weekend's cruise sailing than on the luxurious and hugely stylish Lutine X-55 - one of the most recognisable boats in the Solent and warmly welcomed wherever she berths. Find out more.

  5. Lutine (yacht)

    Yacht Lutine is the name given to all Lloyd's of London Yacht Club's (LLYC) sailing yachts, often with sail number GBR809 First Yacht Lutine (C&N 60') [ edit ] A Laurent-Giles designed Bermudan yawl , built by Camper and Nicholsons in 1952 with yard number 784, she is 58 ft length overall with an 8.5' draft. [1]

  6. Lloyd's Yacht Club

    The club has a vast history which has been founded through the years alongside the members on the London insurance Community. Lloyd's yacht club was officially formed in 1938, but in 1936, Sandy Haworth, who had joined RORC having participated in the 1935 Fastnet race, set out on an informal race from Gosport to Cherbourg […]

  7. Lloyd's Yacht Club

    Lloyd's Yacht Club www.lloydsyachtclub.com. Latest news Show news from . Marine Resources job updates by Marine Resources The latest jobs in the marine industry Posted on 13 Mar 2014 14th Lutine Lineslip Regatta by Andrew Jameson To be held in May in the Solent Posted on 31 Jan 2012.

  8. Clubs and Societies in the Lloyd's market

    As one of the first female oriented Lloyd's of London Sports Club, we provide a platform for women in the insurance profession to network in an informal and inclusive environment. ... Lloyd's Yacht Club. Lloyd's yacht club has been encouraging sailing and making it accessible for the Lloyd's insurance market since 1938. Find out more ...

  9. Nine Lloyd's of London Clubs & Societies You Can Join

    Lloyd's Golf Club. Founded in 1894, and now with over 500 members, Lloyd's Golf Club is well established in the London market. They play 29 matches a year and hold three seasonal meetings, with members welcome to play in any of the events. There are some joining criteria, so be sure to find out more on the LGC website.

  10. Lloyd's Register Of Yachts Online

    The Lloyd's Register of Yachts was first issued in 1878, and was issued annually until 1980, except during the years 1916-18 and 1940-46. Two supplements containing additions and corrections were also issued annually. The information in these supplements were provided by the owner of the vessel and could include changes of ownership, the fate ...

  11. Club Membership

    Membership of Lloyd's Yacht Club is open to anyone who has a connection to the insurance market and is interested in sailing. The membership criteria is quite broad, but if you are unsure if you qualify or have any other questions about membership please contact us. To join you need to complete an online application - the application form ...

  12. HISTORY

    In 1986, a locally based Yacht Club, registered with Lloyds of London, merged with the Riding Club becoming the Lancaster Tennis and Yacht Club. All club members, through reciprocity, are welcome as guests at over 800 Yacht Clubs nationwide. Find Us. 2615 Columbia Avenue.

  13. Lloyd's of London

    Lloyd's of London, generally known simply as Lloyd's, is an insurance and reinsurance market located in London, United Kingdom. Unlike most of its competitors in the industry, it is not an insurance company; rather, Lloyd's is a corporate body governed by the Lloyd's Act 1871 and subsequent Acts of Parliament.It operates as a partially-mutualised marketplace within which multiple financial ...

  14. Lloyds of london yacht club Stock Photos and Images

    Find the perfect lloyds of london yacht club stock photo, image, vector, illustration or 360 image. Available for both RF and RM licensing. ... GOSPORT, ENGLAND. - FIRST OF TYPE - LLOYD'S YACHT CLUB'S NEW LUTINE, A CAMPER & NICHOLSON 55 WITH GRP HULL MADE BY HALMATIC, BUILDING AT THE GOSPORT YARD IN MARCH. PHOTO:JONATHAN EASTLAND/AJAX. REF ...

  15. Sailing The Lutine X-55, The Lloyd's Yacht Club Ocean Racing Classic to

    The Lloyd's of London Lutine X-55 is an iconic sight in Solent and is a perfect boat for corporate entertainment for members clients. We have 10 spaces available on the Yacht on Friday, 18th August 2023. The Day Charter Package. The package includes: Charter of Lutine including a Lloyd's Skipper and Mate. Breakfast on board. Lunch on board

  16. Lloyd's Register Of Ships Online

    Lloyd's Register of Ships online. Explore historical editions of the Register of Ships online now. Volumes of the Register of Ships, formerly Lloyd's Register of Shipping, fully accessible and searchable online (between 1764-1998) can be accessed for free and in PDF format via: Internet Archive. Wikimedia Commons. Google Books.

  17. Book Lutine

    BOOK LUTINE. Choose a date from the calendar below and you will be taken to our booking portal where you can reserve and pay for your place on Lutine or whole boat skippered charter. PLEASE NOTE (for 2024) - If you are booking for more than just yourself, you MUST add your additional guests and their email address (if they are not a member).

  18. Lloyd's Register Of Yachts 1929 : Lloyd's Register Foundation, Heritage

    The Lloyd's Register of Yachts was first issued in 1878, and was issued annually until 1980, except during the years 1916-18 and 1940-46. Two supplements containing additions and corrections were also issued annually. ... illustrates plates of the Flags of Yacht and Sailing Clubs, together with a List of Club Officers, an illustrated List of ...

  19. Members Tour of Lloyd's of London

    An opportunity for 5 members of Property Construction Yacht Club to Tour Lloyd's of London Building looking at its famous architecture and its maritime insurance history including Old Lloyd's library and The Nelson Collection.

  20. Club Rules

    Club Rules. 1. The Name. The name of the Club shall be LLOYD'S YACHT CLUB. 2. The objects of the Club. The objects of the Club are to encourage yachting within Lloyd's, the London market and the wider insurance community. In particular the Club works to provide sailing opportunities to young members who would otherwise not be able to ...

  21. Lloyd's of London is fixing its male-dominated culture of alcohol and

    In short, the 300-plus-year-old marketplace stayed stuck in its backward ways for far too long. But now, Lloyd's of London, which has about 380 brokers and a network of 4,000 insurance ...

  22. Lloyd's Of London Falling Down

    H oping to earn income to help pay for her children's tuition, Dona Evans invested in Lloyd's of London in 1987. The legendary insurance giant was recruiting fresh capital-in fact, Lloyd's ...

  23. Welcome to the Lutine Yachts Ltd Booking Portal

    From here you can book and pay on line for Club Events and Corporate Charters on Lutine, the X-55 belonging to the Lloyd's of London Yacht Club. ... the X-55 belonging to the Lloyd's of London Yacht Club. Note: You will need to register when you first make a booking. Top. Information. About Us; Terms and Conditions; Cancellation Policy;