According to the European Commission's competition case register, the Swiss insurer notified EU merger regulators of its intention to acquire Beazley on June 11, 2026. The filing triggers a Phase I review by the Commission to assess whether the combination would significantly impede effective competition within the European Economic Area.
Zurich agreed terms on the all-cash acquisition on March 2, 2026, with Beazley shareholders entitled to receive 1,335 pence per share, comprising 1,310 pence in cash and a permitted dividend of 25 pence.
The offer represents a premium of approximately 62.8% to Beazley's closing price on January 16, 2026, valuing the transaction at approximately £8.1 billion. Beazley shareholders voted overwhelmingly in favor of the deal in April 2026, with 99.9% of votes cast in support. Completion remains subject to court sanction and further regulatory clearances, with closing expected in H2 2026.
The strategic rationale is built on scale and specialty. Zurich estimates the combined entity will generate approximately $15 billion in specialty gross written premiums annually, becoming the world's leading specialty underwriter. The deal is also expected to unlock $150 million in annual cost savings by 2029 and over $1 billion in incremental revenue opportunities in the medium term.
Beazley's cyber insurance franchise is central to the transaction. The acquisition significantly strengthens Zurich's position in cyber insurance, with Beazley's Full Spectrum Cyber offering combining comprehensive coverage with in-house incident response and proactive security services.
"Together with Beazley, we will create the world's leading specialty underwriter, with exceptional underwriting expertise and data capabilities, and leading access to global distribution," said Zurich CEO Mario Greco when the deal was announced. "Leveraging Beazley's established Lloyd's platform, the combined specialty business will be headquartered in London."
The European Commission filing is one of several regulatory approvals still outstanding. The transaction requires clearance from the PRA, FCA, Lloyd's of London, Switzerland's FINMA and the European Commission.
On a change of control of this kind, the PRA takes the lead on UK regulatory review but consults with the FCA. For groups with cross-border activities, the PRA also coordinates with other national and international regulators to ensure effective group-wide supervision.
The EU filing is a routine but consequential step. A standard Phase I review gives the Commission up to 25 working days to assess the transaction. Given the geographic and product overlap between the two groups across European specialty lines, the Commission will examine whether the combination materially affects competition in relevant EEA markets. Both Zurich and Beazley are active across a range of commercial lines in Europe, including cyber, marine, professional liability and property.
Zurich has already secured the financing, funding the acquisition through approximately $3 billion in existing cash, $2.9 billion in new debt facilities and a $5 billion capital raise completed in March 2026.
Beazley shares have continued to trade modestly below the 1,310 pence cash offer price, reflecting the market's focus on the remaining court sanction and regulatory clearance timeline rather than any fundamental doubt about the transaction itself. Zurich has continued buying Beazley shares in the open market, taking its holding to 4.50% as of June 10, 2026.