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Quinn insurance lost €706 million in 2009

The news of the figures come as the company is expected to be sold off to an American insurance giant and Anglo Irish Bank. The losses will also mean it will need help from the Insurance Compensation Fund.

THE INSURANCE ARM of Quinn lost €706 million in 2009, the year before administrators were appointed to the company it was reported today.

The announcement came on the day it was also confirmed that the administrators had signed a deal to sell the company to US insurance giant Liberty Mutual and Anglo Irish Bank as had been reported last month.

All 1,570 staff members in the Republic and Northern Ireland will be retained under the sale, PA reports.

Liberty will inject €102 million and Anglo will put in €98 million to recapitalise the new company which will now be known as Liberty Mutual Direct insurance.

The administrators of the leading insurance firm, set up by the now heavily indebted Séan Quinn, said that of today’s announced losses €559m of this was operating losses, and €147m was due to write-downs of assets.

A further €160 million was lost in 2010.

The administrators said €333 million was lost in the UK insurance business, the bulk of that relating to the non-motor insurance industry, RTÉ reports.

The administrators said that the company’s poor performance in 2009 and 2010 would mean they would have to seek help from the Insurance Compensation Fund to the tune of €600 million.

Approximately €180 million of this is expected to be drawn down later this year and will likely mean an industry wide levy being applied to non-life insurance customers, reports the Irish Times.

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Comments (7 Comments)

  • Is this the same Quinn who gave each of his kids 200m euro? Now we have to bail him out! He should be shot with balls of his own shite

    Reply
    • It is the same fellow, who has something of a personality cult going on anywhere he employed people.

      I feel great sympathy for those who did lose work over a johnny come lately (hopefully there won’t be any more job losses), but the rest of us can hardly be blamed for the sad fact that he couldn’t sustain his business in the first place, using the profitable parts to prop up the rest, and boost his own credit rating.

      I’d think far more of him if he showed a but of humility for his mistakes, and honesty to his former workers, instead of rousing them against everyone else in an attempt to take the spotlight off himself.

      Reply
  • And Sean Quinn, that humble chap who only gambled with pennies on a Friday night, would have us believe it was all Anglo’s fault.

    Reply
  • Andy 28/04/11 #

    They put €800 onto my motor renewal quote. Gave me no choice put to change company so not surprising they have lost money.

    Where AIB getting €98m ?

    Reply
  • How can a company loose €700 and keep all there staff. I would be worried for my job if I worked there.

    Reply
  • About 10 years ago, when Independent Insurance went bust Irish policyholders were stiffed on outstanding claims.
    Why then should we have to meet the cost of outstanding UK mainly solicitors professional indemnity claims?

    Reply
  • I agree with Ryan, can the Quinn staff/followers of St Sean not see that this man is to blame for his own downfall! I am shocked at the loyalty shown to this man!

    Reply

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