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Zurich’s $11 billion Beazley takeover: the 1,335p offer, the financing, and what could derail it
3 March 2026
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Zurich’s $11 billion Beazley takeover: the 1,335p offer, the financing, and what could derail it

LONDON, March 3, 2026, 08:51 GMT

  • Zurich is set to acquire Beazley in a cash deal valued at roughly £8.1 billion ($10.8 billion).
  • Beazley shareholders will get 1,335 pence a share, factoring in a 25 pence dividend.
  • Zurich pulled in CHF 3.9 billion ($5.0 billion) through a share sale, the company said, using the proceeds to support the deal.

Zurich Insurance Group is snapping up British specialty insurer Beazley for 8.1 billion pounds ($10.8 billion), betting big on areas like cyber, marine, and aviation coverage. Beazley’s stock closed Monday at 1,291 pence, up 1.8% but still under Zurich’s bid. Shares of Zurich dropped 1.2%.

The agreement comes at a moment when insurers are scrambling for expansion in “specialty” lines—think policies tailored for hard-to-place, complicated risks that fall outside standard coverage. Certain slices of that market have seen premium rates hold firm. Boards, for their part, are betting on size: greater scale means richer data sets, sharper pricing leverage, and a bigger share of broker attention.

Analysts are betting the deal will trigger further consolidation. In a note, Jefferies flagged the pact as a signal that Beazley’s “loss exposures” “remain contained”—shorthand for those tail risks that can wreck a specialty book.

Beazley shareholders are set for a payout of 1,335 pence a share—1,310 pence in cash, plus an interim dividend of 25 pence, according to Reinsurance News. Zurich CEO Mario Greco described the deal as a “strong step” for the group’s specialty plans. Beazley chair Clive Bannister said the board would “recommend acceptance” of Zurich’s offer. ReinsuranceNe.ws

Their message is scale. Greco pointed to the merger as forming the “world’s leading” specialty underwriter, throwing out a pro forma gross written premiums figure of roughly $15 billion—a common yardstick before reinsurance is stripped out. Beazley chief Adrian Cox flagged “accelerating risk” for clients, framing the tie-up as their answer.

Zurich told investors it plans to cover the cash portion using approximately $3.0 billion from its existing reserves, another $2.9 billion in new debt, and about $5.0 billion raised through a capital increase and share placement. The company is targeting around $150 million in annual pretax cost savings by 2029. If everything gets the necessary green lights, Zurich expects the deal to wrap up in the second half of 2026, moving forward under a UK court-sanctioned scheme of arrangement.

Zurich on Tuesday announced it wrapped up the equity portion, pulling in CHF 3.9 billion ($5.0 billion) through an accelerated bookbuild. The insurer placed 7,090,909 fresh shares, each priced at CHF 550, targeting institutional buyers. The listing and start of trading for the new shares on SIX Swiss Exchange are set for on or about March 5.

That move pushes Zurich deeper into direct competition with listed specialty underwriters like Hiscox and Lancashire—not to mention global names such as Chubb—where underwriting results can be jolted by major events and sharp price swings.

Still, plenty could derail the deal. Shareholders and regulators have yet to give their blessing, and specialty lines are vulnerable to surprise shocks — think a big cyber hit, unexpected aviation losses, or a surge in marine claims before closing. The projected cost and capital gains remain just that: projections. And even if the numbers line up, integration rarely goes off without some bumps.

Beazley brushed off multiple takeover attempts until February, when it indicated support for a higher bid as the March 4 UK takeover deadline loomed. Zurich, with numbers settled and most financing in place, is shifting from pursuit to finalizing documents.

Michał Rogucki is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic developments. A graduate of Humboldt University of Berlin, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis before transitioning to financial journalism. He covers the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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