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PRIVACY
Enterprise

Newcastle shipping insurance giant NorthStandard has the wind in its sails

The mutual is now two years post merger, which happened at a time of huge global shifts for the shipping industry to navigate

Paul Jennings, managing director of NorthStandard.(Image: NorthStandard)

Where Tyneside was once famed for shipbuilding, one Newcastle firm has helped establish its prowess in another maritime niche. The $750m (£617m) merger of North P&I and Standard Club in early 2023 created one of the world’s largest shipping insurers.

The combined business - which employs about 300 people on Newcastle Quayside and insures about 20% of world shipping - is now into its second year and the going is good, according to managing director Paul Jennings.

“We have ambitions to grow cautiously,” says Mr Jennings. “Looking back, when I started off in this strange industry, the company I worked for was Newcastle P&I - based in the Cloth Market - our income at the time was $4m and we’re projecting $850m of income this year. So, it’s grown a bit over that time.”

The making of NorthStandard involved two historic firms, with North P&I’s story stretching back more than 160 years to 1860 when it was established to insure some of the 260 or so local ship owners based on the Tyne. London-based Standard Club traces its roots back more than 140 years.

Both mutuals were well established in what is known as the “blue water” protection and indemnity market - the insuring of ocean-going merchant ships. Their coming together offered up the chance to expand beyond that longstanding business into other areas such as providing products for the offshore and renewables markets.

The merger of equals was months in the making with the proposal going to a vote of members of both clubs before it could proceed. Mr Jennings explained: “The focus was on making sure our client base was comfortable with it and that they remained with us. We’ve had one very good renewal which happened last February and over that period we’ve actually grown the business. So it’s not just a case of hitting that continuity theme.

“And we’ve been getting really good feedback, not only from our clients - or members as we call them - but also from brokering intermediaries and other stakeholders in the business about how well the merger has gone and about how comfortable everyone is from an external point of view.”

NorthStandard’s subsequent footprint is global with offices throughout Asia, Europe, the US and Australia and New Zealand. But Tyneside has remained the beating heart of the operation - with much of the huge integration effort being steered from the organisation’s offices overlooking the Tyne Bridge.