Tag: affairs

  • Insurance industry faces scrutiny over possible indirect racial bias

    Regulators are to investigate the insurance industry for potential racial bias and discrimination over the data that companies use to set their prices.

    The Financial Conduct Authority said that while it had found no evidence of “direct discrimination”, insurers were using information within their pricing models that may implicitly or potentially explicitly relate to race or ethnicity, so there was a “risk of discriminating against consumers”.

    Announcing a study of the £78bn general insurance industry, which will look at whether certain groups of consumers are paying too much, the FCA also floated the idea of a specific day or week in the year when all consumers would renew or switch their insurance.

    A report published by the regulator indicated that many loyal, older home insurance customers were being overcharged for their cover so firms could offer artificially low prices to new customers.

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    The regulator said it was “concerned that general insurance pricing practices have the potential to cause harm to consumers, particularly those who are vulnerable”. It revealed that some companies had potentially broken its rules and could face a crackdown.

    For years, insurers have often been accused of unfairly overcharging their most loyal customers – in particular by repeatedly raising the premiums of those who allow their cover to be renewed automatically. This has been called a “loyalty penalty” and the FCA has tried to tackle this by bringing in a requirement last year that renewal letters must inform customers of rises.

    However, the issue has continued to cause controversy: in September, Citizen’s Advice lodged a “super-complaint” with the competition watchdog, saying loyal customers of home insurers, banks, mortgage lenders, mobile phone companies and broadband operators were being ripped off to the tune of £4bn a year, or as much as £877 per person.

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    On home insurance, the regulator said one of its main concerns was “the potential use of data based on race/ethnicity within firms’ pricing models to produce different offered prices”.

    It added that companies were asked how they reassured themselves that the third-party data they used did not discriminate against certain customers, and that many could not immediately provide this assurance.

    Possible links between insurance and ethnicity have been highlighted before: in 2016, a report co-written by the former equality commissioner Trevor Phillips claimed that millions of people living in areas with a high density of minority ethnic households were paying an “ethnic penalty” of up to £450 a year each in higher car insurance premiums.

    The FCA also highlighted price differentiation relating to customers who had been with the same insurer for many years and allowed their cover to renew automatically. Some of these people “are on average paying prices significantly above the cost of provision”. The FCA said “potential losers” included people aged over 65.

    By contrast, there is intense price competition when it came to signing up new customers. New home insurance policies were often priced as much as 30% below the cost of providing the cover, the FCA said.

    While some customers would switch after the first year, many others would stay, and companies would make their money by implementing “sharp premium increases” during the second and third years.

    The regulator said some firms may be guilty of not complying with its rules on transparency at renewal, and that where it had concerns, “it will explore all options to address this using the full range of its powers”.

    Noting that Hungary used to have a nationwide insurance renewal period once a year, the FCA said: “Having a specific day or week in the year where consumers are able to renew or switch their providers could in principle help.”

    Gareth Shaw, a money expert at the consumer body Which?, said the market study was long overdue. “For years, loyal policyholders have been exploited by insurance providers, punished by excessive premiums and have had to battle with unclear pricing,” he added.

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  • Hollywood affairs that ended in ‘I do’

    See the famous celebrity affairs that ended with a trip down the aisle

    Back-up dancer Kevin Federline left his pregnant fiancée, actress Shar Jackson, to be with pop princess Britney Spears. Their two year marriage ended with Federline retaining sole legal and physical custody of their son while Spears would get visitation rights that would increase over time. Federline receives $20,000 per month from Spears in child support

    Hip-hop artist Swizz Beatz was still married to singer Mashonda when he started an affair with Alicia Keys in 2008. The couple married in 2010 and have two children together.Billy Bob Thornton was engaged to Laura Dern when he began his affair with Angelina Jolie. Thornton and Jolie wed in 1999, but divorced in 2003.Brad Pitt stated that he “fell in love” with Angelina Jolie while filming Mr. and Mrs. Smith. Pitt was still married to Jennifer Aniston at the time. Jolie’s former bodyguard claims that the romance started on the set of their 2005 filmWanderlust co-stars Jennifer Aniston and Justin Theroux‘s relationship allegedly started while he was still with his girlfriend of 14 years, Heidi BivensActress Julia Roberts and cinematographer Daniel Moder began their relationship on the set of her film The Mexican in 2000, while he was still married Vera Steimberg. After his divorce from Steimberg was finalized, he and Roberts wed on July 4, 2002, in a small ceremony at her ranch in Taos, New Mexico.Spanish actor Antonio Banderas reportedly divorced his wife, Ana Leza, because of his affair with actress Melanie Griffith. Banderas met Griffith in 1995 while filming ‘Two Much.’ They married in 1996, she filed for divorce in 2014NBA all star Dwyane Wade‘s divorce from Siohvaughn Funches was allegedly provoked by his budding relationship with his now wife actress Gabrielle Union.Johnny Depp and Amber Heard allegedly got together on the set of The Rum Diary, before he split from his longtime love Vanessa Paradis. Depp and Heard got married in 2015 and divorced in 2017.Tori Spelling (who was married to Charlie Shanian) was filming the Lifetime TV-movie Mind Over Murder in Ottawa, when she met actor Dean McDermott, who was then married to actress Mary Jo Eustace. Spelling and McDermott began an affair the night they met, Spelling and Shanian separated in October 2005. Spelling married Dean McDermott on May 7, 2006, in a private ceremony in Fiji.One of Hollywood’s greatest love stories, Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward were married for 50 years. Newman was still married to his first wife, Jackie Witte, when they first met in 1953Prince Charles started an affair with Camilla Parker Bowles in 1986, just five years into his marriage to Princess Diana. Prince Charles and Parker Bowles wed in 2005Country legend Johnny Cash was married to his wife, Vivian, when he began his affair with June Carter. The couple were married from 1968 until his death in 2003.Singer Blake Shelton was married to Kaynette Williams when he fell in love with his future wife, singer Miranda Lambert in 2005. Shelton and Lambert split in 2015 amid rumors of infidelity on both sides.Hollywood icon Humphrey Bogart was married to Mayo Methot when he fell in love with Lauren Bacall during the filming ‘To Have and Have Not.’ Bogart and Bacall were married from 1945 until his death in 1957Woody Allen‘s affair with Mia Farrow’s adopted daughter, Soon-Yi Previn came to light when Farrow allegedly discovered Allen‘s nude Polaroid photographs of Previn in late 1991 or early 1992. Farrow broke off her relationship with Allen in 1992 following the discovery. Allen has been married to Previn since 1997.Singer LeAnn Rimes was married to Dean Sheremet and Actor Eddie Cibrian was married to Brandi Glanville when the couple filmed Northern Lights. Rimes and Cibrian have been married to each other since 2011