Hyperion Insurance Group Reveals Year-end Financial Results

Hyperion Insurance Group, the name behind DUAL, Howden and RKH, has developed from a three-person start-up to an international group over the last 25 years with a compound annual growth rate of 35%. In results issued earlier, the firm highlighted that this growth is showing no signs of slowing down through 2019.
Hyperion has consistently been among the fastest growing of its peers with market-leading organic growth, noted CEO David Howden - growth which was ahead of the market again in 2019 at 11%.
Speaking on this achievement, Howden said: “I am proud that this has always been a place for entrepreneurial talent who want to grow careers and build businesses. We continue to attract the very best.”
On a bank reported basis, including 12 months pro forma effect of acquisitions, Hyperion closed its financial year with strong performances across all business units, breaking the £725 million (around US$941 million) revenue barrier, which is an increase of 17%. The group has an adjusted consolidated EBITDA of £211 million (around $273.9 million), which is an increase of 16%, and now has over 5,000 employees in 38 territories, handling US$7 billion of premium on behalf of its clients.
Hyperion’s international broking business, which will be operating as Howden from October 01, 2020, continued its rapid expansion through investments across a number of jurisdictions in the last financial year, including Belgium, Colombia, France, Malaysia, Norway, Tanzania, Thailand, Spain and the UK, and strengthened its presence in each market.
DUAL, Hyperion’s underwriting business is currently the largest international MGA, writing over US$1 billion GWP from 36 offices across 16 countries. The MGA provides its carriers with access to speciality market cover through over 6,500 broker partners and on behalf of more than 60 carriers globally.
Commenting on the results issued today, Howden said: “Staying true to our founding principles and joining with culturally-aligned people and businesses has allowed us to deliver results for our clients in the long term. And we are only just getting started.”
People Power: Building The Future Of Insurance One Career At A Time
The insurance industry is at a pivotal point. As emerging technologies reshape underwriting, claims processing, and cust... Read more
Private Equity's Great Divide: Is The Future Insurance-Funded Or Fee-Driven?
A fundamental shift is taking place at the top of the private equity industry. While firms like Blackstone remain commit... Read more
Japan's Next Battleground: The Insurance Sector Under Activist Pressure
Farallon’s push at T&D Holdings marks a shift in focus for activist capital targeting Japan’s untapped insurance... Read more
Cover And Conflict: Tensions Rise Between Insurers And Litigation Funders
Burford’s clash with Chubb signals a deeper rift in the legal-financial ecosystem A high-profile dispute between li... Read more
Underwater And Uninsured: How Climate Risk Is Reshaping The US Mortgage Market
As climate change intensifies, its effects are no longer confined to coastlines or news reports on extreme weather. In t... Read more
When The Raters Get Rated: What The Fitch–Kroll Feud Says About Oversight And Accountability
In a rare and unusually public confrontation between two of America’s credit rating agencies, a recent feud between Fi... Read more