Daily Mail

Protect f irms like LV from the private equity sharks, MPs tell Sunak

- By Archie Mitchell and Francesca Washtell

RISHI Sunak was last night urged to protect mutuals in the wake of the private equity takeover of LV.

A group of 100 cross-party MPs and peers has called on the Chancellor to strengthen the laws governing friendly societies and mutuals to make them less vulnerable to buyouts.

It comes in the wake of LV’s controvers­ial £530million takeover by Bain Capital that will see it stripped of its mutual status and run by profit-hungry investors. The deal, to be voted on this Friday, would hand LV’s 1.2million members a mere £100 each.

A letter signed by MPs and Lords including Tories Steve Baker, David Davis and Baroness Altmann and Labour’s Anneliese Dodds said the sale of the 178-year-old group had generated ‘considerab­le public concern as well as significan­t crossparty unease in Parliament’. They added: ‘We the undersigne­d urge you to establish urgently a formal review of the law governing friendly societies and other mutuals.’

Key demands include a reform of the rules on who can act as an ‘independen­t expert’ – people appointed by the mutual to review a possible deal and how it would affect policyhold­ers and members. The sale was criticised when it emerged one of LV’s ‘independen­t’ experts, Simon Grout, worked at FTI Consulting – the same firm acting as LV’s public relations adviser.

The politician­s also want changes to the way mutuals can raise money, to enable them to ‘compete on equal terms’ with other firms – one reason given for the sale was that LV could not raise funds to invest because of restrictio­ns linked to a cap on debt.

The all-party parliament­ary group for mutuals launched an inquiry soon after the deal was first announced in October 2020, and chairman Gareth Thomas said the fact politician­s from across the political spectrum are demanding change ‘shows we must not let a saga like the botched sale of LV unfold again’.

The Labour MP added: ‘The more-than 100 parliament­arians who signed this letter speaks volumes about the level of dismay with which we have watched the deal unfold.

‘While we all hope members vote down the dreadful deal and save LV from private equity sharks, we are also looking ahead to ensure no more beloved British mutuals meet the same fate.’

LV was set up to help workingcla­ss families in Liverpool avoid a pauper’s funeral.

Rival mutual Royal London has said it is ready to make a move on LV if the Bain deal is rejected.

‘Vote down the dreadful deal’

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