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Lloyd's of London names Carnegie-Brown as chairman

People travel in lifts in the Lloyd's building in London September 26, 2012. The Lloyd's of London insurance market swung back into profit in the first six months of 2012, after a comparative lack of natural disasters reduced its claims bill by nearly a third, it said on Wednesday. REUTERS/Neil Hall

(Reuters) - Lloyd's of London, the world's biggest specialty insurance market, appointed Bruce Carnegie-Brown as chairman, it said on Monday, after his nomination was unanimously supported by its council.

Carnegie-Brown, currently chairman of Moneysupermarket.com and vice chairman of Banco Santander (MCE:SAN.MC - News), will take up the Lloyd's role in June. He will step down from his role as a non-executive director of insurance and reinsurance broker Jardine Lloyd Thompson Group Plc (LSE:JLT.L - News), Lloyd's said in a statement.

Carnegie-Brown is former chief executive of insurance broker Marsh Europe, a subsidiary of Marsh & McLennan Companies (NYSE:MMC - News), a global professional services firm.

He replaces former banker John Nelson, who has been chairman of Lloyd's since 2011 and a vocal supporter of Britain remaining in the European single market.

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Lloyd's of London, which gets around 11 percent of its business from Europe, is expected soon to announce plans for a European Union subsidiary following Britain's vote to leave the EU. Dublin and Luxembourg are seen as the most likely contenders for the subsidiary, industry sources say.

The market, which started life in Edward Lloyd's coffee house in 1688, still operates on a face-to-face basis in its City of London building and is seen needing to modernize and upgrade its technology.

Lloyd's is also facing increasing competition from emerging markets such as Singapore, with a 2014 report showing the London insurance market losing market share.

(Reporting by Esha Vaish in Bengaluru and Carolyn Cohn in London; editing by Jason Neely)