Anonymous ID: 6f9670 March 19, 2020, 7:59 p.m. No.8483640   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8483333 lb)

chek'd

 

RSA Insurance Group

From Wiki

RSA Insurance Group plc

RSA Insurance Group (emblem).svg

Type

Public limited company

Traded as LSE: RSA

FTSE 100 Component

ISIN GB00BKKMKR23 Edit this on Wikidata

Industry Insurance

Founded 1996; 24 years ago

(London)

Headquarters London, United Kingdom

Key people

Martin Scicluna (chair­person) Edit this on Wikidata

Stephen Hester (CEO)

Revenue £6,898 million (2019)[1]

Operating income

£492 million (2019)[1]

Net income

£383 million (2019)[1]

Number of employees

13,500 (2019)[2]

Subsidiaries 123 Money

Website www.rsagroup.com

RSA Insurance Group plc (trading as RSA, formerly Royal and Sun Alliance) is a British multinational general insurance company headquartered in London, United Kingdom. RSA has major operations in the UK & Ireland, Scandinavia and Canada and provides insurance products and services in more than 140 countries through a network of local partners. It has 9 million customers.[2] RSA was formed by the merger of Sun Alliance and Royal Insurance in 1996.

 

RSA is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.

 

Offices

Asia

Bahrain Bahrain

Oman Oman

Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia

United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates

North America and Caribbean

Canada Canada

United States USA

Europe

United Kingdom United Kingdom

Republic of Ireland Ireland

France France

Germany Germany

Spain Spain

Belgium Belgium

Denmark Denmark

Sweden Sweden

Norway Norway

 

Its global headquarters are in the City of London on 20 Fenchurch Street occupying floors 15-17 of the 'walkie-talkie' building

 

Sauce

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RSA_Insurance_Group

Anonymous ID: 6f9670 March 19, 2020, 8:06 p.m. No.8483718   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8483522

>>8483540

>all male voting

 

Trial balloon

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A trial balloon, or kite-flying (used in the UK and elsewhere), is information sent out to the media in order to observe the reaction of an audience.[1] It can be used by companies sending out press releases to judge reaction by customers, or it can be used by politicians who deliberately leak information on a policy change under consideration. The term is of French origin.[2] Trial balloon translates French ballon d'essai, a small balloon sent up immediately before a manned ascent to determine the direction and tendency of winds in the upper air[3], though the earliest use in English is figurative.