Company: AHL
Filing Date: 2025-06-11
Form Type: 424B5
Source: 0001628280-25-030754
Chunk: 18

Company: ASPEN INSURANCE HOLDINGS LTD
Filing Date: 2025-06-11
Form: 424B5
Chunk 18
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 indebtedness. Accordingly, our ability to use the net proceeds from this offering for other purposes will be constrained.

U.S. persons who own our notes may have more difficulty in protecting their interests than U.S. persons who are creditors of a U.S. corporation.

Creditors of a company in Bermuda, such as Aspen Holdings, may enforce their rights against Aspen Holdings by legal process in Bermuda. The creditor would first have to obtain a judgment in its favor against Aspen Holdings by pursuing a legal action in Bermuda. This would entail retaining attorneys in Bermuda and (in the case of a plaintiff who is a U.S. person) pursuing an action in a jurisdiction which would be foreign to the plaintiff. The costs of pursuing such an action could be more costly than pursuing corresponding proceedings against a U.S. corporation.

Appeals from decisions of the Supreme Court of Bermuda (the first instance court for most civil proceedings in Bermuda) may be made in certain cases to the Court of Appeal for Bermuda. In turn, appeals from the decisions of the Court of Appeal may be made in certain cases to the Judicial Committee of the United Kingdom Privy Council. Rights of appeal in Bermuda may be more restrictive than rights of appeal in the United States.

In the event that Aspen Holdings becomes insolvent, the rights of a creditor against Aspen Holdings would be severely impaired. In the event of an insolvent liquidation (or appointment of a provisional liquidator), a creditor may pursue legal action only upon obtaining permission to do so from the Supreme Court of Bermuda. The rights of creditors in an insolvent liquidation will extend only to proving a claim in the liquidation and receiving a dividend pro rata along with other unsecured creditors to the extent of the available assets of Aspen Holdings (after the payment of costs of the liquidation).

The impairment of the rights of an unsecured creditor may be more severe in an insolvent liquidation in Bermuda than would be the case where a U.S. person has a claim against a U.S. corporation which becomes insolvent. This is so mainly because in the event of an insolvency, Bermuda law may be more generous to secured

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creditors (and hence less generous to unsecured creditors) than U.S. law. The rights of secured creditors in an insolvent liquidation in Bermuda remain largely unimpaired, with the result that secured creditors will be paid in full to the extent of the value of the security they hold. Another possible consequence of the favorable treatment of secured creditors under