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February 2011/4

  • Broker Arthur J Gallagher International is set to close its acquisition of Heath Lambert next month and will immediately look to introduce an underwriting engine to channel the UK retailer's powerful book of business.
  • A credit insurance industry lobby group has released a market code of conduct to address the breach of trust it says arose between insurers and clients after the financial crisis.
  • The UK Ministry of Justice expects progress within weeks on Lord Young's recommendations for reforming the health and safety requirements that insurers place on small businesses and the voluntary sector.
  • The US insurance industry is facing another prolonged lobbying war after plans outlined in the Obama administration's budget proposed disallowing tax deductions for international reinsurance companies ceding their US business to offshore affiliates.
  • Cat bonds performed strongly in 2010, according to Swiss Re's basket of indices for the asset class, with the reinsurer hailing strong performance indicators as a sign the market has fully recovered from the financial crisis.
  • Cat bond sales have made a strong start to 2011, with industry stalwart Swiss Re completing its largest ever Successor note issue and US insurer The Hartford closing its latest Foundation Re bond oversubscribed.
  • Hyperion Insurance Group is working towards a potential initial public offering (IPO) in 2012 if and when a market valuation of £250mn can be met, according to its CEO.
  • The big three broker stocks have risen strongly over the past year as cost-cutting initiatives and expansion drives paid off in their 2010 financial results.
  • Global insurer Axa reported a 24 percent year-on-year drop in net income to EUR2.7bn for 2010, due to a one-off EUR1.6bn loss on the sale of its UK life business.
  • Flagstone Re suffered a year of heavy underwriting losses in 2010, driven by a high catastrophe toll.
  • Boston-based Liberty Mutual slid into an underwriting loss for full-year 2010 after taking a $1.1bn catastrophe hit, up 54.1 percent from the $717mn suffered in 2009.
  • Prem Watsa's Fairfax Financial Holdings slumped to a $363mn fourth quarter deficit after posting a $684mn investment loss.
  • Bermudian (re)insurance group Arch saw its 2010 profits fall by only 4 percent, in contrast to many of its rivals.
  • Argo Group posted a full-year combined ratio of 103.2 percent after the underwriting result at its international specialty arm deteriorated by 20 percentage points.
  • US and European specialty insurance group AmTrust reported a 38 percent rise in net income to $142.5mn for 2010, with acquisitions boosting net earned premiums by 30 percent to $745.7mn.
  • Specialty insurer Navigators reported a $4.9mn underwriting loss for 2010, reversing the $19.5mn underwriting profit made in 2009, following a 3 percent drop in net earned premiums to $659.9mn.
  • Full-year 2010 net income at Allied World rose by 10 percent to $665mn as strong reserve releases and higher realised investment gains offset a heavier claims profile.
  • Bermudian-domiciled cat specialist Lancashire's full year pre-tax profits dipped by 15 percent to $339mn as international cat losses took their toll.
  • Swiss Re reported a fourth quarter loss of $725mn for 2010 but remained bullish on its capital position for the coming year.
  • Four weeks into the fourth-quarter reporting season and - as well as better-than-expected operating profits for the majority of global P&C (re)insurance players - there is evidence of a more bullish line for calling a turn in the market as early as next year.
  • Achilles, the acquisition vehicle for Apollo and CVC's £880mn ($1.4bn) buy-out of Brit Insurance, has made its offer of up to 1,100p per Brit share unconditional after it lowered its acceptance threshold to 80 percent.
  • Chaucer plc's share price has deflated by 10 percent since it emerged that Terra Firma had approached the Lloyd's insurer, amid growing scepticism over Lime Street ever seeing a bidding war.
  • Omega's takeover talks with Canopius have stalled as shareholders wait on the former's full-year results, due on 8 March, The Insurance Insider understands.
  • The protection and indemnity (P&I) clubs have completed their 2011 renewals, with strengthened balance sheets again allowing the mutuals to ease pressure on struggling shipowners.
  • Equity Syndicate 218's losses from its misfiring motor book are likely to reach £480mn, figures released by Equity Syndicate Management Limited suggest.
  • The vast cost to the (re)insurance industry of legal disputes is under challenge from a London-based launch that is promoting mediation as an alternative to the traditional route of lawyers and acrimonious litigation.
  • Positive reserve releases have been a strong feature of recent years, but potential volatility around claims from long-tail books of business remains a threat to the US P&C industry amid a 2009 upswing in asbestos and environmental (A&E) incurred losses.
  • Xchanging Insurance Services (XIS) chairman Richard Bucknall has written to the heads of several Lloyd's trades bodies to reassure them that the firm's position remains secure despite Xchanging's recent financial woes.
  • Proposals outlined by the UK Treasury to give incoming UK financial regulatory bodies greater freedom to act in public have drawn immediate criticism from a London law firm.
  • Australia's slew of catastrophes have been categorised as eight distinct events for insurance purposes by the Insurance Council of Australia (ICA).
  • Reported losses from the Australian flooding and Cyclone Yasi have now passed the $2.9bn mark, analysis compiled by The Insurance Insider shows.
  • Taking over a broker is a difficult undertaking at the best of times. The haggling over the price, the endless scrutiny of the small print, the shroud of secrecy that threatens to drop at every moment - it is a taxing and lengthy process.
  • Spiller steps down from Argo; Cooper Gay loses exec committee member Kinsella; Scor channels Leathem for Lloyd's venture; Katrina, 9/11 cost Lloyd's fac writers $5.2bn; Obama honours Buffett; XL gets NY tick; Aon pays Iranian fine; Chevron $8bn Amazon fine; Scor sells annuity book; BPL to Hong Kong; Way buys mining & energy underwriter; Drop-off in credit claims boosts Euler Hermes results; Platinum increases buy-back limit; London has no exposure to Bahrain cancellation; D&O litigation rise
  • Aon Benfield has turned down the opportunity to take part in a new revolving co-broker arrangement for Florida's state-sponsored insurer Citizens Property Insurance Corporation, saying it would jeopardise its "proprietary and confidential solutions".
  • The offshore energy market faces a possible $600mn loss resulting from damage to Maersk Oil's Gryphon floating production storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel in the North Sea earlier this month.
  • The power of public interrogation is one that we journalists know all about. We spend hours searching for the killer question that will blow the next big story wide open.
  • Broker Arthur J Gallagher International is set to close its acquisition of Heath Lambert next month and will immediately look to introduce an underwriting engine to channel the UK retailer's powerful book of business.