• X
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Show more sharing options
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Free trial
  • Log in

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 68,988 results that match your search.68,988 results
  • A New York federal judge has dismissed a case brought by an ex-Marsh executive against Eliot Spitzer for allegedly defaming him in an article written by the former New York Attorney General and published in the online magazine Slate
  • Talanx's share price has opened higher in the group's trading debut on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange after EUR18.30 pricing per share was announced in its IPO yesterday (1 October)
  • RK Harrison has reached an agreement with Chile's largest broker, Conosur, for the pair to cooperate on all new business emanating from the country that requires international market placements.
  • Professional services firm Charles Taylor has appointed Tito Soso as interim CFO.
  • New Zealand-listed insurer Tower has renewed its catastrophe excess-of-loss programme at a rate increase of around 25 percent. This comes on top of a 70 percent-plus rate hike achieved a year earlier, local press has reported.
  • John Charman will return to the industry next year in a role that he is determined will be every bit as successful as his previous endeavours at Lloyd's and Axis. Charman - who was ousted as executive chairman from the company he built from scratch into a $6bn global specialty powerhouse - has told The Insurance Insider that he will look for opportunities next year after spending the remainder of 2012 with his family.
  • (Re)insurers target emerging markets while divestments continue...
  • Weekly share price movements and key data on The Insurance Insider's universe of P&C (re)insurers and brokers
  • Two SeaBright investors have brought class action suits on behalf of all stockholders against the company and its board of directors over the impending merger with Enstar, alleging that the firm was sold too cheaply via an unfair process.
  • An appeals court has reversed a decision and found that the US Army Corps of Engineers is not responsible for the flooding that ensued from Hurricane Katrina and cannot be sued for damages.