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  • The Bank of Japan has injected more than $180bn into its economy as it seeks to limit the impact of the earthquake on its finances.
  • Although it is likely to be weeks before comprehensive claims data from the Japanese quake and tsunami is constructed, a clearer picture of potential reinsurer exposures based on the structure of the domestic market can already be drawn.
  • As international reinsurers begin to assess their potential exposure to Friday's (11 March) devastating earthquake and tsunami, the early signs are that industry losses will not be sufficient to deliver a full-scale market turn.
  • The Japanese earthquake and tsunami could be the second largest catastrophe for insured losses ever, if early predictions from modelling firm AIR Worldwide are on the mark.
  • Two large single losses affected by Japan's 11 March mega-quake and tsunami are fully placed with local (re)insurers, The Insurance Insider understands.
  • Investors showed their concern over insured losses from Japan's major earthquake, wiping an average 3 percent off the value of global (re)insurance stocks on Friday (11 March) as news broke.
  • The earthquake that devastated the east coast of Japan on Friday (11 March) is likely to push first-quarter insured natural catastrophe losses well beyond last year's estimates - making it the worst year for Q1 losses to date.
  • Legal exclusions mean that international reinsurers will not face significant costs connected with the overheating Japanese nuclear plant Fukushima Dai-ichi - no matter what happens at the stricken facility.
  • France-headquartered reinsurer Scor has said that its maximum losses for the Japanese quake and tsunami are just EUR185mn.
  • The London market is ready and prepared to withstand claims emerging from the Japanese earthquakes as part of its "normal course of business", according to Lloyd's.