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In addition to the the publications listed below, we invite you to visit our intellectual capital website, GCCapitalIdeas.com, for the most current briefings and updates. If you require a printed version of a briefing, please contact us to request the publication. Please note that not all briefings are available in printed form.


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Date Title
May 2012
Catastrophe Bond Update: First Quarter 2012
The first quarter of 2012 was the most active first quarter on record in the catastrophe bond market. Sponsors sought to lock in capital markets capacity for a diverse array of perils and structures in a somewhat uncertain traditional market environment. Capital providers proved up to the task, albeit at slightly increased pricing relative to market levels in late 2011.
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April 2012
Spatial and Temporal Earthquake Clustering: Part 2 – Earthquake Aftershocks: An Overview of EQECAT's Perspective
EQECAT recently released a white paper examining earthquake clustering in the context of seismic hazard and loss assessment. The paper, Spatial and Temporal Earthquake Clustering: Part 2 � Earthquake Aftershocks, is EQECAT's second in a three-part series about spatial and temporal earthquake clustering. This briefing presents a summary of the paper for general interest and should not be viewed as an endorsement of EQECAT's views
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April 2012
Texas Tornadoes & 2012 Storms In Context
The National Weather Service confirmed that 13 tornadoes touched down in northeast Texas on the afternoon and evening of April 3, 2012, with several impacting the densely populated Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area. This briefing provides insight on the day's events and looks at the tornado season in context.
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April 2012
April 1 Reinsurance Renewals
The April 1 renewal has provided a clear indication of how the near record catastrophe losses in 2011 – two-thirds of which occurred in Asia – have affected (re)insurance rates in Japan. April 1 is a significant renewal date for Asia-Pacific markets and for Japan in particular.
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February 2012
Eurozone - Reinsurance Contract Issues
The implications of the many possible outcomes of the current "Eurozone Crisis" are profound and unpredictable and in some cases, unprecedented. The implications are also wide-ranging, embracing political, economic and legal dimensions. Such complexity gives rise to different, not to say contradictory, interpretations and predictions. However, we can only be certain that actual events, when they happen, will follow their own unique trajectory.
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February 2012
Poised for Growth: Guy Carpenter's Seventh Annual Specialty Insurance Program Issuing Carrier Survey
Specialty program insurance providers predict that the Program Administrators and Managing General Agents (PA/MGA) market will grow in 2012 as a result of changes taking place in program business, according to a survey conducted by Guy Carpenter. In its annual study of the PA/MGA marketplace, Guy Carpenter surveyed both traditional insurance companies with specialty program operations and specialty insurance carriers about their program business and the direction of the PA/MGA marketplace. Now in its seventh year, the study found that while the majority of respondents perceive the PA/MGA marketplace today to be smaller than it has been in previous years, many (51 percent) see it growing in 2012. Overall survey results suggest that the willingness of program carriers to adopt a more flexible approach to building the business will become a key driver of growth. Survey respondents report that they are now considering smaller programs, larger territorial scope and start-up programs as well as fronting opportunities in order to grow, or at least to maintain, a reasonable market share.
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December 2011
Industry Good Practice for Catastrophe Modeling & Solvency II - A Perfect Opportunity for Review
The UK insurance industry, supported by the Association of British Insurers (ABI), has developed a report "Industry Good Practice for Catastrophe Modeling & Solvency II" to guide companies' use of catastrophe modeling under Solvency II. Guy Carpenter is ready to help with education and training, catastrophe modeling documentation (including extraction of documentation from model vendors) and data assessment. Key amongst our services will be our expertise in providing model suitability assessments (MSAs) with which we can guide clients in selecting and using catastrophe models.
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November 2011
GC Securities Catastrophe Bond Market Update: Third Quarter 2011
The third quarter 2011 was one of the most active on record, as the catastrophe bond market responded to investor demand for additional investment opportunities, particularly for diversifying peril transactions. Three transactions totaling USD512 million were completed during the third quarter 2011, making it the third most active third quarter on record. Completed issuance contained no exposure to U.S. hurricane peril. Excluding quarters in which no cat bond issuance overall occurred, this is the first quarter since the third quarter 2002 in which there was no transfer of U.S. hurricane risk.
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November 2011
Spatial and Temporal Earthquake Clustering: An Overview Of EQECAT'S Perspective
The recent major earthquakes that have occurred in Chile (February 2010), New Zealand - Canterbury (September 2010), New Zealand - Christchurch (June 2011) and Tohoku (March 2011) have raised questions such as: Do earthquakes of major intensity cluster around the world? Have there been other, previous series of major earthquakes around the world? Are other major earthquakes more likely to occur in the very near future, if so where? These are all very challenging questions. This briefing begins to answer some of them. This briefing presents a summary of the white paper recently released by EQECAT, Spatial and Temporal Earthquake Clustering: Part 1 - Global Earthquake Clustering. It is EQECAT's first paper about both spatial and temporal clustering of mega-thrust earthquakes.
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September 2011
Casualty Advisory Update
The uncertainty regarding the ultimate loss cost of long-tail liability exposures has led insurance regulators to insist on a very high capital allocation requirement for liability classes within the Solvency II guidelines. These will apply to all insurance and reinsurance companies with operations, subsidiaries and affiliates in the European Union (EU) that are licensed to write (re)insurance business within the EU. There are two aspects to the perceived catastrophe exposure in casualty insurance: 1) reserving risk and 2) man-made catastrophe risk.
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August 2011
Update: Downgrade Implications
Standard & Poor's has downgraded the U.S. sovereign debt rating to AA+ from AAA. Implications for (re)insurers worldwide are mixed. Although there are broad economic implications, markets appear to have anticipated at least some of these, which could forestall rash or catastrophic outcomes. The long-term effects, however, could be profound.
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July 2011
Focus on Hurricane Season at July 1, 2011 Reinsurance Renewal
July 1 represents the last major renewal period of the year. As we wrap up the majority of placements for 2011, there are several occurrences that have played a key role in the positioning of the market. Chief among the critical 2011 events are the global catastrophe losses and the release of RMS v11, both of which had an impact on reinsurers' capital positions and views of risk. The longer term impact of both of these factors remains somewhat unclear as losses from recent events are not fully developed and there is not a consensus position on the integration of RMS v11.
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June 2011
Wide Range of Outcomes Seen in June 1, 2011, Florida Reinsurance Renewal
The June 1, 2011, renewals took place against the backdrop of record first-half catastrophe losses and uncertainty surrounding the release of version 11 of Risk Management Solutions' (RMS) U.S. hurricane model. The heavy international natural catastrophe-related losses that occurred during the first quarter of 2011 - combined with the multi-billion dollar losses from tornadoes in the United States in April and May - have added to significant loss activity over the past 16 months, culminating in insured losses of close to USD100 billion.
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May 2011
The Most Active First Quarter on Record, Global Catastrophe Activity Highlights Value of Catastrophe Bond Market
The first quarter of 2011 was the most active first quarter in the history of the catastrophe bond market in terms of new issuance. All told, four transactions came to market securing USD1.02 billion of new and renewal risk transfer capacity. This is a significant increase over the USD300 million issued during the first quarter of 2010 and previous first quarter high-water mark of USD615 million posted during the first quarter of 2008. Issuance was diverse in terms of risk profile and structure, although U.S. hurricane risk was a common theme in all four transactions. All transactions marketed during the first quarter of 2011 priced within or inside of their initial spread guidance.
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May 2011
Succeeding Under Solvency II - Reinsurance and Counterparty Risk
Previous reports in our Succeeding Under Solvency II series focused on the capital requirements associated with Pillar I, corporate governance (Pillar II) and disclosure (Pillar III). In this briefing, the third in the series, we concentrate on special considerations for reinsurance and counterparty risk.
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April 2011
Succeeding Under Solvency II - Corporate Governance (Pillar Two) and Disclosure (Pillar Three)
The previous report in our Succeeding Under Solvency II series focused on the capital requirements associated with Pillar I. In this briefing, we concentrate on the second and third pillars - which we refer to as a combined "Pillar V" (Pillar II plus Pillar III) requirement.
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March 2011
April 1 Reinsurance Renewals
The April 1, 2011 renewal once again demonstrated the reinsurance industry's ability to operate during trying times. The renewal, which is dominated by business in the Asia-Pacific region, followed just a few weeks after the devastating 9.0Mw Tohoku earthquake struck off Japan on March 11.
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March 2011
Succeeding Under Solvency II - Pillar One: Capital Requirements
The briefing is the first in a series of Guy Carpenter reports analyzing Solvency II and its attendant issues as they are finalized over the next several months.
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November 2010
Guy Carpenter Sixth Annual Specialty Insurance Program Issuing Carrier Marketplace Survey
The briefing examines the results of our yearly survey of the Program Administrators and Managing General Agents(PA/MGA) market. It provides insights from a combination of traditional multi-line insurance carriers, specialty carriers and PAs/MGAs.
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September 2010
Casualty Advisory Update
The briefing examines emerging issues in the global casualty reinsurance marketplace. Key issues highlighted in the report include the changing role of annuities used in third-party bodily injury claims settlements in Europe, the growing trend of UK courts to award rest-of-life structured settlements and the emerging market for intellectual property (re)insurance in Asia.
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July 2010
Initial Reactions to Health Care Reform: An Insurer and Reinsurer Perspective
With the passing of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the environment for health insurers has drastically changed. Undoubtedly, the wheels of progress move slowly and we have only begun to understand the full impact that the reforms will have on our industry. What we do know is that these changes will have a significant and immediate impact on every organization conducting business in the health care arena.
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June 2010
July 1 Renewal Briefing
Further erosion of rates was evident at the July 1, 2010 reinsurance renewal. Property rates were down by as much 15 percent despite substantial catastrophe loss activity in the first half of 2010.
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June 2010
2010 Hurricane Season Begins
The 2010 hurricane season kicked-off on June 1 and the meteorological forces wasted no time in getting down to business. Tropical storm Agatha slammed into Central America, killing at least 101 people. The hurricane season kick-off and the storm occurred as backdrops to the wrap up of the June 1, 2010 reinsurance renewals, traditionally centered on the Florida property marketplace.
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June 2010
Tropical Cyclone Landfall Forecast on South China & Korea/Japan
This briefing by the Guy Carpenter Asia-Pacific Climate Impact Centre (City University of Hong Kong) addresses forcasts in the number of tropical cyclones expected to make landfall in 2010.
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June 2010
June 1 Reinsurance Rate Decreases are one Positive Development for Florida Companies
While companies deal with navigating the challenges of the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund (FHCF) integration each year, 2010 also included heightened commentary by rating agencies regarding acceptable risk transfer approaches, the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation's own views on risk transfer and an environment of continuing economic turmoil specific to the Florida insurance environment. In a positive development for these companies, reinsurance pricing continued its 2010 trend of price declines and dropped year over year on a risk adjusted basis by 10 percent to 12 percent on average. This drop returns pricing to a level close to that seen in 2008, particularly in upper layers.
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January 2010
Rates Retreat as Capital Rebounds: Global Reinsurance Renewals at January 1, 2010
Reinsurance rates for most lines of business decreased at the January 1, 2010 renewal. The Guy Carpenter World Catastrophe Rate on Line (ROL) Index decreased by 6 percent in response to a swift and substantial recovery in the capitalization of the reinsurance sector. The combination of the rally in investment markets, much reduced catastrophe loss activity and recessionary effects on demand resulted in an excess of supply and increased competition. This was reflected in a slow renewal in which many contracts closed very late in the season as buyers sought to gain maximum advantage. The overall movements in pricing have also occurred against a complicated background of exposure adjustments, model revisions, program changes and other market noise.
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October 2009
Update: Risk Profile, Appetite and Tolerance: Fundamental Concepts in Risk Management
In April 2009, Guy Carpenter's Financial Intelligence Team published a briefing entitled Risk Profile, Appetite and Tolerance: Fundamental Concepts in Risk Management and Reinsurance Effectiveness. That briefing included definitions of Risk Profile, Appetite and Tolerance and how these concepts fit into an Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) framework. It also presented the results of our initial Risk Tolerance Benchmarking study, which summarized the information publicly disclosed in this area. Our update to that study reinforces the conclusion drawn six months ago that (re)insurers increasingly recognize the value of metric-based frameworks and capital models in evaluating their portfolios. Further, as this trend of recognition gains momentum, so does the importance of being able to understand one's place in the rapidly changing risk management space. Accordingly, this briefing revisits the terminology definitions and updates our survey of companies' disclosures in this area.
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October 2009
Guy Carpenter Fifth Annual Specialty Insurance Program Issuing Carrier Marketplace
Guy Carpenter's Fifth Annual Specialty Program Issuing Carrier Survey finds the Program Administrators and Managing General Agents (PA/MGA) market has remained remarkably consistent from 2008 to 2009, despite the outbreak of the worst financial crisis in more than 70 years. While the number of respondents perceiving market growth has declined since last year, the outlook remains quite upbeat, especially given the year's tumultuous market conditions.
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September 2009
Impact and Implications of Swiss Hailstorms
Severe hailstorms caused widespread property, motor and crop damage in Switzerland on 23 July 2009. Although hail losses only make up an average of 9% of all claims in Switzerland every year, the peril has the potential to cause severe localised damage in the country. Hailstorms can trigger insurance claims totalling hundreds of millions of euros if they hit Swiss urban areas, and this scenario was realised on 23 July when hail measuring up to 50 mm in diameter badly battered central and northern cantons and caused the biggest Swiss hail loss in recent memory.
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April 2009
Risk Profile, Appetite, and Tolerance: Fundamental Concepts in Risk Management and Reinsurance Effectiveness
Prior to the recent turbulence in the financial markets, insurers and reinsurers were increasing their use of Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) to make risk and capital management decisions. While this was driven in part by rating agencies and regulators, many carriers began to recognize the value of metric-based frameworks and capital models in evaluating their portfolios.
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October 2008
FHCF Bonding Capacity Update (Property Specialty Briefing)
The Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund (FHCF) has announced changes in bonding capacity. The new estimates, voted on and approved by the Advisory Council, reflect the changes in the economic climate and emphasize the heavy dependence of the FHCF on post-event financing to meet its obligations.
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September 2008
Casualty Cat Unveils Hidden Risks in Your Portfolio (Casualty Specialty Briefing)
Casualty risk is rarely linear. A single event could affect many insureds across several lines of business, triggering disproportionate payouts, depleting balance sheets, and possibly threatening solvency. While carriers have been aware of the domino effect that could follow a casualty event, a realistic approach to risk mitigation has been elusive. Sufficient data and modeling capabilities traditionally have been in short supply. Fortunately, there is a new way to manage this threat. Guy Carpenter's Casualty Cat Model, developed jointly with Arium, Ltd., makes it possible to track "hidden" exposures throughout your portfolio and develop a plan for protecting your capital.
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August 2008
Approaching a Natural Floor – Life, Accident and Health Renewals at July 1, 2008 (Life Accident and Health Specialty Practice Briefing)
Life, Accident and Health cedent behavior was relatively unchanged at July 1, 2008 renewals. Prices have continued to come down, thanks to several consecutive benign loss years. Rates are beginning to stabilize for some product lines, including medical stop-loss and long-term disability, though the underlying reasons varied with the types of coverage sought. Insurers also are starting to investigate multi-year coverage to protect against volatility and maintain coverage in the event of market discontinuity, and reinsurers have begun to respond.
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July 2008
Bag Profits Early – Investment Gains Under Pressure (Business Intelligence Unit Briefing)
Asset-driven losses have put pressure on earnings. Investment gains comprise an important part of carriers' long-term profits, and financial markets have shown just how volatile this source can be. With net income off 60 percent from the first half of 2007 to the first half of 2008, carrier profitability will become increasingly reliant on technical earnings.
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July 2008
Financial Features in MetaRisk® v1.6 (Financial and Capital Advisory Briefing)
In MetaRisk versions 1.5 and 1.6, many new financial features were introduced. The new features, including U.S. statutory and economic financial statements, integrated economic scenarios and reserve volatility, can provide valuable insights to clients.
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July 2008
No Surprises, Rates Continue to Fall – P&C Reinsurance Renewals, July 1, 2008 (Global Specialty Practice and Business Intelligence Unit Briefing)
Excess capital caused soft market conditions to persist at July property and casualty renewals. For property-catastrophe covers, risk-adjusted pricing dropped 10 percent to 20 percent relative to July 1, 2007. Quote ranges narrowed, though, as reinsurers responded to the realities of the market. The weakening global economy has squeezed insurance and reinsurance markets, as well as corporate profitability worldwide. This has led to considerable expense pressure, including the cost of insurance and reinsurance premiums.
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June 2008
Push Pandemic Out of Insurance - Capital Markets Provide Necessary Depth (GC Securities Briefing)
Life carriers struggle with the notion of hedging pandemic risk. If an outbreak does occur, the process for estimating losses and determining reserves is unclear. Capital approaches do not consider probabilistic tail scenario risks. Quite simply, managing pandemic risk is an effort mired in doubt, though the potential for a devastating, multibillion dollar, worldwide outbreak is real. Traditional risk transfer tools have only limited utility in covering pandemic exposure. However, the depth and flexibility of capital markets may provide a robust alternative to traditional reinsurance.
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May 2008
Outlook for Florida Renewals on June 1, 2008 (Property Specialty Briefing)
Florida property-catastrophe risk-adjusted pricing is expected to decline by about 15 percent on average at June 1 renewals. A competitive reinsurance market and the absence of major insured losses are driving this trend. While disasters are not in short supply, none has had a market-changing impact.
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May 2008
2008 Global Terror Update (Business Intelligence Unit Briefing)
The global terror insurance market is constantly reshaped by new governmental and regulatory developments. Several measures were introduced in the past year, including Belgium's establishment of a terror pool, the extension of the terrorism insurance legislation in the United States and changes to terror programs in France and the Netherlands. Peru has implemented insurance measures related to terrorism coverage, as well. Market capacity for Aviation has grown significantly, and prices have fallen.
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May 2008
New Opportunities and Old Challenges Converge: Fourth Annual Specialty Insurance Program Issuing Carrier Survey (Program Managers Solutions Specialty Practice Briefing)
The program market is evolving. While most Program Administrators and Managing General Agents (PAs/MGAs) wrestle with many of the challenges from years past, this year's survey has uncovered several new opportunities as well. Respondents expect continued growth through 2008 for a market that most perceive to be greater than USD20 billion in gross written premium (GWP). Pricing, premium and new business production remain top concerns for PAs/MGAs, but they are joined by appetites for mergers and acquisitions (M&A) and the use of outside capital to fuel new endeavors.
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May 2008
Manage Non-Life Catastrophe Risk with Custom Scenarios for Solvency II Compliance (Financial and Capital Advisory Practice Briefing)
The Solvency II standard model is nearing completion. Quantitative Impact Study 4 (QIS4) was released on 1 April 2008 and will run through July 2008. In QIS4, the non-life catastrophe risk capital component of the solvency capital requirement (SCR) calculation has been modified substantially from QIS3 and has become more complex. In particular, QIS4 includes a personalized catastrophe scenario capital calculation option, improving the risk sensitivity of the standard model relative to a specific carrier. This approach can provide a competitive advantage through the use of model results for internal management purposes and the compliance process.
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April 2008
The Market's Mixed Signals: Reinsurance Renewals at April 1, 2008
Reinsurance renewals at April 1, 2008 sent mixed signals to the global market. Cedents pushed hard for rate reductions in Asia. Reinsurers stood firm, though, as rates in general may already be close to technical levels. The majority of rate decreases, therefore, were single-digit. U.S. cedents pushed as well. While reinsurers resisted, competitive forces prevailed, and rate reductions were substantial. Decreases can be achieved, it seems, if rates are above technical levels. Insufficient rate levels and poor loss histories lead to reinsurer discipline.
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March 2008
MetaRisk® and QIS 4 Draft: Calculating Market Risk
Solvency II will allow insurers to use approved internal models instead of the standard formula to evaluate market risk and determine solvency capital requirements. With an approach that includes the use of dividends and coupons, MetaRisk® offers a more realistic assessment than the standard formula, enabling more effective decision-making.
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March 2008
Optimize in a Soft Market, Succeed in any Market — Five Strategies for MGAs and MGUs
Soft markets can yield significant opportunities. While many in the marketplace relax underwriting standards and jeopardize future profitability, the next generation of successful firms will focus on optimizing operations and positioning themselves to pounce on the next hard market. For wholesalers, Managing General Agents (MGAs) and Managing General Underwriters (MGUs), achieving sustainable growth now not only leads to outsized profitability when the market hardens, it provides a platform from which to generate future returns – regardless of market conditions. The key may be to seek operational efficiency rather than short-term profits.
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January 2008
ILS Comes of Age – Structured Products on the Horizon (An update from GC Securities Ltd.)
Despite tight credit market conditions in 2007, cat bonds persevered and even continued to deliver returns. Instead of looking back at the credit crunch, though, it is time to look to the future. Structured insurance products, using insurance-linked securities, could be the way of the future.
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January 2008
Near Misses, Plentiful Reminders – Global Reinsurance Review (Business Intelligence Briefing)
Cedents took advantage of a buyer's market. Many 2008 renewals closed late as cedents held out for lower rates in the continuing soft market. Reinsurers were rewarded not only with lower rates, but often smaller lines. The absence of large catastrophe losses was a key factor in the softening of reinsurance markets. Barring large catastrophe losses in 2008, the downward drift in rates is expected to continue through 2008 and into 2009.
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