-
Three strategies to help insurers weather a changing climate risk environment.
April 1Kotter -
The average premium for homeowners insurance in the US is expected to hit $2,522 by the end of the year, driven largely by intensifying natural disasters, rising reinsurance costs and higher fees for home repair, according to Insurify, a Massachusetts-based insurance-comparison platform.
April 1 -
Defections by U.S. states from NAIC's call for property market data reporting could widen the gap in insurance protection, climate risk solutions expert says.
April 1 -
An increase in severe storms and a larger number of high-severity claims is causing longer wait times, which is impacting customer satisfaction, according to the J.D. Power 2024 U.S. Property Claims Satisfaction Study.
April 1 -
Insurance payouts for Tuesday's collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore could be among the largest ever in marine insurance, according to Lloyd's of London Chief Executive Officer John Neal.
March 28 -
Telematics data class action; NHTSA grants for state crash data collection and more legal news.
March 28 -
With its checkered history of risk placement process modernization fading away, the London Market is now pushing towards a bright new data future.
March 27Ebix Europe -
Property and climate risk solution provider's new product pairs property data and AI assessments of roof images.
March 27 -
A series about Insurtech 2.0 as an evolution and movement, the data management foundations, and how advances will improve claims and underwriting.
March 27 -
A tanker bound for Sri Lanka hit a pylon on the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, causing it to collapse in seconds. What are the insurance implications?
March 26