Compliance

  • Armonk, N.Y. - Just a little over two weeks ago, Insurance Networking News reported IBM's acquisition of Austin, Texas-based Webify Solutions, which brought the total of IBM acquisitions to three in less than 15 months (See "IBM Sets SOA Sail"). Now IBM is adding another acquisition to the list.IBM and FileNet Corp. entered into a definitive agreement for Armonk, N.Y.-based IBM to acquire FileNet, a publicly held company headquartered in Costa Mesa, Calif., in an all-cash transaction at a price of approximately $1.6 billion, or $35 per share. The acquisition is subject to FileNet shareholder approval, regulatory reviews and other customary closing conditions. It is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2006.

    August 10
  • Washington - Former Sen. John Breaux hopes policy makers, health care experts and the American public will tune into and participate in a new blog on the Ceasefire on Health Care Web site, www.ceasefireonhealthcare.org.The Ceasefire on Health Care campaign's goal is finding bipartisan "common ground" agreements leading to market based, incremental change to the nation's health care system. The online forum is designed to supplement the Ceasefire podcast series and engage its participants in lively discussion about pressing health care reform trends and issues.

    August 9
  • Lawrenceville, Ill. - UnitedHealthcare's Golden Rule Insurance Co. is offering its HSA customers a selection of mutual fund investment options as well as a debit card and online account management and bill paying services through Salt Lake City-based Exante Bank.Golden Rule helped pave the way for HSAs when it introduced a medical savings account more than a decade ago. More than 41% of the Lawrenceville, Ill.-based insurer's customers currently are covered by health insurance plans that include health savings accounts. As of June 30, 2006, these customers had accumulated more than $170 million in their health savings accounts; the average account balance exceeded $2,400.

    August 8
  • WHITEHILL ACQUIRES INSYSTEMSMoncton, New Brunswick-based Whitehill Technologies Inc. purchased InSystems, a wholly owned subsidiary of Standard Register, Dayton, Ohio, Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. The combined company's critical mass will be nearly 1,000 customers strong, including several hundred insurance companies and more than half of the world's largest law firms, according to Paul McSpurren, president and CEO of Whitehill Technologies. Current InSystems customers should expect business to continue without interruption, according to the companies.

    August 1
  • August - the heart of hurricane season.The hurricanes during August 2005 changed the insurance industry. In fact, with experts predicting a number of storms in 2006, carriers are taking action-developing tools and programs-to help their customers through natural disasters, especially hurricanes.

    August 1
  • 24-HOUR ACCESS TO FINANCIAL FITNESSNew York-based Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America launched a proprietary Web-based system designed to help financial representatives enable their clients to instantly gauge their financial health and simplify their personal and business finances. The system enables financial reps and their clients to coordinate accounts from a menu of more than 3,000 financial institutions, access copies of important legal and financial documents from anywhere in the world, and get a comprehensive, up-to-date snapshot of their financial well-being.

    August 1
  • Late spring 2005, the world learned that a crime ring that included call center employees of an Indian outsourcing company stole more than $300,000 from Citibank customers by tricking callers into giving up their PIN numbers.The news sent shockwaves through the industry, as India was the premier destination for business process outsourcing in the world.

    August 1
  • Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) continues to gain momentum as an important issue among U.S. life insurance company senior management, and economic capital (EC) software may be the key to successful ERM.In its Life Insurance CFO Survey in 2006, the Tillinghast division of Towers Perrin, New York, focused on how life insurers approach ERM in general terms, their risk management objectives and how they define their ERM framework. The survey also analyzed companies' approaches to establishing EC-the minimum amount of capital that the firm needs to bear its risks-including planned improvements to their existing EC framework.

    August 1
  • Stevens Point, Wis. - Sentry Insurance, a property, casualty and life insurance provider for personal and commercial customers, reported today that personal information on more than 112,000 of its customers was stolen, and that data on 72 of them was sold over the Internet.

    August 1
  • Chicago-CS Stars, an operating unit of Marsh, a Chicago-based risk and insurance services firm, today announced that a piece of computer hardware containing personal information of 540,000 injured workers held on behalf of the New York Special Funds Conservation Committee has been found and secured. The Federal Bureau of Investigation has told the company that it is reasonably certain that there was no use of any of the data stored on the hardware.

    July 28
  • Chicago - Stating that 50 individual sets of individual insurance regulations results in a lack of transparency and a bottleneck to global trade, Frank Keating, president and CEO of the American Council of Life Insurers, called for an optional federal charter yesterday during his address to the International Insurance Society here.

    July 19
  • Chicago - Attendees at the International Insurance Society 42nd Annual Seminar in Chicago identified natural catastrophes--over pandemics, geopolitical instabilities, terrorism and man-made catastrophes--as the biggest threat to the future of the insurance industry.The question was posed to the more-than-100 attendees of the July 19, 2006 CEO Panel V: Catastrophic Risk and Insurability: Can the industry cope? Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of Northbrook, Ill.-based Allstate USA and Pierre Ozendo, head of Americas Property & Casualty, Swiss Reinsurance America Corp. USA, Armonk, N.Y., spoke to the attendees on the subject.

    July 19
  • Washington, D.C. - In the first of in a series of government meetings on modernizing insurance regulation, the focus on whether insurers should be given the option of being federally regulated took center stage this week at a U.S. Senate Committee On Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs hearing on "Insurance Regulation Reform."

    July 13
  • Jersey City, N.J. - Catastrophic wildfires cause extensive damage to property and significant disruption to the lives of property owners. In 2005, more than 8.5 million acres burned, nearly twice the 10-year average. This is according to ISO, a provider of products and services that help insurers measure, manage and reduce risk.With more people living closer to brushfire areas, which also happen to be preserves of privacy, the exposure has nearly doubled for insurers between 1970 and 2000.

    July 6
  • Washington, D.C. - NASD has introduced a new series of free, on-demand video Webcasts for compliance professionals that's aimed at taking the mystery out of key regulatory processes and making firms' interactions with NASD more productive and efficient.The first installment of the new "What to Expect" series focuses on what firms can expect before, during and after an NASD examination and offers practical tips for making the process go smoothly. While all NASD-registered firms can benefit from viewing this Webcast, "What to Expect: Preparing for an NASD Routine Exam" will be of particular interest to firms on a four-year examination cycle whose examinations are coming up, given significant changes in the regulatory environment in recent years.

    July 5
  • Cary, N.C. - Reaping business benefits now matches regulatory compliance as the key driver of enterprise risk management (ERM) systems according to a global survey of 339 financial services executives. These benefits include improved performance management, better risk-based pricing, and reduced capital allocation and credit loss. These are the results of research conducted by SAS, a business intelligence provider.A full 83% of participating financial institutions view ERM as a strategic priority, per the survey. Many are setting up new ERM or "integrated compliance" programs. The survey also found that credit risk management is still the top risk management expenditure priority for most firms. In addition, 78% of respondents view credit risk management as critical and anticipate significant, quantifiable economic rewards over the next 24 months, including a 10% reduction in economic capital and a 14% reduction in cost-of-credit losses.

    July 5
  • To many insurance industry executives, compliance means spending gobs of money to avoid having their companies go public with ugly security lapses or pay fines from regulators, or avoid having themselves hauled off to the slammer for misstating information. However, the process of meeting compliance mandates need not be costly-and may actually help increase profits in the long run.For many carriers, there are ways to establish a common base of processes to address multiple mandates, as well as any future requirements. In addition, compliance management can bring new opportunities for gaining better efficiencies and supporting new business growth.

    July 1
  • Do drivers who wear turtlenecks get in more accidents than drivers who don't? What if the theory proved true? Although it would be nice to find out whether this level of minutia affects accurate pricing of risk, when it comes to ratings, this question is not one insurers are asking-yet. But insurers are finding unique ways to price risk-from aggressive braking patterns to career choice. Progressive is one such insurer taking steps toward accuracy, and it's using technology to do so. Most recently, Mayfield Village, Ohio-based Progressive Direct Insurance Co. launched an odometer-reporting, Web-based pilot program in Iowa and Virginia. And, in the summer of 2004, the carrier began piloting a usage-based program in Minnesota called TripSense.Using a device called a TripSensor, which plugs into the ODBII port in newer vehicles, Progressive is collecting driver data in the hopes of creating a win-win for its underwriters and its policyholders.

    July 1
  • AGENCY WEB PORTALNew York-based P&C Insurance Systems Inc. introduced a Web portal that allows direct Web-based upload of ACORD data from agency management software. The portal leverages the architecture of the PCIS management system to provide Web-based multi-line rating, real-time agency access to quote documents, and up-to-date agency production reports.

    July 1
  • DESPITE DEADLINE, MANY FIRMS LACK AML PROGRAM

    July 1