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The Insurance Accounting & Systems Association (IASA), Durham, N.C., announced today that their members have elected Mark Robison as president for the fiscal year that will begin on July 1, 2005. Robison has risen through the ranks of IASA holding various management team, leadership and volunteer positions within the association during his many years of volunteering. Currently, he serves as vice president and treasurer of Brotherhood Mutual Insurance Company, a Fort Wayne, Ind., a niche regional P&C carrier insuring America's churches and related ministries. Robison joined Brotherhood in January, 1994. Prior to joining Brotherhood, he worked as a manager for Ernst & Young, LLP serving insurance clients, and also within the firm's information systems consulting practice. Robison is a Certified Public Accountant, a Chartered Property Casualty Underwriter, a Fellow, Life Management Institute and holds the Associate in Insurance Accounting and Finance designation from the Insurance Institute of America.
June 30 -
Washington - The Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA), a temporary program introduced after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, has served its purpose and is probably stunting the development of the private insurance market, Treasury Secretary John Snow wrote in a letter to the Senate Banking Committee summarizing the agency's conclusions regarding TRIA.
June 30 -
Genworth Financial is streamlining its operations. The $103 billion company, which serves the lifestyle protection, retirement income, investment and mortgage insurance needs of more than 15 million customers, operates in 22 countries, including the U.S., Canada, Australia, the U.K. and more than a dozen other European countries.
June 29 -
Chicago - Companies want clean, accurate enterprise data to enhance analytics capabilities, say business and IT professionals in a recent survey conducted by Chicago-based data warehousing consultant Knightsbridge Solutions. More than 2,000 respondents among all levels of business and IT functions and industries completed the survey, entitled the "2005 BI Peer Review," this past spring.
June 22 -
Chicago - The third annual study conducted by Chicago-based Foley & Lardner LLP on the costs associated with corporate governance reform shows that the average cost of being public in 2004 increased 33 percent over 2003 for a company with annual revenue under $1 billion.
June 17 -
Washington - The Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of America, Alexandria, Va., says a proposal to establish an optional federal charter for insurance regulation is not the "best or right solution for regulatory reform in the industry." The association of 300,000 business owners reacted yesterday to a letter sent by 135 insurance, national and regional finance companies to the Senate Banking Committee in support of a charter. "The lack of a federal insurance regulator is especially troublesome," the letter stated. The group asked the Committee to consider the fact that, because insurance is solely regulated by the individual states, "there is no Federal regulatory agency to represent the financial regulatory interests of the U.S. insurance industry."
June 15 -
Oakland, Calif.-A review of hurricane trends by EQECAT Inc. shows a more than a one in three chance of large hurricane catastrophe losses in the United States in the current season, based on current forecasts by the National Hurricane Center (NHC)."Although the current season might not be as severe and unusual as the 2004 season, the potential for large losses in 2005 is likely to be troubling to insurers and reinsurers, which will have to cover the potential hurricane damage claims," says Tom Larsen, senior vice president of EQECAT.
June 15 -
Boston - At the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) meeting held here this weekend, the NAIC Property and Casualty Reinsurance Study group approved enhanced disclosure requirements for insurers that utilize reinsurance with limited risk transfer features, also known as finite reinsurance. The use of finite reinsurance has received considerable attention over the past several months, because of its misuse by some high-profile insurers. State insurance regulators, working in a coordinated fashion through the NAIC, have been evaluating existing relevant statutory financial reporting since last year. NAIC Property and Casualty Reinsurance Study Group approved enhanced disclosure requirements for insurers that utilize reinsurance with limited risk transfer features, also known as finite reinsurance. The use of finite reinsurance has received considerable attention over the past several months, because of its misuse by some high-profile insurers. State insurance regulators, working in a coordinated fashion through the NAIC, have been evaluating existing relevant statutory financial reporting since last year. The latest proposed disclosures would require an insurer to report to state insurance regulators any finite reinsurance agreement that has the effect of altering policyholders' surplus by more than three percent, or representing more than three percent of ceded premium or losses. Additional reporting requirements regarding contract terms and management's intention in entering the contract have been included to improve transparency. Study Group members also approved a standard attestation form to be signed by the insurer's CEO and CFO attesting that there are no side agreements and that risk transfer has occurred.
June 14 -
Hartford, Conn. - The Innovation Group (TIG), a UK-based provider of policy, claims and conversion technology products and services, will partner with Document Sciences (DocSci), a provider of real-time content publishing products, to automate claims reporting.
June 10 -
Southfield, Mich. - Proforma Corporation, a business process modeling and analysis software company, announced it has joined with business process management (BPM) providers to answer industry demand for interoperability between business process analysis (BPA) and BPM. The consortium agreed to support a common interchange format (CIF) that will facilitate the exchange of business process models between BPA tools, such as Proforma's ProVision BPMx, and other BPM solutions.
June 6 -
In part as an industry response to legislation passed this session mandating that insurers give consumers more information regarding insurance policies to help Florida residents better prepare for hurricanes, the Florida Insurance Council announced a Hurricane Central Web site (www.flains.org).
June 2 -
Washington D.C. - The National Association of Insurance Commissioners' (NAIC) plan to apply Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) corporate disclosure and accounting rules to non-public carriers will take center stage at the National Conference of Insurance Legislators' (NCOIL) Financial Services & Investment Products Committee meeting, which will convene on July 7 from 1:45 to 3:00 p.m., during the NCOIL Summer Meeting in Newport, Rhode Island.
June 2 -
Austin , Texas - To improve its policy management business processes, Aflac is implementing a business process management (BPM) platform. The Columbus , Ga. , carrier, which insures more than 40 million people worldwide, said it plans to use TeamWorks software, from Austin, Texas-based Lombardi, to gain new insight into process performance through business activity monitoring.
June 1 -
Addison, Texas - Universal Conversion Technologies (UCT), an Addison, Texas provider of data analysis and conversion services, today announced that Cincinnati-based Great American Financial Resources, Inc. (GAFRI), a subsidiary of American Financial Group, completed its conversion project. The project included the conversion of 30,000 fixed annuity policies from a recent acquisition, to the PDMA LifePRO system, GAFRI's primary administration system for all lines of business. UCT provided consulting expertise for the data mapping and project management, as well as its data conversion architect conversion.
June 1 -
You've driven the winding road to ERP. You've navigated the bumpy journey to CRM. Now, it's time to rev up your engines for the next big technology race: the race to the newest enterprise goal: CPM.If you haven't already heard the term, it stands for corporate performance management-also known as enterprise performance management (EPM) or business performance management.
June 1 -
Network storage isn't an issue insurance executives spend much time thinking about. But it should be. For starters, regulatory demands, such as those spelled out in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX), are putting the onus on executives to better manage their storage systems. To audit and archive data, organizations need to hold on to more data for longer periods of time, while keeping it all readily accessible to analytical applications.Moreover, as the industry moves away from paper documents, insurers are in danger of drowning in a sea of digital data. The buildup of data is making it more cumbersome to quickly retrieve data that's relevant to key business processes. And that, experts say, is why carriers need to properly manage network storage.
June 1 -
A growing number of insurers are harnessing technology to improve services to customers victimized by identity theft.Some have established outreach programs that give policyholders access to third-party identity theft restoration services. One of them, Columbus, Ohio-based Nationwide Insurance Co., is providing other capabilities as well.
June 1 -
A national life settlement broker is taking an eBay-like approach to the secondary life insurance market, linking cash-strapped policyholders with institutional investors.In April, Life Settlement Insights drew a handful of institutional investors online to test the open-forward auction format of a new venture called LifeX, an electronic communications network that runs on a proprietary auction platform from HedgeHog Inc. Executives with Cleveland-based Life Settlement Insights claim they've created the life settlement industry's first online exchange and are considering extending the capability to other life settlement brokerages.
June 1 -
Carriers have been addressing Internet security ever since they realized the public network exposed them to denial of service attacks and theft of policyholder information. Firewalls, intrusion detection, encryption, virus scanning, access management-all these tools are staples in carriers' IT operations.But what about insurance agencies? Carriers exchange customer data with agencies via the Internet daily, and agents regularly access policyholder data within carrier systems.
June 1 -
From the highest executive to the lowest-level associate, business people in corporate America are creatures of habit-often to a fault.Take paper processing. The reliance on paper documents might represent a drag on day-to-day workflow, but to business people accustomed to traditional processing methods, paper provides a comfort zone-inefficiencies and all.
June 1